Pubdate: Thu, 06 May 2010 Source: Boulder Weekly (CO) Copyright: 2010 Boulder Weekly Contact: http://www.boulderweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/57 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n333/a03.html Author: Chuck Wright POT PERSPECTIVES (Re: "Pot at the Tea Party," letters, April 29.) Boulder Weekly letter-writer Brain Sherwin writes in the April 29 edition, "And don't tell us that the free market will take care of [uninsured sick people], because it's had multiple decades to get it right and it hasn't." But is that really true? And what is a free market anyway? A free market is a market where the government's only roles are to protect people participating in it from force and fraud, to settle disputes and to enforce contracts. If there is any other government interference in the market, by definition it's not a free market. Does the U.S. health care market over the past few decades meet the definition of a free market? Not at all, because government interference in the health care market is everywhere: Doctors, nurses and pharmacists are licensed by the government. The FDA controls which medical procedures and drugs are permitted and drives up health care prices with Byzantine testing requirements. Almost half of every health care dollar spent in the U.S. is spent by government, through such programs as Medicare, Medicaid, SCHIP, government employee health coverage and VA health benefits, among others. The states mandate certain health care insurance coverage (Colorado has 51 mandates), but bar buying health insurance across state lines. The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) forces hospitals and ambulance services to provide care to anyone needing emergency health care treatment regardless of citizenship, legal status or ability to pay. Government interference in the health care market is so pervasive that the DEA is waging a war on sick people by making doctors fearful of prescribing adequate pain medication and outlawing beneficial drugs such as medical marijuana. One cannot even buy certain cold and hay fever medications without signing your name and showing government-issued identification. The U.S. health care market has been clearly dominated by government interference for many decades. That's not a free market. Libertarians say it can only be called a "politically controlled" market; a truly free market would indeed solve most health care problems. Chuck Wright, Westminster - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake