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  #151  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 09:13 AM
presuppose (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2008
Re: Universal Healthcare

Universal Health care is socialized health care. The payment for this comes from all of us taxpayers. To use a health care system is not a right. If you don't work, you don't have money, if you don't have money you may not be able to get the sort of medical help you need at the time you need it. I believe that privately funded free clinics and/or hospitals are a great way to go and should be encouraged. To have the government become even MORE involved in our health care system is a nightmare I hope I don't have to live through.

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  #152  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 10:12 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2008
Re: Universal Healthcare

me too, I completely agree with it on principle.

thanks alot...

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  #153  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 10:21 AM
HM2Viking's Avatar
HM2Viking (Male)
TARDIS
Join Date: Apr 2006
Re: Universal Healthcare

The evidence says that UHC will deliver better results at a lower cost....

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  #154  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 10:31 AM
Woodenpug (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Re: Universal Healthcare

Yeah, and I suppose that an epidemic starting with the chronically lazy will never effect good hard working people with jobs.

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  #155  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 11:03 AM
Registered User
Join Date: May 2004
Re: Universal Healthcare

The private funding system doesn't seem to be working now, does it? Increasing health care costs and number of uninsured, it is becoming a 'survival of the fittest'.
With health care advancements, simple clinics don't cut it anymore.
Example: 35 y/o single mother, CNA local LTC, hx migraine headaches, mother died from brain tumor, uninsured. She uses the local free clinic when possible, but occasionally has to use the ER. What are her choices?
20 y/o uninsured working mother of 3 month old, husband works for sherriff's department, (which offers insurance for employee only), mother c/o deep constant leg pain, free clinic advises MRI (1800$) cash up front. What are their choices?
They both have amily members who have died for this country. Honest, decent, hardworking citizens.
Is it really down to the strong survive?

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  #156  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 12:11 PM
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2003
Re: Universal Healthcare

Originally Posted by presuppose View Post
Universal Health care is socialized health care. The payment for this comes from all of us taxpayers. To use a health care system is not a right. If you don't work, you don't have money, if you don't have money you may not be able to get the sort of medical help you need at the time you need it.
I don't think any kind of UHC should be totally free of cost at the time of service. There need to be built in incentives for not overusing the system. I do think it's reasonable to consider the potential benefits of subsidizing and maybe even standardizing certain health care costs to make it more affordable to all. I want to live in a society where health care costs are reasonably affordable for most.

How do you feel about public libraries? Should they not be supported by public monies? For-profit book lenders would do best to focus on high demand areas, such as detective novels & romance novels, not reference books or non-fiction. But because of public libraries, not only do those with few resources benefit from the availability of the resouces of the library, but all others can also benefit from the accessibility to a wide variety of resources.

How do you feel about public transportation? Without subsidization, there would be little profit motive to provide transportation services to low-income areas which creates much higher barriers for those people to improve their place because it would be much more difficult to get to work or to go to a local college or trade school. Impossible? No. But a benefit of public transport is that we can all benefit from it (if well-planned), so that I can take the bus to work when my car is in the shop or take the subway downtown to avoid high parking fees and slow traffic.

UHC could be similar. Yes our taxes help pay for others. But our taxes would also help pay for our own care. Instead of paying premiums to a private health insurance company, we pay into the UHC. We also benefit from reduced individual health care costs. And we also benefit from the assurance that our personal financial well-being won't destroyed by the bad luck of getting ill or injuried. And if you fear that whatever UHC provides won't be quality enough or will cut you off due to rationing, then you can contribute extra money for private insurance or private health care ON TOP OF the public plan. Kind of like paying a little in taxes for bus/subway service that you may or want need to use at some point but choosing to own and drive a car, which costs more than public transit (once you factor in maintence & insurance not just gas mileage).


Last edited by jjjoy : Mar 05, 2008 at 12:20 PM.
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  #157  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 12:37 PM
ZASHAGALKA's Avatar
ZASHAGALKA (Male)
Who's John Galt
Join Date: May 2005
Re: Universal Healthcare

Originally Posted by HM2Viking View Post
The evidence says that UHC will deliver better results at a lower cost....
No chance. You can't break the laws of economics, even if you really really want it.

