“Behind the coming physician shortage”

CATO’s Michael Tanner in the NY Post:

In fact, we have already seen the start of this process in Massachusetts, where Mitt Romney’s health care reforms were nearly identical to President Obama’s. Romney’s reforms increased the demand for health care but did nothing to expand the supply of physicians. In fact, by cracking down on insurance premiums, Massachusetts pushed insurers to reduce their payments to providers, making it less worthwhile for doctors to expand their practices. As a result, the average wait to get an appointment with a doctor grew from 33 days to over 55 days.

Imagine that.

An Update and Other Links

This past Wednesday, I heard Bing West give a talk about Afghanistan and his new book The Wrong War: Grit, Strategy, and the Way Out of Afghanistan, at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. When I get a chance, I will write up a post. He is a very good public speaker: energetic, lively, clear.

Boston.com’s The Big Picture has some truly horrifying photos of the Japanese tsunami and earthquake. Here is the American Red Cross link. If our readers and commenters have additional links or sites they think important, please leave them in the comments section.

I think the following two articles might be of interest for our readers:

Bryson has pulled off a marvelous feat. He devotes almost every chapter to a room in his Victorian house in England. He then considers why the room is the way it is and what preceded it. In doing so he produces an important economic history, only some of which will be familiar to economic historians and almost all of which will be unfamiliar to pretty much everyone else. A large percentage of it is important, for two reasons: One, you get to pinch yourself, realizing just how wealthy you are; and two, you get a better understanding than you’ll get from almost any high school or college history textbook of the economic progress that made you wealthy. Not surprisingly, given that I’m an economist and Bryson isn’t, I have a few criticisms of places where he misleads by commission or omission. But At Home’s net effect on readers is likely to be a huge increase in understanding and appreciation of how we got to where we are.

David R. Henderson, Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

The disturbing truth that modern Western COIN theory is built on a handful of books based upon practitioner experiences in a handful of 20th-century conflicts is not mitigated by the less famous but broader COIN works. Country studies by lesser known writers are similarly restricted. The core texts cover Vietnam (French Indochina), Algeria, Northern Ireland, the Philippines, and Malaya. The less-well-known writers will go on to discuss Mozambique, Angola, El Salvador, or Afghanistan under the Soviets. Only the most adventurous writers and theorists braved traveling as far as Kashmir or India to look at what could be learned there. Subsequently, the modern study of counterinsurgency and the doctrine it gave birth to are limited to less than two dozen conflicts in a century that witnessed more than 150 wars and lesser conflicts, domestic and interstate (see table 1).

Sebastian L.v. Gorka and David Kilcullen, Joint Force Quarterly (JFQ)

Eff the FDA

A few years ago I blew a gasket in my abdomen and after emergency surgery woke up in intensive care. The hospital was part of a local chain owned and managed by an order of physically tiny but frightfully efficient Catholic nuns. So, the first thing that catches my eye after I claw my way up to semi-consciousness is an old school Catholic crucifix up on the wall. We’re not talking a dry, Protestant two-pieces-of-crossed wood here but an anatomically detailed Jesus in agony nailed in place complete with a tiny crown of thorns.

As I blinked in disorientation at the cross, Jesus began dancing his torso from side-to-side in time with Monty Python’s Always Look at the Bright Side of Life which began playing loudly in my head. For my entire time in intensive care, I couldn’t understand anything anyone said to me because I couldn’t hear them over the endlessly looping song. Every time I looked at the crucifix, Jesus started dancing.

A couple of days later, after I had been moved to an ordinary room, I woke up from a fitful sleep and attempted to escape the hospital. I dragged myself out of bed trailing leads and IVs, screaming in pain and losing my gown in the process. It was quite a shock for the nurses. I even attempted to operate my cell phone and call 911. Why did I do that?

Simple: I thought I was a small Cajun piglet escaping the laboratory of a mad Nazi scientist operating out of a bordello in the French Quarter of New Orleans. True story.

Anyhow, long story short, that is how I began to suspect that morphine and I didn’t get along.

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Three Times is Slavery and Treason: The Sequel

What is it about leftwing organizations and teenage sex slaves?

Not in my wildest dreams would I think I would have to write a post like this one ever again. Yet, here we are.

Planned Parenthood is clearly the target of a successful ACORN style sting. The investigators released one video, got the Planned Parenthood executives and supporters to go on record saying that the one incident was just a fluke and indicated nothing but one corrupt employee. Once the defenders had staked out their position in the ambush zone, the investigators spring another video. We can assume there are at least three tapes in the queue waiting to pop up and continue the story.

The really weird thing is that you would assume that the Planned Parenthood people would have been on their guard after the whole ACORN sting went down. I mean, how stupid can these people be?

I bet they weren’t even paying attention. They were probably all too busy down in the basement obsessively watching The Handmaid’s Tale over and over again.

Well, they better look up from their fantasies and start paying attention because they’re two strikes down. One more and they’re out of the game.

Slicing Spinal Cords With Scissors

[Sorry for any typos. I was a bit upset and hurried.]

I’m mostly pro-choice but this horrific story demonstrates just how utterly extreme and insane the left in general and the Democrat party in particular have become on the matter of abortion:

A doctor whose abortion clinic was described as a filthy, foul-smelling “house of horrors” that was overlooked by regulators for years was charged Wednesday with murder, accused of delivering seven babies alive and then using scissors to kill them.
 

 
He “induced labor, forced the live birth of viable babies in the sixth, seventh, eighth month of pregnancy and then killed those babies by cutting into the back of the neck with scissors and severing their spinal cord,” District Attorney Seth Williams said.
 
Gosnell referred to it as “snipping,” prosecutors said.
 
Prosecutors estimated Gosnell ended hundreds of pregnancies by cutting the spinal cords, but they said they couldn’t prosecute more cases because he destroyed files.

How could this go on for over 30 years?

State regulators ignored complaints about Gosnell and the 46 lawsuits filed against him, and made just five annual inspections, most satisfactory, since the clinic opened in 1979, authorities said. The inspections stopped completely in 1993 because of what prosecutors said was the pro-abortion rights attitude that set in after Democratic Gov. Robert Casey, an abortion foe, left office.

Again, I am pro-choice but this tragedy occurred because the left violently resisted even the least regulatory oversight of even the most extreme late term abortions. The left has made abortion the highest good that trumps every other concern, and the resulting real-world policies border on the surreal.

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