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I’ve always been a big fan of Mr. Wow. When it comes to personal finance, he’s playing 4D chess while I’m playing checkers. And when it comes to the issue of healthcare, he’s playing 4D chess as well. The few times I’ve talked to him about the issue, he really opened my eyes to the inadequacies of my free-market, laissez-faire policy preferences.

But when it comes to healthcare, I’m not playing checkers either. In other words, I have some legitimate fears about full-blown socialized healthcare, and those fears need to be addressed if we want to live in a free and prosperous country.

Anyway, for the longest time, I wanted to challenge Mr. Wow’s fondness for full-blown socialized healthcare, but I never found the motivation to do so. Then I visited Mr. Wow’s Twitter account last week and my piercing blue eyes landed upon these gut-wrenching tweets:


Now, Mr. Wow’s description of our healthcare system is unquestionably crude—and is hardly becoming of his first-rate mind—but it’s nonetheless true. Our healthcare system is indeed “beyond fucked.” And though I would caution Mr. Wow and other fans of full-blown socialized healthcare that full-blown socialized healthcare is just as inept as ours when it comes to dealing with extreme medical cases like the one highlighted in the above tweets (see here, here, and here), I readily concede that our healthcare system needs a major overhaul. And that’s what I want to address with this post and the next post.

Yep, Mr. Wow has finally roused me to action. There are far too many Liza Scotts in America, and there’s no reason why we can’t craft a healthcare system that is much more humane—and much more affordable. But in order to do that, we first have to dispense with all the rancor and emotion. There are no villains in this lamentable situation. Both sides, whether they approach healthcare with a free-market mindset (me) or a statist mindset (Mr. Wow), have legitimate fears and legitimate means to address those fears. What we have to do, then, is craft a system that respects both sides. And this begins by listing each side’s foremost concerns. Here we go.

Mr. Wow’s Legitimate Fears

Mr. Wow knows personally just how “beyond fucked” our healthcare system is. Some years ago he got hit by a car while bicycling to work. Thankfully, his injuries were minor—just some scrapes and bruises and a mild concussion. But it took him over a year of hell to untangle the jumbled mess of kafkaesque medical bills he received. And he had “excellent” healthcare insurance…and a first-rate mind…and an implacable spirit.

If you wanted to design a healthcare system that rained financial terror upon the humble and the mighty alike, you couldn’t design a healthcare system better than ours. And our healthcare system rains financial terror upon the humble and the mighty alike in three primary ways:

The Cloud of Uncertainty

Imagine you go to your neighborhood car service center for an oil change and no one knows what an oil change costs. You have to call its billing department. Anyway, you call its billing department and a billing rep tells you an oil change is going to cost $35. Fine. You get the oil change and await your bill. One month later, the bill comes and it’s $35. But then ten months after that, another bill arrives. It seems a master mechanic did your oil change and he used synthetic oil. Your oil change wasn’t $35, it was $135, and you now owe the car service center an additional $100.

The insane scenario described above is all too common in the healthcare industry. Doctors and nurses have no idea what anything costs. In order to know what a procedure, surgery, or drug is going to cost you, you have to wrangle the appropriate billing codes out of your provider’s billing department and then relay those codes to your healthcare insurer (if you have one). But even then your healthcare insurer can’t guarantee anything. Go in for a colonoscopy and your in-network doctor happens to be using an out-of-network anesthesiologist that day, and your $2,500 colonoscopy suddenly becomes a $7,500 colonoscopy and you owe the difference.

Price uncertainty is a major problem in our healthcare system, and I completely understand why Mr. Wow and millions of other Americans want to eliminate this nonsense and institute full-blown socialized healthcare. Let one byzantine behemoth (i.e., the federal government) duke it out with another byzantine behemoth (i.e., the healthcare industry) and leave the common man and woman alone.

