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  4. Socialized medicine

Socialized medicine

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  • D dennisd45

    I think he is actually making a telling point. He thinks that health care is like a luxury automobile. If you can't afford you, you can't have it.

    No eternal reward will forgive us now for wasting the dawn. - Jim Morrison

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    Red Stateler
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    The same reasoning for the socialistic rationing of health care can be equally applied to luxury sedans. You believe that health care is an entitlement because it extends lifespan and it is wrong to deny such a service to somebody merely because he does not have the funds to acquire it. I therefore will hold the position that, since luxury sedans are safer than inexpensive compact cars (and therefore possess the same life-extending properties as health care), we should all be entitled by the state to share in them equally, regardless of income. It's wrong to deny somebody the inherent safety of a luxury sedan merely because he does not have the funds to acquire it.


    "I curse economic prosperity as it puts an end to much-needed poverty, famine and pestilence." -dennisd45 "I fully support Communists in key positions of our government. I believe that they contribute positively to the liberal ideal." -dennisd45 "Liberals do not exist. You invented them to facilitate your strawman arguments." -dennisd45 "The Communist Manifest was written 150 years ago. It has been rigorously tested and is accepted by left"

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    • R Red Stateler

      Mike Gaskey wrote:

      I'll be 62 next June and I'm perfectly willing to let you dumbasses support me.

      Jerk.


      "I curse economic prosperity as it puts an end to much-needed poverty, famine and pestilence." -dennisd45 "I fully support Communists in key positions of our government. I believe that they contribute positively to the liberal ideal." -dennisd45 "Liberals do not exist. You invented them to facilitate your strawman arguments." -dennisd45 "The Communist Manifest was written 150 years ago. It has been rigorously tested and is accepted by left"

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      Jorgen Sigvardsson
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      You're losing your touch. Once upon a time you would litter the soapbox with words like "moron" and "idiot". Is "jerk" the only thing you can muster these days? :P

      -- Coming Soon to an Illegal DVD

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      • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

        You're losing your touch. Once upon a time you would litter the soapbox with words like "moron" and "idiot". Is "jerk" the only thing you can muster these days? :P

        -- Coming Soon to an Illegal DVD

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        Red Stateler
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        Jörgen Sigvardsson wrote:

        Is "jerk" the only thing you can muster these days?

        With the rate I pay on Social Security and Medicare...Yes. :|


        "I curse economic prosperity as it puts an end to much-needed poverty, famine and pestilence." -dennisd45 "I fully support Communists in key positions of our government. I believe that they contribute positively to the liberal ideal." -dennisd45 "Liberals do not exist. You invented them to facilitate your strawman arguments." -dennisd45 "The Communist Manifest was written 150 years ago. It has been rigorously tested and is accepted by left"

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        • R Red Stateler

          Jörgen Sigvardsson wrote:

          Is "jerk" the only thing you can muster these days?

          With the rate I pay on Social Security and Medicare...Yes. :|


          "I curse economic prosperity as it puts an end to much-needed poverty, famine and pestilence." -dennisd45 "I fully support Communists in key positions of our government. I believe that they contribute positively to the liberal ideal." -dennisd45 "Liberals do not exist. You invented them to facilitate your strawman arguments." -dennisd45 "The Communist Manifest was written 150 years ago. It has been rigorously tested and is accepted by left"

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          Jorgen Sigvardsson
          wrote on last edited by
          #24

          Well, why don't you try to get some happy pills through Medicare? You've paid for it already. ;P

          -- This episode performed entirely by sock puppets

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          • R Rob Graham

            Worse, most insurance companies don't cover preventative care, so many who are living payday to payday neglect it as well. Like I said, it shouldn't be about the merits of the concept, but rather about the best way to fund and deliver.

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            Mike Gaskey
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            Rob Graham wrote:

            most insurance companies don't cover preventative care

            that is because it is, "point of care". Insurance covers damage. HMO on the other hand focuses on preventative care (HMO == health maintenance organization). So, you get what you pay for.

            Mike Dear NYT - the fact is, the founding fathers hung traitors. Vincent Reynolds: My opposition is as enlightened as your support, jackass. dennisd45: My view of the world is slightly more nuanced

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            • M Mike Gaskey

              Rob Graham wrote:

              most insurance companies don't cover preventative care

              that is because it is, "point of care". Insurance covers damage. HMO on the other hand focuses on preventative care (HMO == health maintenance organization). So, you get what you pay for.

