Like many Americans, I watched with amazement, and a sense of shame, the videos earlier this week about the thousands of people drawn to free health care services in the Los Angeles area (provided by Remote Area Medical).

So great was the demand that even after thousands were treated for medical and dental problems, thousands more were turned away.

Isn’t this the ultimate argument for national health care, when a medical group accustomed to providing care in Third World countries and rural areas finds insatiable demand for its services in urban U.S.?

And then I listen to all the hysteria coming up at so-called town hall meetings in opposition to President Obama’s health care plan, and I want to believe it’s all part of a massive insurance industry lobbying effort.

Isn’t this what happened in the 1990s to the Clinton health care efforts? Yet polls say people are genuinely worried about health care and President Obama’s approach.

And then it occurs to me that maybe all the noise isn’t just an insurance-industry-funded protest, but rather a real outpouring of pent-up alienation over big government meddling in our lives.

We see it (the meddling and the alienation) on this blog a lot, mostly with respect to raw milk, but we’ve also seen it in connection with the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), the crackdown on buying clubs, and the harassment of holistic health businesses.

Dave Milano expresses it well following my previous post: “It is always government’s way to first meddle in affairs in which it has no business poking its nose, then when the inevitable disaster ensues, demand more power and money to fix the problem. This is what government has done in agriculture (in concert with commodity-pushing industrial ag businesses) and in finance and healthcare as well.”

I’ve long thought that if there’s one area government has a role (much more than private employers), it is in providing health care. It’s a benefit citizens of nearly every First World country has access to.

But if the recent protests over health care really are mostly spontaneous, then the underlying message is pretty amazing: People are saying, we’d rather do without desperately needed health services if accepting them means they come with the heavy hand of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and its Food and Drug Administration, and the nearly rubber stamp approval of the courts in the event of disputes. Give us dishonest and exploitative insurance companies over those arrogant FDA types any day of the week. At least the insurance companies’ motives are clear–the want only higher profits. The government types want something more insidious—they want control over our lives and our rights.

I happen to think that our culture is hypocritical about so-called end-of-life matters, but I worry, too, about government bureaucrats drawing up rules about health care, and revising them year after year to make them fit neatly into budgets and the needs of big business. Have these Washington bureaucrats worn out their welcome, once and for all?
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It’s the time of year to marvel at bountiful farmers markets. I was at one in Vermont on Saturday, and had more locally grown fresh veggies—Swiss chard, spinach, carrots, cucumber, parsley, beets– for a juice concoction than I’ve had since…last August.