I'm sure people in here mean well, but how many of you grew up around people that get free medical care and entitlements?
I know everybody in the thread at the moment means well. Including you. But I really wish you would try to see where your ideology may be blinding you to the disadvantages of your present system, and the advantages of some other ones.
I want to expand a bit on what Darat said.
Unless we have some very privileged Brits posting in this thread every single one of us will have grown-up and live today with and among people who get "free medical care and entitlements". [....]
Darat, we
are all "people who get free medical care". And so is everyone we grew up with (unless we grew up abroad), and so are all those we live among (unless we live abroad). Even the
most privileged Brits are entitled to free medical care! Some may choose not to access it, but even if they don't use it, they're still entitled.
Now Dan has in one post accused Europeans of being "lazy", because of this. I just wonder how long he's spent in Europe, and how many Europeans he knows. Dan, it's true that we work fewer hours a week than Americans, but that has absolutely bugger-all to do with having access to free health-care. It's to do with life-work balance, and the knowledge that we only get one life so we'd rather not spend
all of it working.
I just don't get the concept that not having to worry about where our medical treatment is going to come from makes us worse people, or lazy, or freeloaders, or moochers. It just doesn't come into it. Oh, I ought to do a bit more overtime this weekend. But the hell with it, I know that I'm entitled to be treated no questions asked if I get appendicitis, so I'll just take the kids to the park instead! Why would that ever be anyone's line of thinking?
Again, Dan, I think you're confusing healthcare with social security, welfare, whatever you want to call it. That's actually where the potential for mooching or freeloading or fraud comes in. I think, because you're so used to a system where entitlement to healthcare and entitlement to social security payments go together, you think of them in the same terms. Please try to separate them, because they're two entirely different things.
As I said, social security/welfare is always going to be means-tested. This is the area where the moochers operate, and probably always will. Others have explained the difficulties here. The more you try to clamp down on the frauds, the more likely it is that some genuinely needy person who's just lost a bit of paper or something is going to be denied assistance. The moochers are masters at playing the system - the genuine claimants struggle.
Now this is an area where our two systems don't differ a grear deal. And yes, I was brought up in a mining village where my father was the minister. About a third of the other children in my primary school class were dirt-poor. And most of these came from free-loading or even criminal families. Yes, there are people who will just relax in the safety net and make no effort to climb out.
But this has
absolutely nothing to do with healthcare. People only access healthcare when they're sick. They don't go out of their way to access healthcare they don't
need, just to get something for nothing! Yes, in a system where there is no universal access to healthcare and that is means-tested in the same way as social security, the social security freeloaders are likely to freeload their way into the free healthcare system as well when they get sick. But it's really just a side-effect of the means-test connection between the two systems in the USA. It's practically an irrelevance.
Now, try to disconnect the two systems. Social security is means-tested, and freeloading will happen, and you do the best you can to minimise this while not excluding the genuinely deserving. We can agree on this, wholeheartedly. But that's not the subject of the thread.
Where healthcare is not means-tested, freeloading simply stops applying! You can't mooch your way into benefiting from something you're automatically entitled to anyway! It really doesn't have any bearing on laziness, or dependency, or feeling that one is owed a living. It's simply how we deal with medical need, and everyone benefits according to their individual need.
Rolfe.