Xequecal wrote:
No, that's not it. When you give an example of a $100,000/year annual treatment and then say, "under private health care, nobody would be able to afford this." The response from the center-right is always, and I mean always, that the free market and charity will find a way to provide that treatment. Nobody EVER responds by saying that under the private system this person may need to do without it and may die. That position would at least be honest and logical.
The problem is that A) unspecified treatments like that are not good examples; this is simply inventing some aribitrary combination of cost factors without consideration as to the existence or frequency of such a condition B) some people clearly CAN afford it and C) It's well-understood that with serious conditions tht cost this much, they are often going to be futile regardless. Private charity does not NEED to be able to provide the treatment to everyone. Furthermore, plenty of people here HAVE acknowledged that some people will die, and in any case some are going to anyhow.
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Both sides are totally convinced that there is a ludicrously immense amount of graft, waste, and theft going on, (the left blames insurance companies, the right blames the government) and that a treatment that now costs $10,000/month could easily be provided for $1,000/month instead if we just put the government in/got the government out of health care.
So?
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It just happened in this thread. Shuyung is absolutely convinced that the example treatment I gave would be available for an affordable price, without really knowing how or why that would be the case. It is simply not reasonable to assume that health care costs could be cut by 90% regardless of what the politicians implement. It comes down to choosing between forcing the rich to pay for the treatment of the poor and lower middle class, or letting the poor/lower middle class die if they contract one of any number of nasty health problems. There is no magic middle ground where you save all the poor people and don't have to demand extra money from the rich people.
I hate to break it to you, but his assumption is not unfair at all since you just invented a $100k/year treatment out of the blue for some hypothetical condition.
Moreover, it is NOT a matter of simply choosing to "let them die" because a great many of these health problems are not fatal, private charity WILL cover many, and many people DO have insurance even if they are in the poor/lower middle class. I've had jobs making as little as $10.50 an hour with health insurance.
What you're really talking about is a small increase in survival chance for the rich because many of these extremely expensive conditions will be fatal no matter what, when taking into accoutn that it is far from a binary "rich can afford it, other's can't" situation.
You also
still have not addressed what is "necessary", and you are engaging in the typical tactic of the left of focusing on fatal conditions that are very expensive while conveniently ignoring that the left ALSO wants free treatment for conditions that are far cheaper and/or far less likely to be fatal, and using this fear of "letting people die" as a bludgeon to get agreement.