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| Say NO to Socialized Medicine |
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| Get Involved |
| Written by Paul Smith |
| Wednesday, 23 March 2011 11:31 |
Say NO to Socialized Medicine“Like it or not ... socialized medicine may well be on its way to America.” Politicians continue to use a phony humanitarianism as a pretext for a cynical socialist power grab — government control of American health care. The organized international campaign to have the governments of the world take charge of health care dates back to the first half of the last century. See this incisive 1950 editorial in the Boston Herald warning of the danger for America. America did not become a beacon of hope to the world because of paternalistic government, but because government got out of the way and let the people produce and keep the fruits of their labors. The American health care system does need reform — real reform of getting the federal government out of the system. The Constitution does not authorize any federal involvement in health care and for good reason. Taking care of our medical needs is not why the Founders proposed a strictly limited federal government. Moreover, more federal involvement would mean less quality and greater costs. We do not need the federal government to manage our doctors and authorize treatments. Nations with universal government-sponsored health care necessarily offer poor service. America does not need overworked, underpaid doctors dispensing aspirin and long waiting lines for important medical procedures. Activities/Resources
Additional BackgroundExcellent background reading documenting the subversive origins and agenda of the drive for national compulsory health insurance is contained in two books: Edward Annis, M.D. (Past President, A.M.A.) Code Blue: Health Care in Crisis. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Gateway, 1993. Marjorie Shearon. Wilbur J. Cohen: The Pursuit of Power, A Bureaucratic Biography. Washington, D.C.: Gray Printing Company, 1967. In Code Blue, Dr. Annis recounts from firsthand experience the battles to prevent socialized medicine. Code Blue also tells very credibly how fringe groups garnered mainstream acceptance for this federal power grab using the Fabian Socialist strategies of permeation and gradualism. Very readable. Marjorie Shearon witnessed the subversive agitation for socialized medicine from within the Executive Branch while she worked as a researcher in the Public Health Service. In 1945, she went to work for Senator Robert A. Taft (R-Ohio) "for the express purpose of helping him to defeat national compulsory health insurance." In 1961, she was the sole opposition witness against Wilbur J. Cohen at his Senate confirmation hearings on his nomination as Assistant H.E.W. Secretary. As Shearon documents in her book, Cohen was instrumental in misleading the Congress into adopting Medicare. Comparatively dry reading, but an incredible story filled with invaluable history of the subversion that explains the continuing drive for socialized medicine.(Campaign launched August 2009) |





