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Mama Can't Find a Doctor, and Other Fallout From New Democratic Legislation
· Friday, July 23, 2010
Lately, even the most elite in media have started to report some of the intended and unintended consequences of the rushed and ill-conceived federal health care bill passed earlier this year by the Barack Obama administration and the Democrat-controlled Congress.
And I've had my first eye-opener. Like everyone of their generation, my parents automatically qualify for Medicare. Soon after the new health care bill passed, their personal physician retired. When they set about looking for a new one, they kept hearing the same refrain: "We are no longer accepting new patients."
Why? Because while Congress fashioned a massive -- and massively expensive -- new health care program, they have also allowed Medicare reimbursements to physicians to be reduced. Many seniors have physicians who are their contemporaries because they've been under their care for many years. As these older physicians retire, their patients are scrambling to find replacements. They're encountering "do not apply" signs on the doors of medical facilities.
Now that's change you can believe in.
Next comes the unfolding realization that the new law is stocked with all sorts of little gems that are destined to make life harder for the young and those still working. For example, many small businesses already dread the annual task of creating 1099 tax forms for those individual contractors they pay each year for goods and services. Apparently they now also will be required to issue similar forms to every corporation, vendor or other party they pay during the taxable year.
As interpreted by many, the new law suggests the need for, say, a local hardware store to search out the tax identification number of huge corporations they pay for products or services. If this interpretation of the law is correct, and it's truly enforced, business in America will be ground to a halt by a cascade of paperwork.
Also in the coming months, all types of entities touched by the new financial reform laws will suddenly learn that they are required to comply with new bureaucratic rules related to the ethnicity, or other demographic profiles, of their employees. Maybe this is well-intended, but once again the burden of compliance will be staggering.
There's more. Under the guise of a "watered down" climate bill, there could soon be plenty of opportunities to add even more costs to American businesses. Ultimately, those costs will be passed on to consumers, of course.
Take the example of the possible ramifications of requiring energy companies to generate specific percentages of their total energy output from wind, solar and other non-traditional sources. The goals being put forth are unattainable, and the inefficiencies and high costs of trying to reach them anyway will only result in higher energy bills for all. And government subsidies to support these new energy sources will mean tax dollars being wasted.
There has been a mad rush to pass all these half-baked pieces of legislation. Now, as the devilish details start to emerge, it's becoming clear that these new laws will have a huge impact on the lives of millions of Americans.
The past provides examples of how poorly designed legislation can eventually lead to sad results. Recall that lovely deal cut by congressional Republicans when they passed the "Bush tax cuts."
In a compromise effort designed to gain passage of the cuts, the GOP agreed to sunset them in 2010. They even went so far as to gradually reduce the so-called death tax to virtually nothing in the year 2010, only to allow it to revert to its punitive original percentages in 2011.
So not only does it stand to reason that mama and daddy can't find a physician. It also stands to reason that their kids might not want them to find one, thanks to the onerous "death tax" penalties if those parents live beyond this year! (Yes, I'm kidding, but this shows a perversity of the coming tax laws.)
This demonstrates that the Republicans of the Bush years could pass legislation just as stupid as anything that's been passed by Democrats this year.
But there's a difference. The GOP passed bad laws out of sloppiness, and from the presumption that they would remain in power for the foreseeable future. The legislation emerging from the current Congress and the Obama administration apparently has a different motive. The Democrats seem less concerned with keeping power in the long run and more concerned about altering every feature of the economic landscape before the nation wakes up to the realization that we have been buried under an avalanche of paper, forced to look for physicians that aren't available or are just plain out of business.
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Marcus
No accidents or sloppiness with this legislation. It's filled with teats for lawyers to milk from. When people wake and smell the manure coming from the congressional halls and realize how they have been duped by these sleazy slimball legal scheisters, I can only hope lawyers get the come uppance they deserve in the grandest of revolutionary style. Smart sleazy lawyers with thousands of bureaucratic dullards at their command, some with guns, to impose this new American order on us? Does that not make your blood run cold?
Posted July 23, 2010 at 10:49:29 AM
SMMallon
I am one of those who bailed out of medicine, after 40 years as a Medical School Professor, when the details of the ObamaCare law emerged. Applications for admission to Med Schools are down 20%. Residencies, the same. More of this to come, so good luck America finding quality care.
Posted July 23, 2010 at 12:00:43 PM
Alex Torello
American tax paying citizens may be forced to react to the mountains of paperwork and regulations the way unions reacted to perceived injustices--STRIKE.
What if a good percentage of citizens and business owners just ignored the burdensome rules and went about their business as if nothing has happened?
It certainly beats armed insurrection!
Posted July 23, 2010 at 5:37:41 PM
terry goodwin
RE: Alex.
I have been saying this for two years. STRIKE!
Having been a member of two unions, I know that a strike is not for now, it's for the next time you negotiate. I went on strike in 1977 for .10 cents an hour raise. That strike lasted for two months.
I know I lost alot of money but when the next contract came up we had negotiating power, it also hurt the employers. We then achieved livable raises, so it works. You have to give up something in order to maintaine something. Same with the current situation we have now, only this is national, not local. STRIKE now and it will change. STRIKE now and you will better youself in the future.
Posted July 24, 2010 at 10:23:23 AM
Margi Wallo
To add a high note to this conversation, I would like to remind everyone that the death rate goes down when doctors go on strike. This, I remember from decades ago, sorry. But I remember it well. We are a great nation, and a prosperous one, that has lost responsibility. We eat ourselves sick, and then, we go to a "doctor" and expect to get well with a pill. The fact is, that every pill has side effects and makes us sicker and more dependent on that schema. I think it's great that there will be a dearth of doctors, and fewer pill pushers. The big pharma companies that have bank-rolled the new deal health bill will find that when people who can't find doctors need to study what to do to get well themselves, for free, they will find fewer suckers to buy their dope, no matter how many billions they spend on tv to brainwash people. What goes around, comes around. My dad, who eschewed health care all his life,died peacefully at home in his bed without pain or painkillers in his mid 80's, as did my mom. My dad's really rich friend, who could afford the best of doctors died an agonizing death at their hand, having taken all they would dish him, a decade or more younger.
Posted July 26, 2010 at 12:49:36 PM