Matt Collins
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False Alternatives: "Is Health Care a Right or a Privilege?"
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PERSUASION POWER POINT # 274[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Geneva,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] by Michael Cloud
"Do you believe health care is a right or a privilege?" the CNN host asked two guests.
"Health care is a right, not a privilege," said speaker after speaker at televised memorials for the late Senator Ted Kennedy.
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"Is health care a right or a privilege?" ask hosts and guests on NPR, PBS, CNN, and MSNBC. You'll read the question dozens of times on Big Government blogs and Web sites. In essays and articles by Big Government partisans promoting government-run medical care or government medical insurance.
The right answer: "It's neither. The question is what logic texts call the False Alternative Fallacy. The question is an example of an unscrupulous, manipulative sales technique: the Alternative of Choice Close. The words 'right' and 'privilege' are loaded and deceptive. May I explain?"
1. The False Alternative Fallacy: If health care is NOT a right, then it's a privilege. If it's NOT a privilege, then it's a right. False. Many widely desired things are neither rights NOR privileges. Literacy is neither a right nor a privilege. Good nutrition is neither a right nor a privilege. Success is neither a right nor a privilege. Love is neither a right nor a privilege. Other alternatives: health care is a desirable service, but NOT a legal right. Or: universal health care, like universal literacy, is a desirable social goal, but NOT a legally-guaranteed entitlement.
2. The Alternative of Choice sales technique: "Which is health care? A right or a privilege? You choose." Sales trainers have taught this manipulative sales technique since the 1930s. "Would you like one egg in your malt or two?" (Maybe you want none.) "Do you want the red sweater or the blue one?" (Maybe you want neither, or a jacket.) This "Do you want this, or that?" technique gives buyers the illusion of choice, to get them to turn off their critical thought process and buy one or the other. The health care "right or privilege" question is designed to make its victims choose between caring for everyone -- or being an uncaring cad.
3. The word "right" in the question means "government-granted entitlement," NOT the natural or God-given rights to life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness that the American Revolution was fought for. When the government grants these kinds of "rights" or entitlements to individuals or groups, it saddles taxpayers with the obligation to fund or provide them. If person X or group Y have a government-granted right to medical services and medicines, then taxpayers are legally obligated to pay for it through taxes or government mandates. Every government-granted "right" is an obligation on you.
Rephrase the first part of the question to this: "Are American citizens obligated to pay for other people's medical insurance, or medical services, or drugs and medicines?" Or: "Should American taxpayers be obligated to pay medical costs of those who smoke, or drink too much, or use dangerous drugs, or overeat, or refuse to exercise, or engage in reckless or irresponsible behaviors?"
A government-granted right to medical care is your obligation, your increased taxes, your cost, your burden.
4. Consider the meaning of "privilege": "a right or immunity granted as a peculiar benefit, advantage, or favor; especially: such a right or immunity attached specifically to a position or an office." (Source: Merriam-Webster Dictionary.)
Here's another dirty little secret behind the false and deceptive health care question: they are trying to con us into choosing between "health care guaranteed to all, or to only the privileged few." This level of trickery goes beyond Karl Marx. It goes all they way to Groucho Marx. Except government-controlled or government-run medicine might just make us laugh all the way to a too-early grave.
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[FONT=Verdana,Geneva,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] 5. The right questions to ask about medical care and medical insurance:
* Which laws, regulations, or government mandates drive up the costs of medical care, medicine, and medical insurance?
* Which of these laws, regulations, and government mandates can your state legislature and governor repeal? Which need to be repealed by the U.S. Senate, the House, and the president?
* Which government-granted privileges and special protections has government enacted for the benefit of pharmaceutical corporations, hospitals, doctors, nurses, lawyers, or insurance companies that make medical care more expensive?
* Which of these privileges and special protections can your state legislature and governor repeal? Which need to be repealed by the U.S. Senate, the House, and the president?
* What other cost-lowering medical alternatives are forbidden or blocked by state government or the federal government?
* Can these be repealed on the state level -- or do they need to be repealed on the federal level?
* What other laws and regulations can we repeal to give patients and doctors more choices? To improve the quality of medical care? To lower the costs of medical care enough to make them as affordable as food, clothing, and shelter in America?
Do NOT let the political con artists prey on your family, friends, and co-workers. Share this column with them. Forward this issue of Liberator Online to them.
* * * * * * * *
Michael Cloud is author of the acclaimed book Secrets of Libertarian Persuasion, available exclusively from the Advocates.
In 2000, Michael was honored with the Thomas Paine Award as the Most Persuasive Libertarian Communicator in America.[/FONT]
False Alternatives: "Is Health Care a Right or a Privilege?"
