California Failure of AB 1400 is a win for liberty and health care
“Most of the harm in the world is done by good people,” wrote libertarian
That’s an excerpt from Paterson’s 1943 book, “The God of the Machine.” It’s the start of the chapter titled, “The Humanitarian with the Guillotine.”
Paterson walks the reader through the thought process and method that leads good people, acting on a bad premise, to support policies that lead the world into “periods when millions are slaughtered, when torture is practiced, starvation enforced, oppression made a policy, as at present over a large part of the world, and as it has often been in the past.”
She identifies this motive in “humanitarian” thinking: “The humanitarian wishes to be a prime mover in the lives of others. He cannot admit either the divine or the natural order, by which men have the power to help themselves.”
The humanitarian quickly runs into the problem that “the competent do not need his assistance” and that the majority of people “do not want to be ‘done good’ by the humanitarian.”
That’s what happened in the
AB 1400 would have abolished private health insurance and Medicare in
The author of AB 1400, Assemblymember
But Kalra said the bill was “double digits” short of the 41 votes needed to pass. “I don’t believe it would have served the cause of getting single payer
done by having the vote and having it go down in flames and further alienating members,” he explained to supporters on a Zoom call later that day.
The question to be answered, before the state and the country waste any more time on this proposal, is: Why was it going to go down in flames?
The answer was identified by
But when “the objective is to do good to others as a primary justification of existence,” what exactly is each person supposed to do? “Shall A do what he thinks is good for B, and B do what he thinks is good for A? Or shall A accept only what he thinks is good for B, and vice versa? But that is absurd. Of course what the humanitarian actually proposes is that he shall do what he thinks is good for everybody. It is at this point that the humanitarian sets up the guillotine.”
In a single-payer health care system, the first “guillotine” is the government’s cuts to the payments made to health care providers. We already see this in
The second “guillotine” is the government’s cuts to available services, generally or to specific categories of patients. While not exactly “death panels,” boards of government appointees will decide the standard of care, and since the government is the “single payer,” that’s all you’ll be able to get, no matter where you go, anywhere in the state. We have seen in the COVID-19 pandemic the precise mechanism by which government “guidance” controls what physicians can do for their patients. Some treatments are allowed and others are forbidden. But how are these decisions made? Look up “regulatory capture” sometime, maybe on a rainy night when you’re in the mood for a horror story.
Progressives like to make thunderous statements on the campaign trail that “health care is a human right,” but that’s not true. Health care is a service, and it has to be provided by somebody. There can’t be a “right” to anything that has to be provided by somebody else. How many people will choose to go to medical school if their professional decisions and their income will be completely controlled by the government?
Our society wants and will always have a safety net to provide for the needs of people who can’t provide for themselves. But other people have to pay to provide those goods and services, and what those people need is the freedom to work and to keep most of the fruits of their labor. They don’t need, and shouldn’t vote for, humanitarians with guillotines.
California No-Bid Contract With Kaiser Triggers Concerns
Check your policy: Some insurers already pushing home insurance plans with reduced roof coverage [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News