BY JAMES TARANTO
Tuesday, September 4, 2007 Just What the Lawyer OrderedWho does John Edwards think he is, our mother? The Associated Press reports from Tipton, Iowa, on the lovely and talented one's latest brainstorm:
Edwards said on Sunday that his universal health care proposal would
require that Americans go to the doctor for preventive care.
"It requires that everybody be covered. It requires that everybody get preventive care," he told a crowd sitting in lawn chairs in front of the Cedar County Courthouse.
"If you are going to be in the system, you can't choose not to go to the doctor for 20 years. You have to go in and be checked and make sure that you are OK." He noted, for example, that women would be required to have regular mammograms in an effort to find and treat "the first trace of problem." Edwards and his wife, Elizabeth, announced earlier this year that her breast cancer had returned and spread.
Edwards said his mandatory health care plan would cover preventive, chronic and long-term health care. The plan would include mental health care as well as dental and vision coverage for all Americans.
"The whole idea is a continuum of care, basically from birth to death," he said.
Aside from its obvious creepiness, there is something dissonant on several levels about a liberal politician in this day and age calling for government to police everyone's medical care.
For one thing, liberals, who these days are more or less uniformly pro-abortion, invariably speak of that practice in terms of "privacy" and "choice." But
how in the world can anyone who values privacy and choice more than life itself possibly countenance a policy of forcing women to have mammograms?For another, we live in a time when liberals often sound like antigovernment kooks, making far-fetched claims that the government is spying on all of us, torturing innocent terrorists, deliberately letting hurricane victims die, etc. Of course the object of this paranoia isn't government per se but the Republican Party and especially the current administration. Some have even asserted (see, for example, this 2005 item about former Enron adviser Paul Krugman) that conservative ideology precludes competent governance.
For the sake of argument, let's assume this assertion is true. It is also true that Americans in recent decades have shown a preference for conservative ideology, electing conservative Republicans in four or five of the past seven presidential elections (and, in the other two, choosing a Democrat who proclaimed "the era of big government is over"). If only liberals can handle big government, and Americans can't be trusted to elect liberals, expanding the government in the way Edwards proposes is a dreadful idea regardless of where you stand politically.
The question would-be Edwards supporters should be asking is:
Would you want George W. Bush making medical decisions for you? Is there anyone who would answer in the affirmative?
You want Bush making YOUR medical decisions?