The Ever-Present Threat of Bankruptcy

Some years ago there was a reality tv show called Downsized that followed the Bruces—an Arizona family that got wiped out financially by the housing crash of 2008-09. And I’ll never forget episode two of season two. In this episode, Rex, one of the Bruce children, had an asthma attack and had to be rushed to an emergency room. He was stabilized and remained overnight. And from what I could gather, the doctors first gave him a drug that cleared out his airways, and then they put him on oxygen. The bill for this seemingly ordinary care? An astounding $20,000—and if my memory is correct, the Bruces were on the hook for all of it because their healthcare insurer was refusing to pay (the emergency room may have been “out of network” or the care wasn’t “pre-authorized”).

That same level of care would have probably cost the Bruces $200 had they been vacationing in Mexico when Rex had his asthma attack. I mean, c’mon. How much do an asthma drug and a canister of oxygen cost? Our healthcare system thus hurls two heaping handfuls of monkey-poop at the beleaguered patient: doctors and nurses don’t know what anything costs and any medical intervention—whether invasive and prolonged or trivial and brief—has a serious threat of bankruptcy attached to it.

Again, I completely understand why Mr. Wow and millions of other Americans want full-blown socialized healthcare. That Americans can be bankrupted by an ambulance ride, a generic drug, or a minor medical intervention is insane.

Healthcare Insurance that Prices Out All but the Rich

In the below table, I compare my current healthcare insurance costs to what my healthcare insurance costs would be if I decided to move to Mexico.

CountryAnnual PremiumDeductible
US$7,764 ($647 Per Month)$7,000
Mexico$1,700 ($142 Per Month)$5,000

And it should be pointed out that I’m extremely healthy. I don’t take any medications, and I haven’t suffered a serious illness since I had pneumonia in the second grade. In fact, I can’t remember the last time I saw a healthcare professional for anything other than a wellness exam.

Now imagine that I’m not extremely healthy. I suffer from type 2 diabetes. How quickly would I rip through my $7,000 deductible? And how much would my annual premium be if I decided to forego a high-deductible plan?

Not surprisingly, the cost of healthcare insurance in America is insane because the cost of healthcare in America is insane. And there’s no way the typical American outside the employer-provided healthcare ecosystem can shoulder the burden of healthcare insurance. Absent Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, and Obamacare, 148 million Americans would be—in the words of Mr. Wow—”beyond fucked.” They might be able to afford healthcare insurance if the monthly premium for an individual were $142 per month (à la Mexico). But in order for the monthly premium to be that low, the deductible would probably need to be around $15,000.

Healthcare insurance that can only be affordable when coupled with a monstrous deductible ain’t healthcare insurance—at least not in a country where a large swath of the citizenry doesn’t have the savings to handle a $400 emergency. So can I really fault Mr. Wow and millions of other Americans for wanting full-blown socialized healthcare when the alternative free-market “solution”—affordable insurance premiums with unaffordable deductibles—is a cruel joke?

My Legitimate Fears

If all you want out of life is to eat, sleep, watch Netflix, and rut, freedom isn’t a paramount concern. Those base desires can be satisfied in any political environment—even in a wretched, totalitarian state such as North Korea. But if you want more out of life—that is, if you want to speak your mind, challenge the status quo, and pursue your god-given talents to the greatest extent possible, freedom is pretty damn important. And that’s why I’m instinctively repulsed by full-blown socialized healthcare. Full-blown socialized healthcare = less freedom = harder to speak your mind, harder to challenge the status quo, and harder to pursue your god-given talents to the greatest extent possible. Let’s see how.

Infidelity to the Constitution

Our Constitution is the guardrails of freedom. It identifies the key components of freedom, and it establishes a system of government that makes it very difficult for the politically strong to wrest those key components from the politically weak.

But here’s the rub. Our Constitution can only safeguard freedom to the extent we abide by its guardrails. We abide by its guardrails, freedom will flourish. We ignore its guardrails—and we find one “penumbra” after another in our Constitution that allows us to break the chains of limited government and flout the sanctity of inalienable rights—freedom will die.

