A Comment About

High Court Overturns Ricci: Bad News for Sotomayor?

June 30, 2009 - 12:09 am - by Clarice Feldman
Uriel
2009-07-02 07:05:47

Shadow.

Interesting and rather rich. You site 3 branches of the military and one law enforcement agency not typically what people think of when they consider government bureaucracies; however a few points to consider:

1) All these organizations are hardly examples of bureaucracies making good decisions. If anything they are a testament to the fact that good individuals can compensate for bureaucratic inertia.

2) The function of these organizations is to conduct activities that quite frankly any sane individual hopes we will never have to engage in. As such they represent a putting aside of resources to meet a social or societal contingency not an individual one. As they will always have to be provided by the Government they are necessary to its core functions protecting liberty (the military) and Individual rights(law enforcement). This makes these organizations necessary evils. Thank god we have good people in them.

3) What you are essentially saying is you trust a government bureaucracy rather than a private one to act as a gatekeeper to you access to healthcare. Leaving aside the fact that we could dispense with both and probably have a much better and more efficient Health Care system. A private health care insurance firms operate in a market place and is in competition with other firms, since it is in competition it must differentiate itself from those firms to be successful in Health Care this typically means providing superior customer service to the individual. This is why most Americans are happy with there Health Care insurance. The government does not have to compete for it to collect money, and doesn’t have to be efficient in dispersing or tracking money. It is in effect a monopoly and all monopolies are bad for the consumer.

4) Multiple private firms means that if one is making poor decisions you can change to another which offers better customer service, more services etc. There will be little or no recourse with a government run bureaucracy.

5) Finally there are remediation available to someone who is treated unfairly by a private firm either through direct regulation by the government or via tort law. It is virtually impossible to hold governments accountable with tort law and they typically do a lousy job of regulating themselves.