|
|
||
|
Columns
/ Current
Issue / Goldberg
File / Nota
Bene / Subscribe
/ Ad
Info / Washington
Bulletin / Home
|
||
|
7.11.00 7.10.00 7.10.00 7.06.00 7.06.00 7.05.00 7.05.00 7.05.00 7.03.00 7.03.00 7.03.00 7.03.00 6.30.00 6.29.00 6.29.00
|
||
|
7/10/00
9:00 a.m. By Grace-Marie Arnett, president, Galen Institute, a national health policy organization |
||
|
Throughout her career in Washington and Arkansas, Hillary has proven her enthusiasm for making Big Government even bigger. Now she seeks the opportunity to enact more policies that would wrest money, freedom and personal control from working families and deliver them to politicians in Washington. Nowhere is this more true than in the health care arena. American medicine remains the highest-quality on Earth. But reforms still are badly needed. For example, 3,177,000 New Yorkers lacked health insurance last year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. This number has climbed steadily since Hillary arrived in Washington in 1993. Yet the "Patients' Bill of Rights" she supports would expand government regulation and increase the ranks of uninsured families. She also opposes free-market reforms, such as $3,000 tax credits for uninsured families to buy private health insurance or expanded, tax-free medical savings accounts. Such ideas would leave money in people's hands to invest in the health coverage they desire. Likewise, many New York seniors struggle to purchase prescription drugs. Yet Hillary vigorously opposes giving seniors a choice of drug benefit plans or providing targeted prescription drug assistance to the neediest of seniors. Instead, she advocates slapping Canadian-style price controls on U.S. pharmaceuticals, a dangerous plan that would deny patients the newest drugs and stop the flow of research and development funds to create tomorrow's miracle treatments for cancer and AIDS patients, among others. The question New Yorkers will face this fall is whether they agree with Hillary's cure for the ills that beset our health care system. Try this quiz to see where you stand:
1. If you had political power, would you create a Secret Task Force to redesign the U.S. health care system representing one-seventh of our economy and put doctors and patients under the control of politicians and bureaucrats? If you answered, "yes," to these questions, then you are a true-blue Hillary fan. All of these elements and much more were included in the 1,342-page Health Security Act designed by the First Lady and her 500-member White House task force in 1993. If you answered, "no," to these questions, you should examine Hillary's health record more closely. "When people ask me if I am discouraged about the defeat of health care reform, I say, 'Yes, I was disappointed that we were not able to make more progress,'" Hillary declares on her campaign web site. "But I learned about what is possible in the political environment. I come from the school of smaller steps now." Translation: if she gets her chance, Hillary Rodham Clinton will impose her top-down, Washington-knows-best health plan one step at a time. Are New Yorkers ready to swallow such a bitter pill? |
||
|
|
||
|
|
Columns
/ Current
Issue / Goldberg
File / Nota
Bene |
||
|
National Review 215 Lexington Avenue
New York, New York 10016 212-679-7330 Customer Service: 815-734-1232.
Contact
Us.
|
||