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Thursday, August 6, 2009

Healthy Pessimism

Dr. Chicago and his Dirty Fingernail Democrat Assistants
They are ready to ram a big health care suppository up our rear ends, but Americans are refusing to drop 'em and bend over. This has caused much angst in the press

Tempo Fugit
Amy Walter, at National Journal, gets to the bottom of it, citing trust, or a lack thereof in government. She describes a focus group of independent voters she observed. Half the group voted for Obama. Their message: What's the rush?
Once the conversation turned to health care, the overwhelming message was pretty simple: slow down.

One participant worried that Congress couldn't possibly complete comprehensive health care reform in just six months. Another said it "can't be done overnight" and that doing something "too fast" could make things worse.

For independents, then, the issue seems to be less about specific elements of a health care plan -- public option versus a co-op -- than a fear that Congress has created an artificial timetable that is causing them to rush through what should be a thought-out, balanced plan.

Good ideas get better with time -- Bad ideas rot in the sunlight
That is why the Dems are in a fevered hurry to ram this through. But the electorate is not so rash. Essayist Alain De Botton would see nothing wrong with such pessimism. Indeed we are following in the footsteps of Seneca and reverting to our Christian and Stoic tendencies.

Unbounded, unfounded optimism is neither natural nor founded in reality

It’s time to recognize how odd and counterproductive is the optimism on which we have grown up. For the last 200 years, despite occasional shocks, the Western world has been dominated by a belief in progress, based on its extraordinary scientific and entrepreneurial achievements.

But from a broader historical perspective, this optimism is an anomaly. Humans have spent the greater part of their existence drawing a curious comfort from expecting the worst. In the West, lessons in pessimism derive from two sources: Roman Stoic philosophy and Christianity. It may be time to remind ourselves of a few of their lessons—not to add to our misery but to alleviate our injured surprise and sorrow.
Stuff Happens
Botton reminds us of the unbounded optimism we all invested in the Wall Street whiz kids. Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid now consume over half of the federal budget. The Post Office is $8 Billion in the red this year. The hole is getting deeper, and we just keep digging.

William Butler Yeats tells us "Things fall apart, the center will not hold." Calamity, disaster, grinding misery and boring drudgery interrupted periodically by some modicum of enlightened civilized peace is the story of mankind. Alain De Botton sums it up well.

We should instead remember the great pessimistic voices of history, of which I cherish two in particular. One is Seneca: “What need is there to weep over parts of life? The whole of it calls for tears.”

The other is the French moralist Chamfort: “A man should swallow a toad every morning to be sure of not meeting with anything more revolting in the day ahead.”

Chamfort also said:
"If it were not for the government, we should have nothing to laugh at in France."
Oh that we could be so lighthearted about our own current situation. After all, seems like lately Washington has been providing us a toad a day.

National Journal - Amy Walter
City Journal - Alain De Botton

6 comments:

Dr. Dave said...

I think the doc who delivered Obugger might be feeling the same way as the dude who saved Hitler.

Canadian Pragmatist said...

Silverfiddle, how can this be rushed when health care has been consistently on the top of opinion polls when they ask, what is the most urgent aspect of domestic policy that needs reform?

This has been one of the tops since it happened in Canada with success.

I don't understand how much misinormation you are willing to spread about health care. Have you no conscience?

Canadian Pragmatist said...

Dr.Dave, you are a moron. If I were in charge they would re-open Auschwitz and you'd be thrown in there. I'm not proud of that, but it's the truth.

Silverfiddle said...

CP: There you go name-calling again...

I have not head one politician or bureaucrat explain this plan and how it will work. All I hear is propaganda about how we can keep our plan, it won't cost any more, bla bla bla...

All I've seen is that 1000 page carbuncle of bureaucratese that takes a team of lawyers to understand. I'm not signing off on something I don't understand. I President Bush were pushing this thing I my position would be the same.

OK, here's your chance. Explain this plan to us.

Canadian Pragmatist said...

He compared Obama to Hitler. I didn't call him a name, I named a place I'd like to have re-opened and him sent to.

I'm not American. I don't follow things that closely to know the exact technical aspects of any piece of US legislation.

Tell me if you think the health care system is better in Canada or the US though.

Silverfiddle said...

CP Said: "Dr.Dave, you are a moron"

Is your memory really so poor?

So you don't know the technical aspects? Then you are a fool to defend it. You could be a US Congressman or Senator.

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