Health Reform: What did it take for Congress to schedule
a vote on its awful health care reform package? Not much, just a phony
low-ball "score" on what the plan would cost from the Congressional Budget
Office.
By presenting the CBO with incomplete, inaccurate and misleading data,
the Democrats in Congress were finally able to come up with a cost score
they like: $940 billion.
That's the estimate the CBO arrived at. Like a used car dealer pricing a
car at $9,999 instead of $10,000, the hucksters in Congress were anxious to
get the official cost below the scary $1 trillion level at which things
suddenly sound very unaffordable.
Using the rigged $940 billion estimate, Democratic leaders now hope to
force a health care bill through as early as Saturday, seizing 17% of the
U.S. economy by simply "deeming" the bill is passed — rather than actually
passing it in an up-or-down vote.
This is not democracy. Nor is it constitutional. And it will do real
violence to the Democrats' promise to leave 72 hours to debate the health
care bill's contents and to let the public see what's in it. Transparency?
This is legislating through a glass, darkly.
But what really bothers us, as we've noted before, is the use of a phony
cost estimate to justify it all. The $940 billion figure the CBO came up
with is almost wholly bogus. So is the laughable estimate that deficits will
be cut by $138 billion over a decade.
And the Democrats know it. That's why they're trying to pass this bill
using questionable parliamentary maneuvers and outright trickery. Those who
agree to this backroom scheme are part of a massive fraud perpetrated on the
American people. As frauds, they should expect no sympathy from voters.
We can't blame the CBO. It can only produce a score, or cost estimate, at
the behest of Congress based on the data it is given. As the saying goes in
the tech world: Garbage in, garbage out. In this case, they were given 10
years of revenues, but only six years of costs. So of course the "cost"
looks reasonable.
And even the CBO, in releasing what it made clear was an unofficial
estimate, warned: "This estimate is ... preliminary, pending a review of the
language of the reconciliation proposal ..." In short, they want no part of
this farce.
In fact, the real cost of this health care takeover is more like $2.5
trillion over 10 years — not $940 billion. That's off by, oh, 166%.
As Michael Cannon of the Cato Institute has noted, Congress' estimates
carefully exclude the majority of the costs from the health care plan.
Indeed, he notes, "the on-budget costs of the legislation probably account
for only 40% of the total costs."
The other 60% comes from mandates on the private sector — that is taxes,
mostly on you but also on businesses. Once reform is passed, you will by law
have to buy health insurance — the first time the federal government has
forced Americans to buy something with their own money. And premiums will go
up.
And despite promises by President Obama of "cuts," total health care
spending will still be $210 billion higher in 10 years, CBO says.
But, you say, even if it costs $250 billion a year, at least 31 million
Americans without health insurance would get care, right? Not so fast. The
CBO's own estimates say the legislation would still leave 24 million
Americans without insurance after 10 years.
Worse, the CBO analysis ignores the well-established impact that higher
taxes have on the economy and personal behavior.
When factored in, according to Heritage Foundation policy analyst Kathryn
Nix, "These provisions would decrease investment in the economy, resulting
in lower wages and growing the debt."
Heritage estimates health reform will add $755 billion to our debt over
10 years, push annual interest payments up $20 billion, add $76 billion on
average to the deficit and kill 690,000 jobs a year.
With reform like that, who needs health care?