Ayn Rand also detested gvt medical programs. But if I understand this  
correctly,
when she was diagnosed with cancer late in her life and she exhausted  all
of her resources for medical care, she finally agreed to receive  help
from Uncle Sam.  Kept her alive longer. 
 
Billy
 
 
------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
11/30/2011 4:15:33 A.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected]  writes:

This  article is poorly written and offers a mischaracterization of Ron 
Paul's  position (s).  But I agree with the premise about  fundamentalism.

Paul cannot openly say the truth for the same reasons  people cannot talk 
openly about homosexuality or issues of race.   Bleeding hearts and various 
other manipulators will use the truth to  destroy otherwise good people.

I have a catastrophic health insurance  plan because I don't want to die.  
I 
would rather not pay the 500 per  month I pay but if I get very sick I'd 
rather be able to go to the  hospital than die.  That is a decision.

Like most Libertarians  Paul supports pro bono care and he offers it in his 
own parctice.  He  does not accept Medicaid or  Medicare.

Kevin


http://www.viewshound.com/politics-usa/2011/11/19/fundamentalisms-of-the-lef
t-and-right

Rigid,  dogmatic thinking dominates both the left and right wing's 
philosophies.  There has to be a major change in people's thinking.

In an otherwise  excellent book, The Myth of The Rational Voter, 
libertarian 
economist  Bryan Caplan strongly objects to the use of the phrase “market  
fundamentalism” to describe hard-core libertarians. This term may sound  
harsh and even a little offensive, but I think Caplan here doth protest  
too 
much. There are many politicians and voters today who deserve this  label. 
Liberal New York Times columnist and economist Paul Krugman puts it  well: 
“It’s literally a fundamental article of faith in the G.O.P. that  the 
private sector is always better than the government, and no amount of  
evidence can shake that credo.” Not convinced? Here’s just one (prominent) 
 
example of this dogmatic thinking: numerous Republican politicians have  
made 
the preposterous and false claim that government spending cannot  create 
jobs. The phrase market fundamentalist seems like an appropriate  term for 
these politicians and their libertarian/conservative  supporters.

Ron Paul is the perfect, if extreme, example of a market  fundamentalist. 
He 
sees every problem in America as the fault of  government; he never seems 
to 
admit there could be such a thing as a  market failure. If you think I 
exaggerate, go back and examine his  ridiculous answer to Wolf Blitzer’s 
question in one of the debates.  Blitzer asked him about the man who 
voluntarily doesn’t get health care  and then gets sick. Paul’s answer 
was: 
“That’s what freedom is all about —  taking your own risks.” This 
dogmatic 
answer was the reduction ad absurdum  of extreme libertarianism. Paul would 
not openly say what any decent human  being would say: We can’t let him 
die, 
he has to be admitted to the  emergency room; instead he evaded the 
question. 
The supporters of Paul who  yelled “let him die” were widely criticized, 
but 
they were simply taking  Paul’s doctrine to its logical, if inhumane, end.

Another group that  can safely be called market fundamentalists are 
advocates 
of “supply side”  economics. They claim that that tax cuts pay for 
themselves, or even more  absurdly, increase revenue! This long discredited 
theory led to the  massive deficits of the 1980s. Even conservative 
economists like Greg  Mankiw (a top Bush economic adviser) have denounced 
supply side economics  as economic quackery. Yet, somehow, the 
supply-siders 
are still taken  seriously by many conservative publications. For example, 
Stephen Moore, a  supply side advocate, writes op-eds for the Wall Street 
Journal editorial  page. Bad ideas sometimes just don’t go away.

However, rigid ideology  is not the exclusive province of the right wing. 
Leftists have their own  fundamentalist philosophy as well. I call it 
simply 
government  fundamentalism. Every article written by a leftist I’ve ever 
read 
has a  common, but ultimately absurd theme: government spending (other than 
the  military) should always be higher than its current level. I have yet 
to  
meet a leftist who will say, “Once social spending reaches x amount of  
dollars or x % of GDP, we’ll be satisfied.” Government spending is higher  
than it ever has been in American history—but it isn’t enough. It never  
will 
be.

The leftist Occupation on Wall Street movement is the  perfect example of 
this ideological dogma. They take as a self-evident  fact that the top 1% 
control the country and rig the rules to their  benefit. The fact that the 
1% 
pay over 28% of their income in taxes and  the top 0.1% pay over 30% of 
their 
income in taxes is completely ignored,  as it contradicts their party line 
that the rich are exploiting the other  99%. Source: Tax Policy Center. 
Another example of dogma over  evidence.

Another complaint I have with many leftists is that they  rarely, if ever, 
acknowledge any legitimate limitations on the powers of  the federal 
government. This is not a straw man argument. In fact, there  was an 
example 
of this misguided thinking on display at a town hall held  by liberal 
Democrat Pete Stark. He openly proclaimed that there was  nothing the 
Federal 
government is forbidden from doing.

This is a  hope more than an expectation, but maybe some thoughtful people 
on 
both  sides will realize that their ideologies are rigid, impractical, and 
yes,  downright absurd. Perhaps a movement like John Stewart’s March for 
Sanity  will sweep the nation and change the way many Americans think about 
 
politics. I remain pessimistic. As a song (I think it was Civil War by  
Guns 
and Roses) once said: Some people just can’t be  reached.

Article category: USA
Article tags: Down with  Dogma!


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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist  Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group:  http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and  blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the  Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google  Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism  website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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