Aizle wrote:
Ladas wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
not at all. I'm well aware they're not allowed to refuse care.
You just made my point for me. That care must be paid for somewhere. Better to have it 'within the system' Rather than bill customers who cannot pay and passing those costs (plus the overhead for it) on to everyone else better to have it within a system set up for this purpose.
I think you and Aizle are both missing the much larger issue here.
And you think that is what?
The conversation has already turned to part of the larger issue that you two seemed to have missed, and Riov still appears not to get.
There is no "within" or "outside" the system the way it is currently configured, as someone is already adsorbing the costs to treat people without any insurance. Costs are merely being shifted from one group to another, with the risk being assumed by the government, and therefore shouldered by the actual producers of the economy, those still paying more in taxes than getting back.
Votes such as these, will in my opinion will be upheld by the USSC, barring another appointment by Obama between now and then, will completely undermine what was already anything but deficit neutral, since the tax base increase they needed to pay for this plan is no longer compelled to join.
What this will do, since the system is not self sustaining, or deficit neutral as the administration and morons in DC would have you believe, is further shift a the weight of the system to those in the most jeopardy of being pushed out of the middle class and self reliance. The entire middle class is getting undermined.
Of course, I have no doubt someone will try to argue that because their healthcare is now covered, the middle class will experience a net gain in disposable income, etc... that's not going to happen. The negative effect of the required increase in taxes and insurance liabilities, medical inaccessibility and depression in wages will outstrip any savings in their insurance. That is of course, except for those in Unions, which have magically gotten themselves excluded from these mandatory plans, and therefore spared from increased costs to them to cover those that until now had no insurance.