TEN QUESTIONS POLITICIANS WON’T ANSWER
The past week's debate about health care has shown that in Washington the only things more stubborn than facts are politicians who evade them.
In spite of a torrent of independent analyses showing that the so-called health-care "reform" bills moving through Congress will dramatically increase the deficit and cause millions of Americans to lose their health insurance, the politicians leading the effort have steadfastly refused to consider that their ideas and policies, rather than the character of their critics, may be flawed.
At the same time, the politicians writing the bill still refuse to answer basic questions about how it will be paid for and how it will affect patients.
Individual Americans should view the month of August as their best, and perhaps final, opportunity to alter the health-care bills before Congress reconvenes in September.
Citizens should ask hard questions without having their motives questioned. I expect such questions at my town-hall meetings. After all, the greater threat to freedom and liberty is not an informed citizenry but an irresponsible, elitist, and evasive political class that refuses to answer hard questions and make tough choices.
While I have confidence in the American people to come up with their own probing questions, let me suggest a few questions that my own colleagues have been loath to answer: