A majority of doctors support measures to deny treatment to smokers and the obese, according to a survey that has sparked a row over the NHS‘s growing use of “lifestyle rationing”.
Some 54% of doctors who took part said the NHS should have the right to withhold non-emergency treatment from patients who do not lose weight or stop smoking. Some medics believe unhealthy behaviour can make procedures less likely to work, and that the service is not obliged to devote scarce resources to them.
And
that’s the trouble with services and institutions run from the taxpayer’s
purse, administered by centralists and bureaucrats. It becomes a carrot or a
stick for interventionists to intervene in your life. Its delivery depends on
your compliance with the diktats and whims of the democracy, or of bureaucrats.
Your standard of living becomes a bargaining chip. Don’t conform? You might be
deemed unworthy of hospital treatment.
It seems innocuous to promise all manner of services in exchange for taxes. Citizens may welcome the convenience, the lower overheads, the economies of scale. They may welcome a freebie, and the chance to enjoy the fruits of someone else’s labour. They may feel entitled to it.
It seems innocuous to promise all manner of services in exchange for taxes. Citizens may welcome the convenience, the lower overheads, the economies of scale. They may welcome a freebie, and the chance to enjoy the fruits of someone else’s labour. They may feel entitled to it.
Many
words have been spent on the problems of dependency; that rather than working
for an honest living, the poor may be sucked into a vortex of entitlement, to
such an extent that they lose the desire to produce. A tax-sucking multi-generational
underclass can
develop. Individuals can live entirely workless lives, enjoying a
semi-comfortable existence on the teat of the taxpayer, enjoying the fruits —
financial handouts, free education, free healthcare, a free home — of social
engineers who believe that every problem under the sun can be remedied by
government largesse and throwing money at problems. And who can blame them?
Humans have sought out free lunches for as long as there have been humans.
Welfare dependency is generally assumed to be viewed negatively in the corridors of power. After all, broad welfare programs mean greater spending, and that very often means great debt. And why would a government want to be in debt? Surely governments would prefer it if more of the population was working and productive and paying taxes?
Welfare dependency is generally assumed to be viewed negatively in the corridors of power. After all, broad welfare programs mean greater spending, and that very often means great debt. And why would a government want to be in debt? Surely governments would prefer it if more of the population was working and productive and paying taxes?
But it is
easier to promote behaviour desired by the state when a population lives on
state handouts. And for states that might want to influence the behaviour of
their citizens — their resource consumption, their carbon
footprint, their moral and ethical beliefs, or their attitude
toward the state — this could be an attractive proposition. It might cost a lot
to run a welfare system, but it brings a lot of power to influence citizens.
And
increasingly throughout the Western world, citizens are becoming dependent on
the state for their standard of living. In the UK, 92% of people are dependent on the
socialist NHS for healthcare. 46 million Americans receive food stamps. That
gives states a lot of leverage to influence behaviour. First it may be used in
a (relatively sensible) attempt to curtail smoking and obesity. Beyond that,
the sky is the limit. Perhaps doctors or bureaucrats may someday suggest
withholding treatment or dole money from those who exceed their personal
carbon or meat
consumption quota? A
tyrant could even withhold welfare from those who do not pledge their undying
allegiance or military service to a regime or ideology (it happened many times
last century). An underclass of rough and hungry welfare recipients is a
fertile recruiting ground for military and paramilitary organisations (like the
TSA).
With the
wide expansion of welfare comes a lot of power, and the potential for the abuse
of power. Citizens looking for a free lunch or an easier world should be
careful what they wish for. Welfare recipients take note:
you depend on government for your standard of living, you open yourself up to
losing your liberty.
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