ProudToBeCanadian
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The latest from our COLUMNIST SECTION:
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Saturday, Mar 13, 10:22 AM
Salim Mansur
Iraq stumbles toward democracy -
Saturday, Mar 13, 10:12 AM
David Warren
Icesave -
Friday, Mar 12, 08:43 AM
Susan Martinuk
Say you’re sorry—and then fix the system -
Thursday, Mar 11, 07:23 AM
Ann Coulter
What’s Arabic For ‘You’re No Atticus Finch’? -
Wednesday, Mar 10, 09:06 AM
Barbara Kay
Dropping the r-bomb -
Tuesday, Mar 09, 09:01 PM
Mike S. Adams
The Breyer Patch -
Monday, Mar 08, 09:01 PM
Mike S. Adams
The University of Notre Shame -
Sunday, Mar 07, 07:04 PM
David Warren
Tyranny of but -
Sunday, Mar 07, 07:18 AM
Doug Giles
Should Christians Use Saul Alinsky’s Tactics in Exposing Corruption? -
Saturday, Mar 06, 09:03 AM
Salim Mansur
Protect free speech, even if offensive -
Saturday, Mar 06, 07:45 AM
Rory Leishman
A rare display of political courage -
Saturday, Mar 06, 07:41 AM
David Warren
The pampered, privileged public service -
Friday, Mar 05, 09:21 AM
S. Wray Gregoire
Are We the World? -
Friday, Mar 05, 09:19 AM
Susan Martinuk
Insite doesn’t do enough to change addicts -
Wednesday, Mar 03, 06:49 PM
Ann Coulter
Subprime Mortgage Crisis Hits Whorehouses -
Wednesday, Mar 03, 07:08 AM
David Warren
Competitive thrills -
Wednesday, Mar 03, 07:05 AM
Barbara Kay
Refugees R Us -
Monday, Mar 01, 09:01 PM
Mike S. Adams
Our New LGBTQIA Center -
Sunday, Feb 28, 08:55 AM
David Warren
Hockey night in Canada -
Sunday, Feb 28, 08:52 AM
Doug Giles
ACORN Goes Madonna and Tries to Reinvent Itself
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PTBC J-Log
A conservative OPINION blog --with bite. OPINION by Joel Johannesen.Sunday, August 21, 2005
Ujjal Dosanjh may sound very much like a communist to someone else, too.
Regular readers know that I whenever I mention our minister of North Korean-style healthcare, Ujjal Dosanjh, I always add that he sounds very much like a communist to me. Well he does.
Every time he says anything, there is something funky about it. I’ve never, ever heard him say anything pro-capitalist, pro-free-enterprise (quite the opposite—“we don’t need private enterprise”, to paraphrase something he actually said once), or pro-free-market, etc. As an ex-NDP premier and now another left-wing Liberal I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised—he’s an extreme left-wing Canadian politician and yet another socialist simpleton.
Today Toronto Sun columnist Hartley Stewart seemed to catch a whiff of that stench of stupefyingly simplistic socialist blather coming out of the so-called honorable minister’s government speech hole, and I wonder if he, too, is left thinking that Ujjal Dosanjh sounds very much like a communist to him.
[...] Am I missing something?
In a speech in Edmonton last Wednesday, federal Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh urged doctors to resist the move towards more private medical care in this country. He argued that giving patients more “choice” in their treatments could undermine the basic principles of medicare.
He asked the doctors to “reflect carefully” so that whatever reforms are advocated by the medical profession remain consistent with the Canadian values of fairness, compassion and community.
The clear implication is that a good Canadian would not use his money to get medical care that is not available to all Canadians. A good Canadian would get in line, however long the line, however dangerous the wait.
The tenor of the minister’s speech suggested that there is something subversive about even examining increased private care participation in the current system. He insisted that the public system is inherently a better way to provide medical care and more reflective of Canadian “fundamental values.”
It is, according to Liberal belief, “unfair” of someone, like my friend, to earn enough money that he can afford to pay for hospital procedures that might be too expensive for other Canadians.
The argument rings false to me. It also has an obvious political hue to it. Current polls show more Canadians are for the injection of private sector funding into the medicare system than are opposed.
Read this column—a goodie. 90 seconds.
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