Author Archive for Ornot the Majestic

Game Review - Bioshock: Welcome to Rapture

Bioshock Logo I am Andrew Ryan and I am here to ask you a question:
Is a man not entitled to the sweat of his own brow?

No, says the man in Washington. It belongs to the poor.
No, says the man in the Vatican. It belongs to God.
No, says the man in Moscow. It belongs to everyone.

I rejected those answers. Instead, I chose something
different. I chose the impossible. I chose…
Rapture.

-Andrew Ryan

The year is 1946. Disillusioned with war and perceived religious and political authority, business mogul Andrew Ryan secretly begins building an escape, a utopia free from the parasites of Marxist altruism and religious scrutiny. He built Rapture, a city where man could build, where a man could make himself by his own merit, where a man could be free from moral entanglements and social obligations. He built “Rapture,” at the bottom of the sea. He invites all the great minds and free-thinkers to relish in his wonderland of libertopia, free to do as they please, how they please.

And then, in 1958, it all fell apart.

So begins the story of Bioshock, the newest game for XBOX 360 and PC from 2K, makers of System Shock and System Shock 2. Set in 1960, the story tells of an Objectivist dystopia at the height of ruin. You, the narrator, crash land into the mid-Atlantic near a mysterious island containing a lone lighthouse. You enter the lighthouse, board a bathysphere, and descend to the depths of Rapture. Leaking and crumbling, and apparently victim of its own design, you must fight the denizens of the genetically malformed and psychologically disturbed to discover its secrets, and its powers.

Unbridled by regulations and rules, scientists in Rapture discover the way to unlock the power of the human genome. Andrew Ryan creates (discovers?) Plasmids, a genetic code that gives humans additional strengths and powers including telekinesis, fire, ice and electricity and powered by EVE, a substance that acts as a fuel. Another substance, ADAM, enhances the ability of plasmids, but also weakens the physical/brain barrier, requiring more and more ADAM to maintain sanity. Soon, the residents of Rapture, horribly transfigured and addicted to ADAM, go crazy. And revolt.

The Philosophy of Rapture
Bioshock
raises two important issues behind its symbolism:
1) Is this a game showing the futility of Objectivism, and its consequences? or…2) is this a game showing that regardless of intentions, man eventually falls to its basest of levels?

The makers of this game never tell us, which allows much room for interpretation.

If we assume #1, then creators have made some inherent flaws and assumptions, through which most can be attributed to #2. But before we start, let’s begin with some basic definitions.

Objectivism (from Wikipedia, a decent summarization) states:

Objectivism holds that there is mind-independent reality; that individual persons are in contact with this reality through sensory perception; that human beings gain objective knowledge from perception by measurement and form valid concepts by measurement omission; that the proper moral purpose of one’s life is the pursuit of one’s own happiness or “rational self-interest”; that the only social system consistent with this morality is full respect for individual rights, embodied in pure, consensual laissez-faire capitalism; and that the role of art in human life is to transform abstract knowledge, by selective reproduction of reality, into a physical form—a work of art—that one can comprehend and respond to with the whole of one’s consciousness.

It is your moral duty to pursue your own self-interests, as long as those interests do not interfere or destroy the individual rights of others. This basic concept is key behind the objectivist movement, and a founding principle of (L)ibertarianism. It is also this concept that the game appears to make as its base in theory, but it could be argued that it was not Objectivism that brought Rapture down, but the fact that it was not quite Objectivist enough.

