Privatize Government Charity

American’s routinely give hundreds of billions in charitable donations annually, giving over $316 Billion in 2012. Every penny of this private charitable giving is voluntary.

Federal and State government gives away more than $1 Trillion dollars in charitable donations annually. For 2014 this combined Federal and State charity is budgeted in excess of $1.36 Trillion, or more than 4 times voluntary charitable giving. Every penny of this government charitable giving is compelled by law, and allocated and managed by government.

This $1.36 Trillion in government compelled charity includes $507 Billion in Medicaid and other direct health care assistance, $120 Billion in unemployment payments, $102 Billion in housing subsidies, $105 Billion in food stamps, and $175 Billion in “income security” payments (earned income tax credit, etc.). Note that these charitable programs specifically exclude Social Security and Medicare payments.

CBS NEWS recently reported that there are more American’s receiving at least one form of government charity than there are working Americans. Over 108,000,000 Americans were direct recipients of government charity in 2011 while there were 101,000,000 American’s with full time jobs. In approximate terms roughly 101,000,000 full time working Americans are each compelled to pay an average of over $13,000 annually to subsidize this charity (part of which is included in the annual government deficit each working American has effectively borrowed and will have to pay back).

A morality problem arises as those with a financial vested interest in government charity become a majority who vote for politicians promising to continue and to enlarge such payments at the expense of independent working Americans.

A solution to this problem lies in privatizing government charity.

Progressives justify their re-distributional policy priorities using words such as “equality,” “social justice,” and “helping the most needy.” They insist on moral grounds that government should be in the business of charity even though, as pointed out above, there is a point fast approaching where compelling charity and imposing dependency is itself immoral.

So, let’s keep the compassion and take the power away from politicians by empowering every taxpayer to contribute a percentage of their tax bill directly to charities of their choice as a dollar for dollar credit. For example, in 2014 the Federal government will donate $800 Billion in welfare charity, constituting 21% of total Federal spending. If my tax bill before charitable donations is $10,000 I could pay $7,900 to the IRS and donate $2,100 (21% of my tax bill) to charities in lieu of paying that amount of tax. To address concerns about those with the highest tax bills setting charitable priorities a clearing house could be used to allocate charitable dollars based on percentages of allocation choices made by taxpayers.

This approach would put the power of compassion in the hands of taxpayers and remove politics from welfare. Individual taxpayers would decide which charitable causes are worthy. Charities would expand to provide the equivalent of health care subsidies now paid for through Medicaid and Obamacare, to provide unemployment compensation, food and housing assistance, etc. as determined by the priorities of the individuals contributing directly to charitable causes in lieu of paying taxes to the IRS.

Taxpayers could choose to pay the charity tax to the IRS in which case the politicians would allocate the exact amount so paid to the same private charities supported by taxpayers.

Under this proposal, society as a whole would continue to be progressively compassionate as the share of total dollars available for charitable causes would not decline, and Congress and the President could vote to increase the “compassion” percentage (for example, from 21% to 22%). Charitable organizations would be more accountable to their donors than government is to taxpayers, contributing to better outcomes. The role of government would be limited while our society would remain compassionate toward those needing help.

Let’s pursue this American solution to our country’s social challenges.

Regards, Pete Weldon
americanstance.org

Healthcare.disaster

I thought some might want to know how well healthcare.gov is working.

I created an account weeks ago and entered all information requested. The system confused my social security number with my son’s, but when I edited the form the system kept insisting on using my son’s social security number as mine.

So, about two weeks ago (I write this on December 18) I decided to delete the application and start over. This time I was able to complete the application, digitally sign the application, and my identity was noted as verified.

So, I thought I was in, however my “current application” still showed only as “In progress.” So, I waited. No emails. No phone calls. No idea.

So, today I logged back in. My application still showed as “In progress.”

So, I started a chat session as offered (“Chat with someone who can help.”). Here is how it went:

[2:49:59 pm]: Thanks for contacting Health Insurance Marketplace Live Chat. Please wait while we connect you to someone who can help.
[2:50:06 pm]: Please be patient while we’re helping other people.
[2:50:10 pm]: Welcome! You’re now connected to Health Insurance Marketplace Live Chat.

Thanks for contacting us. My name is Maria. To protect your privacy, please don’t provide any personal information, like Social Security Number, or any other sensitive medical or personal information.
[2:50:22 pm]: Maria
Hello, how may i help you?
[2:51:09 pm]: Peter
My application has shown as “In progress” for weeks. I have “signed” and been verified. How do I access health policies in my area?
[2:52:08 pm]: Maria
You have to continue the enrollment.
[2:54:18 pm]: Peter
I finished the entire process. Every time I log back in the system makes me verify everything I already entered, then resign the application. The system then shows my identity has been verified. So, what else do I have to do to see the health plans available in my area? The word “enrollment” means nothing and is not shown anywhere on the healthcare.gov web page showing my application.
[2:55:03 pm]: Maria
Thank you for your interest in the Marketplace and for sharing your feedback. We apologize for any technical difficulties you may be experiencing as you use HealthCare.gov. We know this can be frustrating, and we’re working around the clock to improve HealthCare.gov and to make sure your experience with it is a positive one.
[2:55:48 pm]: Maria
Or you may also call the Marketplace at 1-800-318-2596 and they are able to look your application.

