You do. A grammar typo is not a reading comprehension issue.Who needs remedial reading?
You do. A grammar typo is not a reading comprehension issue.Who needs remedial reading?
Other than maintain order, and normal fire/police/ambulance services, no. That's what private charities like Red Cross are for. Up to $2 billion was wasted on fraudulent "help" that the government gave.So the government should have done NOTHING during and after Hurricane Katrina?
Other than maintain order, and normal fire/police/ambulance services, no. That's what private charities like Red Cross are for. Up to $2 billion was wasted on fraudulent "help" that the government gave.
Sorry, but it is. You want someone else to pay for something you want.
Yes. For the most part living in a well known disaster prone area is a choice people make. You choose to live in a flood zone, don't expect everyone else to keep bailing you out when it floods.
Other than maintain order, and normal fire/police/ambulance services, no.
Feel free to give to those in need according you your own conscience, don't force others to do so though.
Other than maintain order, and normal fire/police/ambulance services, no.
There is risks everywhere of course. Don't expect everyone else to make your life risk free.
Other than maintain order, and normal fire/police/ambulance services, no.
No I don't think a complete new system with 1,000+ pages was neccesary to put in place a system where those with no money can get insurance ( for the most part this already exists, i know many people who have low income and they all have insurance, maybe this is a new NY thing) and to add some sort of assigned risk program for people who because of preexisting conditions cannot get insurance.
A second reason is I don't want people to be forced to buy insurance. If I choose not to (as I have in the past) it should be my responsibilty to take the risk of losing my home etc if a major problem occurs.
Here's a link. The presidential candidates vary on this. I prefer Ron Paul's position on this issue (not some other issues): Health care (other than traditional "public health" services like vector control and pollution control) is not the State's business. The taxpayers of one medium-sized US State could provide health care for everyone on the planet if "health care" means one aspirin tablet and one bandaid per person per year. The world's GDP is insufficient to keep even one person alive forever. You are going to die. Most of us, before we die, will get sick. Inevitably, for each person, someone decides if X additional days of life is worth %Y more dollars in treatment costs. In any system, for every person, the answer will be "no", eventually.I ask this in earnest as I have such a large personal stake in the matter. Maybe some of you do too. I know that's why most of my threads in this subforum have been about it. As you all know no private health insurance company would ever cover me. From my current point of view the only way I could get covered is with some sort of universal health care system being implemented. So what is the Republican plan to allow all Americans to have access to health care?
Here's a link. The presidential candidates vary on this. I prefer Ron Paul's position on this issue (not some other issues): Health care (other than traditional "public health" services like vector control and pollution control) is not the State's business.
You are going to die. Most of us, before we die, will get sick. Inevitably, for each person, someone decides if X additional days of life is worth %Y more dollars in treatment costs. In any system, for every person, the answer will be "no", eventually.
Try this:...In my opinion, when the logical conclusion of your argument comes out as absurd as citizens should be allowed to starve to death through no fault of their own, it's time to come up with a new argument. Why would you force me to pay for fire/police/ambulance for you if you were in a disaster?
The problem with the "public goods" argument for State )government, generally) provision of charity (medical care, education, welfare) is that oversight of corporate functions is a public good and the State itself is a corporation. Therefore, oversight of State functions is a public good which the State itself cannot provide. State assumption of responsibility for the provision of public goods transforms the free rider problem at the root of public goods analysis but does not eliminate it."Aside from the important issue of how it is that a ruler may economize on communication, contracting and coercion costs, this leads to an interpretation of the state that cannot be contractarian in nature: citizens would not empower a ruler to solve collective action problems in any of the models discussed, for the ruler would always be redundant and costly. The results support a view of the state that is eminently predatory, (the ? MK.) case in which whether the collective actions problems are solved by the state or not depends on upon whether this is consistent with the objectives and opportunities of those with the (natural) monopoly of violence in society. This conclusion is also reached in a model of a predatory state by Moselle and Polak (1997). How the theory of economic policy changes in light of this interpretation is an important question left for further work.
Based on the evidence presented in this thread, having a conservative viewpoint has evolved to where it's indistinguishable from just being an *******. How did this happen?
The problem with the "public goods" argument for State )government, generally) provision of charity (medical care, education, welfare) is that oversight of corporate functions is a public good and the State itself is a corporation. Therefore, oversight of State functions is a public good which the State itself cannot provide. State assumption of responsibility for the provision of public goods transforms the free rider problem at the root of public goods analysis but does not eliminate it.
Yes.What sort of "vectors" are you talking about? Disease vectors?
I can see an argument for compulsory vaccination, since there is a prisoner's dilemma aspect to the individual's calculation of whether to seek vaccination. For most other issues of individual health, each individual has sufficient incentive to maintain health that State attention to this is likely redundant and expensive.Because keeping a population healthy makes it so that disease doesn't spread as readily and everyone is more productive. For instance, here's a non-proportional difference between 95% vaccinations and 70% vaccinations. That applies to a lot of other things health-related.
Roads do not respond to incentives and cannot maintain themselves. People do, and can. I have not used professional medical services in 20 years.Add to that that preventative measures can stop a lot of problems before they start.
Related to this, if you consider roads the job of the State to maintain because they are an important part of our infrastructure, how can you rate people, also an important part of our infrastructure, as less important?