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[FONT=Verdana,Geneva,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] by Michael Cloud
"Do you believe health care is a right or a privilege?" the CNN host asked two guests.
"Health care is a right, not a privilege," said speaker after speaker at televised memorials for the late Senator Ted Kennedy.
[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Geneva,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]
"Is health care a right or a privilege?" ask hosts and guests on NPR, PBS, CNN, and MSNBC. You'll read the question dozens of times on Big Government blogs and Web sites. In essays and articles by Big Government partisans promoting government-run medical care or government medical insurance.
The right answer: "It's neither. The question is what logic texts call the False Alternative Fallacy. The question is an example of an unscrupulous, manipulative sales technique: the Alternative of Choice Close. The words 'right' and 'privilege' are loaded and deceptive. May I explain?"
1. The False Alternative Fallacy: If health care is NOT a right, then it's a privilege. If it's NOT a privilege, then it's a right. False. Many widely desired things are neither rights NOR privileges. Literacy is neither a right nor a privilege. Good nutrition is neither a right nor a privilege. Success is neither a right nor a privilege. Love is neither a right nor a privilege. Other alternatives: health care is a desirable service, but NOT a legal right. Or: universal health care, like universal literacy, is a desirable social goal, but NOT a legally-guaranteed entitlement.
2. The Alternative of Choice sales technique: "Which is health care? A right or a privilege? You choose." Sales trainers have taught this manipulative sales technique since the 1930s. "Would you like one egg in your malt or two?" (Maybe you want none.) "Do you want the red sweater or the blue one?" (Maybe you want neither, or a jacket.) This "Do you want this, or that?" technique gives buyers the illusion of choice, to get them to turn off their critical thought process and buy one or the other. The health care "right or privilege" question is designed to make its victims choose between caring for everyone -- or being an uncaring cad.
3. The word "right" in the question means "government-granted entitlement," NOT the natural or God-given rights to life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness that the American Revolution was fought for. When the government grants these kinds of "rights" or entitlements to individuals or groups, it saddles taxpayers with the obligation to fund or provide them. If person X or group Y have a government-granted right to medical services and medicines, then taxpayers are legally obligated to pay for it through taxes or government mandates. Every government-granted "right" is an obligation on you.
Rephrase the first part of the question to this: "Are American citizens obligated to pay for other people's medical insurance, or medical services, or drugs and medicines?" Or: "Should American taxpayers be obligated to pay medical costs of those who smoke, or drink too much, or use dangerous drugs, or overeat, or refuse to exercise, or engage in reckless or irresponsible behaviors?"
A government-granted right to medical care is your obligation, your increased taxes, your cost, your burden.
4. Consider the meaning of "privilege": "a right or immunity granted as a peculiar benefit, advantage, or favor; especially: such a right or immunity attached specifically to a position or an office." (Source: Merriam-Webster Dictionary.)
Here's another dirty little secret behind the false and deceptive health care question: they are trying to con us into choosing between "health care guaranteed to all, or to only the privileged few." This level of trickery goes beyond Karl Marx. It goes all they way to Groucho Marx. Except government-controlled or government-run medicine might just make us laugh all the way to a too-early grave.
[/FONT][FONT=Verdana,Geneva,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]
[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Geneva,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] 5. The right questions to ask about medical care and medical insurance:
* Which laws, regulations, or government mandates drive up the costs of medical care, medicine, and medical insurance?
* Which of these laws, regulations, and government mandates can your state legislature and governor repeal? Which need to be repealed by the U.S. Senate, the House, and the president?
* Which government-granted privileges and special protections has government enacted for the benefit of pharmaceutical corporations, hospitals, doctors, nurses, lawyers, or insurance companies that make medical care more expensive?
* Which of these privileges and special protections can your state legislature and governor repeal? Which need to be repealed by the U.S. Senate, the House, and the president?
* What other cost-lowering medical alternatives are forbidden or blocked by state government or the federal government?
* Can these be repealed on the state level -- or do they need to be repealed on the federal level?
* What other laws and regulations can we repeal to give patients and doctors more choices? To improve the quality of medical care? To lower the costs of medical care enough to make them as affordable as food, clothing, and shelter in America?
Do NOT let the political con artists prey on your family, friends, and co-workers. Share this column with them. Forward this issue of Liberator Online to them.
* * * * * * * *
Michael Cloud is author of the acclaimed book Secrets of Libertarian Persuasion, available exclusively from the Advocates.
In 2000, Michael was honored with the Thomas Paine Award as the Most Persuasive Libertarian Communicator in America.[/FONT]
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