theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
Exactly right. People live and die the world over, all day every day. The vast majority of them are flatly not my responsibility. Their relative ages, and your appeals to emotion, don't change those facts one bit.And you want children to die of easily treated diseases because you would prefer to spend thousands a year on your own potential need for healthcare than risk a dime of your share of taxes go to help someone else.
Actually, I take that back: I recognize that I have certain social and moral duties to my fellow man. Other people are, in fact, my responsibility. So I am in favor of private charity and government welfare programs. That doesn't mean I think any welfare program, or an unlimited welfare program, is a good idea.
It accomplished a serious reply from me. Seems like a pretty good deal.See how easy it is to hyperbolize? See how little it accomplishes?
Let's see if my hyperbole accomplishes a serious reply from Travis. He's the one wanting universal health care: let him tell us the conditions he proposes.
If Travis will lose money for a for-profit insurer, it's almost certainly the case that he'll lose money for a non-profit insurer as well, and for every medical service provider who treats him based on his budget rather than their costs.
Alright then: some people need welfare. That's fine. I am responsible for my fellow man. I don't begrudge Travis the welfare programs that sustain him.
I would, however, like to learn what, exactly, is the lifespan and life quality he believes he's entitled to, and what resources should be allocated to deliver that entitlement. Does he have a limit? Is it sustainable? Does it amount to something more than "I cost more than I produce; you should make up the difference"? Does it have any more detail or nuance than "we should just do what they do in Europe"?
So? Life impoverishes everybody sooner or later. There comes a time in everybody's life when not even being a millionaire can solve the problem.And this is to everybody: I don't care how well insured you are, unless you're a millionaire, you're one cancer diagnosis away from poverty. You have no idea what the costs can be. People think "oh, my insurance covers 80%, that's good!" and then are very, very surprised to find that 20% of four million is $800,000 and they don't happen to have that lying around in the sofa cushions.
The human need for medical care is limitless--the longer you keep them alive, the more it costs. People die because their resources run out, plain and simple. Because resources are not limitless. So if we're going to talk about allocating limited resources to limitless needs, I want to see talk about death panels.