Define "adequate". We all, ultimately, receive "inadequate" health care.Expense at the extremes of health care doesn't really justify not giving everyone adequate health care, which is exceedingly affordable. In fact, even the vast, vast majority of the more extreme cases aren't all that expensive for society to cover.
LBJ was a snake. Medicare is unconstitutional and one of the major contributors to the unsustainable US debt..Anyhow, all that said, based on what you said, do you think Medicare should be dropped?
The welfare State cannot last. Politicians have made more promises than they can keep. The longer policymakers defer addressing the entitlement issue, the narrower and less favorable their options will become. How to gracefully default is a complex issue. I don't know. Yes, better not to have made these promises in the first place.Old people aren't productive and "they are going to die" even more so than other people. Do you think social security should be stopped?
Up to you and your grandparents. Inevitably, somebody or some body decides when to pull the plug on grandma. It will either be family or some committee in Washington. Take your pick. Just don't pretend that the State can confer eternal life.Why save money for the elderly, when you can just have people spend it when they are young. No reason to make a system to prop up old people and keep them from dying on the streets, right?
Taxes.Why exactly should fire services be run?
You're wrong.Correct me if I am wrong, but if your house burns down, that's your own damn fault, right?
That decision should be up to the ER to make.I assume that you also think that if someone shows up bleeding to death to an ER, and they don't have insurance or money, the ER should let them bleed out, right?
That's a decision for them to make.So if I deny someone else their life it's no worse than if I stole a chocolate sundae?
I already addressed this straw man.Right so we should all live somewhere the disasters don't hit. You know, like...............that one place and.....................![]()
Why shouldn't you? I never argued against a basic level of police protection.Why should I pay my money to help someone else maintain order?
Ah yes, the "if you believe in some limits, therefore you have to believe in the complete extreme" straw man.In my opinion, when the logical conclusion of your argument comes out as absurd as citizens should be allowed to starve to death through no fault of their own, it's time to come up with a new argument.
Because I believe in certain basic limited services are best delivered through the government.Why would you force me to pay for fire/police/ambulance for you if you were in a disaster?
Ah yes, the "if you believe in some limits, therefore you have to believe in the complete extreme" straw man. You seem to have quite the habit of throwing out straw men in many of your postings.Behold the arbitrariness of one who lacks the conviction to fully embrace the anarchy of which his belief is the logical antecedent.
Pretty much. I believe that Drachsor has fallen for State-worshipful propaganda.Gosh, that's hilarious given how common universal health care is in first world countries. It's also far more efficiently (and fairly) provided than we have in the U.S.Eduardo Zambrano
Formal Models of Authority: Introduction and Political Economy
Applications
Rationality and Society, May 1999; 11: 115 - 138.The problem with the "public goods" argument for State (government, generally) provision of charity (medical care, education, welfare) is that oversight of corporate functions is a public good and the State itself is a corporation. Therefore, oversight of State functions is a public good which the State itself cannot provide. State assumption of responsibility for the provision of public goods transforms the free rider problem at the root of public goods analysis but does not eliminate it.Aside from the important issue of how it is that a ruler may economize on communication, contracting and coercion costs, this leads to an interpretation of the state that cannot be contractarian in nature: citizens would not empower a ruler to solve collective action problems in any of the models discussed, for the ruler would always be redundant and costly. The results support a view of the state that is eminently predatory, (the ? MK.) case in which whether the collective actions problems are solved by the state or not depends on upon whether this is consistent with the objectives and opportunities of those with the (natural) monopoly of violence in society. This conclusion is also reached in a model of a predatory state by Moselle and Polak (1997). How the theory of economic policy changes in light of this interpretation is an important question left for further work.
But I guess since it is "impossible" according to you, then reality must be some kind of illusion.
I might agree about State provision of some services, except for the consideration that State operation or subsidization generates a crowding-out effect (Social Security displaced mutual aid societies, government schools displaced independent and church-operated schools). We disagree about the State. It is a corporation, legally. Does Drachasor contend that the government of North Korea is "OF the people"?My personal stance: If the State can provide a service to the public more efficiently than private enterprise, then it should do so. There's no reason why the State, which is an institution OF the people (different than a corporation, really), shouldn't serve the people by saving them money like this.
Yes.I can see an argument for compulsory vaccination, since there is a prisoner's dilemma aspect to the individual's calculation of whether to seek vaccination.
For most other issues of individual health, each individual has sufficient incentive to maintain health that State attention to this is likely redundant and expensive.Roads do not respond to incentives and cannot maintain themselves. People do, and can.
I have not used professional medical services in 20 years.Define "adequate".
Medicare is unconstitutional and one of the major contributors to the unsustainable US debt..
The welfare State cannot last. Politicians have made more promises than they can keep. The longer policymakers defer addressing the entitlement issue, the narrower and less favorable their options will become. How to gracefully default is a complex issue. I don't know. Yes, better not to have made these promises in the first place.
Up to you and your grandparents. Inevitably, somebody or some body decides when to pull the plug on grandma. It will either be family or some committee in Washington. Take your pick. Just don't pretend that the State can confer eternal life.
Pretty much. I believe that Drachsor has fallen for State-worshipful propaganda.