The problem is not really that Obamacare is socialized medicine, it plainly is, but rather it's the idea that handing over control of the bulk of the health care system to manifold government bureaucracies will be more efficient or more able to control costs than the present patchwork setup. The evidence for this, to put it mildly, is unconvincing. We are bound to go from a de-facto rationing of care based on ability to pay to a de-jure system of rationing based on one's place in a queue. Furthermore the legislation creates many new agencies that will allegedly work together to make things run smoothly but the inevitable turf battles, melees really considering how many new agencies are being created, bode extremely ill for anything resembling efficiency or effective cost controls. Slowdowns, hangups, high-handedness, overload, politically motivated funding differences, and a host of problems naturally endemic to large bureaucratic enterprises are going to serve mainly as impediments to anything resembling smooth operation of the system and will provide endless lawsuit fodder for the legal profession. Perhaps it should have been called the "Attorney's Full Employment Act of 2009".
That last bit has already started obviously and will only get worse as the new legislation begins to plow headlong through each state's established medical care regimens. States very much like to protect what few pathetic remnants of sovereignty they still enjoy and every single one will find a host of issues that will need to be addressed by court decision as Obamacare is gradually rolled out in it's full grubby majesty. Folks who are hoping that big improvements will follow in the wake of O-care will find their expectations tangled in multiple heavy draperies of years or decades long legal battles. Layering a vast bureaucracy over the top of the existing chaotic medical system is a frightening thing to behold with every little decision held hostage to political infighting and/or the personal whims of every agency head and everyone who works for that agency. This is progress? The big mean old profit-hungry medical firms that allegedly have us in their evil power may raise the ire of the permanently indignant class but after a few years of governmental "improvement" we may be waxing nostalgic over how much more "accessible" things were back in the "good old days" before Obamacare.
That last bit has already started obviously and will only get worse as the new legislation begins to plow headlong through each state's established medical care regimens. States very much like to protect what few pathetic remnants of sovereignty they still enjoy and every single one will find a host of issues that will need to be addressed by court decision as Obamacare is gradually rolled out in it's full grubby majesty. Folks who are hoping that big improvements will follow in the wake of O-care will find their expectations tangled in multiple heavy draperies of years or decades long legal battles. Layering a vast bureaucracy over the top of the existing chaotic medical system is a frightening thing to behold with every little decision held hostage to political infighting and/or the personal whims of every agency head and everyone who works for that agency. This is progress? The big mean old profit-hungry medical firms that allegedly have us in their evil power may raise the ire of the permanently indignant class but after a few years of governmental "improvement" we may be waxing nostalgic over how much more "accessible" things were back in the "good old days" before Obamacare.
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