Aizle wrote:
I believe that Healthcare is the right of anyone in a civilized society.
Replace "is" with "should be" and I don't have a problem with that statement.
I will state that Obama's bill does nothing to ensure that "right," and will, in fact, inhibit it.
Let's put aside any arguments over whether Universal Health Care is a good idea or not. Let's assume that it is. Let's assume that it can be done effectively, and with economic responsibility. I'd argue that this is a proven assumption, because I've seen it, but that's not the point here and I'm not going to get into a discussion with Elmarnieh or Khross or Rynar or DFK about the workability of universal health care in general. What I do want to discuss is Obama's method of trying to implement it. To do this, we're going to have to take a brief walk through what was (and compare it to another country with working and effective (if not perfect) universal health care) before we get to what is.
Let's start with where you were, before Obama's health care bill.
In the USA, before Obama's bill, you had a multitiered system of health coverage. Most people will agree it was not working. Private health insurance was bloody expensive. Hospitals and doctors overcharge for their services in comparison with many other countries with equal levels of medical technology and expertise. Many people will argue the reasons for this, and I think the more credible of them involve being forced to treat patients without coverage or funding and therefore no chance of reimbursement, but that really doesn't matter. If you had adequate coverage, and/or you had the money, you could get decent health care. If you didn't, you'd get a half-assed bare minimum. In either case, it cost to much (assuming you bothered to pay.) Want to know how much it cost?
In the USA, the federal government alone was spending $3200 per capita per annum on public health care options (like Medicare.) Over 300 million citizens, and $3200 for each one of them, every year, spent by the Fed on their health care. That doesn't even count private spendings, which amounted to another $3300 per anum per capita. So your health care, as a nation, was costing you $6500 per person per year -- and that was without everyone having equal access.
Now, let's compare Canada. You can argue all you want about anecdotes with rare long wait times or other crap, but in the end, Canada's health care treatment
results are comparable to (and some evidence shows
better, you won't find equal evidence showing the opposite) the United States. Our governments are spending $2200 per capita on actual universal health coverage. Private coverage and costs for procedures not covered by UHC, or for prescription medications (generally not covered at all by UHC) were about $1100 per capita. Canadians as a whole are spending half what americans pay on health coverage, and getting more comprehensive coverage for it.
So in comes Obama to the rescue, with his brilliant plan: We're going to force you to buy health insurance. All of you. If you can't afford it, we'll pay it for you (maybe.) We're going to make it so companies won't bother to pay for it, so everyone will have to get it individually. We're administrating this at the federal level, and basically putting big portions of it in the hands of that o-most-efficient of streamlined departments, the IRS. We're not going to do much to ensure the costs of the procedures, or officially mandate what is covered and what is not. We're going to let the insurance companies decide themselves how to implement this. Basically, we're taking a massively bloated and expensive and flawed system, and shaking it up and hope that makes it work better.
As a comparison, the Canadian system mandates that the provinces insure their citizens. The province gets to decide the specifics of the system, but they run their own insurance. They set the payouts per procedure, etc. It's not perfect, and there are different problems in different provinces, but it is - relative to the USA, cost effective and efficient -- this is even before Obama tries to fix what isn't working by poking it randomly with a stick.
Now, one can argue until they are blue in the face about whether universal health care is a good idea or not. But don't kid yourself into thinking that one can just legislate "HEY! Everyone must have health care!" and somehow make it work. Those countries that do have functioning Universal Health Care would never function under Obamacare.