Saturday, November 26, 2005

Privatization vs Big Government: Friedman's Big Lie
Just read a letter that highlights the heart of the problem with "free market forces". Free, in Friedman's thinking, being "free from government regulations, oversight and accountability". This letter comes from a soldier in Iraq:

Paul,

I wish I had the time or energy or memory capacity to describe to you how wrong this whole thing has gone. It's just as you described it a couple years ago. We can make a difference here, and i believe in the mission as it looks on paper. But your president and his brain-dead colleagues aren't even trying to give us what we need to do it. the add-on armor HMMWVs are a joke. The terrorists target them b/c they know they offer no protection. The M1114s have good armor, but every time we lose one (i had one blown up monday, driver had his femoral artery cut -- will recover fully -- b/c there apparently is no armor or very weak armor under the pedals) it's impossible to replace them. So now I have to send yet another add-on armored vehicle outside the wire daily. The M1114s also have certain mechanical defects, known to the manufacturer, for which there is apparently no known fix. For example, on some of them (like mine) if it stalls or you turn it off, you cannot restart it if the engine is hot. We have to dump 3 liters of cold water on a solenoid in order to start it again. Not that much fun when your vehicle won't start in indian country. I wonder if DoD is getting a refund for the contract. Speaking of contracts, KBR is a joke. I can't even enumerate the problems with their service, but I guarantee they do not receive less money based on how many of the showers don't work, or how many of us won't eat in the chow hall often because we get sick every time we do.
There is so much. I could go on forever. the worst thing, which we have discussed, is that they are playing these bull**** numbers games to fool America about troop strength. If they stopped paying KBR employees $100,000 to do the job of a $28,000 soldier, maybe they'd have enough money to send us enough soldiers to do the job. As it stands we have no offensive capability in the most dangerous city on earth. General Shinseki should write an Op/Ed that basically says, "I told you so." Idiots.

Where are the AC-130s? The apaches? They have them in FAR less active AOs (areas of operations). All we ever get is a single Huey and Cobra team, both of which are older than I am. it's such a joke. They're not even trying. At all. They have apaches in Tikrit but Hueys in Ramadi.

I wish every american could see this for him/herself. Registering your frustration at the ballot box isn't nearly enough. There should be jail terms for this.


You get what you pay for and when it comes to not paying for your government, what you get is a national tragedy.

Oh, and his last few comments show us that not only does this administration not want to get out of Iraq, they are actively trying to PROLONG the stay there. It's what they want: neverending war. That's where the money is and when you elect Republicans, you elect Big Business. The very anti-thesis to Good Government.

And Friedman's economic theories continue to be debunked. In a 2004 book, Critical Condition: How Health Care in America became Big Business and Bad Medicine, famed investigative journalists, Donald Barlett and James B. Steele lay out their argument that it is precisely because of "free market forces" with no Government regulation that allowed our problem to become what it is today:

Over the last few decades, American health care has radically changed. A system that was largely not-for-profit has become a field where the profit motive and market forces affect every decision. [snip]

Much of the turmoil is a direct result of a national policy to run health care like a business, a misguided notion promoted by Washington over the last two decades that the free market and for-profit health care would restrain costs and bring high-quality care to all. On both counts, the experiment has failed miserably. In the meantime, tens of billions of dollars--money that could have gone into patient care--has been drained from consumers and corporate subscribers and transferred to investors, executives, and others who have a stake in perpetuating this myth.

1 Comments:

At 2:18 AM, Blogger Pen said...

Slow for the carpet cleaning. Tea house is doing well.

So where's this apt of yours? Behind WalMart? Sounds like it must be pretty nice.

 

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