Full-blown socialized healthcare makes a mockery of one of the most important guardrails in our Constitution. Nowhere in Article One, Section Eight of the Constitution is Congress granted the power to provide healthcare. Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, and Obamacare are blatantly unconstitutional. And so too is full-blown socialized healthcare.

Now I’m not saying the federal government shouldn’t provide healthcare. I actually think it should. But if we want the federal government to provide healthcare, we should amend the Constitution accordingly. Infidelity begets infidelity. And that’s the problem. We’ve become way too cavalier when it comes to honoring the chains our Constitution places on expansive government. And we’ve become way too cavalier when it comes to honoring the sanctity our Constitution reserves for inalienable rights—”diversity”, “equity,” and “inclusion” at the expense of such vital liberties as free speech, due process, and equal protection of the law are all the rage these days.

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see the threat posed by full-blown socialized healthcare and our growing infidelity to the Constitution. Our woke overlords have no problem de-platforming, de-banking, de-schooling, and de-employing those who run afoul of woke commandments and sensibilities. And this tyrannical impulse of theirs will not disappear with the introduction of full-blown socialized healthcare. It will only get worse. If “fascists” (i.e., those who disagree with our woke overlords) can be de-platformed, de-banked, de-schooled, and de-employed, they can certainly be de-healthcared.

And lest you think I’m being overwrought, that our woke overlords would never weaponize full-blown socialized healthcare against their unwoke “uppity” brethren, think again:*

* Quick aside: It should be pointed out that our woke overlords (i.e., big-government disciples who are hostile to the inalienable rights of whites and freedomists, and are commonly referred to as “progressives”) don’t have a monopoly on evil. Had full-blown socialized healthcare been around in the 1940s and 1950s, for instance, it’s safe to say that our unconscious overlords at that time (i.e., small-government disciples who were hostile to the inalienable rights of blacks and communists, and are commonly referred to as “conservatives”) would have weaponized full-blown socialized healthcare against blacks and communists. 

Paycheck Slavery

Imagine this scenario: the government has an unlimited right to tax your income and it acts on this right. Seventy to eighty percent of your paycheck is whisked away by the taxman.

Now a question: What is the material difference between being a slave and the government taking 70 to 80 percent of your income? Nothing. You sweat and toil and earn bread, and someone else gets to decide who eats that bread.

The effective tax rate for all levels of government in America today is far short of 70 to 80 percent. But for many well-to-do Americans, it’s in the 40 to 50 percent range. And there are no constitutional protections against that effective tax rate becoming even more onerous and less discriminatory. If 51 percent of the electorate want paycheck slavery for everyone, the other 49 percent will just have to accept the involuntary servitude imposed upon them.

To be truly free, some things should never be subject to the whims of voters and politicians. Voters and politicians, for instance, shouldn’t have the right to create a two-tier system of citizenship and then bar second-class citizens from riding in the front of the bus, dining in downtown restaurants, and enrolling their kids in the neighborhood’s flagship public schools.

Well, the same goes for taxation. Voters and politicians shouldn’t have an unlimited right to tax. Having that power invites tyranny. Democratic control of your paycheck is democratic control of your values. “We’ll tell you what you shall buy with your sweat and toil.” And once the majority has enough control over your paycheck and values, it has effectively rendered your most valuable possession—your mind—useless. After all, what’s the point of having a mind—”of dreaming things that never were and saying why not”—when confiscatory taxation makes sure you don’t have any money to act on your dreams?

Full-blown socialized healthcare will just advance the onset of paycheck slavery. And I don’t care if it’s for a good cause. Defense is a good cause too. Does that then mean we should all welcome being turned into slaves for the military-industrial complex? Hell no. I don’t want to be a slave to the military-industrial complex. And I don’t want to be a slave to the healthcare-industrial complex either.

ISIS

Whenever you remove competition from human affairs, you remove accountability. And whenever you remove accountability (i.e., the ability to lose or be hurt), you invite ISIS: incompetency, sloth, inefficiency, and stagnation.

