Posted on 12/17/2011 5:45:03 AM PST by Kaslin
When people make statements that are completely at variance with reality and they continue to repeat them and you know they are not crazy, its only natural to wonder, whats going on?
Ive concluded that for some people on the left, political beliefs are like a false religion in which the parishioners become unable to distinguish myth from reality.
How else can you explain the statements of Donald Berwick, President Obamas recess appointee to run Medicare and Medicaid, on his way out of office the other day? For starters, he claimed that the Affordable Care Act (what some people call ObamaCare) is making health care a basic human right. Then he went on to say that because of the new law, we are a nation headed for justice, for fairness and justice in access to care.
Now I cant claim to have read everything in the 2,700-page law, but I can assure you that making health care a right just isnt in there. Nor is there anything in the new law that makes the role of government more just or fair.
To the contrary, a lot of knowledgeable people (not just conservative critics) are predicting that access to care is going to be more difficult for our most vulnerable populations. That appears to have been the experience in Massachusetts, which Obama cites as the model for the new federal reforms. Its not that Massachusetts tried and failed to expand access to care. It didnt even try.
True enough, Massachusetts cut the number of uninsured in that state in half through Governor Romneys health reform. But it didnt create any new doctors. The state expanded the demand for care, but it did nothing to expand supply. More people than ever are trying to get care, but because there was no increase in medical services, it has become more difficult than ever to actually see a doctor.
And far from fair, the new federal health law will give some people health insurance subsidies that are as much as $20,000 more than the subsidies available to other people at the same level of income. In fact, the new system of health insurance subsidies is about as arbitrary as it can be.
Berwick isnt alone in making bizarre statements about health reform. Right after the passage of the Affordable Care Act, administration health advisors Robert Kocher, Ezekiel Emanuel and Nancy-Ann DeParle announced that the new health reform law guarantees access to health care for all Americans.
In fact, nothing in the act guarantees access to care for any America, let alone all Americans. Far from it. Again, take Massachusetts as the precedent. The waiting time to see a new family practice doctor in Boston (63 days) is longer than in any other major U.S. city. In a sense, a new patient seeking care in Boston has less access to care than in just about every other U.S. city!
The disconnect between belief and reality is not unique to our country. With the enactment of the British National Health Service after World War II, the reformers claimed that they too had made health care a right. The same claim was made in Canada after that country established its single-payer Medicare scheme.
Yet in reality, neither country has made health care a right. They didnt even come close. Neither British nor Canadian citizens have a right to any particular health care. A patient with a mysterious lump on her breast has no right to an MRI scan in either country. A cancer patient has no right to the latest cancer drug. A cardiac patient has no right to open heart surgery. They may get the care they need. Or they may not. Sadly, all too often they do not.
The British and the Canadians not only have no legally enforceable right to any particular type of care, they dont even have a right to a place in line. For example, a patient who is 100th on the waiting list for heart surgery is not entitled to the 100th surgery. Other patients (including cash paying patients from the United States!) may jump the queue and get their surgery first.
Imagine a preacher, a priest or a rabbi who gets up in front of the congregation and gets a lot of things wrong. Say he misstates facts, distorts reality, or says other things you know are not true. Do you jump up from the pew and yell, Thats a lie? Of course not. But if those same misstatements were made by someone else during the work week you might well respond with considerable harshness. Whats the difference? I think there are two different thought processes that many people engage in. Lets call them Sunday morning thinking and Monday morning thinking. We tolerate things on Sunday that we would never tolerate on Monday. And there is probably nothing wrong with that, unless people get their days mixed up.
In my professional career I have been to hundreds of health policy conferences, discussions, get-togethers, etc., where it seemed as though people were completely failing to connect with each other. One day it dawned on me that we were having two different conversations. Some people were engaged in Monday morning thinking, while everyone else was engaged in Sunday morning thinking.
Heres the problem. Whether the beliefs are true or false, if people didnt come to their religious convictions by means of reason, then reason isnt going to convince them to change their minds.