Unlimited demand must yield to unlimited supply (impossible), or, rationed supply. Rationing the care of 86% of Americans in order to cover 14% ISN'T better results.

There are far less socialistic and far less rationing ways to cover those 14%. UHC isn't about the care of those 14%; it's about the control of the care of the 86%. It's about choice. Congress and it's bedded lobbyists don't want YOU to have control of your own care. Gov't restricted care is anti-choice.

As far as costs, is that BEFORE or AFTER the gov't runs 300% over budget? Let's look at the major gov't medical program that DOES routinely run massively over-budget:

I linked the site here a few pages back: take a look at the TRUSTEE'S report on Medicare. Within 2 decades, Medicare is projected to cost MORE THAN Social Security. You currently have 15% payroll taxes withheld for SS (combined you and your employer) - and - it's not enough to save Social Security.

You currently pay 3% for Medicare (combined you and your employer) and the projected costs (not making it universal, the projected cost to cover ONLY CURRENT enrollees) will need to be greater than the cost of Social Security (at 15% taxation).

You are looking at MORE THAN 30% payroll taxation just to keep up the current Social Security and Medicare programs past 2028. Now, triple the number of Medicare Enrollees to get to Universal coverage. That will yield an effective taxation rate of MORE THAN 60% and that's just payroll taxes. That doesn't include income taxes.

Of course, you won't really have to pay more than 60% in payroll taxes if gov't restricted health care is enacted. Currently, seniors demand and vote equal access so the gov't must spend just like private insurance. Once the gov't eliminates competition with itself, it will have no such motivation to provide comprehensive coverage. At THAT POINT, it can reduce your taxation to 40%. It can save 20% of taxation by rationing out access to care.

So, you'll only have to pay more than 40% payroll taxes to fund greatly reduced care. This, btw, is consistent with what other nations pay for their gov't restricted care.

Your chief selling points here do not hold up to evidence, or reason. Universal health care is an equal share in a black, rotary Ma Bell phone. I'll take my cell phone plan, any day.

Gov't restricted care is anti-choice. That will cost you much more than just money. When you have a major illness, you better pray that the gov't hasn't decided that the numbers show that they can save more money THIS YEAR by limiting treatment for THAT illness.

~faith,
Timothy.


Last edited by ZASHAGALKA : Mar 05, 2008 at 12:42 PM.
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  #158  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 12:40 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Re: Universal Healthcare

I don't think that we need socialized healthcare. The countries that have it are not doing well. I don't want the government telling me what care I can have and what I can not have. I also do not want to be forced to pay for everybody elses healthcare. We already help indigent patients. Yes, I do think that something needs to be done about our current insurance system, but keep the government out of it.

P.S. As far as Michael Moore's movie "Sicko" goes, you have to consider the source. You only see what he wants you to see. You're not getting the whole truth.

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  #159  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 01:11 PM
ZASHAGALKA's Avatar
ZASHAGALKA (Male)
Who's John Galt
Join Date: May 2005
Re: Universal Healthcare

Originally Posted by ZASHAGALKA View Post
So, you'll only have to pay more than 40% payroll taxes to fund greatly reduced care. This, btw, is consistent with what other nations pay for their gov't restricted care.
Of course, the last time we had greater than 50% taxation (MORE THAN 40% payroll tax needed for such a plan PLUS income tax), the massive equity exit from the economy to the government set up the malaise and stagflation of the '70's.

So, in addition to a crippling tax burden, nationalizing health care will tank the economy, as well. You will be paying more taxes in the face of massive job lay offs and out of control inflation.

Not to mention, for those of you on THIS site: the FIRST thing the gov't will do once it has a monopoly on YOUR salaries is to cap them, and cap them low. For example, under the FRENCH plan that many here so adore, the average doctor makes 60k/yr. If the average doctor makes 60k/yr, how much will YOU MAKE?

What a perfect storm: crippling taxation, wrecked economy and salary caps.

THIS is compassionate?

~faith,
Timothy.

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  #160  
Old Mar 05, 2008, 01:16 PM
muskylounge (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2008
Re: Universal Healthcare

One question. What is the average income tax that a person pays (%) if he/she works in a country that provides free healthcare for everyone?

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