December 26, 2009

Whole Foods, Obamacare, the left, etc...

Bleagh -- knowing what I am up against just makes me sad for this nation... From William M. Briggs:
It�s not to late to avoid the worst�reconciliation coming; Or, What does Whole Foods have to do with health care?
It�s not too late to prevent the worst in health care. The Senate bill must still be force-fit to the House bill during reconciliation. We still have time to discuss what requiring a new health tax means. The opportunity to sway our masters, at least a little, still exists.

Time might be out for Whole Food�s chief John Mackey, however, who earlier this year wrote an editorial for the Wall Street Journal in which he quoted Margret Thatcher: �The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people�s money.�

The result: an 8.4 on the Richter scale of quaking and shaking and sputtering from the left. Cries of �How could he!� echoed from blog to blog. Bitter tears! Condemnation! The assumption of the wounded was that any man who would sell expensive carrots must have been a socialist, just as they were.

No attempt was made, incidentally, by the weeping minority to refute the Iron Lady�s quip, for the simple logical reason that you cannot prove invalid what is true. The left were incensed merely because Mackey had the gall to say publicly what he did.

Judas himself did not get as much heat from his Christian brethren as Mackey took from the socialists. A boycott of Whole Foods was on!

An internet site sprang forth: WholeBoycott.com. Their tag line is �Whole Foods CEO, John Mackey, says healthcare is NOT a right and used his corporate bully pulpit to spread insurance industry lies. Join other shoppers who will not spend dollars supporting Mackey�s right wing agenda.�

The hilarity of that statement is undoubtedly unintentional. The �right wing agenda� of which they speak means, as judging by Mackey�s actions, to provide health insurance to your employees, and supply them with flexible �health dollars� on top of the insurance.

Mackey also wanted to, e.g. �Repeal all state laws which prevent insurance companies from competing across state lines�, and �Make costs transparent so that consumers understand what health-care treatments cost�. Gosh darn Republicans and their gosh darn right wing agendas!

The effect of the boycott�maybe�was to force Mackey to remit his title of �chairman.� He is still CEO, still on the board, presumably still has his shares, and will likely continue charging very large piles of lettuce for very small piles of�but you don�t really want that joke to end, do you?

The Whole Foods fiasco is important because it illustrates the mistakes in thinking, false assumptions, and incorrect conclusions of the health care debate. The meat of the entire thing is in that one mystical word: right.

It is a lovely word, but it is only one side of a coin. Socialists always assume its flip side, responsibility, can be ignored, or can be assumed to mean one fixed thing�exactly what Thatcher said: the responsibility for anything is on whoever has more money. Which is what makes socialism a self-limiting (and painful) disease. The money always runs out.

You cannot have a right without creating a responsibility, just as you cannot have a coin which only has one side. This is why we will have a discussion in the coming week over what responsibilities are implied in the �right� that socialists are claiming.

We can dispense with some arguments from the boycott site immediately. The site is, I think, a fair representative of socialist thinking. The link brings you to a page written by a �PhD� (!), who believes he has rebutted Mackey�s common sense approach.

�Healthcare IS a right in other countries� can be answered with, If all those other countries jumped off a cliff, would you, too?

�Does health reform mean a �government take-over?� Ridiculous question but NO!� But YES! as they admit in their next breath, when they say, �Free markets do not work without rules and an independent arbiter.� The arbiter, the ruler, that is, will be the government. The assumption is that an arbiter is necessary. This assumption is false generally.

�Repealing mandates on what insurance must cover & state laws which prevent insurance companies from competing across state lines�will leave some consumers vulnerable.� Even if this is true, it is not an argument for the �right� which they claim. The buried assumption that �consumers� should be cared for and coddled is in there, of course, but that is another claim that is not true generally.

�Health Savings Accounts � Why they don�t work.� They do in fact �work�, if by �work� we mean they pay (at least some, or even all) of the expenses for care. It is only true that these accounts to not bring health to everybody. But no system can.

There are several other points, but they are marginal and involve only the particulars of certain plans, and do nothing to answer the central question: Why do people have a �right� to health insurance?
Too good to excerpt -- swiped in toto. William's blog is a great read and will be added to the blogroll at its next revision. Posted by DaveH at December 26, 2009 10:39 PM
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