Food for Thought, and for Skeptics
Now I know by now many of you are thinking “BUT! IT’S JUST A GAME! YOU’RE CHASING SMOKE ON A WINDY DAY!” Well, possibly. But with it being the #1 selling game on XBOX, and with 9.8/10 or higher in most game review magazines, there is no doubt that this game will be played. Also, given its thought provoking plot, there is little doubt it will many raise questions. Consider also the Randian basis that this game builds upon, including the symbolism which alludes to famous works and characters of her novels. With names like Andrew Ryan….Frank Fontaine…Atlas…it’s not hard to see Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged, and notice it’s more than just coincidence. Like a good book, or a good movie, this game was meant to raise questions and be explored.
Continue reading ‘Game Review - Bioshock: Welcome to Rapture’

Giuliani is from Mars, Robertson is from Venus

Felix Ungar and Oscar Madison. Turner and Hooch. Mutt and Jeff. America sure loves the odd couple - it’s obvious. No further proof was needed that opposites indeed attract than when on Nov. 7th, amongst a storm of celebrity presidential endorsements (most non-plussed nor surprising), Pat Robertson announced his support for “America’s Mayor”, Rudy Giuliani.

Rudy Giuliani took a city that was in decline and considered ungovernable and reduced its violent crime, revitalized its core, dramatically lowered its taxes, cut through a welter of bureaucratic regulations, and did so in the spirit of bipartisanship which is so urgently needed in Washington today…

If the thrice-divorced, pro-abortion and pro-gay rights former mayor of New York being backed by the founder of the Christian Coalition of America is something you find a bit odd, well, you should….and not just from the narrow angle of Pat Robertson.

Considering Rudy Giuliani’s rather scathing remarks to Republican Congressman Ron Paul during the South Carolina Republican debate regarding the reasons for the 9/11 attack, five months later he accepts endorsement from a man suggested we invited the 9/11 attacks due to moral degradation (Pat Robertson Quotes).

We have permitted somewhere in the neighborhood of 35 to 40 million unborn babies to be slaughtered in our society. …..We have insulted God at the highest levels of our government. And, then we say ‘why does this happen?’ Well, why its happening is that God Almighty is lifting His protection from us.

Giuliani’s aide reported that the two have “shared goals” despite “minor differences”.

The overriding issue before the American people, is the defense of our population against the bloodlust of Islamic terrorists,” Robertson told the National Press Club audience. “Our world faces deadly peril…and we need a leader with a bold vision who is not afraid to tackle the challenges ahead.”Robertson said Giuliani is “a proven leader who is not afraid of what lies ahead and who will cast a hopeful vision for all Americans … It is my hope and prayer that he will lead the Republican Party to victory in November of 2008.”

“Minor Differences”? My experience with Christian “values voters” often placed abortion at the forefront of the important topics driving vote. Often, pulling hibernating voters from their four-year slumber to sluggishly waddle to the booths, without a hesitant dangling chad to be found in the crowd. But now abortion is a “minor difference”? This article sheds some light on this change:

Abortion is a low priority among Democratic-leaning voters (38 percent) and even Republican-leaning ones (43 percent). Voters overall rate the economy and the war in Iraq as leading issues.

Among Republican-leaning voters, the top issue important to their vote is terrorism with 77 percent marking it as very important. For Democratic voters, the leading issue is health care with 82 percent indicating so.

But wait…terrorism? But Mr. Robertson, I thought you agreed that such evils as pornography and abortion led to 9/11…I guess that core base has shifted. So have you. Irony? Considering the large backlash against John Kerry during the 2004 election over him being a “flip-flopper” and “waffling” on issues, I guess if you flip-flop in all the right directions, it’s not such a bad thing! Either that, or modern-Republicans have a short attention span.

Then again, maybe this is what Thomas Jefferson feared when he wrote this letter in 1802:

“Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between church and state.

As they say, politics makes for strange bedfellows. And compromises. Is this what was envisioned years ago? Perhaps the implications was to not only keep religion out of the state (for freedom of religion purporses), but to also keep the politics out of the church. For if once grievous abominations in the eyes of the moral majority can now become a minor difference, if those pushing for a return to a “Judeo-Christian baseline” will support the perceived “morality” more than the man, whom will the masses follow? Who has become their God now? Is it chasing after power? Is it honoring morality as equivalence to righteousness? Or has the self-proclaimed holy-water been muddied by the hands of agenda. For as power corrupts, are we so blind as to believe that the lust for such power is absent in the holy hands of the politically motivated Christian leader? For this nation, let’s hope history hasn’t been devoid of its lessons.

