Segnosaur
Penultimate Amazing
Well, that certainly wasn't my attention.... I do realize that we cannot have western society existing under anarchy; some government services are necessary and they will be the need for mandatory taxes to support that infrastructure. The problem is deciding what needs to be supported and what doesn't need to be.But you're implying that the force issue alone is reason enough to invalidate any sort of publically funded system (at least, that's how your and CaptainManacles' comments come across to me).
The important issue is recognizing that taking tax money (even if its for something as noble as healing the poor sick people) is an example of force being applied.
Well, a general rule would be things that form a natural monopoly are more likely to require government supported taxation. We can't, for example, expect everyone to have their own military, or their own personal set of roads.In which case the question of settling which force is acceptable becomes very important. Why would publically funded health care be unacceptable force but public education or the military or any of a number of government programs be acceptable force?
Then there are items for which the free market can actually play a part. Health care is certainly part of that. It is my belief that we can and should have services in place to help the disadvantaged (welfare for example); health care certainly falls into that category.
Seems to me there has to be something more substantial to an argument against publically funded health care than using the narrow and exception-ridden force argument.
There ARE a lot of arguments against publically funded health care. There have been a lot of posts about them in this thread.