Monte wrote:
An infant certainly cannot work to change their health care. They are born into a situation in which they have no control.
My lady faire and I were talking about this just the other day. She works at an inner city school, and the vast majority of the kids in that school lack good health care. So, the majority of them spend about 4 times as much time in pain as someone from a middle class family. That pain has a serious impact on their ability to learn, and the development done at that early age is key.
So these kids, who have no say in what situation they were born to, are now severely disadvantaged by a situation they have no ability to control. I just don't see how it's a moral idea to allow that to continue.
Because in order to change it involves forcing other people to pay for a remedy for a problem they are not repsonsible for. Just because a person is in a situation they can't control doesn't morally obligate someone else to remedy it, unless there's a specific duty between those two inidividuals based on some other relationship they bear to each other. An infant can eventually work to improve its situation when it is old enough.
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/scratchhead
Huh? I mean, you didn't get a choice as to who your parents were. You were born into the situation you were born in.
No one else chose that for you either, so it is equally valid to say they cannot be held responsible for changing it.
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Well, that entirely depends. If the society we live in today is capable of providing good health care to children, I just don't think it's a moral or even rational act to deny it to them based on some vague philosophy about rugged independence. We are the only western industrialized nation that does not guarantee health care to all of it's citizens. Perhaps some might think that's a badge of honor, but I think it's a mark of shame.
You are basically arguing, if I read you correctly, that a child is guilty of a parent's lack of success.
Rugged independance has nothing to do with it, nor does any vague philosophy. It has to do with simple human motivation.
If you fix people's problems for them, they stop trying to do it themselves, and if you take away the results of someone's success, they stop trying to succeed.
Guilt has nothing to do with it any more than punishment does. Guilt is a result of wrongdoing. The fact that people in poor circumstances aren't guilty doesn't somehow obligate anyone else to them.
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Because we are all in this together. Because these things affect all of us. And frankly, because it's the right thing to do. You may disagree on that, and that's probably as far as that argument can go.
All in what together? If something affects mew, why shouldn't it be my choice whether to do something about it? WHY is it the right thing to do? Soemthing better than "We're all human beings" or some other tautology would be nice.
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I strongly disagree. The Military *is* a social safety net, so are schools, and so are the police. We could have an entirely privitzed army that contracted to the various states and the country overall. However, we know that an army accountable to the public and to civilians is significantly less likely to become a threat to our liberty.
That has nothing to do with it being a social safety net. The military exists to fight and defeat our enemies, not to solve social problems or provide jobs to the poor. The fact that it does so is a side benefit, not a purpose of it.
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Police, fire, parks, H1N1 vaccines, dissaster response - all of these things are social safety nets. Should the people of New Orleans have been left to die because they could not afford a helicopter evacuation? I certainly don't think so.
They aren't
social safety nets a all. They provide protection against events which are not social in nature. Viruses and Hurricanes occur without regard to social conditions.
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Actually, in a way I agree with you. A simple public option will not drive costs down enough. The only thing that will truly drive down costs is a single payer system - essentially getting rid of all private insurance companies and having a single health care insurer that covers every citizen. Medicare for all, essentially. That, or an NHS style system where the government runs all health care in the country.
How do you know this is going to drive the costs down, and what about the problems of smoking, obesity, etc?
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Both of those options have proved to be significantly more cost effective and better at delivering care than our own. Unfortunately, it's a very difficult pill to swallow for some of the most powerful lobbies in Washington.
They may have proven cheaper, but cheaper is not the same thing as cost effective, Moreover, working differently in countries that are smaller in both geography and population, as well as different socially and economically does not mean they will work here.
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I do think that a public insurance option will help keep doctors, hospitals, and insurance companies honest. It will have a great deal of bargaining clout, and will be able to negotiate good, fair costs for the people covered by the plan.
Or it will simply drive these pplaces out of buisness. I have a feeling your idea of a "fair cost" for a service would be below what's realistic to pay for it, and what about when someone can't afford the "Fair cost"? That's right, you wnt it to be free, whih means other people have to pay MORE than the fair cost.
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But that isn't what's being proposed, DE. What's being proposed is a public plan that exists alongside the current public plans, funded by premiums and deficit neutral.
I said notihng about another proposal. I said costs come mainly from poor personal health behaiors such as obesity and smoking. Nothing about the plan being proposed alters that.
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Well, that isn' exactly true. Regulation of tobacco is already moving in a direction that is much more powerful. I agree that there are health issues that won't be solved by a public insurance plan. However, what it will help to solve is the financial devastation that comes when hard working people encounter a sudden illness or injury that ruins them, among many other things.
We've already tried taxing the hell out of tobacco to little effect. All we're going to do by regulating it is increase the attractivness of bootlegging it.
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I'll ignore the somewhat venomous tone at the end here and respond to your first point -
People are responsible for their own care, and people all over the country take good care of themselves. And they can still get cancer. And their private insurance company can still just drop them because they don't want to pay for that cancer. So then their lives are ruined, despite doing everything right.
No, they can't just drop them because they don't want to pay for something after they have it. If that were the case, no one's cancer would EVER be paid for, and no one would buy insurance in the first place.
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The poor are already able to access health care via medicaid. This effort is largely directed at people who work hard but still can't afford the frighteningly high (and ever increasing) cost of health care coverage.
Which is a problem. Not because they can't get access to health care (which they can) but because we're paying for people to get something they don't need to have. We don't have any obligation as a society to provide people with these things. You're making a great case for more private charity though.
It's really just a program to buy the votes of the poor. Don't tell me people aren't going to vote for the guy promising them free stuff.
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One of the main things driving that coverage is the lack of competition. In some states, insurance companies control upwards of 90 percent of the market. I doubt you would argue that such a lack of competition has no effect on the price.
I would, except that who are insurance companies supposed to compete with, if not each other?