Originally Posted by sanctuary
Take the insurance companies out of the equation and there would be sufficient funding to maintain our present standards and indeed, expand them. We pay more per capita than anybody else, but most of it goes to fund the bloated insurance companies. Take the "for profit" factor out of healthcare, then we'll talk.
It's a fantasy that you can trade the administration by private concerns for the administration by gov't and get any 'savings'.
If you want to take the gross profits out of the system, I agree that we need to take the '3rd party payor' out of the system. I see no particular benefit in handing it off to gov't.
The only way to benefit is to put the policing of prices directly in the hands of the consumer. Healthcare needs more free market reforms, not more of the same.
On the one hand, you decry what amounts to removal of free market processes from the current system, on the other, you advocate even further removal in the hands of gov't. Instead of addressing such problems, you aim to permanently entrench them.
The result you will get is more of the same. Much more.
Only, once you destroy the market basis of the system, those that advocate gov't control of healthcare will just advocate more and more control. It's a never-ending process. Yes, healthcare is worse now (under universal care) than it was before, but with even MORE control, we can make it better. That is a utopian fantasy with no basis in reality.
That's the nature of socialism and it's the danger of socialism. Fortunately, we have ample evidence of such failures. Unfortunately, too few people learn the lessons of history until they are long down the road of repeating them.
The lessons of history, lest you forget, is that socialism is NOT compassionate. You trade opportunity for a fair share in a dismal outcome. Given the alternatives available, that's neither compassionate nor fair. It's just cruel.
~faith,
Timothy.