Grizzly Bear
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- Joined
- May 30, 2008
- Messages
- 7,963
Ah yes, the freedom to not have insurance. Because sharing risks with other people is socialism or something.
I hate being forced to purchase the care, though I don't necessarily regret having it now that it's sort of "affordable". The subsidy program bumped the coverage price down just enough for me to be able to budget it.
The sticker shock from the actual care I've gotten in practice though is still staggering regardless of what I'm liable for paying out of pocket. The way I see it, the bill still only makes care affordable by redistributing money around instead of attacking the damn problem source though, which is the actual cost of the care... and interestingly enough while in Ireland last month I saw that the local health care system in the UK was a point of strong debate for some of the same reasons. They have an aging population putting quite a strain on the funding and they'd been looking at higher tabacco taxes and mansion taxes to take up the slack.
Point being... much as people seem to be celebrating the law for championing affordable care, and for as much as I benefit from it, it's just delaying more problems for down the road by doing nothing to address the problem source. Screw the "socialism" label and the praise...
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