The Old Curmudgeon

These are my writings, letters to the editor, and thoughts all gathered in one place.

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Location: Lake Charles, Louisiana, United States

Georgia Tech Grad. Veteran. Retired, Writer.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

First Understand the Problem

Dear editor:

I am amazed sometimes by the one sided brain function of many people who use propaganda handed to them by politicians and media big mouths (newspapers, TV and radio) that have an agenda of their own for their own selfish reasons. It’s almost like “say the secret word” and believe it even if it doesn’t make sense. Such are the comments made in a letter to the editor which appeared Sunday, November 15th.

The writer claimed that nowhere in the U.S. Constitution does it say that the government has the authority to require people to have health care or offer assistance to those in need of it. That happens to be true. But, I don’t see the writer complaining about the fact that this ground breaking document never gave the government the authority to put up traffic lights that require us to stop and go, or build roads for us to travel on, or control air travel, or have Social Security and Medicare, or on and on with all the benefits we receive from federal, state, and local governments (that we are taxed and paid for) to which we have become accustomed. All those “terrible Socialistic” ideas have become the norm in a country whose Constitution says nothing about them. Times, people and needs change.

And what about the claim that government intervention would interfere and wreck the world’s most successful health care in the world? While our medical care is wonderful and many people come here from foreign countries to take advantage of it, there are a few facts we must face. With our health care the United States is number 20 in the industrialized world for longevity of its citizens and number 17 in infant mortality (up to one year old.) Those failed health systems the writer points to, I assume England and Canada, are both way ahead of us in both those categories.

And lest we forget, Louisiana is 8th in the nation in a prevalence of diabetes, 7th in heart disease, over 60% of our adults are obese, the infant mortality rate per 1,000 is 9.8 as opposed to a nationwide 6.8, cancer deaths per 100,000 is 203.5 versus 180.7 in the nation overall. Our problem is not only national but very much a local one.
So whether or not the Constitution specifically allows for healthcare we must take steps to solve our problems. Instead of claiming that we are destroying the Constitution we ought to be screaming about doing something about the health of our citizenry…..all of them.

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