IRS: If it’s Worth Something to You, it’s Worth Something to Us

On August 7th, SF Giant’s left-fielder Barry Bonds pounded the final nail into ‘Hammerin’ Hank Aaron’s 30 year home-run record coffin when he knocked #756 into the right-field stands off a lefty pitch by the Washington Nationals. It marked not only a big day in baseball, but it unintentionally changed forever the life of one Met’s fan, Matt Murphy, forever.
From his August 9th interview on NBC’s Today Show:

Part of me wants to keep it. It’s the greatest American sports accomplishment in history. Part of me might want to sell it, but I really am leaning towards keeping it. It’s just too valuable, sentimental.

Well, as it turns out, he doesn’t really get much of a choice.

Applying Murphy’s Law to the matter of Catch 756, it is clear that catching a baseball worth hundreds of thousands of dollars is (assuming you can keep nearby fans from wrestling it away from you) an immediate and valuable ascension to wealth. Granted, the recipient/beneficiary/ball catcher has done nothing whatsoever to “earn” the income, but this does not mean it is not income—it merely means that it is not subject to social security or self-employment taxes on earned income and wages.

To make matters worse, according to John Barrie, a NYC tax attorney, capital gains taxes also could be levied in the future as the ball gains value. Essentially, it becomes subject to property tax and income tax, whichever may come first. Essentially, Mr. Murphy, a college student from Queens, NY, may be forced to sell the ball based on that principle alone.

The IRS’s argument? Since he could sell it, it is considered income and a liquidable asset, so therefore subject to taxation based on approximated value increase. My own personal aversions to taxes aside, according to the law, this makes sense if Barry Bonds is knocking two-story beach homes over the fence, not so much when a $14 baseball suddenly becomes considered valuable due to fluctuations of the emotionally-based memorabilia market. Are we then to be taxed each year based on “determined income” of my computer, my vehicle, my gun collection and my DVDs? All these items could be sold, some for profit, within a few hours. They probably would be if this “rent-to-own” tax mentality was an actual reality, which is the basis of the immoral property tax: continual payment on property already owned based on yearly considerations of worth. Hardly makes “owning” anything worth it from that standpoint.

Then again, that’s the summation of progression of most governments, hence why the right to property is of utmost importance to all people. For with this right we gain the right to control, profit, transfer and sell. In a sense, we become the ruler of that estate, and it is by this right that all other rights come into being. For if our property no longer becomes ours, but instead becomes the government’s, we are then subject to the government. Hence why taxes on owned property is the antithesis of the basis of our rights - it wrestles our right to own freely, as it forces us to pay dues to an unintended body.

As John Locke said in his Second Treatise on Civil Government:

…it is not without reason, that he seeks out, and is willing to join in society with others, who are already united, or have a mind to unite, for the mutual preservation of their lives, liberties and estates, which I call by the general name, property.

In more recent times, Ayn Rand made her case in Atlas Shrugged:

Just as man can’t exist without his body, so no rights can exist without the right to translate one’s rights into reality, to think, to work and keep the results, which means: the right of property.

Mr. Murphy may make his own anti-taxation statement once he gets the bill for the ball that calamitously fell from the sky.

Laptops: New tools for terrorism?

On July 24, 2007, the united brain trust of Capital Hill organized to discuss the newest threat to national security: your laptop. According to a CNET News article:

Politicians charged on Tuesday that peer-to-peer networks can pose a “national security threat” because they enable federal employees to share sensitive or classified documents accidentally from their computers.

At a hearing on the topic, Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) said, without offering details, that he is considering new laws aimed at addressing the problem. He said he was troubled by the possibility that foreign governments, terrorists or organized crime could gain access to documents that reveal national secrets.

