I say no. It isn't my responsibility to pay for health care for people who don't eat healthy foods. Look at the obesity epidemic in america that is caused by eating mcdonalds for breakfast lunch and dinner. I know many people who drink too much beer. I mean, this one girl needs to have 8 before she even feels drunk. Now if she gets liver problems, let her pay. It may sound cruel, but paying for irresponsible behavior only causes more of it.
I heard in a doctors office that a man who was a coke head was able to get benifits. This is a waste of tax payer $. I know another woman who collects disability payments, but she isn't disabled to the point where she can take care of 8 cats, drive and get her hair done every week. I think the welfare state model is a failed one and I hope it doesn't take hold in america
My God, it's like whack-a-mole. You deal with one guy spouting prejudiced antisocial BS, and another one comes up with exactly the same illinformed rant.
Do you really think that the only cause of ill-health is junk food and alcohol? If we all just ate right, took exercise and quit beer and cigarettes, all the doctors would be out of a job? I wish.
I don't think any of the proponents of universal healthcare would maintain that everyone who benefits is a paragon of healthy living. Well, the word "universal" rather knocks that idea on the head. But why is it that the opponents can do nothing but castigate
all potential recipients of universal care as junk-food-binging profligates?
You've actually got it completely the wrong way round.
Where a service (such as health) is means-tested, there will always be people who manage to swing an entitlement whom others believe are undeserving. And this of course generates resentment among those who are paying the taxes but not seeing any benefit for themselves. But the fact is that US taxpayers are paying for these people at the moment! You just said, a man who is a drug addict is in receipt of benefits. So, you're describing your system as it is.
You seem to be rejecting a universal healthcare system just because it might benefit a few more who are suffering from self-induced problems. But as I said, what about the other end of the scale? What about the teenager with cystic fibrosis? What about the vast majority of people whose health problems are in no way any fault of their own? Do you think that everyone in that category is adequately cared for in your current system?
But it's your whole rhetoric I take issue with. "It's not my responsibility to pay for...." With all due respect, that's a really twisted way of looking at it. None of us knows what might be ahead of us, health-wise. Here I am, perfectly healthy and in a good job. So were a lot of people, the day before something catastrophic hit them. Thinking about it completely from the point of "us", the healthy people who don't want to be forced to pay for someone else's treatment, and "them", the people in need of treatment who suddenly turn into grasping, demanding parasites insisting on picking your pocket, is unhelpful.
Feeling secure that you live in a society to which you contribute when you can, and to which you can turn when you need help, is actually pretty positive. Constantly seeing yourself as the put-upon provider, and others as the undeserving, demanding recipients, ain't healthy.
And you may be interested to know that there has been much discussion in Britain regarding whether people whose health problems are self-induced should have the right to completely no-strings treatment. Already, some treatments or surgeries are conditional on the patient losing weight or giving up smoking first. For very scarce resources (like a liver transplant), how the patient came to be needing the treatment is one of the things factored in when deciding who gets the available organ.
It is perfectly possible to structure a universal system so that people are penalised for self-inflicted harm - actually, it's a lot easier to do this in a universal system than in a privately-funded one. It's just not very constructive to damn everyone with a health problem as being in this category - or to assume that you will never be in the category of potential recipient yourself.
Rolfe.