You know what? I used to think the way Dan does, when I was about 16. But I thought my ideas through to their logical conclusions. I also looked around me and saw how things actually worked, and observed that there were often consequences I hadn't foreseen, but which with hindsight were predictable.
Why should I be forced to obey my parents, pay my taxes, go to school, drive on the left side of the road, wear a seat belt and so on and so forth. Wouldn't it be wonderful to be FREEEEEEE! I even at one point speculated that it might be better to be in jail because absolute compulsion might feel paradoxically freer than social pressures.
I was an idiot.
As I said, I thought things through, and more importantly I observed how things actually worked. And I changed my mind about a lot of things.
Dan isn't 16.
Now I'm not hanging around this thread because I want to debate universal healthcare, not any more. We've gone into the matter in enough detail that I understand the Americans' objections really and truly are entirely ideological, not practical. I'm hanging around because I find the psychology of the opposing argument fascinating.
Rolfe.
I think that it's in the American mindset, partly.
There seems to be, and forgive the overarching simplification here as I am fully aware of the variety of opinions in America, an assessment that Socialised Healthcare IS a loss of freedom.
Even if it's pointed out that it would only be an alteration of the system currently in place, there exists some wiggle room for which those against government intervention in all things can insist that there WOULD be an appriciable difference beyond the obvious increase in standards for the lower classes in the US. It seems born to me, and I am aware I am playing armchair sociologist, of two seperate things within the American psyche. The feeling that America IS the best nation of the world that I would consider a form of nationalism, and the paranoid fear of "Communism" brought on by the echos of the Cold War.
The belief in the USA as being a saviour of sorts, and truely having the best of everything in the world really does seem all pervasive to an outsider viewing their media. This frankly child-like notion seems itself to influence the idea that since the US is a Superpower (and best in the world) everything the US does is therefore the best way. Thus Universal healthcare, as practiced by the inferior nations of the world, would not be the right move. It would be to the detriment of the US because the current system is
de facto the optimal one.
Secondly, the fact that such a system is Socialised leads to obvious (if false) comparisons with the USSR. The fact that a system with the word "Socialist" in the title, however incorrect this self application was, will lead to immediate suspicion by a number of Americans. This is not entirely without reason of course, given the horrors of the USSR, but since the comparison is not entirely accurate, there is a serious issue here.
Of course, being British and only having temporary, if extended exposure to the US internal systems and civil society I could be entirely wrong, and if shown to be so (with evidence) I will of course retract.