“The nation” is not a big biological organism but is made of a large number of individuals, all different and unique, with each his or her own preferences, values, and circumstances. Economics is a science that studies the social consequences of individual choices. Ultimately, all choices are individual, even the decisions made by politicians and bureaucrats. A political majority is made of individuals. If somebody were “the nation’s doctor,” you would thus expect him to be proficient in economics, whether he studied the social consequences of the Second Amendment, or the First, or the Fourth, or any of them.
The US Surgeon General officially defines himself, presumably on the basis of some law or regulation, as “the Nation’s Doctor.” His office is a strange creature (as its history also reveals):
As Vice Admiral of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, the Surgeon General oversees the operations of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps (USPHS), an elite group of over 6,000 uniformed officers working throughout the federal government whose mission is to protect, promote, and advance the health of our nation.
Like most public health bureaucrats, he and his office are not exactly proficient in economics. His latest “advisory” is titled Firearm Violence: A Public Health Crisis in America. Although surgeons general have opined on many topics and lifestyles, they never discussed the social consequences of free speech or due process. (The current Surgeon General did however publish advisories on social media and health misinformation.) His advisory on firearms violence contains no mention of the word “economics” and seems to reference no more than two limited economic studies. Could I have missed something in the report’s 110 footnotes (there is no separate bibliography)? It does look as if the Surgeon General believes he is the physician of a big organism of which ordinary individuals are the organs or the cells.
Economics and other rational choice approaches to society have deflated the pre-scientific idea that society can be studied as a biological organism. Émile Faguet, the great French literary critic, historian of political ideas, essayist, and Academician was not an economist, but he knew enough to mock the sort of “zoological politics” implied by social organicism: “You think you are a man,” he wrote; “in fact, you are a foot”—“Vous vous croyez un homme; vous êtes un pied” (Le Libéralisme, Paris, 1902/1903). My Independent Review article “The Impossibility of Populism” illustrates the danger of this error.
Of course, we can hope that individuals will make informed choices on their trade-offs between risk and happiness–especially when children could be indirect victims. Minimal government intervention in the form of unbiased information, assuming it is possible, could probably be justified. But unbiased information and the protection of children are not what public health is about. An article in the current issue of The Economist, “Research into Trans Medicine Has Been Manipulated,” reviews an instance of what public health activists typically mean by information and research.
What we now call “public health” originated around the beginning of the 20th century, a bit earlier in Germany. It is not a scientific endeavor but an ideological and political movement. (I have developed this idea in a Regulation article, “The Dangers of Public Health,” and a Reason Foundation paper, “Public Health Models and Related Government Interventions.”) During the Progressive Era, the public health movement and at least one Surgeon General were supportive of eugenics and compulsory sterilization. In an article on “UVA and the History of Race: Eugenics, the Racial Integrity Act, Health Disparities,” P. Preston Renolds, a professor of medicine and nursing at the University of Virginia, mentions how the fifth Surgeon General of the United States, Hugh Smith Cumming, with two assistant surgeon generals,
took eugenic racism into the rural tobacco fields of Alabama. Here they implemented the infamous Tuskegee Syphilis Study, where nearly 400 black men were followed for 40 years in an effort to document how the disease manifested in black individuals left untreated. The tragedy is that with the discovery of penicillin as a cure for syphilis after World War II, these men were never informed of their disease, nor offered curative therapy.
In many ways, “public health” is the label for faddish lifestyles encouraged, if not coercively imposed, by government. Think about the decades-long persecution of smokers by prohibiting restaurants, bars, and other private venues from freely welcoming them. Public health is government coercion with a human face. It is a surreal experience to see the Surgeon General, dressed in his authoritative vice admiral’s uniform, opining on what lifestyle choices his national patients should make (see “U.S. Gun Violence Is a Public-Health Crisis, Surgeon General Warns,” Wall Street Journal, June 26, 2024).
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READER COMMENTS
Craig
Jun 30 2024 at 8:15pm
Who are you to question the century long evolution of the administrative state. Indeed what we see is the politization of anything and everything through any plausible vehicle.
Pierre Lemieux
Jun 30 2024 at 8:30pm
Craig: I cannot say that you are wrong. But note a crucial double fact: The Surgeon General (doctor of the Nation) is nominated by the President and approved by the Senate.
Peter
Jul 2 2024 at 8:53am
Right but not as a political appointee, or at least no more political than a COCOM commander. He’s nominated inline with any other flag officer given he’s a commissioned officer in the uniformed service.
As an aside TBH all the non-DoD uniformed services just need to finish being devolved from their historic roots within DoD and ended as a service.
steve
Jul 1 2024 at 3:04pm
I think you are wrong about the history of public health in many ways including when it started. You can make a decent case that public health measures have been a primary factor in increasing longevity and economic productivity, but set that aside. In this particular case he has noted that we have been experiencing a large rise, though it is dropping, in gun violence. Do you dispute those numbers? I hope not as the numbers are strong. He suggests we try to do something about it and makes some suggestions. Your response is basically one long ad hominem.*
Take a stand and tell us whether or not you think we should try to address this issue or not. If not, why? If so, what would you suggest?
*Seriously, what is with some Public health guy 100 years ago was a eugenicist? How does that affect a policy discussion about guns. Nathan Larson ran for office as a libertarian but was convicted for kidnapping a child and running a pedophilia site. Should that color how I view libertarians? No, the huge majority of libertarians are decent well meaning people. There is no reason to think they have more or less child kidnappers than anyone else. Similarly, some public health people as eugenicists 100 years ago has nothing to do with public health people now, none of whom promote eugenics.
