Friday, October 09, 2009

Liberal lies about national health care, Part 7 ~ By Ann Coulter

From WorldNetDaily
Ann CoulterBy Ann Coulter Posted: October 07, 2009 ~ 5:57 pm Eastern © 2009 Note: This is the latest in Coulter's multi-part series debunking "liberal lies" about health care. 18) America's lower life expectancy compared to countries with socialist health care proves that their medical systems are superior. President Obama has too much intellectual pride to make such a specious argument, so instead we have to keep hearing it from his half-wit supporters. These Democrats are all over the map on where precisely Americans place in the life-expectancy rankings. We're 24th, according to Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Barbara Boxer; 42nd, according to Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell; 35th, according to Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson; and 47th, according to Rep. Dennis Kucinich. So the U.S. may have less of a "life expectancy" problem than a "Democratic math competency" problem. But also, as described in last week's column, the citizenry's health is not the same thing as the citizenry's health-care system. Besides America's high rate of infant mortality – based on biology and lifestyle choices, not medical care – Americans are also more likely to overeat or smoke than people in other developed nations. And the two biggest killers in the Western world are obesity and smoking. Liberals shouldn't have to be reminded how fat Americans are, inasmuch as they are always chortling about it. A 2004 New York Times article leeringly quoted a foreign doctor, saying: "We Europeans, whenever we came to America, we always noticed the enormous number of obese people on the streets." I note that these are the same people who openly worship Michael Moore. Somewhat surprisingly to those of us who have long admired France for its humanitarian smoking laws, until the mid-1980s, Americans had had the highest rate of smoking in the developed world. This makes patriotic Americans like me wonder if there's a way to get Michael Moore to start smoking. (You know, just to keep his weight down or whatever.) To be fair, the French are still being exposed to large amounts of smoke due to all the cars being set on fire by Muslims. In 2003, America led the world in smoking-related deaths among women – followed by Hungary. Simply excluding all smoking-related deaths from the World Health Organization's comparison of life expectancies at age 50 in 20 developed nations would raise U.S. women's life expectancy from 17th to 7th place and lift American men from 14th to 9th place. Americans are also more likely to die in military combat than the whimpering, pant-wetting cowards our military has spent the past 70 years defending – I mean, than "our loyal European allies." This is a health risk Europeans have managed to protect themselves against by living in a world that contains the United States military. These are risk factors that have nothing to do with the health-care system. To evaluate the quality of our health care, you have to compare apples to apples by looking at outcomes for specific medical conditions. [CLICK HERE TO READ MORE]
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