Ryan is a snake in the grass a globalist shill and operative

On Mar 26, 2017 8:38 AM, "MJ" <[email protected]> wrote:


"The answer is it is already happening because of the market.
"Increasingly, doctors are abandoning the broken insurance model and
claiming their own independence by offering direct patient care. As
<http://www.businessinsider.com/direct-primary-care-a-no-insurance-healthcare-model-2017-3>*Business
Insider* profiled recently,
<http://www.businessinsider.com/direct-primary-care-a-no-insurance-healthcare-model-2017-3>
around 1,000 doctors (and counting) are moving toward charging patients a
monthly membership fee for service and then patients pay *a la carte* for
the services they actually need. This allows clinics to eliminate most of
the administrative costs and it restores the relationship between doctor
and patient that has been undermined by a century of government intervention
<https://mises.org/library/100-years-governments-managed-health-care>. For
more specialized care, clinics such as The Surgery Center of Oklahoma
<http://time.com/4649914/why-the-doctor-takes-only-cash/>, also use a
cash-for-service business model without the monthly fee.
"Given that this is happening naturally on the market already, the
legislative focus for those in Washington concerned about American
healthcare should be preventing any future laws and regulations that would
destroy this model going forward."

03/23/2017

*Ryancare is Failing ­ What Should Happen Next? *Tho Bishop

The beltway Republicans are scrambling now that it seems the Obamacare
replacement package put forward for Paul Ryan and endorsed by Donald Trump
can’t get enough support to get through the House. The failure of the
American Health Care Act should surprise no one, as it is a piece of
legislation that managed to please no one. The Freedom Caucus, made up of
the “true believers” of the Tea Party, balked at its similarities to
Obamacare <https://mises.org/blog/obamacare-repeal-or-obamacare-20>, while
more moderate members found the bill’s modest change to the ACA too radical
for their tastes.

While the failure of the Ryan/Trump/Whatevercare represents a political
defeat for the president and GOP leadership, it is probably a net-win for
those who oppose socialized healthcare. After all, nothing could be more
beneficial to the Bernie Sanders-wing of the Democratic party than for the
nominally “free market” Republicans passing its own brand of reform that fails
to fix America's insurance market
<https://mises.org/blog/what-republicans-miss-about-healthcare-reform>.
Much like the 2008 financial crisis, its collapse would absurdly be seen as
a defeat for “capitalism” and be used as justification for even more
government control.

The unfortunate reality going forward is that more significant approaches
to healthcare reform, such as the bill pushed by Senator Rand Paul and his
allies in the House, are unlikely to find enough support in the Senate.
Further, considering the way the media portrayed the Congressional Budget
Office’s analysis of the ACHA, which noted that 14 million consumers may no
longer purchase healthcare without an individual mandate and therefore are
“losing coverage,”
<http://www.cnbc.com/2017/03/13/cbo-says-millions-lose-health-insurance-under-gop-obamacare-replacement.html>
any healthcare plan that comes close to pricing real healthcare risks (like
properly accounting for the costs of those with pre-existing conditions)
will be skewered relentlessly. This is all before even addressing the
problems caused by Medicare and Medicaid.

This is precisely why attempts to push grand “free market” reforms
<https://www.forbes.com/sites/peterferrara/2011/04/07/how-george-w-bush-lost-personal-accounts-for-social-security/>
in the Federal government end in failure. Few politicians in DC have the
economic lens required to appreciate how necessary these tough decisions
are, so Federal politics simply becomes a race to see which party can buy
more votes than the other
<https://mises.org/library/how-government-buys-your-support>.

Given this grave reality, is there anything that can be done to improve
American healthcare?

The answer is it is already happening because of the market.

Increasingly, doctors are abandoning the broken insurance model and
claiming their own independence by offering direct patient care. As
<http://www.businessinsider.com/direct-primary-care-a-no-insurance-healthcare-model-2017-3>*Business
Insider* profiled recently,
<http://www.businessinsider.com/direct-primary-care-a-no-insurance-healthcare-model-2017-3>
around 1,000 doctors (and counting) are moving toward charging patients a
monthly membership fee for service and then patients pay *a la carte* for
the services they actually need. This allows clinics to eliminate most of
the administrative costs and it restores the relationship between doctor
and patient that has been undermined by a century of government intervention
<https://mises.org/library/100-years-governments-managed-health-care>. For
more specialized care, clinics such as The Surgery Center of Oklahoma
<http://time.com/4649914/why-the-doctor-takes-only-cash/>, also use a
cash-for-service business model without the monthly fee.

Given that this is happening naturally on the market already, the
legislative focus for those in Washington concerned about American
healthcare should be preventing any future laws and regulations that would
destroy this model going forward. Further, rather than trying to completely
overhaul Obamacare, simply eliminating the individual mandate tax and
allowing Health Savings Accounts to be used for healthcare membership would
be subtle ways of empowering the market to revolutionize American medicine.
This should be coupled with real tax cuts, not “ revenue neutral reform
<https://mises.org/blog/beware-revenue-neutral-tax-reform>” to help
Americans keep their own hard-earned money to help pay for it.

Steps can also be taken on the state level to further empower medical
professionals. For example, expanding the abilities of medical
practitioners would help mitigate doctor shortages. Reforms to medical
licensing ­ such as recognizing the real-world experience of military
trained medics ­ would also make it easier for skilled individuals to enter
the market.

This more modest approach to healthcare reform shouldn’t be seen as a
defense of Obamacare or the status quo. It’s not. Obamacare was a
deplorable piece of legislation, designed by people who were either utterly
delusional or intentionally crafting a framework that would fail
<https://mises.org/library/economics-obamacare>. In a just world, everyone
who played a hand in crafting it should be forever stuck with the fruits of
their labor for their own personal care.

Yet we can’t be blind to the realities of modern politics ­ Washington is
dominated by progressive ideology in both parties
<https://mises.org/blog/progressives-left-and-right>. While the long-term
solution to this has to be political decentralization
<https://mises.org/blog/deist-we-have-decentralize>, in the short term we
can settle by defending the ability of markets to compete along side
government regulated disasters. This was how Ron Paul sought to destroy the
Fed <https://mises.org/blog/case-against-fed-reform-0>, it’s how
homeschooling parents are able to free their children from public education
<https://mises.org/library/praise-homeschools>, it’s how Patrick Byrne
plans to undermine government cronies on Wall Street
<https://mises.org/library/future-decentralized-0>.

As the Soviet Union was collapsing, Murray Rothbard wrote a paper outlining how
to desocialize an economy
<https://mises.org/library/how-and-how-not-desocialize>. Gradual reform
would fail, he noted, because “the giant socialist bureaucracy will only
seize upon such delay to obstruct the goal altogether.” Instead, he
advocated prioritizing the protection and normalization of already
established black markets.

America doesn’t yet have completely socialized medicine, but the same
approach is true here. As long as we preserve the functioning markets that
currently exist, and allow them to grow, Americans can maintain hope for a
functioning healthcare system in the future.

The same cannot be said for Washington politics.

https://mises.org/blog/ryancare-failing-%E2%80%94-what-should-happen-next

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