Steve
Jon Murphy
Jul 1 2024 at 4:01pm
He is right at least insofar as the United States is concerned. Our entire public health apparatus arose out of the eugenic movement (and maintains much of that framing). There’s an excellent book detailing the history of public health in the US (and other movements) called Illiberal Reformers by Thomas Leonard.
steve
Jul 1 2024 at 7:42pm
Ahh, that book. First, if you know medical history there was a fair bit of public health activity that happened well ahead of the eugenics movement, both in the US and elsewhere. A short but decent timeline at link. I think people forget that eugenics was a popular idea for a while among many people, not just progressives. They were concerned about establishing public health programs since they thought it would preserve the wrong kinds of people ie minorities and the poor. Their racism guided their policy choices which would not be considered public health activities. Fortunately, the people actually committed to public health ignored them and public health has been a major positive in our culture.
The Tuskegee example was confined to Georgia. It was really a product of racism and was not part of public health. Regardless, what does the actions of those people have to do with public health now. Since you brought up race let’s go back another 60 years to when white people actually owned black people. Does that mean all white people now want to own black people?
https://sphweb.bumc.bu.edu/otlt/mph-modules/ph/publichealthhistory/publichealthhistory_print.html
Steve
Jon Murphy
Jul 2 2024 at 9:41am
Not really. Eugenics remains an implicit underpining in the US. Indeed, the pandemic response around the world was built off eugenic understandings. Almost all medical research still has vestiges.
People, and especially in the medical profession, didn’t ignore eugenics. It’s just been rebranded.
Joe Potts
Jul 4 2024 at 1:17pm
Tuskeegee is in Alabama, which, believe it or not, is ACTUALLY A DIFFERENT PLACE from Georgia.
Yes, I know they all seem the same to you.
Pierre Lemieux
Jul 1 2024 at 9:06pm
Steve: If you read the two articles of mine linked to in my post, you will find much information on the history of the public health movement (especially in my Reason Foundation article)—which, with due respect, you might not have specifically followed. About the latest “advisory” of the Surgeon General, have you wondered why it includes adolescents up to 19 years of age in the “children and adolescents” who die from “firearm-related” causes? Youth suicide is, for sure, a big problem and puzzle (one wonders why the rate has gone up for young people who spend a big part of their youth in public schools, and how politicians can reduce it!), but the US rate (data for 15-99 youth) is barely above the world average (among WHO countries). It is higher in several countries including Sri Lanka, New Zealand, Ireland, Norway, Canada, Finland, Switzerland–just to name a few. There are substitutes in the means of committing suicide. These are just some of the standard biases of the public health movement. (Note also the comments of David.)
steve
Jul 2 2024 at 9:33am
Pierre, I read those. I have had a long term interest in the history of medicine since it was my profession and while public health per se has not been a special interest it gets covered in general reading. Public health preceded eugenics and lasted after eugenics. There was a fairly short period where people who believed in eugenics decided they should use public health measures if possible to carry out their racist beliefs. As noted in the UVA article this was not limited to public health as the eugenicists got footholds in many universities. Eugenics did not develop public health.
However, that’s just my fussy pedant side showing up. None of those people are alive. No one who believes in eugenics has been involved in public health for nearly a hundred years. If you want to set a standard where having some bad people involved makes them bad forever then every nation in the world should be judged as evil. It’s a bizarre useless standard. Judged on its merits, public health has been a success.
If an increasing number of young people are killing themselves with guns why is that not an issue public health should address. Are you suggesting we just ignore it? I dont see you or David offering any ideas about addressing the issue. Since I guess it must be a special interest of yours I am sure you are aware that a lot of suicides are impulsive. What do you think of the approach the Israeli army took to deal with suicide among its soldiers? Anyway, half are suicides and half are not. What do you recommend for the other half?
Steve
Pierre Lemieux
Jul 2 2024 at 10:59am
Steve: The economic approach to any phenomenon that harms some people (and any social phenomenon in general) is not to explain it by the random actions of bad (or good) people. It is to inquire about the incentives (including from the state of opinion) and the social institutions generate it or make it possible, how some individuals are motivated and able to do “evil” acts. Why, for example, were 65,000 women forcibly sterilized between 1907 and 1980 in America? Why not in France? Why was the contemporary public health movement born in Germany? Why was the public health movement so authoritative and authoritarian when the Covid epidemic began?
It is important to understand that I am not speaking of medicine but of the public health movement. Bernard Turnock, the author of a major public health textbook, wrote (Public Health: What It Is and How It Works, 5th Edition [2012], p. 22):
Elizabeth Fee (“Public Health, Past and Present: A Shared Social Vision,” introduction to George Rosen, A History of Public Health, xxxiii) agrees with
It is, of course, a “shared social vision” by those who share it, and want to impose it on others, from eugenics to today’s official visions of social purity and state benevolence.
David Seltzer
Jul 1 2024 at 4:45pm
I wonder if the Nation’s Doctor wants to inoculate individuals against thinking and choosing for themselves. “Firearm crisis.” According to the CDC, 54% of gun related deaths are suicides. About half of homicide victims are young men. About two-thirds are Black. How does the Nation’s Doctor address those complex issues?
Joe Potts
Jul 4 2024 at 11:14am
Public health: One more lever of governmental oppression.
Comments are closed.