Andrew Heaton asks: Is this the dumbest healthcare law?.
Some text:
If you want to open a hospital, you have to convince the government that there's a need for it. And all of the existing hospitals—your potential competitors—get to show up at the hearing and explain why, actually, there's no real need.
When you have to ask your competitors for permission to open a business, don't expect to get it.
For "live free or die" fans: New Hampshire is one of the 12 states without a Certificate of Need law. And the only one in New England.
On the more general topic, local Dr. James Fieseher appears in my lousy local newspaper, Foster's Daily Democrat to assert: America needs a national healthcare system (archive.today link)
Reader, didya ever notice how much mischief is buried in that word "system"? There's that hidden implication of something carefully planned by benevolent experts. We don't need no stinking markets!
Anyway, Fieseher's article is an unsurprising and unholy mixture of fallacy and finger-pointing. I won't debate the whole thing, but things go wrong for him almost immediately:
The closest thing most Americans have to a healthcare system is our present network of health insurance. But a health insurance network is not the same as a healthcare system.
Calling health insurance a healthcare system is like calling auto insurance a transportation system. If anything, health insurers are brokers, middlemen who collect fees from us and use them to pay our medical bills. They don’t supply any of the equipment or personnel needed to prevent injury or illness or fix our medical problems when they occur. Their main purpose is to pay our medical bills. But like all middleman transactions, they charge a fee for that service which adds to the cost of our care.
Of course, "auto insurance" is part of our "transportation system". But it doesn't pay for our cars, gasoline, routine maintenance, and the like; we are expected to pay for that stuff ourselves. This doesn't make our "transportation system" perfect by a long shot, but it gets most people where they want to go.
Should "health care" work more like that? Sure.
Is that what Fieseher wants? Ha. No.
Also of note:
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Grumpy economist John H. Cochrane was asked to be one of the five participants in a WSJ forum with a question-begging title: How Can We Reduce Income Inequality? (WSJ gifted link) His response:
It’s easy to reduce income inequality: Imprison the billionaires. Burn the evil capitalist businesses that generate their wealth and seduce us with wonders—iPhones, software, electric cars, Amazon, Walmart, miracle drugs, and so on. There, feel better?
Our billionaires kept a fraction of the benefit they generated for us by starting these innovative businesses. Their great wealth remains reinvested in those companies to serve us even better in the future. Just what is the problem?
It is right to worry about people of lesser means. But how does a kid who works at a carwash in Fresno even know how many billionaires there are, or what their net worth is?
We should worry about opportunity. Teachers’ unions destroyed his schools. Construction restrictions make moving to good jobs impossible. Business regulations, taxes, minimum wages and occupational licenses limit his opportunities. Social programs trap him by taking away a dollar of benefits for each dollar of earnings. To provide opportunity, start by getting out of the way.
Many people who worry about inequality hope to improve this kid’s life by taxing the innovators to send him a few more government checks—so long as he stays poor. But there aren’t enough billionaires to make a dent in the government’s ravenous appetite. And what a horrible vision: entrenched misery and idleness, in a stagnant society devoid of innovators, made only a bit better by a dwindling government check and dysfunctional social-service programs.
Others who decry inequality want taxes to reduce the political power of the wealthy. But that hands even more power to the government. Fairly won inequality does not threaten democracy. Confiscatory taxation does. Don’t kill the golden goose.
There is more at his substack: Inequality at WSJ.
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Sorry, I've got more on that guy in Maine. Or rather, Robby Soave does at Reason: Graham Platner has made #MeToo Democrats and their enemies switch sides.
Expecting any level of ideological consistency from partisan political actors is a fool's errand; even so, the amount of sheer hypocrisy generated by the Graham Platner scandal is striking.
In response to fresh allegations that Platner, the presumptive Democratic candidate for Senate in Maine, was abusive in his past relationships, conservatives who in the past have been correctly discerning of the motivations behind certain sexual misconduct claims are now heralding these accusations as all but confirmed. In fact, they have assailed The New York Times, which published a detailed story about Platner's dating history and alleged violent episodes, for not going further in its indictment. Meanwhile, many Democrats who gleefully and uncritically embraced the "believe all women" mantra of the #MeToo era are broadly dismissive of the Times story, even though the evidence of wrongdoing is arguably more compelling in this case.
Things are fluid enough that I feel I should visit the news sites before I post Platner-related items to find out whether he's dropped out.
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Beware of staffers bearing crullers. This NHJournal article received a Pun Salad chuckle: Donut-Wielding Staffer Put NHDems' Platner Problem on National TV.
A doughnut-wielding staffer trying to block a video camera with a breakfast pastry put Stefany Shaheen in the national news and shone a spotlight yet again on Granite State Democrats dodging questions about their Nazi-tattooed neighbor, Graham Platner.
For weeks, U.S. Senate candidate Rep. Chris Pappas and his fellow Democrats have refused to answer questions about Platner’s problematic behavior, including his Nazi SS tattoo, his statements praising a Hamas attack on Israelis, his insults targeting Black people and gay people, and, most recently, his sexting with multiple women in recent months despite being a married man.
Shaheen, who is seeking the NH-01 Democratic nomination, was confronted by a Republican tracker asking whether she supported Platner’s Senate campaign. Shaheen did not answer. Instead, according to video of the incident, a campaign staffer repeatedly shoved a pastry into the camera as the tracker pressed the question.
Also at Fox News: 'Meet the Press' interview cut short as Trump clashes with Kristen Welker. No donuts were involved, apparently.
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I'm old enough to remember when Democrats were better liars. Or at least they were better at consistent messaging. Jeff Maurer observes: “The Common Man Is a Racist Douchebag” Is Not the Populist Message Some People Think It Is.
As of this writing, Graham Platner scandals include:
A Nazi tattoo that Platner explains1 by saying (in so many words) “I know very little and make poor decisions — anyway, vote for me!”;
Being a man in his 40s who not only knows what Kik is, but who created a profile on that app with a semi-nude pic;
Texting with 28% of the female population of Maine while married;
An ex-girlfriend describing him as a hard-drinking, abusive asshole;
Serial lying about the provenance of the Gus T. Oysterman character that he plays and about the finances of his alleged oyster empire;
Enough assholish Reddit statements to make you want to swim to the bottom of the ocean and yank out the big plug that powers The Internet.
Those are the scandals as of this writing — 7:46 PM Eastern Standard Time on Thursday, June 4, 2026, Anno Domini. Though one suspects that Republicans might be sitting on a gargantuan opposition research folder that they’re going to drop on Platner like Wile E. Coyote getting crushed by an anvil the second it’s too late for Democrats to pick someone else.
So, pass the popcorn. Or the donuts.
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