So, I asked where the help was and received no response.

So, I called the number. A very helpful man went through the application page by page and was able to get past the problem.

Once the “Application” was “Complete” I received my “Eligibility Results.” These results said that my wife and I are “Eligible to purchase health coverage through the Marketplace.” However, our two children (ages 21 and 23) “don’t qualify to purchase health coverage through the Marketplace.”

But wait! Our children should be eligible because they are US citizens, are less than age 26, and one of the promises of Obamacare was that my children could “stay on my plan.”

The nice man then told me that the only way to get this straightened out was that I would need to file an “appeal” of the eligibility results (I guess I was found guilty). The only way to appeal appears to be to write a letter.

So, I will write a letter. (FYI – both children live outside Florida which, I am guessing here, makes them ineligible to “stay on my plan” even though…)

I can’t wait for the formal response to my appeal.

Oh, and I was asked if I wanted to register to vote! Yes, comrade. You can be sure I am registered and will vote.

I think we should all document and share our experiences with the great Obamacare disaster.

Regards, Pete Weldon
americanstance.org

Obamacare Façade Has Crumbled

Perhaps the most interesting result of the bungling of HealthCare.gov is the now transparent reveal that Obamacare is nothing more than an effort to put health care in the United States under complete government control regardless of social or financial cost.

According to US Census Bureau health insurance coverage statistics for 2012 almost 85% or 263.2 million of 311 million Americans already had health insurance coverage in 2012. Roughly 168 million were covered by private health insurance, 86 million by Medicare or Medicaid, and 9 million by other health programs, leaving approximately 48 million not having health coverage for some reason (including those voluntarily declining to purchase coverage).

Why do we need to put health insurance, reimbursement, and determination of care under centralized government control to meet the needs of 15% of our population? Only to satisfy the ideologues determined to socialize all health care (and everything else).

The HealthCare.gov disaster is the tip of the proverbial iceberg.

American’s who have never had coverage for financial reasons now have the option of paying a tax or purchasing possibly subsidized coverage with deductibles and annual out of pocket maximums most are unlikely to be able to afford.

When 85% of Americans see the coverages they don’t need that they are forced to pay for, when they find out their Doctors have not agreed to be part of the plan they can now afford, when they find out how much more they will be paying, when they find out the healthcare.gov “marketplace” is a shame, the game will be over.

Americans need to start working now to replace this disaster with a combination of free market reforms and direct assistance for those in need. The NCPA.org offers some detailed alternatives. Additional simple changes include selling health insurance across state lines and transparent pricing for health care services in advance of care.

Regards, Pete Weldon
americanstance.org

Hayek’s Spontaneous Ordering Forces

Friedrich A. Hayek’s training and pursuits in economics led him to reach conclusions about society, government, and markets.

Quoting from Friedrich A. Hayek’s lecture “The Pretense of Knowledge” upon accepting the Nobel Prize in economics, Dec. 11, 1974:

To act on the belief that we possess the knowledge and the power which enable us to shape the processes of society entirely to our liking, knowledge which in fact we do not possess, is likely to make us do much harm. In the physical sciences there may be little objection to trying to do the impossible; one might even feel that one ought not to discourage the over-confident because their experiments may after all produce some new insights. But in the social field the erroneous belief that the exercise of some power would have beneficial consequences is likely to lead to a new power to coerce other men being conferred on some authority.

Even if such power is not in itself bad, its exercise is likely to impede the functioning of those spontaneous ordering forces by which, without understanding them, man is in fact so largely assisted in the pursuit of his aims. We are only beginning to understand on how subtle a communication system the functioning of an advanced industrial society is based—a communications system which we call the market and which turns out to be a more efficient mechanism for digesting dispersed information than any that man has deliberately designed.

If man is not to do more harm than good in his efforts to improve the social order, he will have to learn that in this, as in all other fields where essential complexity of an organized kind prevails, he cannot acquire the full knowledge which would make mastery of the events possible. He will therefore have to use what knowledge he can achieve, not to shape the results as the craftsman shapes his handiwork, but rather to cultivate a growth by providing the appropriate environment, in the manner in which the gardener does this for his plants.

There is danger in the exuberant feeling of ever growing power which the advance of the physical sciences has engendered and which tempts man to try, “dizzy with success,” to use a characteristic phrase of early communism, to subject not only our natural but also our human environment to the control of a human will. The recognition of the insuperable limits to his knowledge ought indeed to teach the student of society a lesson of humility which should guard him against becoming an accomplice in men’s fatal striving to control society—a striving which makes him not only a tyrant over his fellows, but which may well make him the destroyer of a civilization which no brain has designed but which has grown from the free efforts of millions of individuals.

