Originally posted by: SammyJr
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: SammyJr
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: SammyJr
Originally posted by: alphatarget1
Originally posted by: SammyJr
Yeah, health care is a want. If I break my arm, I just WANT to get it fixed. I don't need it fixed anymore than I need Taco Bell for dinner.
That's not the problem. How much does it cost to fix a broken arm? How about stomach bypass/heart surgeries for obese people who fail to control their lifestyle and are enormously expensive?
Unless we start to live healthier as a nation and have reasonable expectation of healthcare (be it government run or not), Obamacare WILL bankrupt us.
Irrelevant. There are some morbidly obese people where I work and they're covered under my insurance plan. Same thing with yours, I'm sure. We're already paying for these bad life choices via private insurance. What's the difference if it is on a national level?
No difference, but it's just more bastardization of "INSURANCE". You shouldn't be in the same risk pool as others. Unfortunately people don't care as long as other people pay for them.
You're obviously of the "tough shit" school of thought. There's the obvious example of fatties and smokers and other people who cause avoidable damage to their health. But what about the unavoidable? Kid gets hit by a car and is confined to a wheel chair for the rest of his life. Someone gets cancer. Someone is born with a congenital defect. Someone suffers from depression. Should these people be denied care because of what amounts to bad luck? Should their unavoidable risk level put health insurance and treatment for chronic conditions out of reach? Remember that many chronic conditions severely limit employment opportunity if untreated.
I think our society is better than that. People with bad habits should pay more, but its immoral for someone to suffer because they were dealt a shitty lot in life.
No, not "tough shit" but rather reality based and of the mindset that individualism and freedom are what has made this country the greatest nation on earth.
I don't see how making everyone pay individual rates for medical care is going to make anything better. Perhaps you can explain it to me.
No one is talking about being "denied care". However, what you and other socialists are trying to push on everyone is an even further entrenchment of the entitlement mentality where you can push your costs off onto others via gov't force.
So where can an unemployed diabetic go to get medicine? The ER will turn him away. He can't afford a doctor or insurance. People are denied care for chronic conditions all of the time.
Employment? WTF? I have stated many times that I don't think INSURANCE should be tied to employment and that risk pools should be of like risk - not like employment.
You missed the point. Some people have chronic conditions that need to be managed or they can't work. Chronic care management is pricey and if you can't get a job because of your chronic condition and you can't get treatment for your condition because you can't work, well, the problem is obvious.
Our society is better when it has more Freedom. More freedom from the gov't, more freedom to choose our level of risk averson(INSURANCE), and more freedom to choose our level of care.
Like I said, "tough shit" school of thought. Not everyone has the luxury to pick their risk aversion, due to funding constraints and or chronic conditions.
Why do you want an insurance company middle man between you and your doctor? How does that make you more free?
Obviously it sucks when someone had no choice in their "plight" but does that really mean that you and others should be able to force everyone else to bear the monetary burden via the Federal gov't?
That's part of living in a society. You want an Ayn Rand style free for all, visit Somalia. I hear it is paradise with a weak Government and all.