Originally posted by: ProfJohn
	
	
		
		
			Originally posted by: her209
	
	
		
		
			Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Just curious, how many of you pro-socialized health care people understand how much money the US spends on health care each year?
In 2004 health care spending in the US reached $1.9 TRILLION dollars.
		
		
	 
How much of that was spent toward overhead?
How much was spent toward litigating and paying off malpractice lawsuits?
		
 
		
	 
I have no clue... 
What is your point? 
The number of lawsuits will go through the roof with government in charge. Look at the worse HMO in the country and think about that being the government.
"I think I broke my arm"  
"Well you will have to come back in 2 days and then we can x-ray it"
		
 
		
	 
Would you like to know the REASON that the healthcare system is ****** today (other than the technical quality and expertise of the doctors and equipment, which is world-class, but hardly relevant if people can't access those services)? Two words, administrative costs. All the people being paid to administer the private healthcare system, with all its infinite complexities, are being paid from the same money pool that the healthcare revenues feed into. All this winds up driving up prices while simultaneously making proper and prompt healthcare unavailable to millions. The end result? Nearly a sixth of our country simply has no way to get healthcare outside of the Tylenol isle. How do you fix that? One, you SOCIALIZE MEDICINE. You know what "socialize" means? No, it doesn't mean we all start wearing berets and goatees and start marching around saluting Our Fearless Leader (although we do a distressingly large amount of that anyway). It simply means that every citizen in the US will have part of their tax dollars diverted to paying for their healthcare. What does this mean? it means many things:
1. Employees no longer need health insurance, so employers stop having to provide it. The result? Salaries go up; sure, some of that extra cash will fatten the employer's bottom line, but monetary compensation will also increase for the employee.
2. Prescription drug prices will go down, since the government as the new HMO on the block can now squeeze the drug companies by the balls until they get the cheapest price possible. Where will the money for that come from in the drug companies? Maybe all those health benefits they no longer have to pay their employees?
3. With every insurance policy in the nation under one roof, in one standardized, streamlined system, administrative cost (and personal greed by executives) would drop dramatically. This would reduce prices across the board, ultimately saving taxpayers money.
4. Now that hospitals aren't burning so much on administration, they can actually afford to hire the amount of doctors and nurses they need. The free market is precisely why the emergency room is always jammed full for hours.
5. Most crucially, every American is now guaranteed good health, or at least as good as modern medicine can provide.
I think it's fairly obvious if you aren't blinded by party affiliation or ideology that socialized medicine is a good idea, and certainly it's worlds better than our current system. My sister is 23, lives in New York City, works 14 hour days five days a week and has no health insurance. That's wrong, and not just because she's my sister. If she gets sick from working so much, it should be her right as taxpayer to have part of the money she pays in taxes, that she EARNS at work, be diverted to keeping her healthy and productive. Lets face it, socialized medicine is good for the economy, good for the citizens, good for pretty much everyone except a few very, very rich people.