Conservatives in their teens and early twenties, who will
continue to confer over at George Washington University through
Friday, took a break from exhortations from the likes of Sen. Jim
DeMint and Stephen Moore to entertain a cautionary missive
carried from a looming socialist future. The emissary was English
Member of the European Parliament Daniel Hannan, a rugged and
outspoken advocate of limited government perhaps best known for
his screed
in March castigating UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown for
reckless spending in the precise and devastating way that only a
British parliamentarian could manage.
Hannan appealed to history, heritage, and global interests in his
apologetic against nationalized health care, delivered, as he put
it, from the vantage point of a decade down the road that the
U.S. Congress is now on. NHS, the British socialized health care
system, is the third largest employer on earth, following the
Chinese Army and Indian Railways. Established following World War
II in 1948, Hannan said the British system demonstrates a
timeless truth of governent: "When government adopts a system, it
is very hard to get rid of it. I don't want anyone in this room
to think you can experimentally adopt a state option in health
care."
Hannan's recommendation for healthcare? Adopt a system like that
of
Singapore, with a limited pay-in and a number of incentives
to keep prices low.
Much of Hannan's talk was easy on American ears, as he waxed
eloquent about the vision and high ideals of the Founders and
encouraged students to respect the freedoms guaranteed by the
"most sublime constitution ever drafted by human intelligence."
Of Britain and the European Union, Hannan was less flattering.
His talk of the EU in particular, with its bulky 567-page
constitution granting power upon power to the state, its
legislative "democratic deficit," and its drive to centralize
power, made it clear that he'd be delighted to put himself out of
a job.
But he held out hope for the UK, citing its first
fully open primary, held on Wednesday. That vote, he said,
signaled a way British politics has changed "utterly,
irrevocably, and benignly."
You can find the rest of Hannan's talk, including anecdotes about
Churchill and a fresh perspective on Che Guevara as a fashion
statement, recorded here.
Jeremiah| 8.6.09 @ 2:58PM
BRAVO Daniel Hannan!
Does the good gentleman offer tutoring services? Our politicians sorely need them.
Ken (Old Texican)| 8.6.09 @ 3:48PM
Thank you Hope!
Jeremiah, hope you enjoy your user name. We had another fellow with the same handle here, and he was a total nut case communist.
You might want to consider another user name...perhaps Micah?
Communists don't read Micah, but beware your user name can be used by any ACORN person in the country...or terrorists in Gaza.
ncatty| 8.6.09 @ 4:08PM
Egads, the British health system is the third largest employer in the WORLD? What a statistic!
William Humbold Jr| 8.7.09 @ 10:21AM
Support a freer Europe.
Vote YES at www.FreeEurope.info
ghdshop| 3.30.10 @ 1:30AM
Thanks very much for sharing.I am quite agree with you.