Government's
Medicare drug benefit program is an unmitigated disaster
Do you want to know what happens when a government that cares nothing
about the people gets put in charge of administering a drug benefit
program? You get an unmitigated disaster, and that's what we're seeing
today with the Medicare prescription drug benefit program. This program,
which is just legalized theft from one group of American taxpayers
to another group of American consumers (mostly the elderly), originally
promised to give people discounts on prescription drugs.
The program was supposed to cost "only" a couple hundred
billion dollars. It turns out that, as usual, the politicians were
lying. The drugs being offered through this program are not offered
at much of a discount at all, and the program is going to cost $750
billion over the next 10 years. That's three quarters of $1 trillion.
Scratch that. As of this writing, the figure has now escalated to
a whopping $1.2 trillion according to new figures from the White
House, as reported in the Washington Post.
For those who don't immediately grasp the difference between million,
billion and trillion (they all just run together when the federal
government is talking about spending, don't they?), here' what it
looks like: $1,200,000,000,000.00. That's over $4,200 per person
living in the United States, and it's all a windfall handout to Big
Pharma.
The best part -- that is to say the most entertaining part -- is
that the program is so confusing, most people who try to participate
in it can't figure out which plan to choose. It's administered through
a partnership between private industry and government, and participants
in this program must choose which plan they want to be on.
Each plan covers a certain number of prescription drugs and offers
certain rip-off prices. All the prices, of course, are sky-high profiteering
markups that would be considered criminal in any other industry.
These are the highest prices in the world for these drugs, and yet
somehow, consumers think they're getting a discount because it's
a little bit less than what they might have been paying retail.
However, six out of 10 participants in this program are saying they're
not saving any money at all. It sort of makes you wonder what the
point of this whole thing is. The big news is that this program is
so darn confusing that the federal government had to expand its toll-free
help hotline from a couple hundred staff members to 4,000 staff members
just to answer questions from senior citizens who can't figure out
which plan to join. The administration of the plan is falling flat
on its face as well, because when senior citizens go to pharmacies
and try to buy prescription drugs, it turns out that their name isn't
in the computer where it's supposed to be.
The plan isn't working out how it was supposed to, people can't
get their drugs, and they are panicking. All of this demonstrates
what happens when you put the federal government in charge of "negotiating" drug
prices with the very same for-profit corporations that contribute
enormous sums of money to the political party currently in the White
House.
The real purpose behind the Medicare benefit program
Think about the administrative overhead, the paperwork, the fraud
and corruption that will inevitably crop up in this program. Think
about the time wasted by all the people involved in this system.
What's the purpose of it? Is it really just to help senior citizens?
This plan really has two purposes: First, it makes President Bush
popular by making sure he has lots of handouts for senior citizens,
a demographic that happens to have a high number of active voters.
Secondly, it's a big Bush handout to campaign supporters, notably
Big Pharma. You see, drug companies have supported the Bush administration
for years, and this is a great way to thank them, by actually having
the government steal money from taxpayers and send that money to
pharmaceutical companies. It's legalized inter-generational theft.
Want to get elected? Offer big handouts and entitlements to voters
I'm always amused when one generation of taxpayers or voters steals
money from another group. It's usually the older generation stealing
money from the younger, because it's a lot easier to pass on the
cost to your children or grandchildren than to actually pay it
yourself. Politicians are getting very good these days at making
people believe they can actually get something for nothing. In
fact, getting elected has really become a competition of who can
offer the biggest handouts of all.
Even Arnold Schwarzenegger got swept up into this recently. After
the defeat of four different propositions that were going to introduce
some fiscal sanity to the State of California, he returned to the
podium and announced, "Message received," and then proceeded
to detail all kinds of new spending programs that would put the State
of California even deeper into debt, and the voters loved it!
That's what the voters want you see -- more spending and less accountability.
