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GLENN BECK PROGRAM
BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
GLENN: Hello, you
sick twisted freak. This is Closed Line Friday. Going to
talk to John Stossel. He had a conversation with Michael
Moore. I don't know if the I can sit in the same room with
that guy but that's the story. We'll talk to him. He's got
an interview with Michael Moore on ABC tonight. Also Bush
says success now is allowing us to have a gradual troop cut.
I hope we're not doing that for political reasons. I hope
he's doing that because the general has told him we can do
that. I don't understand it but if that came from the --
that guy came from the guy in the green suit and not the
blue suit, I'm okay with it.
San Francisco is to offer healthcare now for every uninsured
adult. This is the front page of the New York Times and it
starts in, "Since contracting pole I can't at the age 2,
Yen-Ling Ho has lived with pain most of her 52 years.
Although she immigrated here from Hong Kong last year, the
soreness in her back and joints proved too debilitating for
her to work. That also meant she didn't want to have health
insurance. Not carrying a heavy burden for her daughter, who
was already paying her living expenses." .
So now you've got somebody who's come here, has lived in
pain for 52 years, has come here, moved to San Francisco,
lived here a year and the City is using this as someone who
we need to get health insurance for. No problem. You know,
I'm sorry that Yen-Ling Ho has lived in pain her whole life
but what this reminds me of is exactly the stories that were
in the newspaper that gave us the New Deal. Quite frankly on
the dark side of things, it's always, always some little
story that pulls at your heart string that gets you to do
things that you just shouldn't do. It was a little baby. A
little baby knock, I think, a little baby that Hitler rushed
to the aid for to put out of his misery that caused the
extermination camps or was the one that first started it.
You can't get caught up into the emotion of this stuff.
That's the way -- I mean, it kills me. They always say that
conservatives are the ones that are just, they just, they
don't think things through. And yet every time it's
something like this. If private sector wants to help Yen
Ling Ho ease her pain, if somebody wants to swoop in and
help her, that's great. Why is that, why is that taxpayers'
responsibility? Why?
Now, actually I'm okay with this story. I'm okay with this
story if it happened just in San Francisco. If San Francisco
wants to say we're going to do universal healthcare for
everyone that lives in San Francisco and the State of
California wrote it into their Constitution that whatever
San Francisco wants to do, we're not paying for. If San
Francisco goes out of business, it's San Francisco's fault.
We're not bailing them out. We're not going to -- we're not
going to have them bleed into their healthcare system.
They'll never do it. Why? Because the idea of socialism is
just too attractive to too many politicians. Being out there
and being able to buy votes through whatever it is is just
too attractive. But if San Francisco wanted to be the
testing ground for something like this and allow it to fail,
or succeed -- it's going to fail, it always does. But
succeed or fail, allow it to stand on its own two feet, I'd
be all for it. But what will happen is it will start to
bleed out and it will start to get into the state funds. And
then the state will say, well, we've got to have this; we
can't afford this. And then the Feds will do it.
San Francisco offering care now to every uninsured adult. Do
we have our mad John Stossel on yet?
STOSSEL: Yes, you do. I agree with you. Let states or cities
experiment with their socialist ideas and we can see if they
work or fail, and frankly they won work. So we can watch
them fail and learn from that.
GLENN: Exactly right. I mean, John, have you read the book
yet, The Forgotten Man, yet?
STOSSEL: No.
GLENN: Oh, you've got to read it. I read it about four weeks
ago and been talking about it. And Giuliani was on just last
week and he said, boy, you want to understand what's coming,
understand how -- what happened during the Depression and
how it's all repeating itself with healthcare and everything
else, you've got to read The Forgotten Man; it's
unbelievable, but we've got to learn from history.
Why is it or how is it that -- and maybe in your travels. I
don't know if you addressed this all in your special
tonight, but you're talking to people who want this
universal healthcare. How is it that the people who are
jamming this down or want to jam this down the throat of
Americans, who are just saying that we've got to have this,
got to have this, got to have this are the same people who
are constantly campaigning against Republicans, against the
tax cuts because they say we can't afford it because the
deficit is too big? How are they expecting us to pay for
universal healthcare?
