Letter from Mark Bittner to Senator James E. Murray, with Attachment
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OCR Page 1 of 7COPY FOR; - PRESIDENT HARRY S. TRUMAN
MARK R. BITTNER
CARL J. KNAUSS
MILES K. PERSON
MYRON L. FETTERMAN
President
RICHARD A. ABBOTT
the
Secretary
Treasurer
Vice-Presidents
CHARLES H. SHAFER
Asst. Secretary
Lehigh County Taxpayers' Leaque, Inc.
AFFILIATED WITH
FRED W. FEGLEY
TAX JUSTICE LEAGUE OF PENNSYLVANIA
Executive Secretary
LEAGUE
1034 Hamilton Street
Allentown, Penna.
Phone 2-8424
Board of Directors
April 2, 1946.
Counsel:
RICHARD A. ABBOTT
RICHARD A. ABBOTT, Atty
MARK R. BITTNER
Senator Murray(D-Mont),Chairman ,
ROBERT V. RITTER, Atty.
PAUL C. ETTINGER
MYRON L. FETTERMAN
Senate Labor Committee
A. S. GERMAN
ALLEN V. HEYL
Senate Office Building
CARL J. KNAUSS
Washington, D.C.
286-a
S.
E. H. KRATZER
BECO
RICHARD G. MILLER
SERVIL
MILES K. PERSON
Dear Senator:
GOVERT
ADAM POTTEIGER
WARREN A. SCHADT
THOMAS E. SEMMEL
The newspapers announce the Senate Labor Committee hearing
CHARLES H. SHAFER
HARRY J. SPROUT
and consideration of legislation to set up a national
compulsory health insurance plan, known as the National
Health Act of 1945, S 1606 (Murray-Wagner) and H.R.4730 (Dingell).
We wish to assure you at the outset of the opposition to
socialized medicine. Socialized medicine means that
all doctors work as employes of the government, and placing
the expenditure of between three and four billion dollars
annually into the hands of one man, the Surgeon General,
would be 'socialized medicine" in its most vicious form.
Nearly 300,000 bureaucrats would be necessary to administer
the system. It would establish machinery for the political
distribution of Medical Care. The concept is strictly
totalitarian.
You doubtlessly know why doctors so relentlessly and
vigorously oppose these measures. Such a system would not
allow physicians standards of ethics of the medicial profession
and rob it of its independence and self respect.
There should be no imposition of restriction to deprive
practitioners of the right to conduct their business under
the free enterprise system and the American way of life.
This system has always been most advantageous to the general
public.
If all of the provisions of this proposed legislation were
put into operation, the process would destroy the private
practice of medicine in the united States.
We necessarily oppose government intervention in the field of
private enterprise, such as originally proposed in socialized
housing bills, HR 4761 and S 1592; in socialized medicine
bills, S.0606 and HR 4730; and Federal aid to U.S. Schools,
"useless bills" - S 717 and S 863. Such socialized thinking
as in the proposed socialized legislation is un-American
-
simply an attempt to regiment private business and subject
it to government control and regulation.
Sincerely
mark R. Bither
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