What Hayek refers to as “spontaneous ordering forces” is in my experience more directly identifiable as the morality of the free market. Any free market must be moral to exist. Morality here is defined by the promises of the seller to the buyer, and from the buyer to the seller.

When you buy something as simple as a package of candy you presume there is something inside that is safe to eat and you have a expectation of the form, taste, and texture of that food based on prior experience. You exchange your money for the package of candy because you trust what you are receiving in exchange. Likewise, the distributor of the package of candy presumes your form of payment is valid just as the manufacturer of the candy trusted the distributor’s form of payment in delivering cases of candy to the store where you purchased it.

This same trust is characteristic of all free markets where buyer and seller voluntarily exchange and provides an essential “ordering force.” If the candy is tainted the buyer quickly seeks a remedy from the distributor and/or manufacturer for breaking the essential promise of safety and expectation, and the buyer is free to seek another distributor and/or manufacturer the next time they want a package of candy. (If you have ever returned something to the supermarket you were enforcing this market bargain, providing an “ordering force.”)

Now follow this thinking to bigger markets such as the market for labor and the market for health care. How is it possible for society to end up in a better place if the government interjects laws between the free exchange of buyer and seller?

If government imposes minimum wage laws many people may lose their jobs because higher wages incent automation and contribute to higher prices. At what point does the cost of a machine making Big Macs become more cost effective than paying a person to perform that task? Keep in mind that the price of the Big Mac necessarily includes the cost of making it and that the customers of the Big Mac (all of whom have an interest in the price) include the people employed at McDonalds. There is no way anyone (let alone those in government) can know the net societal consequences of minimum wage laws with any certainty yet politicians continue to expand such laws and set higher and higher minimum wages.

Our recent progressive efforts to control health care (Afforable Care Act) and banking (Dodd-Frank) are subject to the same realities. Application of progressive ideology in government planning and control proves less effective than the free market in creating a just outcome exactly because such planning and control remove the moral requirements of voluntary exchange and direct accountability from the process. These essential “ordering forces” are replaced with all involved being compelled to trade (not voluntary) in an authorized manner and all involved then blame each other when something goes wrong (no accountability). In the health care area, what preceded Obamacare is just as bad as Obamacare in not allowing the benefits of the free market to contribute to an improved outcome. In the banking area, the simplicity of compartmentalization of risk under the 52 page Glass-Steagall Act of 1932 protected citizens from excessive bank risk taking until its effective repeal in 1999 but now the progressives demand the 849 page Dodd-Frank Act that does more to grant government leverage over the banking industry (see J.P. Morgan settlement) than it does to protect citizens from excessive bank risk taking, undermining a free market in banking services.

The unparalleled success of America is not the result of, and our success in the future will not benefit from, a bigger and more intrusive government interfering in our right of free exchange. We need to elect those who understand and promote the benefits of free markets to represent us in Washington, D.C.

Regards, Pete Weldon
americanstance.org

Leadership Through Disingenuity

Mr. Obama and his administration are so smart, so clever, so incapable of being honest or sincere, and only pretending to be.

The evidence of this is in their semantics. Their use of words to persuade is replete with inaccuracies, untruths, incompleteness, and guile.

A few examples:

The most famous is “If you like your plan you can keep your plan, period” repeated at least 60 times by Mr. Obama and replicated endlessly in the media as expected and desired by the administration. This phrase was specifically designed to relieve worried citizens of the fear that Obamacare would negatively impact them and to enable its passage. We also know that Mr. Obama and members of his administration knew their claim was disingenuous at best and an outright lie at worst.

Then there is the constant phrase used by Mr. Obama that healthcare.gov is a “marketplace” where you can “shop” for health insurance.

A “marketplace” brings to mind a farmer’s market where numerous independent sellers bring their wares and trade with consumers who voluntarily “shop” to meet specific needs.

Definition of “marketplace” – a place where various goods are bought and sold.

Definition of “shop” – to look for something that you want to buy.

Definition of “buy” – to get something that you want or need, usually by losing something else that is important.

Healthcare.gov in contrast is a place where those qualifying for subsidies are compelled to apply and then receive a list of health plans meeting the requirements of Obamacare, not the needs of the consumers. The sellers (the insurance companies) can only sell what the government approves. There is no negotiation. There is no real choice. There is no shopping. There is no marketplace. Healthcare.gov is only a vehicle through which consumers seeking subsidies MUST buy health plans approved by the government. Consumers not qualifying for subsidies can also go to health insurance company web sites to purchase Obamacare approved plans directly. There will not be any plans other than Obamacare approved plans after 2014 unless the law is changed.

Mr. Obama’s use of the terms “marketplace” and “shop” are conjured to make it all seem a routine free market environment where you go to get products you want at competitive prices. The words were chosen on purpose to corrupt the truth and persuade through misrepresentation and guile.

These unfortunate realities will hit home when each individual experiences Healthcare.gov.

Regards, Pete Weldon
americanstance.org