The whole concept of living in a society means in part that every person is not solely responsible for their own share, but they depend on society as a whole to provide for their needs. Do you grow all of your own food? Make all of your electricity? Build your own roads? Fight your own house fires? The list is practically endless, and there is absolutely NO reason why healthcare should not be included as a public good. Every single other Westernized nation seems to have figured this simple concept out, but unsurprisingly "Americans" such as yourself are too selfish and self-absorbed to comprehend it.
You rail and moan about paying for "others" healthcare, but if your house catches fire I seriously doubt you'd let it burn down, you'd call someone else for help.
Also, what makes you think that everyone who is sick actually had any control over their conditions? There are many people out there suffering from incurable conditions that they have no control over. Should they be forced to live a substandard life just to be able to afford the healthcare they need to stay alive? Again, this is something that other countries have all figured out, but "Americans" such as yourself just can't get it through their thick heads.
Horrible post.
I don't grow all my own food. I purchase it - free market style, when I need it. I don't pay for other's food. I pay for my own, as I need it.
Make all my electricity? Nope. Private industry does that, with price controls. I don't pay for anyone else's electricity, and I use it as I need it. Oh, and last I checked, people who don't pay for electricity get cut off.
Build my own roads? Well, no. You got me there. I have to agree that roads ARE a public service best left to the government. Of course, last time I checked how well they were doing it was pretty bad. The roads and highways were falling into disrepair, they weren't keeping up with bridge maintenance, and the entire system was massively underfunded with respect to maintenance.
Fight my own house fires? Well, no, I don't do that either. Here's the interesting thing about that though: many areas don't really HAVE full time fire fighters. You see, once again, the burden of actually managing that has proven to be far to large. So what they have are volunteers. Those volunteers are only summoned in case of need - triage if you will. Because having a full time fire-fighting system in place is simply economically unfeasible.
Your 'list' is an inaccurate conglomeration of straw men. None of which reflect the reality of health insurance.
Health insurance is an abberation. It is not insurance when it is used to pay for every single instance of health care usage. Let's get that straight. If we moved back to a sane model - insurance for the catastrophic events but individual payers for anything non-catastrophic, that would make an enormous amount of sense.
Can you imagine if car insurance was a duplicate of health insurance? Mandatory, and used for everything from changing a headlight to replacing and windshield wiper blade? Insanity, and in the end unsupportable.
So let's be very, very clear. Health care in the US IS enormously broken. Why? Well, I make better than median wages, and I shudder to think of how much money I spend on health care for my wife and three sons. Without the so-called "insurance" to negotiate realistic prices I would be bankrupt. But why is that? Without insurance, 99% of Americans couldn't afford health care. What would happen? Prices would drop if health care providers wanted to stay in business! Imagine that! Instead, we have collusion between the health care providers and the insurance providers. Health care providers intentionally charge exhorbitant fees that no sane American would pay. Then give special prices only to the health-insurance providers so you are forced to get health insurance.
So how does congress propose to fix that? I've read the bill. All 2000+ pages of it. I can't claim to understand it fully. It's so full of legal-ease and double talk I doubt we'll understand it for another 20 years. What I DO understand is a total lack of addressing the problem. The only thing this bill really, trully does it to make sure that the people who can afford health care now will be paying for everyone in the future. By law. Which isn't really all that different that what's going on RIGHT NOW.
You want to FIX the issue? Here's how to do it.
#1 Government makes a list of conditions that can use insurance to be covered. This includes only conditions that were sudden, unexpected, non-preventable. Others, for instance heart disease when a person has over-eaten for 20 years and not taken care of themselves? Not covered. Do you think that a car-insurance company would cover the damage to your own vehicle if you intentionally took a crow-bar out and smashed it up? No? Ok then.
#2 All other treatments, including doctors visits, are now NON-INSURED. Oh NOES you say. Now I can't afford the $200+ to go to see the doctor for a normal office visit!
OH YES I say. Because if that doctor wants to stay in business, he's going to lower prices to drive people to come. The free-market at work.
Done. That's it. Affordable health care. Will everyone be covered? Nope. Should they be? Well hell, it'd be nice. But there isn't an economic model on the planet that has shown a way to make that work. It's simply to pricey. Rationed health care you say? Yep. Suppy and demand. Supply and demand.
I'm 100% against giving things away. Hunger is the greatest motivator. Want is right next to hunger. What happens when you remove the motivation to better oneself? Only a few people will actually strive to do so.