It is frustrating to sit nearby and listen to men and women try and talk politics or some other current event topic when they are ill-informed. It is especially annoying for me to hear the super-spin on health care reform that is now dominating many conversations. "You know I'll tell you something George, if this socialzed health care bill goes through congress that will be the end of us!" says an overly dramatic, overly zealous roundtable coffee-shop patron.
It is the usual rhetoric heard within mostly conservative think tanks, talk shows and pundits. What did he mean the "end of us?" Rediculous! The end of what? Society? Freedom? Hold on a second, I'm getting a tweet from Glenn Beck. Oh my god armageddon is coming in the form of health care reform! Run for the hills! (Or a church, I believe that is actually an understood "safety" in the game of religion.)
The reason why it is so completely frustrating to hear this rhetoric is because we aren't even anywhere near implementing socialized medicine. Not Obama, no one in congress, and zero in the senate are advocating socialized health care. For the record socialized health care is care which is administered and run by the governement through government ran hospitals, doctors offices and government staffed doctors.
But I guess that doesn't really matter for people who are preaching to the choir, or those who only wish to feel better about their opinions by enlisting others to feel the same way through malignant duplicity. They are just silly sound-bites they've memorized and have been perpetuated by certain media outlets to obfuscate the topic.
Moreover, I don't even support Obama's health care reform package. However, I've come to that conclusion based on reasons other than those stated above. I am opposed to the new health care reform because it is a complacent proposal to the current for-profit insurance industry system we have in place now with high overhead costs, unecesarry profits and excessive paperwork for physicians. It does nothing to address the way health care is practiced: the number of primary care physicians v specialists, the prices private practice doctors charge (which are more than other countries), the types and number of expensive services that are used with celerity yet don't always convincingly provide extra benefit, etc.
To me the health care reform debate is an unfortunate example of the political racket conservative and liberals engage in which limits real constructive analysis. This type of propaganda has lead people to believe half-truths about single-payer health insurance, or should I say freedomless, socialized, beaurocratic, wait-line, rationing, in-efficient health care.
- m.tsang




