Posted by
JustinM on Friday, July 31, 2009 9:50:27 PM
Senator Bayh:
I have included a detailed analysis in this correspondence
as to the impacts of the current health care reform bill being worked on by our
Congress, a bill that will eventually reach you and your colleagues in the
Senate. The impact study is provided
below:
http://www.liberty.edu/media/9980/attachments/healthcare_overview_obama_072909.pdf
I urge you to not only vote against the Senate version of
the bill, but use whatever power and influence you may have to convince your
colleagues to vote against this issue as well. My outright hope is that you
find a way to make sure this never even comes to a vote and is rejected before
reaching the Senate floor. The health care bill proposed by the current
Congress is not a bill that can merely be adjusted and fixed; it's an
abomination that is beyond hope for fixing our problems. If anything, the
problems will only worsen if this bill passes.
It isn't just a matter of monetary cost; this bill will cost
real lives and cause real pain in real people. As a US Senator, you are a representative of the people and are expected
to act in our best interest. It is clear that this bill is not in our best
interest.
I've heard the supporter's claims on this bill, including
our President's, and after reading the bill in its entirety and fully digesting
the impacts, which are best summarized in the link posted above, it is clear we
are not being provided an honest assessment of what we will be forced into. I
am reluctant to say this, but the authors and supporters of this bill, including
Mr. Obama, are lying to us and I expect you, as my representative, to call them
out on this and fight against this bill at every turn.
The health care system in our nation is a mess, I agree with
this; however, no one has bothered to properly study the issue to be able to
offer any solutions. Increasing costs and an increasing number of individuals
who are uninsured is not the problem itself; it is the symptom of the problem.
The American medical system is a sick patient and Congress
is currently behaving like a new age medicine man who adorns his trailer park
office with printed "degrees" from the Internet in strange holistic
medicines. You cannot just start simply throwing cures at the patient. You
first need to understand why the patient is sick. There exists no medicine that
treats fever, there are numerous maladies that cause fevers and each of them
requires a different treatment.
Numerous factors cause prices to increase and access to
decline. Like any other product or service, medical care is a business that
exists in the market and operates on the same market laws that economists have
understood for centuries. When a price increases, that means either supply is
restricted or demand is artificially increased, or a combination of the two. The
US medical system suffers from both.
Further, Congress, including your Senate colleagues, fails
to identify what the end result is to be. "Access to all" is a vague
promise. Without clearly defining what your end result should be, it will most
likely create problems. The current health care bill only exasperates existing
conditions that are creating the problems in our health care system since the
bill fails to provide access to all and does little more than restrict supply
via Federal blocks on hospital expansions and reducing the incentives to enter
into the medical field via salary caps without concern for specialty. It also
will drive up demand by adding 47 million citizens and countless non-resident
aliens, legal and otherwise, into an already strained system.
Once the problem is identified and an end result is
formulated, THEN a plan of action can be built to bridge the problem to the
solution. Currently, Congress wants to build this bridge without concerning
itself where it should be built from and where it should be built to or even
considering what the terrain of the riverbed terrain.
I am a financial auditor by trade and am well versed in the
realm of economic thought. While I am still young and have not established a
name or career, I can still offer my detailed analysis of the cause, effects
and possible solutions to our health care problems.
You are free to contact me at my home phone listed in the
correspondence form or via cell phone at [edited] if you are interested
in discussing, in detail, my analysis of our health care system and what I
believe are viable solutions.
The President is right on one matter, the health care reform
Congress ultimately passes will be historic. The question is whether history
will remember that as the pivotal point where the great American experiment in
liberty and freedom died or the day that very experiment was saved. I would
like you to be remembered in history books as the man who saved the Republic
from its destruction and proved Dr. Alexander Tytler's prediction that all
Democratic nations are doomed to fail wrong and I would like to be a part of that by
providing the support necessary, either by my words here or a deeper and more
important role in shaping these issues.
Regards,
Justin Murray
Fishers, IN