STOSSEL: That's another good question. They don't think
about it that way. They think by paying for healthcare in
the government, you will give the economy a boost because
then employers won't have to pay.
GLENN: But where are they getting -- it's not like the
treasury's just printing money. The money is going to come
from the companies because they are going to pay higher
taxes.
STOSSEL: Plus, you think health care's expensive now, wait
until you see how expensive it is when it's free because
when you don't pay for it, then you want more. You want
everything.
GLENN: Well, isn't that the -- isn't that really the problem
now? Insurance really is a problem. I mean, if you knew you
had, except for catastrophic, if you had a certain amount of
money to spend, wouldn't you be -- wouldn't you shop around
more?
STOSSEL: Yeah. We show the beauty of that tonight and how
that's changing people's lives. But what if you had grocery
insurance? Think how that would change your behavior? You'd
go to the grocery store and you'd buy steak and lobster. You
wouldn't care what anything costs. Hey, the insurance
company's paying. And then you went to the checkout. There
would be all these people demanding paperwork and forms and
telling you which food you could and could not buy. If you
had it for -- if car insurance were treated the way health
insurance is, it would cover gasoline and oil changes and
you wouldn't care what gas costs. Yet this is how we handle
healthcare and we think that's normal.
GLENN: John, help me just think this through logically
because this really bothers me. They say that healthcare is
a universal right. Healthcare being a universal right on the
scale of things that are the most important to me, if I say
I've got to have this or I die, water would be first, food
would be a universal right second. And then maybe healthcare
would be third. I mean, security would be up there before
healthcare. Why does no one -- is it just because it shows
how ridiculous it is? Why does no one say food is a
universal right?
STOSSEL: You could add in clothing and shelter to the list,
too. I think a lot of the left does say that and they say
we're a rich country, these are all important things.
Therefore Government should provide them. But it does open
them up to the point that the private sector is pretty good
at getting people food, clothing and shelter and does it
better than governments ever have. Of course, that argument
isn't convincing because we've got all these farm subsidies
because people say we can't rely on the private market to
give us food.
GLENN: John, you, for your special tonight, you sat down
with Michael Moore. Describe what it's like to sit down with
Michael Moore.
STOSSEL: Well, he was actually very charming. He said he
loved the interview with me because he never gets to really
argument about the beauties of socialism and take some time
and do it seriously. And he didn't -- I was moderately
hostile. He did not get testy and we had good fun exchanges
that I think shed light on the subject.
GLENN: Did he actually use the word "Socialism"?
STOSSEL: Yes. Well, he sometimes talks about socialism,
state capitalism he uses sometimes.
GLENN: State capitalism.
STOSSEL: Like high school economics courses. And he
believes, his point, of course, is that the Government gets
his father's Social Security check to him every month and
that shows that Government can do things well. The fact that
Social Security is bankrupt and isn't going to keep doing
that eludes him. The idea that that's pretty simple. And the
post office doesn't work half as well as UPS or Federal
Express eludes him. And healthcare's complicated. I hit him
with: Look, the best that Government could do producing cars
is the Trabant and that was the East German car. I pulled
out of a picture of it. He said, it's terrible, we can't
have that, get rid of that.
But government healthcare would become that in good time. I
mean, these socialistic problems always work for a while.
Took the Soviet Union 70 years to fail. You get the eager
beavers to come in, the peace corps does a good job. But
then because government doesn't change, it gradually
atrophies. But people don't know what they're missing. At
the VA they don't know that they don't get 80% of the drugs
that are available. They think they're getting good care.
Same is true in France and Canada, except for the people who
are pulling their own teeth because they can't get to a
dentist.
GLENN: Did you see in Time magazine there's a lead story,
the cover this week is the call for national service?
