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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
No, because you didn't ask a question.
Now, if you've got something to ask, spit it out FFS.
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When they come a wull staun ma groon Staun ma groon al nae be afraid Thoughts awe hame tak awa ma fear Sweat an bluid hide ma veil awe tears |
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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
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again- do the needs of the few outweigh the needs or free will of the many?
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No individual can plan his own existence in their view. So the state planners must arrogate to themselves the right to manipulate any sector of the economic system if the good of “society” or the “general welfare” is paramount. Ipso- if the rights of the individual get in the way, the rights of the individual must be sublimated. The Road to Serfdom FA Hayek (interpretation) Mortgage Backed Security survivor |
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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
Don't know what you are fussin' with Pram about, but health care is something everyone needs. Single payer financing restricts no ones free will as to who provides it. It simply takes away that "free will" choice of whether to pay the insurance bloodsucker or the morgage and food on the table.
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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
Sometimes, yes.
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When they come a wull staun ma groon Staun ma groon al nae be afraid Thoughts awe hame tak awa ma fear Sweat an bluid hide ma veil awe tears |
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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
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The problem with our current system isn't not enough insurance, it's Too Much insurance. As private-insurance-opponents point out, there is an incentive for each payer to pay out as little as possible, and because the payers are not directly involved in the actual care exchange, the results are sometimes tragic. What the government-insurance-proponents fail to take into account is that this negative incentive and indifferent posture do not magically disappear just because one shifts from several third-party payers to one. (One does admittedly gain the advantage of standardized red tape, but this is a shorter-term advantage than that of market-based competition.) Economically, the best method is to decouple insurance coverage from employment, reduce or eliminate prepaid healthcare disguised as health insurance (i.e. low- or no- deductible plans), and encourage individual purchases of both healthcare and catastrophic health insurance. This takes advantage of market forces towards cost efficiency and product innovation while reducing the tragedies of overwhelming medical expenses.
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Today's forecast: Government corruption. Tomorrow's forecast: 100% chance of more 'politics as usual' Maybe it's finally time to vote Libertarian
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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
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You actually know nothing about healthcare... Nothing The reason US healthcare is costing twice the french is preventive care and any good health professional who as looked at this area will tell you so... I have worked in the area and the figures are astounding... Preventive Care saves huge amounts of money... The is one think I like to say to you is that your idealogically lead and you can't see reality. The reality of the situation is the present system is killing over a million Americans a year(thats conservative), your method will kill more. The system is grossly too expensive because corporate greed... Your so idealogically blind to this... |
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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
Do I smell a "disagreeing with me makes you Hitler" argument?
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"Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to take everything you have... The course of history shows that as a government grows, liberty decreases." -Thomas Jefferson |
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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
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What did Hitler do the the mentally ill... |
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Re: 59% of US Doctors favor Universal health care
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I've shown how yours will kill more - Third party payers will always have an incentive to pay as little as possible. Monopolizing that incentive will eventually lead to one or more of arbitrarily restricted supply, reduction of innovation, and/or arbitrary reduction of demand (a la Hitler's execution of mental cases). Quote:
(Then a bird swoops down on the butterfly and is promptly blown to bits by a shotgun blast as a herd of obnoxious ATVers zoom by, crushing whatever flowers are in their path and leaving behind a clooud of exhaust.) The system is grossly too expensive because of corruption and incompetence. Corrupt lawyers suing for no good reason. Corrupt patients who hire them. Corrupt doctors putting in false claims, whether to private or govermental payers. And yes, corrupt corporations that also put in false claims. Corrupt or incompetent payers who sometimes allow or even facilitate fraud. Corrupt or incompetent legislators who thwart meaningful reform. Corrupt or incompetent individuals who neglect to get proper preventative care. Corrupt or incompetent benefits coordinators who select plans that aren't appropriate for their employees or their company. And sometimes even corrupt or incometent companies that fail to pay or fail to pay in a timely manner. And probably some more corruption and incompetence I'm failing to list here. And the costs of all the controls needed to try to find and stop all the corruption and incompetence. Corporations are inherently greedy - that is their job. But they are also generally fair, in that they usually live up to their contracts. So long as you know that going in, you're generally okay. And if they don't live up to their contracts, you can sue or call the cops. Governmental programs are inherently innefficient (unless they're inhumanely efficient, like Hitler's mental health program) - that's just the nature of the beast. But they're also politically motivated, so if you're connected, you can get what you want or need. So long as you know that going in, you're generally okay. And if they don't live up to their contracts, you can... well, in this case, you can go to hell. (Or heaven, or just 'away'.) Inflamatory rhetoric aside, you do have a point about preventative care. Even if healthcare is 'free' under socialized medicine, people still won't go without proper education (probably in the form of public service announcements) to let them know they should. A more efficient solution is proper education, catastrophic insurance that includes payment for some basic preventative care like (annual?) check-ups, charitable funding for preventative care for those who can't afford it, and market-driven healthcare. And if somebody dies an early death because they decide they'd rather have a shorter life graced by a big-screen TV than a longer one after getting that nasty growth looked at, that's their choice, not mine. Or yours.
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Today's forecast: Government corruption. Tomorrow's forecast: 100% chance of more 'politics as usual' Maybe it's finally time to vote Libertarian
Last edited by Evil_inKarlate; 04-23-2008 at 01:47 PM. |
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