Xequecal wrote:
I don't take it seriously, but the sentiment is way more common than I thought.
Not in my experience, and frankly, I know and spend time with a great many liberal folks.
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For example, wait until you've heard someone complain about how unfair it is that FDR couldn't push through a 100% income tax for incomes over $25k like he wanted, because the evil Republicans in Congress blocked it.
Sounds like a bit of creative re-imagining to me.
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The military and police protect everyone equally.
And frankly, I think the government has an equal responsibility when it comes to health care. I see it as no different than police, fire, rescue, and the military.
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Public health care most certainly does not. The wealthier you are, the worse off you are under public health care.
How so? When you are wealthy, you don't get the extra cool police protection. Same officers, same gear, same technology. Same thing with health care.
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The progressive tax to fund it hits you harder and harder, and while you pay more and more you still get exactly the same benefits despite how much you pay.
The same is arguably true about the military and the police, dissaster recovery, the internet, interstate highways, etc. However, I believe the wealthy gain a great deal more for their dollar in the social contract than the poor. In other words, they gain more, so it's not all that unfair in my eyes to tax them more.
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As you get older, you have to buy private care to stay healthy because your public ration isn't enough, so now you're not only paying many times the value of what you're getting from the public system, you have to pay even more to supplemental private care.
This doesn't make sense to me, either. Seniors today are covered by Medicare until they die.
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It's great if you're poor, because the alternative is getting no care. And since the poor outnumber the rich, the average life expectancy goes up a lot. But it's still taking money and by extension years of life away from the wealthy so the poor can live longer.
And public health should be revenue neutral. The rich should be able to access the same services as the poor. And how in the heck can you reasonably claim that it takes years of life away from the rich? How are they entitled to longer lives than the poor? Not a zero sum game.
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You might want to share that sentiment with Obama, since his original health care proposal was funded entirely by an excise tax on those making over $250,000 per year.
Which is perfectly fine by me. That in no way adds up to a 90% tax burden on them, or anything even remotely close to that. A small tax increase on the biggest earner is a great way to fund this. His plan also calls for premiums to be paid by those that can afford it, in addition to that tax increase. In other words, his proposal is *not* exclusively funded by taxing the wealthy.
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It's not putting a gun to their heads and pulling the trigger, but it's definitely taking years of life away from the wealthy elderly by decreasing the amount of money the have to provide health care for themselves.
Your conclusion is seriously flawed. First of all, anyone at that age is eligible for medicare. Furthermore, a rich person would still be able to access the public option. Do you honestly think that small tax increase would come directly out of their health care? Doubtful. Likely, they have an excellent health care plan paid for by premium to a private company.
Now, if that rich person were to suddenly fall on hard times, or if their insurance company were to drop them, they would also have the option to use the public insurance plan. How great is that? A safety net, even for the wealthy.
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It feels like all the people who want limited government really just want government limited to Republicans.
---The Daily Show