STOSSEL: Yes.
GLENN: There's a call for national service. You've got to
read this article. It's dumbfounding.
STOSSEL: Time is disgusting week after week. They are worse
be Newsweek which is pretty disgusting. I started to read
instead a magazine called the Leak which gives you a summary
from left and right of what's going on in the world.
GLENN: I just can't believe that this -- I mean, here we are
at a place where our deficit is not $6 trillion. It's $56
trillion when you figure in all the things that they've
taken off the books and hidden and put in IOUs. It's $56
trillion. And they're talking in Time magazine about how
there needs to be this call for national service and we need
to have people that do, you know, work on global warming and
go in the peace corps and Americorp and go teach and
everything else, which is all great, pie in the sky stuff.
One of the deals is that everyone -- that government should
force everyone to have mandatory service, that it would be
two-year forced service at the end of high school and every
child born in America would get a $5,000 U.S. Treasury bond
at birth. It would cost $20 billion a year. In it they say,
well, the United States would be great because you'd get all
that service, plus you'd get a billion dollars back for
those who didn't cash that in every year. And -- and this is
the most amazing part. I think this woman is gearing up to
offer us the new New Deal.
STOSSEL: No question, I think they all are. I think the
young people, when I speak at colleges, they have this --
it's intuitive to think big Mommy/daddy government can
provide and they should fix things for people. And it's only
through -- I mean, I believe that when I started reporting,
it was only 20 years of consumer reporting that finally woke
me up to the fact that those plans don't work as free people
spontaneously working together for their own interests.
GLENN: So you started, when you started originally, you were
a pie in the sky Mommy and Daddy government guy?
STOSSEL: Yeah. How do you think I got into television? I was
regarded as a liberal.
GLENN: The special tonight, what was the thing that you
found the most eye-opening? What is the thing that you say,
when America sees this, they are going to be bowled over?
STOSSEL: Well, people pulling their own teeth, people
waiting -- you know, lottery in some towns in Canada hoping
to get a family doctor. That the utopia portrayed by Michael
Moore is, of course, not that. And the beauty, the
excitement in the people who have health savings accounts
who say, wow, suddenly I'm spending my own money on
healthcare; I own my own healthcare, I'm making the
decisions. I can go to my accupunturist, or my psychic
healer. I think some of them are spending it on stupid
things they don't believe in, but it's their choice. And for
the first time they're asking doctors 'does it have to cost
$200' and the doctor says 'oh really, you're going to pay me
cash, I don't have to deal with the insurance paperwork?
Well, $100' And then the doctor doesn't even know where to
put it, they haven't had a cash box in the office for so
long. The beauty of beginning to impose a market in
healthcare, that's exciting to.
GLENN: Have you been following what's happening in Wisconsin
with the argument on whether they should have state
healthcare, universal state healthcare? Again, if states
want to do it, and they allow me to move my company out of
that state. I'm totally fine with it. As long as I have a
choice.
STOSSEL: Go on Wisconsin. Let them show us the beauty of
socialist healthcare. And when they fail, I feel bad for the
people in Wisconsin, but then at least the rest of America
will wake up. I feel bad about the fall of the Soviet Union,
it once was our model for what doesn't work. Now all we have
is Cuba, North Korea, the post office and the motor vehicle
division, without these examples of failure people
intuitively embrace government control.
GLENN: Alright, John Stossel tonight on ABC at 10. The
special on healthcare, boy I gotta tell ya, you better arm
yourself America with this kind of information. You better
know what you're talking about because this thing is coming
and it's going to be jammed down your throat. This is going
to be . . . the argument is going to be two-fold - who's the
best to protect and defend us, and then the other is going
to be who's the best to take care of us and hold our hand
and make sure that the economy, that we'll be able to eat
and healthcare and every other free thing from the
government. Arm yourself with this information, because this
debate is coming in healthcare is coming your way. John
thanks man.
John Stossel: Thank you.
END TRANSCRIPT |
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