The Wealth of Nations and Health Care Spending: No Surprises Here

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Category : Random Musings

I discovered a quite well-researched and penetrating analysis of health care spending this morning on R.C. Hoetzlein's Web site. Not that there's really anything groundbreaking or new here, but he does a nice job of providing good reference links and crossing a lot of T's and dotting a lot of I's.

What I drew from his work was the observation that health care spending across the globe pretty much tracks the wealth of nations. The wealthier nations tend to spend more of their GDP on health care, probably reflecting a desire to do so by the populace.

The one exception is Japan, but having once worked in Japan, I must say it's not a place where you'd want to get sick unless you had lots of money and/or lots of connections.

A graph follows, but I can't vouch for its graphic quality:

chart of health care spending worldwide v. GDP of each nation

Congress Set to Outlaw Outlawing of Public Sector Unions by States

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Category : Random Musings

Taking aim at states like Virginia that have passed laws forbidding the establishment of public sector unions, a law wending its way unnoticed through Congress called PSEECA, the Public Safety Employer/Employee Cooperation Act, would force unionization on all states' public sectors.

Though the Virginia law, which forbids the unionization of police, fire and paramedic personnel working for any public entity in the commonwealth, has broad bipartisan support, PSEECA would forbid any state from doing what Virginia and other states have done–protect themselves from the extortion expense and recalcitrant behavior of unionized public safety servants.

Nationwide, just 7.6 percent of private employees are unionized, but 36.8 percent of public sector employees belong to unions. Nationwide, almost 59 percent of police are unionized, and the figure is even higher for firemen–70 percent.

Consider the consequences: In Albana, N.Y., the firefighters' union recently argued that one of its members should not be terminated for committing off-duty arson–because it did not impact his firefighting abilities! In Seattle, the police have gone unpunished for a series of brutal–and unjustified–beatings, with the city virtually powerless to discipline those involved.

Anyway, while the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) gets all the headlines, PSEECA flies under the radar–while threatening not only states' rights but also public safety when intractable unions start dictating policy to firemen and policemen, and to the local governments that pay them.


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Canadian Premier Williams Rejects His Nation’s Health Care System

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Category : Random Musings

After touting the beauty of single-payer (read: socialist) health care in Canada, Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams has secreted himself off to locations unknown in the United States to undergo a heart procedure, reportedly open-heart surgery.

Some reports claim the procedure was not available in Williams's home province; others aren't sure. However, clearly someone in Canada performs heart procedures for those who can't afford to go south of the border and are stuck with Canada's version of Obamacare. However, quality and waiting time are always huge factors in our northern neighbor's delivery system.

A few things shade this whole episode in gray if not downright darkness. First, Williams tried to hide the fact of his trip south for surgery. Second, it seems blatantly hypocritical for a staunch defender of CanadaCare to secretly opt for the obviously "lesser quality" (according to pro-Canada people like Williams) health care system in America. Third, it's not even clear if Williams is the payer or if the Canadian public is.

Which is why I've said all along, should Obamacare pass, the nation will face a two-tiered medical system: one for the public that's as awful as Canada's, and one for Obama and his cronies that retains all the glory and qualify of the privatized system we all currently enjoy.

Majority of Americans Believe in Starting Over on Health Reform

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Category : Random Musings

A USA Today/Gallup poll released after the election of Republican Scott Brown in Massachusetts shows that a majority of Americans believes Congress should start over on health care reform and abandon the current House and Senate bills.

(Public sentiment has finally caught up with what I've been saying for the past year–the status quo is better than the Democrats' Taxachusetts-based reform.)

The poll shows 55 percent of Americans favoring a redo and 39 percent favoring a go-ahead on current legislation. Those favoring the start-over are largely Republicans and Independents, as two-thirds of Democrats are fine with the current reform measures.

In addition, 46 percent said that other issues were more important than health care reform while 32 percent still consider it a priority.

Union Members Don’t Share or Support Union Goals, Candidates

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Category : Random Musings

A Hart Research Associates poll, conducted for the AFL-CIO, found that 49 percent of union members in Massachusetts voted this past Tuesday for Republican Scott Brown. Union-backed Democrat Martha Coakley garnered 46 percent of the union vote.

AFL-CIO spokespersons quickly attributed the result to weakness in the Democratic candidate, not to any referendum on Obama or the Democratic agenda in Washington, D.C.

Uh, huh….

Further polling of union members, this time regarding the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), showed a similar disconnect between union leaders and union members.

This month new polling showed that 66 percent of union households oppose changing the bargaining process in unionization, which EFCA would do; 51 percent of union households oppose changing the way unions are formed, which EFCA would do; and 77 percent of all voters, as well as 77 percent of union households oppose a government arbitrator having the final say in determining contract terms, which EFCA would do.

