In isolation, my wording is not as precise as it could have been, so let's put it back in context. You said:
You were trying to parallel a national health care program to existing government services which are substantially not national in nature. My point was to draw attention to the fact the parallels were less than being implied. Again, I could have, should have been crisper in my choice of words, but the point still stands.
Again we come back to the issue I asked you to clarify, the one you claimed I was attributing to you falsely:
Originally Posted by skeptigirl
Oh and of course you, [SpaceMonkeyZero], didn't notice we have socialized education, fire and police services.
Not to put too fine a point on this, but the US does not have national socialized education, fire or police services.
So after griping I was attributing a false position to you and attacking that false position (that is the definition of a straw man isn't it?),
Is that your only objection then, you want to see cities, counties or states providing the health insurance?
Why are you so quick to erect straw people?
now you say,
I admit it. Personally, I think it is intellectually dishonest, though, to say the US has national educational services on the basis the federal government provides funding to public schools
I simply asked your position suggesting one option, 'you are for government subsidized health care if it isn't at the national level'. I didn't say that was your position, I asked if it was. You called it a straw man. If it were a straw man, then I would have had to have claimed it was your position.
The thing that prolonged this discussion was not my lack of understanding of your meaning of straw man.
Had you understood what was meant by "straw man" from the get-go, the 10-posts-each might have stopped with one.
Had I been debating your position and attributed a false argument to you, that would have been a straw man. I said repeatedly I wasn't debating an issue with you I was asking your position.
And your use of a straw man against me is claiming I am arguing for national health insurance over local. That debate is a long way off. That is a debate about the specifics.
All I am arguing in this thread is, the fact one supports national health care of some kind, which is MoveOn's position, does not define that group as the "radical left". I merely pointed out that the perception of health care as a public industry vs a private industry is not so far fetched as many in the right wing believe.
You injected an irrelevant argument, there are local and national police and fire as well as local and national subsidized education. So what? We still don't view those three services in the US as private enterprises. There are private providers of all three, but they are mainly seen as public services. To argue there is a greater percentage of the services provided at the local level than at the federal level does not make them any less public service industries. Your straw man is making my argument about "national". I was only pointing out "government".
You are trying to make government run health care about an invasion into capital markets. I am pointing out that is a somewhat uniquely an American perspective. In a rational rather than an emotional analysis, many services fall to government responsibility in capitalist societies. One is not a radical leftist (again, that's what this discussion is all about) simply by thinking perhaps health care should be in the public service category.
... to say the US has national educational services on the basis the federal government provides funding to public schools.
On the other hand, many hospitals and health clinics receive federal funds, don't they? I guess the US already has national health care....
Yes, we do have some national health care. There is Medicaid, Medicare, and now a few states are offering limited forms of health insurance and requiring mandatory carrying of medical insurance the same way auto insurance is mandated. It's time to reorganize how we fund health care. It is not a radical idea.