              Mike Dear NYT - the fact is, the founding fathers hung traitors. Vincent Reynolds: My opposition is as enlightened as your support, jackass. dennisd45: My view of the world is slightly more nuanced

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              Rob Graham
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              That would be fine if I had that choice. I don't, I get what my multi-national employer is willing to provide, and pay whatever premiums he is unwilling to subsidise. My choices of physicians and hospitals are limited to those the insurance provider deems suitable, as are the treatment options and prescription medications that can be selected without financial penalty. Given the size of the combined (company paid and mine) premiums, I pay a pretty substantial tax for a limited and controlled benefit. I see little difference in this and 'socialized medicine'. What I do see is a crappy delivey system, with tremendous overhead that includes insurance brokers, lawyers and beancounters at multiple levels. A fully government operated delivery system might be worse, but they would have to work hard at incompetence to do worse. 50 years ago we had a real free enterprise health care delivery system, that worked well (for it's time). Since then we have turned it into a bueaucratic nightmare run by people who have no responsibility to the health care consumer, but rather to competing interests. We need to fix the delivery system, and eliminate non-contributors from the process, so that practitioners can enjoy reasonable compensation for their work, and patients can get reasonable care at an affordable price. Neither happens today for the majority of consumers or practitioners.

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              • M Mike Gaskey

                Rob Graham wrote:

                most insurance companies don't cover preventative care

                that is because it is, "point of care". Insurance covers damage. HMO on the other hand focuses on preventative care (HMO == health maintenance organization). So, you get what you pay for.

                Mike Dear NYT - the fact is, the founding fathers hung traitors. Vincent Reynolds: My opposition is as enlightened as your support, jackass. dennisd45: My view of the world is slightly more nuanced

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                Rob Graham
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                As an additional point, I have several co-workers (in other parts of the US) who are offered HMO as an alternative (or in some cases only) plan. Most of them would argue that the HMO offers little preventative care, and that what they actually paractice is "specialist minimization", since it is quite difficult to actually see a physician who is a specialist. It's basically up to the HMO to determine whether your condition warrants consultation with one of their limited supply of specialists. Even closer to a 'socialized medicine solution', which further supports my argument that we are already (at least most of the way) there, but had, along the way, implemented a terribly inefficient and costly delivery system.

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                • R Rob Graham

                  That would be fine if I had that choice. I don't, I get what my multi-national employer is willing to provide, and pay whatever premiums he is unwilling to subsidise. My choices of physicians and hospitals are limited to those the insurance provider deems suitable, as are the treatment options and prescription medications that can be selected without financial penalty. Given the size of the combined (company paid and mine) premiums, I pay a pretty substantial tax for a limited and controlled benefit. I see little difference in this and 'socialized medicine'. What I do see is a crappy delivey system, with tremendous overhead that includes insurance brokers, lawyers and beancounters at multiple levels. A fully government operated delivery system might be worse, but they would have to work hard at incompetence to do worse. 50 years ago we had a real free enterprise health care delivery system, that worked well (for it's time). Since then we have turned it into a bueaucratic nightmare run by people who have no responsibility to the health care consumer, but rather to competing interests. We need to fix the delivery system, and eliminate non-contributors from the process, so that practitioners can enjoy reasonable compensation for their work, and patients can get reasonable care at an affordable price. Neither happens today for the majority of consumers or practitioners.

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                  TheGreatAndPowerfulOz
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  Rob Graham wrote:

                  with tremendous overhead that includes insurance brokers, lawyers and beancounters at multiple levels.

                  ah, you've hit on the head the reason why we don't have a universal health care system and why every effort to create one has failed and will forever fail: the entrenched status-quo industry. It's the same reason we'll never get a flat-tax system in place either: doing so would put entire segments of "professionals" out of work, accountants and IRS agents in the tax case, insurance companies, agents and like people.

                  Silence is the voice of complicity. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. -- monty python Might I suggest that the universe was always the size of the cosmos. It is just that at one point the cosmos was the size of a marble. -- Colin Angus Mackay

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                  • T TheGreatAndPowerfulOz

                    Rob Graham wrote:

                    with tremendous overhead that includes insurance brokers, lawyers and beancounters at multiple levels.

                    ah, you've hit on the head the reason why we don't have a universal health care system and why every effort to create one has failed and will forever fail: the entrenched status-quo industry. It's the same reason we'll never get a flat-tax system in place either: doing so would put entire segments of "professionals" out of work, accountants and IRS agents in the tax case, insurance companies, agents and like people.

                    Silence is the voice of complicity. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. -- monty python Might I suggest that the universe was always the size of the cosmos. It is just that at one point the cosmos was the size of a marble. -- Colin Angus Mackay

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                    Rob Graham
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #29

                    ahz wrote:

                    : doing so would put entire segments of "professionals" out of work, accountants and IRS agents in the tax case, insurance companies, agents and like people.

                    In this case it's headed rapidly in the direction of pricing itself out of business. More people are being forced into the emergency room door mode, as health care insurance costs (not to maention 'pay it all yourself' costs) increase at double digit percentage rates each year. It may become a problem we're forced to fix, regardless of who gets displaced.

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                    • D dennisd45

                      Medical miasma[^] Sounds pretty good to me!

                      No eternal reward will forgive us now for wasting the dawn. - Jim Morrison

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                      Allah On Acid
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #30

                      Clickety[^] Have fun, one voters. I posted this just for you.

                      Definition of 'Liberal': A person who is so open minded that their brains have fallen out.

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