Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Obamacare: The New “Animal Farm”

GodFather Politics – Cross-Posted at AskMarion: Now that we’ve had just a few weeks of the mess that is ObamaCare, it brings home how grossly unfair it is for the political class to impose it on the rest of us and not have to abide by it (for as long as it lasts) — think Animal Farm (50th Anniversary Edition). It may yet collapse on its own weight.

I feel sorry for the younger generation (just out of college). They have less of a chance to get a good job with benefits. Many companies continue to downsize because of ObamaCare.

So these young people get less work. But they’ll have to pay more for healthcare, which they may never see. Assuming they can register for it, which we now know is a huge assumption.

Last week, one liberal blogger described how he had been all for ObamaCare. He was one of the few ones (relatively speaking) who managed to get through the computer system and register on-line. Lo and behold, his insurance costs were going to go through the roof, as was the deductible. So he said, forget it. He even said he won’t pay the fine either. Well, good luck with that.

ObamaCare seems simple to understand: You pay more, but you get less. Not to mention the loss of freedoms, the institution of a massive governmental bureaucracy, and the potential annihilation of healthcare as we know it.

At the very least, fairness would demand that all the politicians have to live under it. It’s grossly unfair to force the rest of us into a system that doesn’t seem to work, while the elite class has exempted itself from it.

All of this reminds me of the classic anti-Communist novel, Animal Farm , by the great British writer George Orwell (1903-1950). The short book is a parable of the Soviet Union.

And no, I’m not calling anyone a Communist. But Dr. Paul Kengor, Grove City College professor, documents in his book, The Communist (Kindle), Obama was mentored by Frank Marshall Davis, a member of the Communist Party USA (#47544). This is part of the public record.

Here’s a spoiler alert. In Orwell’s novel, you will recall, the animals revolt against the tyrannical farmer (Mr. Jones, a human), who represents the czar. But then as the animals look forward to sharing everything equally, the pigs in charge ultimately live high off the hog, so to speak.

After killing the farmer, the animals declare, “Remove Man from the scene, and the root cause of hunger and overwork is abolished forever.”

The animals post “Seven Commandments” — the final one stating, “All animals are equal.”

But as the plot develops, it becomes clear that the pigs (representing Josef Stalin, Leon Trotsky, and other Soviet leaders) have become an elite class.

At the end of the book, as the other animals — who do all the work and underfed — look into the farmhouse, they see the pigs enjoying a great meal. They can barely distinguish the pigs from the humans, whose regime they had rebelled against.Animal Farm_all animals are equal

The Seven Commandments had been changed to just two: “ALL ANIMALS ARE EQUAL, BUT SOME ANIMALS ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS.”

Today, we seem to have an elitists’ class and the rest of us. As long as ObamaCare is implemented as the law of the land, then it ought to apply to the president, his family, his staff, the Senators, and members of the House of Representatives and their staff. The law (and tax) should be good enough for the Supreme Court and their staff as well.

I’ve heard some Congressmen complain that their staff members can’t afford it. Well, what about the rest of us?

Meanwhile, the Bible says differing standards are unfair and unjust: “Differing weights and differing measures — the Lord detests them both” (Prov. 20:10). Psalm 94:20 criticizes “those who frame injustice by statute.” Paul strongly criticizes Peter in Gal. 2:14 for forcing a standard on the Gentiles that he himself was not living by.

Our nation’s birth certificate declares that “all men are created equal.” Are we to assume that under ObamaCare, some are created more equal than others?

Animal Farm and 1984 (Kindle)

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