In the eyes of most people, the intent of legislation matters more than the outcome. That’s the only way we can possibly explain why most people continue to support federal efforts to make health care more affordable and more available.
It wasn’t until the 1960s that the federal government got seriously involved with interfering with the medical industry. You can argue that it started before then, because it was certainly a gradual thing. But it was in the Great Society programs of the ’60s that the government started pumping massive amounts of money into health care. The purpose was to make quality health care available to everyone.
That’s not what happened, of course. In 1940, you could spend a day in the hospital in Greenville, Ohio, for $4. Adjusted for inflation, that would be about $31 today. Do you know any hospital where you can get a day in a room for $31 now? I don’t. Why is medical care so much more expensive today? And why do people trust the people who made it more expensive to fix the problem?

Modern weddings seem designed to conceal reality of relationships
Finding your own authentic voice is riskier than copying everybody else
Words on paper don’t give governments the right to rob us
Meeting with dead man left me pondering choices of life, death
When you’re finally facing death, how many people will love you?
It took me years to feel the anger I’d repressed since childhood
Good riddance, UAB football: Taxes shouldn’t subsidize college sports
Don’t complain about debt when you borrow $35,000 to study puppetry
11 children left orphaned by plane crash remind me how fickle life is