Quantcast
728 x 90
728 x 90
728 x 90
728 x 90
728 x 90



  • It’s Not Health Care ‘Reform’; It’s Exploitation0

    • July 22, 2010

    Pajamas Media: Scratch a health care “reformer” and you’re likely to find a health care exploiter. To stop health care exploitation we must address the root issue: the nature of rights and the purpose of government.

    READ MORE
  • The Obama Care Scam0

    • March 29, 2010

    ObamaCare is a scam. It further empowers politicians to dictate how you seek medical care and support charities. Politicians should protect, rather than violate, your right to make these choices. The bill is not reform. Rather, it spreads a disease that masquerades as its own cure: authoritarian politically-controlled medicine.

    READ MORE
  • Get Ready for Health Insurance Slumlords0

    • March 22, 2010

    If you dislike your health insurer now, just wait until politicians impose price controls that make your insurer act like a slumlord. Expect worse customer service, skimpier plans, and more claim denials.

    READ MORE
  • House Bill 1330: The All-Payer Database is a Transparency Trojan Horse0

    • March 1, 2010

    With no limits on how the data collected can be used to coerce individual behavior, this bill poses a grave threat to both medical privacy and individual liberty.

    READ MORE
  • Why We're 'Crazy' About Health Care Choice0

    • January 29, 2010

    Sentinel Editor Dave Perry dismisses the Colorado Right to Health Care Choice Initiative as “crazy” and says its supporters “clearly have lost” their minds (Opinion, January 21).

    The Initiative would prohibit Colorado government from requiring you to purchase health insurance.

    READ MORE
  • Health Insurers' 'Sins' Don’t Justify Reform0

    • January 8, 2010

    Are health insurance companies evil? A web search for the phrase turns up almost a million hits. The common reasons for this passionate indictment are insurance company profits, denial of claims, and rescission of policies. But these do not justify the Democrats’ goal of expanding political control of health insurance. Rather, they call attention to existing controls that unfairly advantage insurers and limit competition that would keep insurers honest. They also suggest government’s failure to enforce contracts

    READ MORE