Let’s not talk about the fact that holding classified documents that threaten national security on a personal computer (or even work computer) loaded with P2P software is already a big no-no, but it’s also a stretch, considering that most file-sharing programs come pre-loaded with safeguards that precede each action with warnings about sharing certain folders. Yet, according to Thomas Sydnor, an attorney-advisor in the Patent Office’s copyright group, it isn’t enough. He claims that users aren’t just mistaken into sharing files, but are tricked into sharing private information that the user never intended to make public. Yet fret not, for according to Syndor, this “inadvertent sharing” is reason enough for new regulations, not just for national security, but for the protection of American citizens.

Right now - and completely unknown to them – Americans are sharing sensitive personal
data—their bank records, credit-card numbers, passwords, tax returns, and letters, to
name a few. Without their knowledge, businesses are sharing confidential data about
their customers, employees, and strategic plans. Federal, state, and local governments are
also affected—and sensitive data has been exposed. Worse yet, Internet criminals know
this, and they are data-mining filesharing networks.

*Note: The incident he is referring too was the case of a Department of Transportation worker who’s daughter installed LimeWire, a popular P2P software, on her work computer and accidentally shared non-classified documents on the network.*

While such things are capable, does further regulation of a private industry need to proceed simply due to the possibility of misuse? Well according to Rep. Jim Cooper (R-TN), it goes a step beyond mere use, and places the blame squarely on the code-writers. In this case Gorton, CEO of LimeWire:

“I’d feel more than a shade of guilt at this point, having made the laptop a dangerous weapon against the security of the United States,” Cooper said. “Mr. Gorton, you seem to lack imagination about how your product can be deliberately misused by evildoers against this country.” (Cooper also, at one point, claimed that Gorton’s own home computer was probably leaking sensitive documents.)

Cooper went on to accuse Gorton of making the “skeleton keys” that “grant access to material harmful to U.S. national security.”
(For more such lovely gems, you can read further here.)

This is a dangerous line we are crossing, for where does it end? If the possible potential for misuse of a free computer program sounds the alarms of regulation in the name of threatened national security, where will it lead to next? As a nation that bases many decisions on precedence, this should sound some alarms in the heads of the citizens. Yet, this is the consequence of a nation bent on letting the state save us from ourselves. Perhaps Rep. Cooper and the rest of his ilk would fare well to remember the words of Seneca, in his letters to Lucilus when he said: “Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est.” (Latin: “A sword never kills anybody; it is a tool in the killer’s hand.”)

British Supernanny(state) might just come to America to help save you from yourself.

*For some reference, see what I wrote several weeks ago about the current push for healthcare reform in the U.S.*

Supernanny

“My dearest Britains, put down your quaking cuppa and let me wipe the tears of fear from your eyes. Here, take this spoonful of sugar, for this medicine may be a little bitter, but it’s good for you. I know better than you, don’t you see? Now now, stop your crying! Don’t you worry a tit, Supernanny(state) is here to save you from the worst enemy you have ever faced. A demon who lurks in the shadows and preys, ever so slowly, on your individual. This demon lurks within you and must be excised for the good of the state…and you. Don’t you understand? It is you you should be fearing! Suppernanny(state) is here to save you from yourself! It is for your own good, and all we care about is your well being and your life!!

Also, you’re bloody expensive.”

Researchers at Oxford University say that charging Value Added Tax (VAT) at 17.5 percent on foods deemed to be unhealthy would cut consumer demand and reduce the number of heart attacks and strokes……The move could save an estimated 3,200 lives in Britain each year, according to the study in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

While I hate to seem the heartless miser, but with a population of 60 million and an obesity rate of nearly one quarter of that number, it’s hard to think that such an increase of tax is purely philanthropic. Rising costs of N.H.S. (National Health Service, Britain’s publicly funded health provider with a 2007-2008 budget of 104 billion pounds sterling) has already forced them to start rationing care, including denying hip replacements to those considered to be “obese”.