This same principle applies to collectivism and health care. If people didnt come to the false religion of collectivism by means of reason, you are not going to talk them out of it by means of reason. If you remember this principle, you will save yourself the agony of many, many pointless conversations.
p.s. Liberalism is indeed a religion and worships the creature and the creation but denies the Creator God and therefore is in condemnation for their hatred of truth. Jesus Christ is the way, the truth and the life and no man comes to the Father but by Him.
And that is the dirty little secret. They can not "prove" their postion that God does not exist no more than I, as a Christian, can "prove" that he does. Thus, both positions share one thing: it takes a leap of faith to get there.
[Generations of leftists could overlook 100 million dead catalogued in the Black Book of Communism]
Truth indeed. Yet they always mock Christianity about the evil times of godless murders of innocent Christians by the church of godlessness, but communism is ammoral and the murdered peoples are multitudes more than the victims of evil religious murderers in priests garbs of old. Communism, of which socialism is the child of, has murdered more people than any religion on the earth ever has.
Religion’s role in society is replaced by liberalism; charity, morality, sexuality, and basic concepts of freedom, property, liberty and ‘rights’ are all re-defined.
Maybe this is the lefts form of the American Holocaust. Like Stalin’s Gulag’s or Mao’s starvation of dissenters. America’s left has found a way to “off” millions of its “non-desirables” by denying them medical treatment, a PC way of mass murder.
IMHO...Religion requires faith, without which many of the precepts that form the foundation of belief can not be proved. Without the faith, one might question things that the faithful might not be able to answer convincingly. Faith in God isn't debunk-able as, say AGW is. Atheists can not prove (to anyone but themselves) God does not exist, and believers can't prove to them He does. Stalemate. Faith bridges the gap, a bridge usually built by some life changing event.
Liberalism is religion the way Greek Mythology was religion. Logic and common sense can pretty much destroy it, but liberals are emotionally invested such that logic and common sense do not penetrate. Their emotion epitomize the term blind faith. In leftism, unquestioning faith is required or it falls apart. And liberals, within their means, are every bit as nasty to the unfaithful as are Muslim jihadists. The more excellent the counter argument, the more bile generated in the ranks of the faithful towards the bearer of truth, which is why liberal atheists are so nasty in their aims and disposition towards Christians. Liberalism is an ungrounded religion, which is why liberals are so angry and unhappy.
Liberalism: Symbolism over substance.
This in fact is the most obvious objection to Obamacare. One that I am shocked that is not made more often.
Personally, I think that a certain amount of decorum is in order regardless of the setting. Consider the lies that BO told during his SOTU. It was generally recognized that, despite lying his face off, it was the inappropriate time for someone to stand up and call him out. Not that BO shouldn't have been chastised for shamelessly using the SOTU to propogate lies, but just that there is a time & place - whether in congress or in the church.
Personnally, when I have heard a pastor telling lies from the pulpit, I have called him on it, in no uncertain terms - just not in the middle of his homily.
Still, a very good summary to save & keep for the sanctimonious folk who "believe" in ObamaCare.
...as well as Communism, Socialism, Political Correctness, Green Politics, and all other “Progressive Politics”...
The American left has openly been engaging in mass murder for decades. And the justifications for it are just as arbitrary as those that Stalin or Hitler used: people who have no utility to society can legally be killed as long as they are dependent on others for survival. Although the initial victims were the very young, reaching a certain age no longer confers legal protection.
They don't need any justifications at all. The ban on DDT alone has killed over 100 million people.
Most leftists need to be in a rubber room, put in the stockades, mocked, caned and driven out of the country, tried for treason and hung.
You know, I think this is true.
After decades of socialist indoctrination by the schools, and the assault on reason, reality, and objectivity by modern intellectuals, libtards are no longer able to think, or refuse to think, and all they can depend on for guidance is their emotions.They become emotionalists, and their emotions becomes their reality.
It is like a watered down version of fascism or communism where it substitutes the worship of the State and/or “Dear Leader” for God.
Yes it is, with articles of faith that can’t be questioned.
You can find whole families out there who've been emotionally living off their ideological commitments for generations.
Politics, ideology, being on the left, say, is the most important thing for them.
But to say that a set of views that you disagree with is always and everywhere in itself a religion is going too far.
Rev Denis Fahey nailed it, calling liberalism “unconscious collective messianism”.
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