by Paul Jacob
While President Obama flew to foreign lands to lobby for Chicago's Olympic bid, a group of Americans trekked to Canada to find out about government-run health care.
Jon Caldara, president of the Independence Institute in Colorado, visited Vancouver, British Columbia, to host a conference that explored Canada's medical system. Caldara's foray north was written about in the Washington Times, and the Los Angeles Times interviewed some of the same Canadians.
Caldara's interest in the subject is personal as well as civic-minded. He has a 5-year-old son who has undergone eight operations, including heart surgery. From what Caldara can tell, his son would have received little or none of this treatment in Canada. There, instead, he would have been put on waiting lists.
Caldara heard stories from Canadians who had been shuffled from one specialist to another, each requiring long waits before even being seen. Actual treatment? More waiting.
Outside the system, entrepreneurs have sprung up to broker deals with private physicians to the south, in the U.S., and even with growing quasi-illegal clinics in Canada.
Meanwhile, in our little haven for sick Canadians, American politicians still talk about reforms that would ruin it for the Canadians -- as well as for us. Some even prefer the Canadian system to what we have now.
Jon Caldara doesn't think this makes sense. Neither do I.
Paul Jacob's "Common Sense" is published by the Citizens in Charge Foundation. Their website can be visited at www.citizensincharge.org.