Is anyone surprised? I’m not.

In fact, this is to be expected. Private businesses know that to in order to control costs, you have to either a) increase your influx of capital, b) reduce your outflow and/or c) do both. Why should a government run system be any different? If obesity is a burden on the system, it is only natural that they must then pay more for what they will most likely take (the same principle that American insurance companies use for high risk individuals, but are so chastised for by the Michael Moore’s of this nation. Oh the irony.). What is the final cost? Well, your choice, of course. Like all good socialist programs, it’s a slow ex-sanguination by the hands of the very people who begged to be saved from themselves.

Yet, this is Britain. It’s across the pond, and the Prime Minister isn’t exactly a US President, right? Think again. Considering the recent bans on trans-fats in both New York City and Seattle, the plague of smoking bans across US states, it seems Americans want the same “salvation” in the loving arms of Supernanny(state). Even more alarming, with a population of nearly five times that of the U.K., and projected obesity rates of 75% by 2015, perhaps we should consider what we are giving up while we are pushing so hard to give in.

Don’t worry, that “free” health care is going to cost you.

Healthcare: The push for reform

With the recent presidential debates and the debut of Michael Moore’s newest film “Sicko”, it seems that the issue of healthcare is of serious concern. Especially when one considers the recent statistics of 43.6 Americans are without health insurance, it can be argued that these concerns are not without merit.

Or are they?

While it can be viewed as tragic, the repercussions of such concerns infecting our political scheme give me more than just a case of the chills. Advocates of a single-payer socialized health-care program infect both Democrats and (arguably) some Republicans (I know that Mitt Romney does not directly endorse a tax-paid socialized system, his efforts to extend and basically require health insurance to all will require more government involvement in this issue than a true conservative, or economically savvy American should be comfortable with, even considering him throwing around words like “market” and “tax-free”.) Also, considering that Health-Care is the leading domestic issue of polled Americans, it is worth taking a closer look.

With such a large and encompassing (and admittedly emotional) issue, it is difficult to cover all views and aspects. I would like to focus on a few key issues and misconceptions, which I hope the readers here will research, discuss and elaborate accordingly.

Most advocates endorse a single-payer plan, as seen in Canada, and most European nations. While not entirely the same, the ideas behind such universal systems all operate under the same principle; providing guaranteed healthcare to ALL citizens, provided courtesy of their respective reigning government. Since 1987, the Physicians for a National Health Program (or PNHP for short) have been advocating single-payer, universal healthcare for all US citizens. They have served as an example for many advocates of universal care (including lobby groups and presidential/congressional hopefuls), so it is reasonable to use their stance as a starting point, since many of the issues and concerns being presented by today’s politicians are reflected by PNHP.

(For reference, I will be using the FAQ section on the PNHP website as jumping off points)

Single-payer is defined as:

…national health insurance is a system in which a single public or quasi-public agency organizes health financing, but delivery of care remains largely private.

In other words, they claim that while it is “publicly financed”, it is still essential “private”. This will be the first item of discussion.

”Universal care is not socialized, but publicly funded private care”

To anyone beyond a 3rd grade reading comprehension and economic understanding, this will read as a large misnomer. Their claim, is that since the government only pays for the care, but does not give the care, it is still private. According to their website:

Socialized medicine is a system in which doctors and hospitals work for the government and draw salaries from the government. Doctors in the Veterans Administration and the Armed Services are paid this way. Examples also exist in Great Britain and Spain. But in most European countries, Canada, Australia and Japan they have socialized financing, or socialized health insurance, not socialized medicine. The government pays for care that is delivered in the private (mostly not-for-profit) sector. This is similar to how Medicare works in this country. Doctors are in private practice and are paid on a fee-for-service basis from government funds. The government does not own or manage their medical practices or hospitals.

