I think a lot of our comments are missing the mark, in terms of the article sited. Sowll is not opposed to any individual decisions, just to the idea that the decisions are being made by "intellectuals" whose values are different from his. We cede a great deal of our life decisions to experts of one kind or another, don't we? From teachers, to lawyers, we always seek the'best' advice.
As Janet says, the governemt could do more in research to find real cures, notjust existence-extending technology. The government already funds most medical research, through grants from the National Institutes of Health to academic institutions, etc. The current administration increased their budget but not by a lot. They do provide payment for doctors,usually primary care, who respond to thier patients requests for information about their options. This requires more time than a 10 minute appointment, and doctors formerly coud not be reimbursed for the time - unless the disguised it somehow in the Medicare codes.
But i doubt if the public would support, with additional taxes, the amount of money needed to find all the cures. and to give everybody everything they want.
So how do we make a policy on health care that will provide the greatest good to the greatest number of people? Should that be the criteria?