And why not? The government has been spending more money than it
has for decades, so why can't the voters do it too? While we're at
it, let's vote ourselves some free prescription drugs. Isn't democracy
a wonderful thing?
I call it the tyranny of the masses, because whatever the majority
wants to do -- no matter how unethical, irrational or illegal it
may have been before -- it's suddenly justified under law. I don't
know about you, but if my grandpa broke into my house, stole my wallet
and used it to go out and buy Viagra at the local pharmacy, I'd be
upset about that, but somehow when the whole nation does it, it's
okay.
Welcome to America, and remember, now that this program is in place,
there's going to be competition among presidential candidates to
see who can offer the biggest health care handouts. I predict the
next such debate will be about something even bigger than just a
drug handout. It will be a national health care plan that offers
mandatory screenings for all sorts of diseases so that every person
in America -- newborn, child, adult -- can be diagnosed with something
and "treated" with pharmaceuticals that will make the drug
companies even more filthy rich than they are already.
Think about it: Do you want the federal government in charge of
mandating what kinds of treatments your child might get for depression,
a mental disorder or a learning disability? The government has no
interest in prevention. We invest almost nothing in prevention in
this country. The money will all go to prescription drugs. The government
has no interest in teaching people how to actually prevent or reverse
chronic diseases. It only has an interest in treating people who
are managing their symptoms in a way that keeps the pharmaceutical
industry profitable.
The best option for free-thinking people is to avoid this whole
system altogether. Live outside conventional medicine like I do and
like many Americans have chosen to do. We're healthier, happier and
guess what? We have more money because we didn't spend it all on
overpriced prescription drugs that you can buy anywhere else in the
world for pennies-on-the-dollar.
Do you know why drugs are so expensive in this country? It's because
we don't have a free-market system when it comes to drugs. Everything
else is free-market. You can buy a car from Japan, you can buy T-shirts
made in Mexico, you can buy computer memory chips from Korea, or
you can buy plastic spatulas from Hong Kong, but how dare you try
to buy prescription drugs from anywhere except the monopoly-controlled
U.S. market? How dare you? That's why I call it a drug racket. It's
a monopoly racket defended by the FDA, Big Pharma and corrupt legislators
who get reelected thanks to campaign contributions from drug companies.
It's a simple system, but hardly anybody is willing to tell the
truth about it, and this big Bush handout -- this Medicare drug benefit
program -- only really benefits the drug companies. It doesn't benefit
the senior citizens, and it doesn't benefit the taxpayers who are
footing the bill. It certainly doesn't benefit any honest, hardworking
American whose income continues to dwindle under the assault of do-gooder
government programs like this one. It really only benefits Big Pharma,
and, of course, that was its purpose.
The Medicare drug benefit program is really just another clever
way to extract productivity from U.S. taxpayers, and it's working
extremely well. Practically no one in the mainstream press has noticed
any of what's really going on here. We see all sorts of articles
about how terrible the system is, but I haven't seen any articles
on real solutions.
You know what the real solutions are? They don't start with drugs;
they start with food. If you want to get people healthy, it's very
easy: Change what they eat. You can cure diabetes in three weeks
by changing what you eat. You can cure virtually every type of cancer
with changes in diet and nutritional supplementation. You can reverse
Alzheimer's disease. You can reverse osteoporosis. You can reverse
depression. You can reverse and eliminate all of these chronic degenerative
diseases by changing what you eat, how you exercise, your exposure
to environmental toxins, your stress levels and by availing yourself
of natural sunlight and fresh water and air.
You'll never hear that from the federal government, and you won't
hear that as a benefit program, because no one profits from it. No
one profits when the U.S. population is healthy. Pharmaceutical corporations
only make money when you're sick and when you stay sick.
I'm curious as to what program they'll come up with the next. How
can they top this one? I can't wait for the next presidential election
to see who's going to come up even more grandiose lies and try to
convince even more voters that they can get something for nothing
because "the gub'ment will pay for it." |