If a physician belongs to a large HMO group, do they not work for the HMO? Is their care-giving not controlled directly by who foots the bill? Under our current system, insurance companies can decide whether certain procedures/care/drugs will be paid. Therefore, the control of healthcare is directly under the supervision of the paying body, namely the HMO. Transferring such power the US government does not change this basic fact.

”Medicare/Medicaid is more efficient than private insurance”

According to the website:

The United States has the most bureaucratic health care system in the world. Over 24% of every health care dollar goes to paperwork, overhead, CEO salaries, profits, and other non-clinical costs. Because the U.S. does not have a system that serves everyone and instead has over 1,500 different insurance plans, each with their own marketing, paperwork, enrollment, premiums, rules, and regulations, our insurance system is both extremely complex and fragmented. The Medicare program operates with just 3% overhead, compared to 15% to 25% overhead at a typical HMO.

Yet, a few lines down:

Whenever we allow the wealthy to buy better care or jump the queue, health care for the rest of us suffers. One need only look at the example of the nation’s health insurance program for the poor, versus the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, MD, that serves members of Congress. Access to care for the poor is deteriorating because Medicaid is a grossly underfunded health care program. Because it doesn’t serve the wealthy, the payment rates are low and many physicians refuse to see Medicaid patients. D.C. General Hospital in D.C., which serves the poor, is always on the brink of bankruptcy. Calls to improve Medicaid fall on deaf ears because the beneficiaries are not considered to be politically important. On the other hand, members of Congress have completely free access to care at National Naval, where the quality of care couldn’t be better.

While efficient, why is it that more and more physicians are jumping the Medicare ship? The problem? Reimbursement. Medicare underpays physicians so much that care to these patients if often denied. According to Medicare payments, as discussed here,

When your doctor or supplier agrees to accept the charge approved by Medicare as total payment for services, this is called “accepting Medicare assignment.” Medicare pays your doctor or supplier 80 percent of the Medicare-approved charge, after subtracting any part of the $131 annual deductible you have not met. For covered services, the doctor or supplier can charge you only for the amount applied to the deductible and the remaining 20 percent of the approved charge.

In other words, it is Medicare that decides what it will cost, then pays 80% of it. Then, accordingly, depending on whether or not the physician is under and agreement clause with Medicare (a “take it or leave it and don’t ask questions” approach), the physician must accept what they are paid as full-payment, regardless of actual cost of the care.

This approach, of course, would make any system rather “efficient”, now wouldn’t it? Medicare takes in money (from taxes) to pay for services, but then does not fully pay for said services. They “spend” less than they take “in”, making them “efficient”. Yet, doesn’t that defeat the purpose? If this efficiency is so important, why is the hospital that serves the “poor” under the constant shadow of bankruptcy? Why does it provide reduced care? Of course, the argument is that Medicare is “underfunded”.

”Universal Care will cost less then our current system”

Anyone with a basic understanding of free-markets will laugh at such a claim. How does one expect a monopoly to actually cost less? Again, according to the website:

The U.S. Supreme Court recently established that rationing is fundamental to the way managed care conducts business. Rationing in U.S. health care is based on income: if you can afford care you get it, if you can’t, you don’t. A recent study by the prestigious Institute of Medicine found that 18,000 Americans die every year because they don’t have health insurance. That’s rationing. No other industrialized nation rations health care to the degree that the U.S. does.

If we are to provide the same healthcare to all, including the have AND the have-nots, how will this reduce costs? If healthcare costs are already high for those who CAN afford it, how much more will it cost if the service is provided for those that currently can’t pay for it? Of course, such a system is already in place.

In most Emergency Departments, care has to be given, regardless of payment. More often then not, this cost is never re-couped. Instead, the cost is then distributed throughout the hospital by increasing cost of procedures/care, billing extra to insurance companies who, in turn, increase premiums. Healthcare costs go up all around, in order to help cover the cost of those that can’t pay. Adopting this system under a universal banner, will do no more to decrease cost than lighting a $10 bill on fire is equivalent to spending it.

