Dental
Socialism in Britain
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
When you think
about the sufferings of the precapitalistic age, it helps to have
a vivid example in mind.
Think of teeth.
In ancient
Egypt, dentists drilled holes through the bone to drain abscessed
teeth. No anesthesia. Later, people learned that pulling teeth was
the best way to deal with this and other problems. No anesthesia.
Dental drills were an advance, but you had to keep the hole filled
to keep the air out.
Those who had
the tools did the work. For centuries in Europe, the same guy who
cut your hair also extracted your teeth. In the US, it was the blacksmiths
who would make the kitchen knives, saw off limbs, and drill and
pull teeth.
By the mid-19th
century, the biggest advance ever came along: laughing gas to take
away the pain, which is unthinkably horrible in all ages and all
places.
Well, if you
live in Britain, you are likely to experience a blast from the past.
The system
is socialized. Shortages and bad service are as universal under
socialism as tooth pain was before the advent of anesthesia. But
many in Britain no longer have any choice: they have to pull out
their own teeth.
Only 49 percent
of adults and 63 percent of children are registered with a dentist
in England and Wales, according to the New
York Times. You have to be registered to get service, but
there is still no guarantee. You wait months, even years, if you
get in at all.
To make an
appointment, you have to call at 8am. The logs are full by 8:10am.
This is what accounts for the burgeoning market in over-the-counter
replacement fillings that you stuff in yourself. Most people just
avail themselves of their tool boxes, and give the problem tooth
a good yank. It heals in time.
This experiment
in British socialism was concocted by a class of intellectuals who
imagined that their scheme would provide equal access to all of
life's wonderful things. The result has been a tragedy. And this
tragedy has, in many ways, ended in a terrible farce: people yanking
out their own teeth in the land that gave us the most conspicuous
example of the industrial revolution.
There is more
than a lesson concerning socialism here. The experience provides
a warning against all forms of "scientific social planning." The
intellectuals hatch their plans to save humanity but, in some strange
way, they forget that they are not playing games in a laboratory.
They are dealing with real human lives. And these lives are not
large amalgamations of classes or races but individuals. We experience
pain and suffering, joys and triumphs, as individuals.
Tooth pain
has a way of focusing the point on what really matters. Someone
may claim that he has an idea for providing universal access to
dentistry, if only you give him the power to do what he wants.
But there are
a number of questions you should ask. Will he or you be the one
to suffer if something goes wrong? Who is going to be held to account
if the plan results in deprivation rather than plenty? What is the
exit strategy for abolishing the system if it doesn't work? Where
is the guarantee that this exit plan will be followed?
If someone
can't give compelling answers to these questions, you are best to
take the safe route and do nothing. No one in all of history has
been able to improve on the workings of society via the power of
the state. No matter how well constructed the plan appears to be,
it always seems to make things worse than better.
Free enterprise
can't make the reality of tooth pain disappear. It can’t alter the
makeup of the universe. It can't change human nature. It can't abolish
mortality. It can't take away the need for parents to train their
children on the difference between right and wrong. It must accept
the structure of reality as a given.
Neither,
however, can the state do these things. What free enterprise does
is provide the best possible system for dealing with reality. It
provides a rational way of dealing with the scarcity of time and
resources.
If you try
to improve on freedom by means of the state, you not only create
a worse situation but you end up slowing the pace of progress and
actually bring about retrogression in advances made through the
capitalistic era.
The
socialization of dentistry has plunged Britain back more than a
century in tooth care. Abolish capitalism altogether and you can
find yourself back in the Stone Age. Even the metal drill will seem
like a welcome tool.
May
9, 2006
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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