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Wall Street Weekly | 09/11/2009 11:45 am

Liz Peek: Obama's Mystifying Message

By Liz Peek
© Shutterstock

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 9/7) 

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist and the author of wOw’s SHEconomics.

Here’s one thing that almost all Americans appear to agree on: They want the same health-insurance program that members of Congress have. Good luck with that.

President Obama gave a stirring speech on Wednesday night, his 29th on health care. Americans everywhere were moved by his eloquence. However, many remained completely mystified by his message, including myself. If there is enough fraud and waste in Medicare to fund a good portion of universal coverage, why don’t we tackle it right away? Why do we need legislation to go after lawbreakers? Also – where are these "costs" that we’ll be cutting? Why doesn’t the president offer up one concrete example of what will be eliminated? How can we have "radical reform" but leave everyone’s program just as it is?

Here’s the corker: If the government controls 70% of health care today, and that portion has grown much more rapidly than the private sector (even before prescription benefits kicked in), and the system is cataclysmically broken, does that really lead us to turn over more of the industry to bureaucrats?

President Obama continues to pitch two incompatible proposals. The first is that we need to provide insurance and medical care to an additional 30 million people. The second is that we need to rein in costs. Both of those goals are valid, but who really believes that they can coexist? The notion that his pet program is budget neutral is malarkey, according to the Congressional Budget Office. If you’re skeptical of the CBO – consult the Pete Peterson Foundation, which just published a study saying that the House bill would boost our deficit by $1 trillion in its second decade. Equally idiotic is the prospect that monumental government tampering will please those 84% of Americans who are today happy with their insurance and health care.

What can be done? I think most Americans believe that it is a moral imperative that the needy in this country have access to health care. While the debate has wandered off into a stultifying treatise on insurance, which the administration hopes will bore us into apathy, the real heart of the issue is getting indigent people out of the emergency room and into some alternative health-care situation.

I cannot understand why the administration does not sanction the growing availability of clinics that are being developed by pharmacies like Rite-Aid and big-box stores like Wal-Mart, which offer low-cost care to those with and without insurance. A recent study in the Annals of Internal Medicine concluded that these operations – there are now 1,000 such clinics across the country – provide care just as effectively as the traditional doctor visit, and considerably more cheaply. Why doesn’t Obama reach out to these providers, and offer government support for a rapid expansion of these outlets as well as vouchers (like food stamps) for those unable to pay? Who do we think will be more efficient – Wal-Mart or Washington?

As to providing affordable insurance for everyone, this can be accomplished by allowing insurers to compete across state lines, and by providing subsidies for high-risk pools. This could be mandated by Congress overnight. Yes, some states will howl over lost fees. Better some unhappy state regulators than upsetting the majority of Americans who will ultimately see their insurance subsumed into a giant government bog.

And how about seriously tackling the exorbitant cost of so-called "defensive medicine" practiced by those fearful of lawsuits? The president, to his credit, actually alluded to this issue in his address – a first for a Democrat to my knowledge. (Mentioning tort reform out loud is to Democrats like whispering "Voldemort" to Harry Potter.) This is a serious problem, accounting for as much as 20% of our health-care outlays. Since trial lawyers vehemently oppose any caps on awards, and since they spend millions supporting Democrats each year, I have little expectation on this front.

443 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Kristy B
I was watching Rick Sanchez on CNN, and he stated $375,000,000 has been spent by companies trying to influence health care reform.  Now what is wrong with that picture?  Those senators are always thinking about the best interest of the people :).  As far Joe Wilson, I heard that he "chastised" Strom Thurmond’s biracial daughter for stating who she is even though Thurmond’s family knew about her.  Thurmond even supported her financially while she was young.
By Kristy B on 09/11/2009 5:23 pm
F P

Here’s an interesting tidbit about Joe Wilson:  he voted to give money for health care to illegals:

http://www.opencongress.org/articles/view/1219-Joe-Wilson-Voted-to-Provi…

 Another political hypocrit. 

By F P on 09/11/2009 4:56 pm
Kristy B
LOL!!  he was probably voting with his party
By Kristy B on 09/11/2009 4:59 pm
rocky rocky
No one should die because they cannot afford health care, and no one should go broke because they get sick. 
By rocky rocky on 09/11/2009 5:17 pm
F P
Exactly and that’s it in a nutshell.
By F P on 09/11/2009 5:19 pm
Kristy B
So many people feel the way that you do, but it seems like all we hear are those who don’t want all of our citizens to have health care.
By Kristy B on 09/11/2009 5:26 pm
macwoof woof
Somebody is playing in the sludge and this column by Liz Peek isn’t worthy of comment.
By macwoof woof on 09/11/2009 5:26 pm
Dona Howlett

In my opinion…………..Liz Peek (as the kids say) SUCKS BIG TIME.

By Dona Howlett on 09/11/2009 8:29 pm
Mahulda Fite

When you have almost 90% of the people happy with their current health care and insurance, you don’t have a "crisis". If the system was broken, no one would have adequate health care and this country would not have the state of the art medical treatment that it does.

All of a sudden—2 months, Obama reduced the number of uninsured from 47 mil to 30 in his speeches—I guess we don’t need legislation since he apparently solved the problem for 17 mil individuals. If the problem is the "uninsured" and "costs" then deal with that, don’t change the system that apparently is OK for 90%. There are solutions that don’t require legislation that could be immediately addressed—like Liz outlined. But the truth is that is not what this "health care legislation" is about, it is clearly an attempt at the usurpation of our liberties. Those who fail to see this, will unfortunately see it when it is too late to do anything about it.

By Mahulda Fite on 09/11/2009 5:52 pm
Kris Merrill
I heard the speech, I read the speech and I support Obama and his efforts. 
By Kris Merrill on 09/11/2009 6:53 pm
elle vee
Thank you Wilson for saying what the majority of Americans are thinking.
By elle vee on 09/11/2009 7:06 pm
macwoof woof
there ya go again libra, diamond, gator girl… wishing it was so doesn’t make it true. keep clicking your heels or blowin’ that fairy dust cause it is a long fall ya got ahead of you.
By macwoof woof on 09/11/2009 7:22 pm
F P
Well I’ll comment—way to go! You are sooo right.
By F P on 09/11/2009 8:06 pm
Dona Howlett

elle vee

If the majority of Americans think like Wilson why isn’t a Republican sitting in

the White house as President.

By Dona Howlett on 09/11/2009 8:31 pm
elle vee

Dona

Health care is the issue here, not the election.

By elle vee on 09/11/2009 9:13 pm