For the remainder of this discussion, let’s look at the purpose of insurance itself, and misnomers on the actual cost to have it.

Comedian Chris Rock on insurance:

They shouldn’t even call it insurance, they should call it incase s***. I give the company some money, incase s*** happened.

While crude, it is rather concise, isn’t it? Insurance is to “insure” that in case something happens, you are covered. It’s a gamble. You pay money every month, just in case.

Let’s use an example: car insurance. You pay, every month, so in case something happens to your car, you are covered. Now, you can not have insurance (assume here it’s not a requirement of law) and gamble that you won’t get in an accident. Or you can gamble that paying a monthly fee and never using it, is still cheaper than paying out-of-pocket directly for something that does or could happen. Yet, how is car insurance fair? If someone has a history of expensive accidents and speeding violations, is it fair to make the “safe” drivers pay more? Can’t car insurance companies force dangerous drivers to drive “safer”? Not directly. Instead, they charge them more, since at-risk drivers are higher at-risk for increasing costs.

Now imagine, for a moment, that car insurance also covered “preventative” and “maintenance” care on your vehicle. Let us say that every time you got your oil changed, your tires rotated, your brakes fixed, you billed your car insurance. How much higher would your insurance premiums increase? If all were required to pay for oil changes to those that “could not afford it”, how much higher then would premiums be? How much higher then would the cost of oil changes become?

With health insurance, this is no different. Health insurance itself is expensive, because such things as basic, preventative care, are billed to insurance. Considering that a majority of the top 10 killers of men are mostly preventable, it’s enough to make you wonder if we are indeed paying for “care”, or paying for other people’s personal choices. Would it be tolerated by those who pay car insurance if part of premiums paid for upholstery cleaning to those who smoke/eat/drink in their cars? Not without demands of increased rates or insurance denials. Yet, according to the PNHP website:

Experience rated insurance requires higher risk people to pay higher premiums. This approach says that people who have had cancer or other problems in the past, or who have chronic conditions like diabetes and hypertension, must pay more because they are at higher risk of getting cancer again or having a stroke or other health problem. Experience rating allows insurance companies to “cherry pick” the healthiest people and either refuse to insure the sickest or, what amounts to the same thing, charge prohibitively high rates. This approach makes no sense. The whole point of insurance is to spread the risk so that everyone is covered.

If one cannot distribute based on risk, how does this bring costs down? How is it therefore paid? If you cannot charge higher risk patrons MORE, then EVERYONE has to pay more to be “fair”, according to such a system as single-payer. This alone shows that costs will increase, just based on risk.

Of course, the biggest push for single-payer is the belief that since 43.6 million Americans HAVE no insurance, it is because they can’t afford health insurance. Is this true? Probably not as much as you think.

In order to justify universal coverage, it has to be shown that the issue is of so much public importance, that it will be a government mandated provision. Police to ensure safety, military to ensure protection, even roads to ensure travel. Yet, why is there not push for universal coverage of food? Shelter? Why are these basic “needs” not provided, courtesy of your tax dollars? Why can one not walk into a store, and take exactly the food that one needs to survive? Is food not of greater importance than roads and even police for daily survival? Is food not more important than even *gasp*health care? The fact remains that even those who push for single-payer healthcare, recognize the need for self-preservation. If one puts other things in front of food in importance, they are regarded as a fool. Yet, why the double standard when it comes to healthcare? If it is so important that it needs government intervention to provide it to all (over food!), then why is it often put last?

According to some statistics, 65 million Americans have basic cable, while 50.6 million Americans subscribe to premium channels.
, 248 million television sets in households in 2001, and an average of 2.4 television sets per home. Out of all households, over 70% have cable and/or satellite television. 62% of Americans have cell phones, of which 64% pay more than $50 per month. And, in case you are wondering about who most subscribers are, according to this article:

Seventy-five percent of Mission High students have cell phones, according to a recent survey conducted by Truitt, and many of those interviewed said they couldn’t live without them. But 75 percent of the school’s students are also so poor they qualify for free or reduced-price lunches.