I know well the horror of ISIS. For 21 years I worked for a highway department on Long Island. And because we had a monopoly on road maintenance and a coerced clientele—the taxpayers by law had to pay for our service—it was impossible for us to lose or be hurt. We got our cut of property taxes whether we provided excellent service or not.

Now a question: If pursuing excellence in anything is hard, including something as mundane as road maintenance, how likely do use suppose my fellow highway employees and I pursued excellence when we knew full-well that our livelihoods didn’t depend on pursuing excellence? If you said “very unlikely,” go straight to the head of the class. In a word, we were bums. In fact, our total compensation was so disconnected from the amount of effort we exerted, we commonly referred to our jobs as “high-class welfare.”

Here, then, is how the horror of ISIS manifested itself in my little corner of government:

Incompetency: Very few of my co-workers were competent in their jobs. And it’s not because they lacked the innate ability to be competent. It was uncanny how many of my co-workers were total boobs on the job but total crackerjacks off the job in whatever avocation moved them—playing softball, jamming in a rock band, running a landscaping business, etc.

Sloth: During the typical workday, the typical highway employee gave the taxpayer about two hours of moderately conscientious work.

Inefficiency: Why have three two-man crews filling potholes when you can have one six-man crew filling potholes? It’s much more fun when you have five guys standing around and cracking jokes while one guy works.

Stagnation: Nothing changed. When I first began my government career, the typical highway employee gave the taxpayer about two hours of moderately conscientious work during the typical workday. And when I ended my government career 21 years later, the typical highway employee gave the taxpayer about two hours of moderately conscientious work during the typical workday.

And this is probably the main reason why our healthcare system is “beyond fucked.” We’ve removed too much competition and accountability and invited too much ISIS.

Now I’m not saying the incompetency and sloth components of ISIS are currently marring our healthcare system. The typical doctor or nurse is still very competent* and still very industrious. But the inefficiency and stagnation components of ISIS certainly are marring our healthcare system. You see it in administrative bloat, you see it in the practice of defensive medicine, you see it in the needlessly restrictive licensing laws that determine what healthcare professionals can provide what care, you see it in the growing popularity of medical tourism, you see it in the steadfast resistance of doctors, hospitals, and pharmaceutical companies to any reforms that would make healthcare prices more transparent and encourage patients to comparison shop, and you see it, above all, in healthcare costs that make us the laughingstock of the developed world.

* Quick aside: Even though I still have a lot of faith in our country’s doctors, the complicity of our doctors in effecting our opioid crisis does give me pause. Perhaps decades of ever-decreasing competition and accountability are finally starting to put doctor competency in harm’s way.

Crafting a System that Addresses both Sets of Fears

Okay, groovy freedomist, there you have it. I think I’ve done a masterful job of outlining the healthcare-related fears of me and Mr. Wow. The real trick, however, will be crafting a healthcare system that adequately addresses both sets of fears. Can it be done? I think so. But you’ll have to wait for Part Two to see how. Cheers.

 

10 thoughts on “Mr. Wow and I Are Both Right: Part One

  1. Recently the Biden administration provided a simple but very effective tool in solving this problem as part of the Covid relief bill. Simply stated, it limits the amount that you can pay for healthcare to 8.5 percent of your income. Unlike the original ACA, there are no complex formulas or subsidy cliffs. It’s just simply 8.5 percent of income and applies to premiums only. Currently, to take advantage of this you would need to (purchase) your healthcare through the ACA website. An even simpler solution would be to just provide a tax cut for any premiums over 8.5% annual limit. No socialized medicine or Govt program necessary, just a tax cut that helps people pay for competitively priced health care from whatever provider they prefer. This one line of tax code could eventually just replace the ACA entirely saving everyone money.
    The Frug recently posted…Let’s Clean This Mess Up.My Profile

  2. Ask any of us who live in a country with free healthcare if we’d give it up and the answer is a resounding ‘NO!!!”
    We can’t believe what you guys put up with. You’d have to prise Medicare away from our cold, dead hands before we’d lose it.
    It’s strange you’d argue like this. You’ve been to Australia. If either of you had been in a car crash/suffered a heart attack or some other health crisis – you’d get your hospital operations and procedures for free. This sort of stuff is what taxes are for.
    Frogdancer Jones recently posted…Art, art and more art – plus a Blue Lake.My Profile

  3. Imagine my surprise to see you mention me in blog post! Huzzah!! And a thought provoking one at that. Well done, but you know I’ll have to chime in on this.

