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Subject:
Gun Owners Need to be Critically Concerned About Health Care Reform
(buckeyefirearms.org) Buckeye Firearms Association is a single issue, non-partisan PAC. As
such, the debate on healthcare reform occurring across the U.S. is not
something that would be within our normal sphere of coverage. However,
my good friend Chad Baus posted a story
a few days ago highlighting how the Centers for Disease Control has
begun researching gun violence and the impact of gun violence on
healthcare costs. This immediately set off alarm bells in my head as
the pieces fell into place. Why, you ask?
Healthcare reform is a brilliant way to regulate/ban firearms without violating the Second Amendment.
As an attorney, part of my job is risk management – sit around and
think big thoughts on how things could go wrong, and then plan
accordingly. (Some of my less charitable friends describe it as "being
paid to think of ways to screw things up.")
Healthcare reform, which seems completely innocuous to gun rights at
first blush, is a Trojan Horse. Of that, there can be no doubt. The
only real question is whether our enemies will choose to use it as
such. Given the string of court and legislative defeats the anti-gun
groups have suffered, is there any doubt whether the Brady Bunch will
pass up an opportunity to regulate firearms in this oblique manner?
Chad's article pointed to a Washington Times editorial
taking the CDC to task for circumventing congressional orders to
abstain from gun control "research." The original reasoning behind this
"research" ban was that the CDC would be using tax dollars to advance a
gun control agenda, and the taxpayers rightly put an end to these
shenanigans. Now, under President Obama, the CDC is defying this ban by
researching "health care costs" and how guns impact health insurance
and health care services. If any reader is in doubt as to what the
results of this "research" will be, you might as well stop reading now.
So, sometime in the near future, a tax-payer funded study will show
that gunshot wounds take up a tremendous amount of medical resources,
almost all of which goes unreimbursed, because the victims are
uninsured. The study, of course, will fail to mention that the majority
of this care goes to criminal/gang elements injured during illegal
activities. I will readily concede that the Crips, Bloods, Triad,
Mongols and the Mexican Mafia have woefully deficient employee benefit
plans (no 401K, dental, paid vacation etc) but is that really a basis
for national health insurance policy?
Why should gun owners care that this "research result" will show such an impact on health care costs?
Underwriting.
Insurance premiums are calculated, in part, based upon your risk
group. If you smoke, your premiums are higher and/or it is harder to
get coverage. Why? Cigarette smoking demonstrably increases your health
care costs over the long term. Have diabetes? Ditto. High blood
pressure and cholesterol? Get out your wallet.
So now, armed with a "study" showing that the presence of a gun
greatly increases health care costs, gun owners are now considered a
high risk group and the insurance companies have Science! to back up
that claim. "Owning a gun is no different than having cancer..." "No
sir, we aren't violating your civil rights. You may still own whatever
guns you wish, you just are going to pay at-risk rates rather than
preferred rates."
I assure the reader that this scenario is not far-fetched or
fanciful, the mechanism is already in place and is capable of operating
exactly as I have outlined. The only question is whether the antis will
have the political will to use it in such a manner, and to what extent.
(i.e would they try to divide us by "finding" that ownership of a
$5,000.00 trap gun has no impact on healthcare costs, but ownership of
a handgun does and ownership of an ugly black rifle drives the costs
right through the roof.)
Here is a preview of the new health insurance application forms:
Name, address, age, gender, height, weight, prior medical
conditions, do you smoke, do you own guns, if so how many and what
kind....
Then there is the whole issue of de facto gun registration, since
this information will now be on your wonderful, portable healthcare
chart that is all residing on a computer someplace. Don't forget the
new taxes on guns and ammo to help provide insurance for those poor
Crips, Bloods, Triad, Mongols and Mexican Mafia members who find
themselves suffering from uninsured gunshot wounds incurred during a
drug deal gone wrong . The anti-gun possibilities are limited only by
the imagination.
Please don't delude yourself into thinking that this would only be
part of any "public option" insurance plan. The private insurance
companies are going to be in direct competition with any of the
pre-existing or new government insurance plans, so if the public plans
get an "upcharge" for gun ownership you know the private ones are going
to demand this extra money, too. After all, they have Science! to
provide the justification for the higher premiums.
These are not paranoid delusions or ramblings, just possibilities
that are there for the taking should the political muscle be flexed to
do so.
So what do gun owners need to do? We need to be calling our
Congresscritters and demand, at a minimum, two things. (If you are just
outright opposed to any of the healthcare reform going on, simply add
the above objections to the pile of objections you already have when
you call in, and skip over making these demands.)
First, any healthcare reform bill must be absolutely, affirmatively
firearm neutral. The law must explicitly state that no insurer, public
or private, may use ownership or use of firearms as a basis for
underwriting or benefit decisions.
Second, any healthcare reform bill needs to explicitly deny
insurance benefit payments for care provided to anyone who is harmed
during the commission of a violent felony, and allow hospitals/doctors
to choose to refuse treatment to these same people if they feel they
can ethically do so. They may ethically feel they have to treat these
people, but you and I should not be subsidizing medical care to Johnny
Crackhead when he finds himself shot during a robbery, nor should we be
subsidizing someone's ethics. It is time these criminals start bearing
the consequence of their actions and allow natural selection to work
its magic.
About The Author Ken Hanson is a gun rights attorney in Ohio who serves as the
Legislative Chair for Buckeye Firearms Association. He is the attorney
of record for Buckeye Firearms Foundation, which filed an amicus brief
in the Heller case. In 2008, the National Rifle Association's Institute for Legislative Action (NRA-ILA) awarded him with its Defender of Justice Award. He is the author of The Ohio Guide to Firearm Laws, a certified firearms instructor and holds a Type 01 Federal Firearms License.
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