The Independent Physician©
According to The Daily Caller, seven out of
ten Americans feel the country is on the wrong track and a majority do not feel
President Obama should be re-elected. The Resurgent Republic’s survey also
found that even a majority of Democrats do not feel the country is heading in
the right direction. Other surveys have supported these same conclusions, now
just one year out from the presidential election.
Similarly, the same polling source found that the majority of registered voters
do not approve of Obamacare and feel the nation is worse off for it (decreased
quality, increased costs, cuts in Medicare to the tune of $400 Billion, and a
greater presence of Uncle Sam in the examination room). By a margin of 54 to 34
percent, Independents are strongly opposed to the ‘Affordable Care Act’.
According to a recent Kaiser Foundation poll, more Americans “have an
unfavorable view of the [healthcare reform] law.”
These findings are not surprising, and are not news to
anyone who has been following the saga of health care reform since the
beginning of President Obama’s presidency. Since the beginning, despite the
false sense of representation portrayed by the American Medical Association,
American physicians have been staunchly against Obamacare and have not felt
they could keep maintain the current state of their practices in the context of
decreased reimbursement, increased bureaucratic oversight, and an influx of new
patients with an ‘Obamacare card’ in hand.
Healthcare reform is trading in the wrong currency because
it’s based on the ‘dumb-down’ philosophy of European-style socialism. The thinking of the Obamacare architects has been
this: get non-doctors to perform the
role of doctors, pay doctors less, and make everyone feel that they’re still
getting something more by euphemizing the whole process with
clever marketing and subtle deceptions about quality and access.
The sooner physicians and other healthcare professionals get
wise to the fact that their own local and state medical societies were
complicit in selling them out, the sooner they will withdraw their memberships
and begin to form new alliances with people who truly represent them.
The best currency for successful healthcare reform is honesty.



Bill Gunderson 
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