    First, I am not as much of a communist as that tweet seems to make me. I actually think much innovation and efficiency is created through the free market and tend to believe that it will course correct most things. But that involves certain assumptions, mainly that the market is elective so that if it is inefficient you can choose not to participate.

    The issue becomes a market for common goods (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_good_(economics)). Things that benefit overall society, but no one would pay for individually, roads being a perfect example. Same with police, military, fire departments, etc.

    In fact, fire brigades started as private enterprises, but it quickly shifted to a public good when a Fire department would show up at a fire and watch a building burn, simply because the owners weren’t customers of that department, also fires don’t particularly care if you are subscribed to a fire brigade or not. So it was in the best interest of the society to make everyone pay into the system, and provide coverage to everyone.

    Now, let’s talk healthcare. I’m actually fully for free market healthcare, but if that’s the case, then it truly needs to be free market. Treat it like a restaurant or any other business, if you can’t afford it you get no service.

    So, if you happen to get cancer and can’t afford the care, you die. Can’t afford insulin? You Die. Break a leg and can’t afford a cast? Hobble the rest of your painful, miserable life.

    I honestly can’t see anyone in modern civilized society actually propose that type of system with a straight face.

    Now, why do I feel like socialized medicine would work? Because it’s basically the same concept as our current health insurance system. There are high risk & low risk people that pay into the system, and you spread the risk & cost across the largest population as possible.

    Now, who is the real devil here? I would posit that it’s the insurance companies. There are massive profits for a middle man that obscures and complicates an entire system. A provider in Oklahoma is actually fighting this, and it’s an interesting concept. All costs are laid out in simple to understand language and upfront: https://surgerycenterok.com/

    It works amazingly well.

    The other thing to think about is where did our image of universal healthcare come from? Well, it seems to be a marketing/lobbying effort by the insurance companies to make the American public distrust universal care. (https://www.npr.org/2020/10/19/925354134/frame-canada).

    I do have a proposal though. I would love to see a government run healthcare plan. Basically open medicare to everyone, but make it optional, you can get it if you want, or you can go with any other provider. Let the free market work and see where the chips fall.

    Our system is so horribly broken it needs to be fixed. While I don’t necessarily agree with all that Obamacare did, I have to give the man credit for attempting to fix a horrible system in a way that he thought best.

    1. There’s one thing that I forgot to include.

      It’s something that people that defend our current system can never honestly answer.

      Why is it that every other “civilized” nation has some form of universal healthcare and they all work as well if not better than our current system by every objective measure?

      https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2020/jan/us-health-care-global-perspective-2019

      We spend twice as much per capita on healthcare for worse objective results.

      We actually spend the same per capita in public funding on healthcare, but we also have the massive amount of private spending on top of it.

    2. Haha! This is why I’m such a big fan of you. Talk about a high-powered mind! Great response. But I’m not going to address it now. My post next week will do that. Can’t wait to see what you think of my “solution.” Give my regards to the awesome Mrs. Wow. And have a great weekend. Cheers.

  4. Whew! That was intense, but it’s an excellent post. I worked at the bedside and in hospital leadership, and “beyond fucked” is an accurate description.

    As you pointed out, neither the providers of care nor the patients (customers) know how much procedures cost. This leads to lack of accountability on both ends, and results in the insane escalation of costs that we’ve seen for the past 50 years.
    I think the push towards completely socialized care is a logical, but extreme reaction, to the decades of inaction. We haven’t shown the wisdom or will to take this on.
    As you said, constitutional issues can be dealt with by amending, but probably won’t (wisdom and will). But something has to be done, even if it skirts or jumps constitutional guardrails.
    A complete overhaul that stops short of government control but takes healthcare beyond the failed “free market, secret pricing” structure we have now is needed, but we keep proving that we aren’t up to the task. I hope that changes.
    Great discussion, WOW and Mr. G.