These are just a few examples, illustrating the perception of cost. How much more would a family be able to afford healthcare, if they went without such things as televisions, cable, satellite, and $200/month cell phone bills? If healthcare is so important, why do such trivial items come first?

Perhaps it is not our system that needs reformation as much as the people that it covers.

Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps

*Note* I am studying for my medical boards (which I take in six days) so this will be a quick and general rundown of my thoughts between studying tentorial herniations and allergic polyarteritis nodosa. Don’t ask me, I still don’t know.

Ask somebody, anybody, who Ron Paul is, and you’ll likely get one of two answers: One, of course, being most commonly “who?”, which is not surprising coming from a country where only one in seven Americans aged 18-24 can find Iraq on a map. The second most popular, being of course “that guy running in the wrong party.” Daily show host Jon Stewart asked it, and after the second GOP debate, it was the first question asked. So what, right? Not that he really has much a chance, according to the most recent Gallup polls. It’s a moot point.

I guess then, that is the point.

Think back to the 2000 election. By a narrow margin, Republican George W. Bush nudges out Democrat Al Gore by less than a 1% margin in the popular vote. Green Party candidate Ralph Nader takes 2.73%, and hatred of party-line Democrats everywhere. The cry of “Ralph Nader stole the election from Gore” echoed down the the left-hand side of the streets of New England and California, while Kleenex stock skyrocketed. Their biggest pre-election fear was realized…a vote for Nader was a vote for Bush. Wasn’t that how it went? (Politics is perception, isn’t that how is goes?)

Or was it that there were issues out there that were big enough to swing some people away. Or perhaps, just maybe, some Americans discovered they didn’t like to be pigeon-holed into left/right political box.

According to this article, we could have a similar “problem” on our hands, only this time it is within a party itself.

The other important thing to note is that Ron Paul is the only Republican candidate to oppose the war. This is critical because it means that the anti-war Republican vote will almost exclusively be on his side. And the pro-war vote would be split among all the other candidates..

While this is more than likely a far stretch, there is no doubt that Ron Paul and his campaign has given the Good Ole Boy Republican Club its fair share of eye twitches and sweaty jock itch, especially considering his views on the Iraq Conflict War. Not to mention many anti-war moderates/independents, tired of the two-party taffy pull, might find his brand of realism and staunch opposition appealing. Recent polls indicate that opposition to the war is at about 67%. Of the 169 million registered voters, only 43% are registered Democrats, making this well beyond a Democrat-only issue. Not to mention that the Iraq War may be big enough to cause a pull on these “fringe” voters, especially for those living in states not requiring registration to vote in primaries.

So let us pretend that Ron Paul manages to throw a monkey wrench into the giant GOP machine, not by winning, but by swinging some votes to upset the would-of-should-of-been future Mr. Forerunner, yielding the crown to a lesser-likely hero. Will the streets of Anytown, USA run red with pachyderm tears while cries of “how did we let this happen to us” echo across Middle America? Or will we, as Americans, finally realize that we can’t have our cake and eat it too, for we demand what we aren’t willing to take.

We demand a difference and change in each election, but question any deviation from the standard. We occasionally give 3rd parties a glancing nod, then frustratingly cast them into the “wasted vote” pile as we reluctantly choose a lesser evil. When these 3rd party candidates run under that larger umbrella, they are immediately chastised and questioned about their sincerity of perceived polarization. “You’re different” they cry, “perhaps you made a mistake and meant to be over there, playing on their team?!” Why must the difference you crave fit into that box you’ve built? Perhaps, America, just perhaps, you’ll find that choice is more important than the allegiance and alignment.

So, despite the opinions of many who enjoy comparing the likelihood of election with political importance (like our very own Darius. BTW, welcome!), it may be a little too soon to start picking out your proverbial wallpaper with your bedfellow top-runner.

America may not be done surprising you.


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