http://www.jewishworldreview.com/1013/steyn.php3****

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Oct. 28, 2013/ 24 Mar-Cheshvan, 5774 ****

*This is way cooler than the decline and fall of the Roman Empire *****

By Mark Steyn ****

If you’re looking for an epitaph for the republic (and these days, who
isn’t?) try this – from August 2010 and TechCrunch’s delirious preview of
healthcare.gov:****

“We were working in a very very nimble hyper-consumer-focused way,”
explained Todd Park, the Chief Technology Officer of the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, “all fused in this kind of maelstrom of pizza,
Mountain Dew and all-nighters … and, you know, idealism. That kind of led
to the magic that was produced.”****

Wow. Think of the magic that Madison, Hamilton, and the rest of those
schlubs could have produced if they’d only had pizza and Mountain Dew and
been willing to pull a few all-nighters at Philadelphia in 1787. Somewhere
between the idealism and the curling slice of last night’s pepperoni, Macon
Phillips, the administration’s Director of New Media, happened to come
across a Tweet by Edward Mullen of Jersey City in which he Twitpicced his
design for what a health-insurance exchange could look like. So Phillips
printed it out to show his fellow administration officials: “Look, this is
the sort of creativity that is out there,” he said. “One thing led to
another, and he left Jersey City to come to D.C. and helped push us through
an information architectural process.”****

Don’t you just love it! This is way cooler than the decline and fall of the
Roman Empire: The only “architectural process” they had was crumbling
viaducts. I think we can all agree that Barack Obama is hipper than all
other government leaders anywhere, ever, combined. Unfortunately, the dogs
bark and the pizza-delivery bike moves on, and, in the cold grey morning
after of the grease-stained cardboard box with the rubberized cheese stuck
to it, Obamacare wound up somewhat less hipper and, in fact, not even HIPAA
– the unpersuasively groovy acronym for federally mandated medical privacy
in America. Appearing before Congress on Thursday, the magicians of
Obamacare eventually conceded that, on their supposedly HIPAA-compliant
database, deep in the “information architectural process” is a
teensy-weensy little bit of “source code” that reads, “You have no
reasonable expectation of privacy regarding any communication of any data
transmitted or stored on this information system.”****

Democrat members of the House committee professed to be bewildered at why
anyone would be either surprised or upset to discover that his information
can be shared with anyone in the federal government, including a corrupt
and diseased IRS that uses what confidential information it can acquire to
torment perceived ideological enemies. And, at a certain level, the more
blasé of the people’s representatives, such as New Jersey’s Frank Pallone,
have a point: if Obama thinks nothing of tapping Angela Merkel’s cellphone
(as she had cause to complain to him Wednesday, in what was said to be a
“cool” conversation, and not in the hepcat sense), why would he extend any
greater privacy rights to your Auntie Mabel?****

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Incidentally, do you think we need a congressional oversight committee to
look into the effectiveness of congressional oversight committees? Every
time I’m stuck at Gate 37 and glance up at the 24/7 Wolf Blitzer channel,
there’s somebody testifying about something: Benghazi … Lois Lerner …
Obamacare … No one gets fired, no agency gets closed, nothing changes.****

The witness who coughed up the intriguing tidbit about Obamacare’s
exemption from privacy protections was one Cheryl Campbell of something
called CGI. This rang a vague bell with me. CGI is not a creative free
spirit from Jersey City with an impressive mastery of Twitter, but a
Canadian corporate behemoth. Indeed, CGI is so Canadian, their name is
French: *Conseillers en Gestion et Informatique*. Their most famous
government project was for the Canadian Firearms Registry. The registry was
estimated to cost in total $119 million, which would be offset by $117
million in fees. That’s a net cost of $2 million. Instead, by 2004 the CBC
(Canada’s PBS) was reporting costs of some $2 billion – or a thousand times
more expensive.****

Yeah, yeah, I know, we’ve all had bathroom remodelers like that. But in
this case the database had to register some 7 million long guns belonging
to some 2.5 million to 3 million Canadians. That works out to almost $300
per gun – or somewhat higher than the original estimate for processing a
firearm registration of $4.60. Of those $300 gun registrations, Canada’s
Auditor-General reported to Parliament that much of the information was
either duplicated or wrong in respect to basic information such as names
and addresses.****

Sound familiar?****

Also, there was a 1-800 number, but it wasn’t any use.****

Sound familiar?****

So it was decided that the sclerotic database needed to be improved.****

Sound familiar?****

But it proved impossible to “improve” CFIS (the Canadian Firearms
Information System). So CGI was hired to create an entirely new CFIS II,
which would operate alongside CFIS I until the old system could be
scrapped. CFIS II was supposed to go operational on Jan. 9, 2003, but the
January date got postponed to June, and 2003 to 2004, and $81 million was
thrown at it before a new Conservative government scrapped the fiasco in
2007. Last year, the Government of Ontario canceled another CGI registry
that never saw the light of day – just for one disease, diabetes, and
costing a mere $46 million.****

But there’s always America! “We continue to view U.S. Federal Government as
a significant growth opportunity,” declared CGI’s chief exec, in what would
also make a fine epitaph for the republic. Pizza and Mountain Dew isn’t
very Montreal, and, on the evidence of three years of missed deadlines in
Ontario and the four-year overrun on the firearms database, CGI don’t sound
like they’re pulling that many all-nighters. Was the Government of the
United States aware that CGI had been fired by the Government of Canada and
the Government of Ontario (and the Government of New Brunswick)? Nobody’s
saying. But I doubt it would make much difference. Asked by Mother Jones to
explain why Obama the candidate uses the Internet so effectively but Obama
the government is a bust, his 2008 tech maestro, Clay Johnson, put it this
way: “The first person that you need in order to start a web company would
be a web developer; the first person you need to start a government
contracting firm is an attorney.” The problem with Obamacare isn’t the
website design, it’s the nature of government procurement in an
unaccountable bureaucracy serving 300 million people.****

Despite the best efforts of President Obama and doting Tweeters in Jersey
City, government isn’t groovy. The standard rap on Obamacare is that it’s
turned America’s health system into the DMV. If only. I had cause to go to
the DMV in Twin Mountain, New Hampshire, the other day. In and out in 10
minutes. Modest accommodations, a little down-at-heel, nothing cool about
it at all. But it worked just fine. Friendly chap, no complaints.
Government can do that at the town level, county level, even (more
sparingly) at the state level.****

But a national medical regime for 300 million people? Not in a First World
country. And, when you’re mad enough to try it, the failure is not the
insignificant enrollment numbers, but the vaporization of the existing
health plans of 119,000 Pennsylvanians, 160,000 Californians, 300,000
Floridians, 800,000 in that tech Tweeter’s New Jersey. That’s the magic
that happens when you disdain the limits of prosaic, humdrum,
just-about-functioning government. Perhaps things will get so bad the
coolest president ever will no longer seem quite so hip. But, alas, you’ll
have to wait three years for a hip replacement. That’s government health
care for you.****

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