  5. Government can provide coverage for certain chronic and catastrophic conditions to keep the cost of coverage down in the private market. Government can require insurers to cover all procedures at the same reimbursement rate and all providers to charge the same rate to all patients regardless of their insurance status. Government can mandate that insurance only include a deductible or a copay (not both and cap the amount) and eliminate the ridiculous measurement of reasonable cost for the area instead of the actual billed amount. There should be incentives for people to take steps to get healthier rather than charging healthy and unhealthy people the same premiums. Medicare doesn’t come close to covering the cost of procedures that are billed. There is almost always a tremendous discount down to what Medicare allows. This overage is then passed on to other patients that have no insurance or causes the cost of other insurance to go up. Medicare for All will be tremendously costly unless the root causes of the high cost of medical care are addressed. This has to start with getting people as healthy as possible and eliminating the incentives that medical providers have to over treat and over prescribe. Providers should have to publish and adhere to a list of costs for every procedure at every facility so there are no surprises after the fact.

  6. I read your post today with much interest. In many things, you hit the nail on the head. Might I however, offer a few points? I worked in the healthcare field for over 3 decades, and watched the evolution of healthcare during that time.

    First thing that strikes me as odd is the young lady raising money for her surgery. in my career, I provided huge amounts of uncompensated care…often for someone who had a condition needing urgent care, who had no resources (such as, say, a tumor in a child). It simply wasn’t a question. The needed procedure was done, and if we could aid the patient/family in getting assistance (medicaid) we would, but there was no delay in doing the procedure. (Obviously, I know nothing of this particular situation…but I worked in three different academic children’s hospitals, and in *any* of them a child with a tumor would have been scheduled for her operation immediately.)

    Second, the disconnect between the patient and the doctor is profound. The patient/family pay into health insurance (maybe), and the bill from the doctor/hospital comes, just as obfuscated as you described…but instead of the “mechanic” getting the extra money, it’s the administrators, the insurers, etc. If the patient and the doc had a direct conversation on who paid, and what that pay was for, a lot of this would go away, IMO.

    Third, the waste is incredible. (Ironically, prior to COVID, nurses would walk around the OR pulling masks off docs so the masks could not be reused…we were each using 6-10 masks per day, at the administration insistence). A huge percentage of OR items are “single use only”, when they formerly were sterilized and reused. The incredible paperwork eruption over the past couple of decades is very wasteful. Electronic Records (EMR) has increased the workload, decreased accuracy, and made much of the medical record impenetrable to anyone except billers and lawyers.

    Fourth…the “opioid epidemic”…when I was in training (late 70s, early 80s), the “old guys” told us to be very careful with narcotics in the postop period…”people will get addicted”.

    In the 90s, the hospital accrediting organization (JCAHO-Joint commission, a semi-governmental agency) began severely criticizing hospitals where patients were released with pain. “Pain-the fifth vital sign” was the mantra. Docs and hospitals were punished over this. Surveys given to patients were used as the judgement of the quality of the medical care. guess what? Docs, and hospitals did what our “overlords” told us was right. But now, the opioid epidemic is our fault….

    I enjoyed the read, even though I think there are areas that could be expounded upon…

    1. Thank you, Planedoc. I love it. It’s so refreshing to hear from an insider who isn’t afraid to objectively judge his profession. And thank you for the push back on the opioid crisis. Doctors are no doubt in a difficult position. Prescribe too little pain medication and patients needlessly suffer. Prescribe too much pain medication and patients risk addiction. And where the line rests between just enough pain medication and too much pain medication is hardly clear-cut. Again, thank you for making me a little less ignorant. And I can’t wait to hear your thoughts on how I propose to “fix” our hot-mess healthcare system. Cheers, my friend.

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