Enough dithering! President Obama says its time to act on health care. I agree.
But act how? Are we really going to be happy with the pussy-footing proposals floating around Congress? All the so-called reformers want to do is tinker with insurance regulations. But how effective would that be, considering that the insurance companies themselves support the changes?
We have taken our eyes off the ball, people. Lets get back to first principles. Obamas premise is that we have a right to health care. A right.
America was founded on the idea of rights inalienable rights. No one can take them away. I assume that when people say that health care is a right, they mean that health care is an inalienable right. Obama apparently agrees. In his speech before Congress he called for free services, such as physical exams, colonoscopies, and mammograms. Free! You have a right to those things.
Well, okay. But why stop at free preventive services? Why not free treatments, free surgery, free drugs, and so on?
We need those things as much as a physical exam. If we have a right to health care and if we are unable to obtain those services, our rights have been denied or violated.
That is something the advocates of health-care reform say we must not tolerate.
Okay, lets not tolerate it. Lets make sure no ones right to health care is violated. Lets get serious for a change.
But how? I can think of only one efficient way to accomplish this. Lets enslave the providers of medical services doctors, nurses, paramedics, dentists, chiropractors, acupuncturists, psychiatrists, and the rest. My proposal may shock people, but I am confident that this feeling will wear off as we think about how logically it flows from the principle that we have a right to health care.
First, let me point out that there is no other good alternative. Any other system designed to deliver health care as a matter of right will have gaps through which the least fortunate inevitably will slip. Isnt that the problem were trying to fix? Obamas approach isnt much better. He wants to force the insurance companies, with taxpayer subsidies if necessary, to insure everyone healthy or sick, young or old at the same price. He might even like a government insurance option, though he cant make up his mind whether or not that is an essential feature of his plan.
Regardless, its a bad plan. Requiring insurance companies to pay for our medical care misses the point.
Where do you think insurance companies get their money?
From us! What kind of right to health care is it if we end up paying for it anyway? Obama means well, but his plan is a shell game.
On the other hand, enslaving the doctors and other providers would have none of the defects of the current system or the leading reform plans. It goes right to the source. We have a right to health care? Fine. Force the doctors to provide it.
Of course, this wouldnt be free. Im no pie-in-the-sky utopian. The doctors and the others would have to be fed, clothed, and housed. Theyd need certain comforts. Thats understood. But it would be far easier to keep a lid on costs by enslaving the providers than by the patchwork system we have now, or would have under Obamas plan.
The biggest problem I can see is that if doctors are going to be our slaves, no one will want to be a doctor.
Most people dont relish the idea of being slaves even in the national interest. Theyre selfish that way.
We certainly cant be a world-class country without doctors and nurses, so I have a solution to this problem:
conscription. President Obama should direct the nations schools to look out for students with an aptitude for biology and direct them into medical studies. Then at the appropriate time, the government should draft those young people into the newly created U.S. Medical Service Corps.
I know what youre thinking: As word of this got around, the best students will play dumb. If that happens, well have no other choice than to pick our doctors by lottery.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman
magazine. Visit his blog Free Association at