Chaos
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2003
- Messages
- 10,611
I am sure there are charity programs that are not up to par.
How sure are you that any charity programs are up to par?
I am sure there are charity programs that are not up to par.
Under a universal system won't there be similar situations as this one. Won't there be any type of review system to determine if a major treatment is medically necessary (if not fraud will certainly increase). And sometimes won't it be wrong and people will die because they did not get the treatment.
We disagree. The government of a locality is the largest dealer in interpersonal violence in that locality (definition, after Weber). A law is a threat by a government to kidnap (arrest), assault (subdue), and forcibly infect with HIV (imprison) someone. The policeman's nightstick is not a magic want. The State cannot confer eternal life.Yes, and if the it is a system covering all residents and run by the State, then it saves loads of money. Saving money is a good thing.
That's not my argument at all. Seems to me it's advocates for State-subsidized health care who dream of aggregation of medical care resources and medical decisionmaking. My argument is rather opposite. While the overall expectation of an additional __X__ days of life for a given age cohort or class of patients will increase with the application of an additional __$Y__ dollars worth of resources will increase, the substitution of political judgment for individual judgment will degrade overall social welfare.This statement has nothing to do with anything. You act like unlimited money means unlimited health. Again, THIS IS NOT TRUE.We are all born terminally ill.
You say the sweetest things. Give us a kiss (do I have to tell you where?).That is a really dumb statement.
Go ahead and sell your house to support their care if it means that much to you. I'm not planning to deprive my sister's kids of their share of my assets by dying broke. I was raised in no church. I was a Biology major before I switched to Math. I'm comfortable with death. Individually, it's a tragedy to close friends. Overall, it's inevitable.We all die, that much is true. But terminal illness has a specific and dire meaning that you are cheapening here in a most unconscionable fashion. We have several people on this board now who are battling what are likely to be terminal illnesses, and I think it is an insult to them to attempt to make their pain, fear, and suffering out to be no big deal.
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Although I am just now realizing how amusing it is that I'm putting all this effort into essentially attempting to argue myself out of a job.![]()
If you have ever had to balance a checkbook, you might understand.the terror that the american right has of socialized medicine just never ceases to amaze me.
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If you have ever had to balance a checkbook, you might understand.
There
Is
No
Free
Lunch
you pat for roads, police, fire protection and military.
nothing is free.
nor is healthcare, but it is at least more vital than military to attack foreign states.
If you have ever had to balance a checkbook, you might understand.
We disagree. The government of a locality is the largest dealer in interpersonal violence in that locality (definition, after Weber). A law is a threat by a government to kidnap (arrest), assault (subdue), and forcibly infect with HIV (imprison) someone. The policeman's nightstick is not a magic want. The State cannot confer eternal life.
That's not my argument at all. Seems to me it's advocates for State-subsidized health care who dream of aggregation of medical care resources and medical decisionmaking. My argument is rather opposite. While the overall expectation of an additional __X__ days of life for a given age cohort or class of patients will increase with the application of an additional __$Y__ dollars worth of resources will increase, the substitution of political judgment for individual judgment will degrade overall social welfare.
Considering the last time the United States balanced its budgetary checkbook was in fiscal year 2001, I don't think it's in a position to lecture anyone on that score. (And I'll just note that Canada has a universal health care system and the federal government had posted numerous consecutive budgetary surpluses prior to the recent recession. So if the idea is that universal health care means budget deficits are likely or even required, there is evidence to the contrary.)
If you have ever had to balance a checkbook, you might understand.
Was just as childish (IMHO) as his response.
As I wrote before, "evidence" means "from what is seen". Anecdotes, in other words. People in this discussion objected to my evidence, and moderators allowed insults in response. That's tiresome. The world is a pile of anecdotes. From anecdotes (i.e., data) people extract statistics. I have read statistics on wait times to see a doctor and on post-diagnostic success that favor the US. Again, as I wrote before, the taxpayers of one medium-sized US State could provide medical care ("coverage") for the Earth's entire human population if "medical care" means one band-aid and one aspirin per person per year, but the entire Earth's GDP would be insufficient to keep even one person alive forever.Oh, I see, so now you are rejecting the fact other countries have health care systems that cover everyone for far, far less than our system costs? I already backed up this statement to you. Do you have counter evidence or what?
I'm not the one promising eternal life. Quite the opposite; I have observed repeatedly that everyone is going to die. So please quit misrepresenting my argument,Then stop acting like eternal life is possible. Because no one is saying it is. At best it is a straw man argument. It definitely isn't all that realistic a concern, since only the most outrageously expensive treatments would be in question and they are extremely rare.
The question is vague. Lots of problems with control over medical decisionmaking by a remote, rule-bound bureaucracy.I mean, can you give an example of something that wouldn't be covered or what a problem would be?
Dunno what "this" refers to. As to the "live longer" part, we've been over this.Can you show how a state-run system is failing where our current system hasn't failed as well? And your evidence for this? State-run health care systems all produce populations that LIVE LONGER than what we have in the USA. Where's your evidence for this?
In hindsight, lifespans in Hiroshima dropped steeply on 1945-08-06, and it was not because the health care system got worse, relative to previous days or to Kyoto or Yokohama. Lifestyle choices, mostly, and ("NOT", mistakenly omitted) the quality of care make the difference in aggregate longevity between US and, say, Belgium.
Same for governments. The State is a bunch of guys with guns. Guns do not make people wiser or more compassionate.Why do you somehow think insurance companies aren't going to try to save money and avoid payments if at all possible?
You've presented statistics on expenditures per capita and as a fraction of GDP. These say nothing about the quality of care that medical treatment budgets deliver.Reality just doesn't line up with what you are saying here from everything I know -- and I've presented evidence to back up what I am saying.