Video: The arrogance of statism exposed
posted at 9:30 am on March 8, 2010 by Ed Morrissey
Via Radio Vice Online and Newsbusters, a seminal moment in American politics from George Will. Will and Robert Reich debated health-care reform yesterday on ABC’s This Week, and Will punctured two of Reich’s arguments. First, he refuted the idea of windfall profits at health insurers, whose margins typically range from 2% -6%, depending on the year. (Computer manufacturers have 20% margins by comparison.) But Will scores an even bigger point when he reduces Reich’s retort to its basic premise — that Americans are just too stupid to act on their own:
ROBERT REICH, AMERICAN PROSPECT: The health insurers are not, George, you said they’re popular and everybody likes their health insurer. They like their doctor. They hate their health insurer. And health insurance is going up in terms of rates 20, 30, 40, 50 percent in many states. In fact, Goldman Sachs just this past week has said to its many of its investors, “Invest in some insurance companies because they don’t have competition, and they have, are exhibiting huge profits.” That is money directly out of the pockets of Americans.
GEORGE WILL, ABC: A, you say they have huge profits. As you know, confiscate all the profits of all the health insurance companies, with those profits you could finance our healthcare for 48 hours. What you do for the next 363 days I don’t know. Second, you say there’s not enough competition? Fine, let them compete in a national market across state lines.
REICH: Yes, let them compete across state lines, fine. But not a race to the bottom. Set minimum federal standards because we’ve seen over and over again that the recipients of health insurance don’t know what they are buying very often. Until there are common standards, minimal standards, then people are going to be taken. And that is what’s happened over and over again.
WILL: There you have the premise of this legislation and the core of today’s liberalism: the American people are such dopes they can’t be counted upon to buy their own insurance.
This ObamaCare exercise relies on the notion that people can’t choose for themselves, and Reich gives the game away in this exchange. In fact, that assumption about individuals undergirds the entire progressive Left agenda. Statism proposes that a small, select group of elites make all of our decisions for us, because we’re mostly incapable of acting in our own best interests or even recognizing what they are. Instead, power gets shifted to the federal government in order to put the smart folks in charge of our lives … the “smart folks” being those who decided we were not smart enough to run them ourselves in the first place.
Every state has insurance regulation, and not just in health care. As Will points out, that hasn’t kept insurers from competing across state lines in auto and home insurance, and the competition helps drive costs down and make insurers more responsive. The only reason this hasn’t happened in health insurance is because of Congress.
Unfortunately, our health-insurance policy is being set by a man so smart that he couldn’t figure out the difference between liability and collision insurance for his car just after graduating from Harvard Law School. Given that precedent, I’d rather bet on the American people being smart enough to know better than the elites who propose this power grab.









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Liberalism not only assumes the public is dumb, but depends on it. The only way they can get public support is when people are too dumbed-down to see their real agenda.
infidel4life on March 8, 2010 at 1:35 PM
Woe betide the officer that discounts the talents of his men, especially the senior NCOs.
LarryG on March 8, 2010 at 1:49 PM
100+ The essence of liberalism!
Dasher on March 8, 2010 at 2:06 PM
“…[I]f you’re very old, we’re not going to give you all that technology and all those drugs for the last couple of years of your life to keep you maybe going for another couple of months. It’s too expensive…so we’re going to let you die.”–Robert Reich to college kids
“…recipients of health insurance don’t know what they are buying very often.”
Recipients of Big Government don’t know what they are buying very often…but they’re learning more everyday.
Noel on March 8, 2010 at 2:07 PM
Let me make this simple:
How many items of our life, has the Democrat Party and/or this administration, made any more efficient or higher in quality?
Their agenda is to wreck the United States economy in whatever fashion they can. Proof is forthcoming daily.
Efficiency? Higher quality? Nothing but a talking point.
Cybergeezer on March 8, 2010 at 2:09 PM
This ObamaCare exerciseThe Democrat party relies on the notion that people can’t choose for themselves, and Reich gives the game away in this exchange.Fixed it.
xblade on March 8, 2010 at 2:16 PM
What!?!?
It’s because of minimum mandatory coverage that costs are so high. You can’t buy insurance without psychological coverage or fertility coverage or a hundred things you may not want.
What I want to see are “minimal” standards.
We don’t have a dental care crisis. I don’t have it. If I get a root canal I pay. What’s the problem?
Pablo Snooze on March 8, 2010 at 2:40 PM
We will when the Dems decide they need one.
infidel4life on March 8, 2010 at 3:02 PM
Nice! Reminds me of that old Hendrix line…
“S’cuse while I slap this guy…”
RalphyBoy on March 8, 2010 at 5:10 PM
Not to nit pick, but computer makers do NOT make 20% margins. Apple, Inc. does, but all the rest, after paying for the Windows license, make around 5% margins. Sometimes, Microsoft is the only one to make a dime off the sale of a computer.
geotopia on March 8, 2010 at 6:43 PM
I pay $60 a month for health insurance. It’s not much of a plan but it’s something. I have a $1000 deductable, $25 for office visits, 50/50 on the copay, $150 for ER, free prescriptions on eye exams, and I think on meds I pay the first $250 and then it’s free. I say all that to say that might be more than we ever get out of Obamacare. And at what cost. Who on this planet really thinks there’s anything about Obamacare that’s going to cost $60 a month. Now, the reason it’s $60 a month is because there are so many people paying into the insurance policy. Why can’t we work that into the system. What scares me about Reisch is he actually thinks he’s telling the truth. My money says that if you increase competition across state lines you lower the price. This has been proven time and time again. If you allow more people to buy into a policy the lower the cost of the policy. I can’t possibly be speaking anything that’s new to the conversation except why can’t we try the tried and true methods first before we screw the whole thing up and then we have real problems. Reisch said healthcare was more important than employment??????? Did he really say that????? How on earth can we afford Obamcare if 20% of the country is unemployed????????? What the hell is wrong with us that we even give this goof any credibility!!!!!!!!
ranzofola on March 8, 2010 at 8:42 PM
Let’s remember what Robert Reich said in this 2007 video:
“What an honest President would say about health reform”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IT7Y0TOBuG4
- Young healthy people will pay more
- Will let old people die to reduce costs
- Forcing drug companies to reduce costs will mean less innovation, less new products and less new drugs so you will not live that much longer than your parents.
wren on March 8, 2010 at 9:05 PM
Healthcare and insurance both have increasing returns to scale; they’re both industries that can result in monopolies. This is exactly what you’re trying to defeat by allowing cross-state competition, but there’s no reason it won’t develop in the same way nation-wide. That’s why you need regulation: so companies can’t price-gouge or collude to use harmful policies such as denying pre-exisintg conditions.
RufusW on March 9, 2010 at 1:54 AM
Thanks for posting that link, saved for posterity.
Cylor on March 9, 2010 at 2:04 AM
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