Mar 23, 2010
Like millions of Americans, I watched the healthcare legislation drama unfold from last summer to its catastrophic climax Sunday night. The 219 to 212 House vote approving the Senate health bill was, for this country, a before-and-after moment of epic proportion and as such it will be remembered.
What—for the umpteenth time—was wrong with the Senate bill?
Where does one begin? Most Americans will see their insurance premiums rise dramatically; it will have a devastating effect on the insurance industry; it cuts Medicare dramatically just as 7000 more Medicare-age Americans become eligible each month for those benefits. It drives up the national deficit well beyond its already dramatic and immoral levels. And it constitutes a first step toward a European style of socialized medicine—just to name a few.
Then there are the more profound philosophical problems with this bill, eloquently summarized by Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. The Senate bill, soon to become law, strikes at the very heart of the American experiment itself. This vote, noted Ryan, constitutes a choice “about what kind of country we are going to be in the 21st century.”