Still, union leaders are predicting passage of the EFCA sometime this year, loss of the Democratic super-majority in the Senate not withstanding.

Uh, huh….

Nice Work, Team Obama

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Category : Random Musings

No need to comment on Obama's plan to save or create 3 million (or was it 5 million?) jobs through his stimulus plan of pork, pork and more union and government pork, but Shadow Stats has once again unearthed the reality behind U.S. unemployment, which now stands at an FDR-like 22 percent:

Shadow Stats' unemployment figures

Meanwhile, Seeking Alpha chronicles the meteoric descent in the ratio of jobholders to the overall U.S. population:

Ratio of jobholders to U.S. population show declining rapidly

Death Panels Live, Pardon the Pun

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Category : Random Musings

A thoughtful article over at the Cato Institute Web site by Alan Reynolds exposes the smear campaign against Sarah Palin and her observation about "death panels."

The smear involved linking her comment to the language for "end-of-life counseling" in the House health care reform package, when in fact Palin was referring to the overall end result of such reform.

Her words: "Government health care will not reduce the cost; it will simply refuse to pay the cost. And who will suffer the most when they ration care? The sick, the elderly, and the disabled, of course."

Palin's comments were more directed toward trusted Obama health care adviser Dr. Ezekiel Emmanuel than they were to the House measure. Emmanuel is a longtime advocate for rationing health care primarily to people aged 15 to 45 and letting the young and the old fend for themselves. (Which is basically Hitlerian, but if you mention that, you get the Palin treatment by the traditional media.)

The moral of all this, besides the obvious manipulation of truth by the media, is that we "useless eaters" (thank you, Adolph, for the term) need to unite and defeat Obamacare, but I fear we may be too late. We already opened the hen house door and let the fox(es) in by thinking the Democrats could produce the world's first universal free lunch.

Now we have to pay for it.

Oakland Cops Get 130 Vacation Hours and Back Pay for Unpaid ‘Donning and Doffing’ Time

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Category : Random Musings

You gotta wonder who was more out to lunch, the cops who thought they needed overtime for dressing and undressing for work or the judge who agreed with them?

Anyway, Oakland's pigs so-called finest are now being paid $3,500 each, along with 130 hours of vacation time, for not having been compensated for putting their uniforms on and off. Another $1.75 million goes to the union for extortion legal fees.

Does that mean if I'm required to wear a long-sleeved dress shirt and tie to work that I should get paid for "donning and doffing" time?

"Hey, boss, you know the cops get paid for dressing for work," I intone right before he hands me my pink slip.

Remember, this is on the taxpayer's dime to boot.

Skyscraper Index: ‘World’s Tallest’ Curse Fells Dubai; Who’s Next?

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Category : Random Musings

As buildings set new records for height, economies tend to set new records the other way. This is known as the Skyscraper Index.

The completion of the Empire State Building in 1932, then the world's tallest building, signaled the onset of the Great Depression. In 1973, the completion of the Sears Tower marked a two-year, 45-percent plunge in U.S. stocks.

In 1997, Malaysia's Petronas Towers surged skyward to become the "world's tallest building," and the Malaysian stock market tanked 50 percent in gratitude.

Now Dubai, with its construction of the "world's largest building," the Burj Dubai, sees its economy in the gutter and the owner of the building in default on billions in notes.

Shanghai is tempting fate with the construction of the world's second highest skyscraper, set to open in 2014. Will China tank that year?

The Koreans are aiming to complete the world's tallest twin skyscrapers, the Incheon Towers, in 2015, so a Chinese crash could ripple eastward and take South Korea in its wake.

Don't tempt fate with the world's biggest, tallest, largest or whatever, argues speculator Victor Niederhoffer in his book Practical Speculation.

He cites the example of the Nasdaq's MarketSite tower, which featured the world's largest video display when it opened in December 1999; in short order the Nasdaq composite plunged 70 percent.

The Saudis are also tempting fate by constructing a complex called the Abraj Al-Bait Towers in Mecca, which will lay claim to being the world's largest building in terms of floor space when it opens next year.

You've heard of "dead pools," where bets are placed on which famous person will go next. Maybe we need a "Skyscraper Pool" too, though it might prove to be too predictable.

ACORN Leaves Paper Trail for Takeover Plan in Oklahoma

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Category : Random Musings

It seems that the shady people at ACORN in Oklahoma got sloppy when vacating a building to avoid rent and left behind some interesting documents, including this one detailing how they planned to take over and control Oklahoma for the Far Left: