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Old 10-10-2007, 07:17 AM   #201 (permalink)
 
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Nope,,,,you cant opt out, but you have mulitiple choices of private providers.

Thats life
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Old 10-10-2007, 07:25 AM   #202 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux
Nope,,,,you cant opt out, but you have mulitiple choices of private providers.

Thats life
In the interest of clarity can you explain how that works? I have not found an explanation. How do you force people to buy the coverage? What happens if they don't? For example with social security people pay social security taxes based on income, but if they have no income or if they earn income from things like interest/dividends/insurance proceeds/etc. they don't take social security taxes on those forms of income. The point is that the issue can be a bit more complex than you imply in your response.
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Old 10-10-2007, 07:35 AM   #203 (permalink)
 
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The plan is as an "individual mandate" plan that requires you to have health insurance comparable to a requirement to have auto insurance.

The devil is in the detail and I really dont know the enforcement mechanism. I do know it provides many options for individuals to select the plan that best suits their needs.

Of course its more complex than I implied, but its equally simplistic to characterization it as "socialized medicine" as others (not you) have suggested.

And now I am done here too.
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Last edited by dc_dux; 10-10-2007 at 07:41 AM..
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Old 10-10-2007, 07:41 AM   #204 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux
Nope,,,,you cant opt out, but you have mulitiple choices of private providers.

Thats life
I like the smug response. Do you get off on making other people's lives miserable?

I eat organic and work out and rarely have to go to the doctor. Yet you still want me to buy insulin for some obese idiot who can't figure out high fructose corn syrup is killing him, or the smoker with lung cancer, or anyone else who has no regard for their health. I guess that's perfectly acceptable in your world.

Forcing me to participate in this BULLSHIT is so uneverving. It's as bad as forcing religion on someone.

Healthcare is not about being healthy or getting well, it's about a continuing dependecy on the system. Socialized healthcare will just make this worse. I won't be visiting your Mengele offices or hospitals. No thanks.

There's two types of people, those who want to be left alone and those who won't leave them alone. I think we both know where we stand.
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Old 10-10-2007, 07:46 AM   #205 (permalink)
 
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Yep....that explains it.

Each man (or woman) left to himself (herself) and fuck everybody else. It a shame you can't see how this attitude will ultimately will come around to affect you anyway, in either your pocketbook, your workplace or other social interactions.

I think even your man Ron Paul, with all his libertarian leanings, understands that much.

Quote:
I won't be visiting your Mengele offices or hospitals. No thanks.
WTF is that....talk about smug.

Now I will leave you alone
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Last edited by dc_dux; 10-10-2007 at 07:59 AM..
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Old 10-10-2007, 08:03 AM   #206 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux
Yep....that explains it.

Each man (or woman) left to himself (herself) and fuck everybody else. It a shame you can see how this attitude will ultimately will come around to affect you anyway, in either your pocketbook, your workplace or other social interactions.

I think even your man Ron Paul, with all his libertarian leanings, understands that much.
You promote a system that benefits from people getting sick and staying sick. That is the attitude that is fucking everyone. Try telling people their food supply is poison and their medicine is killing them if you really want to help.

Ron Paul ran a doctors office with an external payment drop box and never accepted medicare/medicaid. If someone couldn't afford to pay no questions were asked. The reason he stopped his practice and ran for congress is because governmental intrutions made it increasingly difficult to run his practice how he saw fit.

The sponsors of this bill do not have the outstanding character of Ron Paul, but they do have the payoffs from big pharm. I'm sure Hillary will get elected and you'll have all the healthcare you want.
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Old 10-10-2007, 08:18 AM   #207 (permalink)
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Hillary is bought and paid for. I doubt we'll see single payer health care under her. We'll probably get something better than we have now, but that's not saying much.

As I understand it, the wait times are due to there not being enough doctors, but graduates in medicine in Canada and Western Europe have steadily been on the rise for the past two years. If the trend continues, waiting times will become less and less of a problem.

As for paying for someone else, no man is an island. Sometimes we need to lean on people for help, and sometimes they need to lean on us. That's what society means. All of us, collectively, are interdependent. We have to do our best to make sure the health care system won't make people complacent and dependent, but to deny someone health care because they might not have 100% healthy habits is deeply cruel and inhuman. Universal healthcare is about equality and sympathy, two ideals I hold in very high regard.

To Samcol, is it bullshit that you pay for roads or police? Would you opt out of them and simply not use them? I see medical care as being just as necessary if not more so than any other governmental system or program be it as big as military or as small as regulating for safe baby food. It's alright to admit that sometimes corporations can't get the job done because they're too profit driven.
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Old 10-10-2007, 08:26 AM   #208 (permalink)
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How about this for a healthplan:

All you fat, smoking, drinking buggers get no insurance or healthcare, period. If you don't get at least 3 hours of exercise a week, no doctor for you. You die (hopefully failing to propogate) leaving the rest of the universe with affordable health coverage, provided either by the state or privately?

Probably would save about a trillion dollars or so ...

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Old 10-10-2007, 08:44 AM   #209 (permalink)
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That'd be nice, but if people were asked to be responsible, they'd revolt. Saying "you have to go out and exercise, or else" would lead to revolution.
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Old 10-10-2007, 08:44 AM   #210 (permalink)
 
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We could give the Repubs a Hillary punching bag.

BTW, I'm all for single payer, but I dont see how we get from here to there without something in between.
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Old 10-10-2007, 09:44 AM   #211 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
That'd be nice, but if people were asked to be responsible, they'd revolt. Saying "you have to go out and exercise, or else" would lead to revolution.
Exactly, and that's where we are headed with health care. No smoking, no fast food, you must exercise etc. Employers are already fining people on their health policy for smoking and such. Socialized healthcare is leading down the wrong road.

By your own admition it's a failed program it seems. A: We pay more money to support the healthcare of these unhealthy individuals or B: We begin outlawing anything perceived by masses as unhealty. Both are bad, people should be able to smoke or be fat and lazy if they want, but I shouldn't have to pay for it.

I just don't understand why people won't let me make my own decisions about something as critical as my health. It's mind boggling.

Let's not forget the government will get to decide what is or isn't covered. You want the same government that sends us to needless war and destroys civil liberties to take care of us. You can't possible believe they won't royally fuck healthcare up too.


p.s.
And no, I don't believe healthcare falls in the same category as roads and police, especially at a federal level.
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Old 10-10-2007, 10:21 AM   #212 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
Exactly, and that's where we are headed with health care. No smoking, no fast food, you must exercise etc. Employers are already fining people on their health policy for smoking and such. Socialized healthcare is leading down the wrong road.
I don't really understand how trying to stop people from smoking is such a horrible thing. Smoking is a form of suicide and it's addictive. People who smoke should have to pay more. People who refuse to exercise should pay more. People who eat at McDonald's every day should pay more. That hardly negates the whole thing, though.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
By your own admition it's a failed program it seems. A: We pay more money to support the healthcare of these unhealthy individuals or B: We begin outlawing anything perceived by masses as unhealty. Both are bad, people should be able to smoke or be fat and lazy if they want, but I shouldn't have to pay for it.
I must have missed my admission about how it's a failed program. We pay more in private healthcare than any country pays in socialized or partially socialized medicine, and we still have 45,000,000 people who aren't even covered. Imagine how much more we'd pay if those 45m could afford it. Even if we had the same tax level for everyone, be they healthy or not, we'd all be paying a lot less. Insurance and malpractice are extremely high drains on the whole process. Without them, and without the drive for profit and to appease investors, the system becomes substantially cheaper.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
I just don't understand why people won't let me make my own decisions about something as critical as my health. It's mind boggling.
It's not a 'decision' not to have health coverage. It's just ignorance. It amazes me that people discuss healthcare as being a decision to make, as if your deciding on what color of car you want. Without healthcare, you're in deep shit. Something "as critical as [your] health" should be important enough for you to be covered. That's the whole idea.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
Let's not forget the government will get to decide what is or isn't covered. You want the same government that sends us to needless war and destroys civil liberties to take care of us. You can't possible believe they won't royally fuck healthcare up too.
Military is in the process of being privatized. Private contracts, mercenaries on the ground, and bought and paid for politicians. Socialized medicine flies in the face of that trend. Socialization is about moving the control from the hands of the proven irresponsible corporations and private interests.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
p.s.
And no, I don't believe healthcare falls in the same category as roads and police, especially at a federal level.
It doesn't yet, but it would under socialization. My point is that I don't see anyone complaining about the government controling things like roads and police. I don't see anyone calling for privatized police (imagine paying $200 a month in case you need to call the police and if you don't pay... no one will protect you) or privatized roads (don't pay your transportation insurance? Good luck getting to work...).
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Old 10-10-2007, 11:01 AM   #213 (permalink)
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I don't really understand how trying to stop people from smoking is such a horrible thing. Smoking is a form of suicide and it's addictive. People who smoke should have to pay more. People who refuse to exercise should pay more. People who eat at McDonald's every day should pay more. That hardly negates the whole thing, though.
It's not bad to try and pursuade someone from smoking, but if someone wants to that's their choice and who are you to outlaw it. I guess won't be able to drive my motorcyle either since they are more dangerous than cars. I do a high risk job, should I pay more too? Seriously, that slope never ends.
Quote:
I must have missed my admission about how it's a failed program. We pay more in private healthcare than any country pays in socialized or partially socialized medicine, and we still have 45,000,000 people who aren't even covered. Imagine how much more we'd pay if those 45m could afford it. Even if we had the same tax level for everyone, be they healthy or not, we'd all be paying a lot less. Insurance and malpractice are extremely high drains on the whole process. Without them, and without the drive for profit and to appease investors, the system becomes substantially cheaper.
So...I can't sue for malpractice when the doctor screws me up with a system I didn't even want in the first place. That's outstanding. Don't you believe in redress of grievances?
Quote:
It's not a 'decision' not to have health coverage. It's just ignorance. It amazes me that people discuss healthcare as being a decision to make, as if your deciding on what color of car you want. Without healthcare, you're in deep shit. Something "as critical as [your] health" should be important enough for you to be covered. That's the whole idea.
It is a decision, not everyone feels the way you do. This nationalized healthcare garbage is just like Roman Catholic church of years ago. Everyone must follow the king's religion, no freedom.

The other huge problem that we aren't even talking about is how bad the actual 'care' is. The FDA allows horrible things to pass (GMOs, pesticides, fertalizers, antibiotics, growth hormones all in the food supply that makes us sick so we can buy their cool new pill) while trying to ban natural cures. This is the system you are supporting and now you want to force me to participate. It's bad.
Quote:
Military is in the process of being privatized. Private contracts, mercenaries on the ground, and bought and paid for politicians. Socialized medicine flies in the face of that trend. Socialization is about moving the control from the hands of the proven irresponsible corporations and private interests.
Yes, the same politians who are bought and paid for by the mercs are likewise bought and paid for by pharma. They surely will save us all with their healthcare. I expect great things.
Quote:
It doesn't yet, but it would under socialization. My point is that I don't see anyone complaining about the government controling things like roads and police. I don't see anyone calling for privatized police (imagine paying $200 a month in case you need to call the police and if you don't pay... no one will protect you) or privatized roads (don't pay your transportation insurance? Good luck getting to work...)
hmm...$200 a month for police? I think ill pocket that cash and just keep my revolver handy. Come to think of it, if I never had to deal with harrasment from a police officer while I was minding my own business that would be fine too.
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Last edited by samcol; 10-10-2007 at 11:04 AM..
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Old 10-10-2007, 11:23 AM   #214 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
It's not bad to try and pursuade someone from smoking, but if someone wants to that's their choice and who are you to outlaw it. I guess won't be able to drive my motorcyle either since they are more dangerous than cars. I do a high risk job, should I pay more too? Seriously, that slope never ends.
Prohibition of ciggys is a good idea. I've suspected for years that's the direction California is heading. I guess we'll have to wait and see. BTW, cigarettes aren't transportation. They only have a simple function: they're a method of taking in addictive drugs. While tobacco is actually a decent product and can be used to make useful things, cigarettes have no positive health value whatsoever. At least McDonald's hamburgers have protein.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
So...I can't sue for malpractice when the doctor screws me up with a system I didn't even want in the first place. That's outstanding. Don't you believe in redress of grievances?
I believe in reasonable reparations. Suing for $35m is a gross misuse of the justice system. I believe that if a doctor screws up, he should have to be forced into school and relearn how to be a doctor, and that the person who was wronged should be made well if possible. If the doctor slips and cuts the wrong thing? They fix it and provide coverage for that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
It is a decision, not everyone feels the way you do. This nationalized healthcare garbage is just like Roman Catholic church of years ago. Everyone must follow the king's religion, no freedom.
What about no equality? What about the $12,000 you'd have to pay to get your finger put back on? That's a magnificent drain. What about the freedom to not have to be sick or injured because you're poor? There's your loss of freedom: poverty.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
The other huge problem that we aren't even talking about is how bad the actual 'care' is. The FDA allows horrible things to pass (GMOs, pesticides, fertalizers, antibiotics, growth hormones all in the food supply that makes us sick so we can buy their cool new pill) while trying to ban natural cures. This is the system you are supporting and now you want to force me to participate. It's bad.
And what makes you think that any universal health care will run like the FDA? Because some governmental agencies aren't working, none can work? Slippery slope.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
Yes, the same politians who are bought and paid for by the mercs are likewise bought and paid for by pharma. They surely will save us all with their healthcare. I expect great things.
Pharma is declawed under socialized medicine. Insurance companies go out of business, and thus can't affoed to have politicians in back pockets.
Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
hmm...$200 a month for police? I think ill pocket that cash and just keep my revolver handy. Come to think of it, if I never had to deal with harrasment from a police officer while I was minding my own business that would be fine too.
So you can hold an investigation when a loved one is murdered when you're at work? Do you have access to databases with fingerprints? Do you have access to criminal records? Don't follow in suit with DK in thinking you could be your own police officer just because you have a gun. Being a police officer is a lot more than being a marksman.
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Old 10-10-2007, 11:44 AM   #215 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Prohibition of ciggys is a good idea. I've suspected for years that's the direction California is heading. I guess we'll have to wait and see. BTW, cigarettes aren't transportation. They only have a simple function: they're a method of taking in addictive drugs. While tobacco is actually a decent product and can be used to make useful things, cigarettes have no positive health value whatsoever. At least McDonald's hamburgers have protein.
Again, so because people CHOOSE to harm themselves or be in higher risk, I get to assume that risk. The people you say should be charged more are some of the same people that cannot afford it in the first place.

Quote:
I believe in reasonable reparations. Suing for $35m is a gross misuse of the justice system. I believe that if a doctor screws up, he should have to be forced into school and relearn how to be a doctor, and that the person who was wronged should be made well if possible. If the doctor slips and cuts the wrong thing? They fix it and provide coverage for that.

What about no equality? What about the $12,000 you'd have to pay to get your finger put back on? That's a magnificent drain. What about the freedom to not have to be sick or injured because you're poor? There's your loss of freedom: poverty.
So that heart you have in your body, what dollar value to you give it? your legs? what do you do if the doctor accidentally cuts off your leg or arm? He goes back to school, they give you a prostetic and pat you on the head and send you on your way? WTF is that?

Quote:
And what makes you think that any universal health care will run like the FDA? Because some governmental agencies aren't working, none can work? Slippery slope.
Because so far I have not in my lifetime ever seen a government agency in the United States work to my advantage. Understand what I said, work to my advantage. As an aside the deregulation of utilities has lead to more money out of my pockets than ever before for the same electricity and telephone. So I also don't see corporations being the end all either. A blend of the two I'm happy to live with in some capacity to prevent things like Enron, Tyco, MCI.

Quote:
Pharma is declawed under socialized medicine. Insurance companies go out of business, and thus can't affoed to have politicians in back pockets.

So you can hold an investigation when a loved one is murdered when you're at work? Do you have access to databases with fingerprints? Do you have access to criminal records? Don't follow in suit with DK in thinking you could be your own police officer just because you have a gun. Being a police officer is a lot more than being a marksman.
Insurance companies going out of business? So then where is my choice you touted I would have if I didn't want to get the Universal coverage? Where's the choice? If Insurance companies don't exist then where is the competition?
You are now touting a monopoly by the government, when earlier you suggested that people will still have choices.
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Old 10-10-2007, 11:51 AM   #216 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Prohibition of ciggys is a good idea. I've suspected for years that's the direction California is heading. I guess we'll have to wait and see. BTW, cigarettes aren't transportation. They only have a simple function: they're a method of taking in addictive drugs. While tobacco is actually a decent product and can be used to make useful things, cigarettes have no positive health value whatsoever. At least McDonald's hamburgers have protein.
Then with this view, you're saying that socialism isn't about personal freedom and liberty at all, but about a government body making rules and laws on how you will live your life because they know whats best for you, right?

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
And what makes you think that any universal health care will run like the FDA? Because some governmental agencies aren't working, none can work? Slippery slope.
name one program that the federal government has built that runs efficiently....on its own.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Pharma is declawed under socialized medicine. Insurance companies go out of business, and thus can't affoed to have politicians in back pockets.
do you truly think that the government, through OUR taxes, is going to be able to foot the bill for ALL medical care? Will, you are much smarter than that.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
So you can hold an investigation when a loved one is murdered when you're at work? Do you have access to databases with fingerprints? Do you have access to criminal records? Don't follow in suit with DK in thinking you could be your own police officer just because you have a gun. Being a police officer is a lot more than being a marksman.
I believe he's simply referring to having the ability to prevent violent crimes upon your own person, not investigating crimes that have already happened.
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Old 10-10-2007, 12:01 PM   #217 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by dksuddeth
Then with this view, you're saying that socialism isn't about personal freedom and liberty at all, but about a government body making rules and laws on how you will live your life because they know whats best for you, right?
You know what's best for yourself, but that doesn't stop you doing it. People should be responsible for themselves. It has nothing to do with freedom and everything to do with responsibility.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
name one program that the federal government has built that runs efficiently....on its own.
How about I name 10?
ACHP
Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigations Board
Federal Maritime Commission
Merit Systems Protection Board
National Archives and Records Administration
National Council on Disability
National Endowment for the Arts
National Endowment for the Humanities
National Institute of Mental Health
National Park Service

I can name a lot more.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
do you truly think that the government, through OUR taxes, is going to be able to foot the bill for ALL medical care? Will, you are much smarter than that.
I am pretty smart. I'm smart enough to do my homework on the issue. How much would we be paying per person if we had the same system as the UK, in taxes? I know the answer to this question. How much do we pay in our current system?
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
I believe he's simply referring to having the ability to prevent violent crimes upon your own person, not investigating crimes that have already happened.
So the police don't investigate crimes? We were talking about the police, not separating out specific functions of the police. Of their full list of responsibilities, that which you'd have to pay for if it was privatized, includes investigation of crimes.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Again, so because people CHOOSE to harm themselves or be in higher risk, I get to assume that risk. The people you say should be charged more are some of the same people that cannot afford it in the first place.
Oy vey. For the millionth time, a public system of health is always cheaper than a private system. And not just in health. Look at prisons. Look at military. Look at anything. It's always cheaper when it's public. So even if people are asked to pay a bit more because they smoke or don' exercise, they're still pay a lot less than they would be paying into a private medical service.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
So that heart you have in your body, what dollar value to you give it? your legs? what do you do if the doctor accidentally cuts off your leg or arm? He goes back to school, they give you a prostetic and pat you on the head and send you on your way? WTF is that?
What if a doctor accidentally cuts off my arm? Seriously? That's going to be your argument? Give me a break. Most malpractice suits are about mistakes. A sutcher is left in place, a vein is nicked, or some gauze is left in the body. Most of those cases can be resolved 100%. In the rare cases that's not true, other arrangements can be made. If, for some ludicrous reason, someone were to cut off your leg (wtf?), then that person shouldn't be practicing medicine. He should be a butcher or something.

Really, though, I was expecting a better argument than that. Jeez.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Because so far I have not in my lifetime ever seen a government agency in the United States work to my advantage. Understand what I said, work to my advantage. As an aside the deregulation of utilities has lead to more money out of my pockets than ever before for the same electricity and telephone. So I also don't see corporations being the end all either. A blend of the two I'm happy to live with in some capacity to prevent things like Enron, Tyco, MCI.
Lol... so when was the last time you ate a can of tuna and died from mercury poisoning? Or is death an advantage? More hyperbole, exaggeration, and appeals to ignorance.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Insurance companies going out of business? So then where is my choice you touted I would have if I didn't want to get the Universal coverage? Where's the choice? If Insurance companies don't exist then where is the competition?
Only a freshman economy student thinks that competition is always necessary. And only someone who's too stubborn to admit he or she is wrong would stick to an argument like "freedom is always 100% right". Freedom is not only subjective, but it's relative. There's no freedom for me to have 100% free healthcare. There's no freedom for people who are broke to get any health care. What about their freedom?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
You are now touting a monopoly by the government, when earlier you suggested that people will still have choices.
The government is not a corporate entity, and it's not profit driven.

Last edited by Willravel; 10-10-2007 at 12:16 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 10-10-2007, 12:40 PM   #218 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
You know what's best for yourself, but that doesn't stop you doing it. People should be responsible for themselves. It has nothing to do with freedom and everything to do with responsibility.
yet you feel that the government should outlaw smoking, maybe drinking, or at least anything else that you feel is bad for people? are you confused maybe?

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
How about I name 10?
ACHP
Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigations Board
Federal Maritime Commission
Merit Systems Protection Board
National Archives and Records Administration
National Council on Disability
National Endowment for the Arts
National Endowment for the Humanities
National Institute of Mental Health
National Park Service

I can name a lot more.
we still have chem spills, hazardous material issues, pirates and boating accidents, the presidents brain is missing, handicapped people still get dismissed, what arts, what humanities, how many thousands of mentally ill people go without medical care, and the park service? what a mess. nice try though.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
I am pretty smart. I'm smart enough to do my homework on the issue. How much would we be paying per person if we had the same system as the UK, in taxes? I know the answer to this question. How much do we pay in our current system?
I repeat, the gov is NOT going to foot the entire bill for medical care as it rises because more people will abuse the 'free' universal health care and go to doctors for having a cold or a rash instead of being sensible. They WILL utilize a select group of health insurance companies, most likely the ones that contributed to the campaign funds of those who supported universal health care, who will then raise rates to cover costs so they make a huge profit off of the gov, who will raise OUR taxes to cover what they pay to insurance companies. It's a mad, mad, mad circle I tell ya.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
So the police don't investigate crimes? We were talking about the police, not separating out specific functions of the police. Of their full list of responsibilities, that which you'd have to pay for if it was privatized, includes investigation of crimes.
you're obfuscating the issue by saying that everyone pays for and utilizes ALL police functions because they can't fend for themselves, yet no police department has ever been held liable for failure to protect an american citizen. What is it we're paying for again?


Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Oy vey. For the millionth time, a public system of health is always cheaper than a private system. And not just in health. Look at prisons. Look at military. Look at anything. It's always cheaper when it's public.
You know not what you speak of. I had military health and dental care and 16 years AFTER, I still have the holes they drilled in my molars that they just didn't fill. Military medicine sucks ass. Prison medical care is better because a wacko liberal group decried the prison system for letting violent criminals waste away in their cells. Medicare and Medicaid, public health systems BTW, continue to drop their coverages while raising their rates and fees. Stop looking through the beer bottles at universal health care.


Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
What if a doctor accidentally cuts off my arm? Seriously? That's going to be your argument? Give me a break. Most malpractice suits are about mistakes. A sutcher is left in place, a vein is nicked, or some gauze is left in the body. Most of those cases can be resolved 100%. In the rare cases that's not true, other arrangements can be made. If, for some ludicrous reason, someone were to cut off your leg (wtf?), then that person shouldn't be practicing medicine. He should be a butcher or something.
Will said doctors be getting malpractice insurance through the gov? If they do, you won't see a dime if something were to happen to you.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Only a freshman economy student thinks that competition is always necessary. And only someone who's too stubborn to admit he or she is wrong would stick to an argument like "freedom is always 100% right". Freedom is not only subjective, but it's relative. There's no freedom for me to have 100% free healthcare. There's no freedom for people who are broke to get any health care. What about their freedom?
The ONLY thing that keeps costs down is competition in the market and that is NOT just a freshman view. ALL of history shows that whenever you have a monopoly, or a select few providing said service, prices go up because they can demand AND expect it, for where else will you obtain such service?

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
The government is not a corporate entity, and it's not profit driven.
In this you are right, however, the government isn't interested in profit, they are only interested in spending humongous amounts of money that they take from US. It has been that way throughout history, still.
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Old 10-10-2007, 01:00 PM   #219 (permalink)
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Prohibition of ciggys is a good idea. I've suspected for years that's the direction California is heading. I guess we'll have to wait and see. BTW, cigarettes aren't transportation. They only have a simple function: they're a method of taking in addictive drugs. While tobacco is actually a decent product and can be used to make useful things, cigarettes have no positive health value whatsoever. At least McDonald's hamburgers have protein.
No, it's a horrible idea. Prohibition on alcohol and drugs have been great success. Everyone knows cigs are bad, that's not the issue. It's about having the freedom to smoke or not.

Quote:
What about no equality? What about the $12,000 you'd have to pay to get your finger put back on? That's a magnificent drain. What about the freedom to not have to be sick or injured because you're poor? There's your loss of freedom: poverty.
It's not the federal governments job to give welfare or healthcare to the poor. It's not even a federal issue. Why can't we leave some things to states like it's supposed to be.

Quote:
And what makes you think that any universal health care will run like the FDA? Because some governmental agencies aren't working, none can work? Slippery slope.
Uh, healthcare and the FDA and pharma are all directly related. How will the crap the FDA allows not be in universal heatlhcare? I mean it's already there, but with universal care I'll have to use it.

Quote:
Pharma is declawed under socialized medicine. Insurance companies go out of business, and thus can't affoed to have politicians in back pockets.
Pharma declawed? Not sure how you made that huge leap. The FDA and Pharma are still making the drugs and poisoned food for you to eat and lobbying the proponents of this healthcare package.

Quote:
So you can hold an investigation when a loved one is murdered when you're at work? Do you have access to databases with fingerprints? Do you have access to criminal records? Don't follow in suit with DK in thinking you could be your own police officer just because you have a gun. Being a police officer is a lot more than being a marksman.
The executive branch has the authority to enforce the law.

You're coming up with some pretty crazy 'what ifs' and conclusions that have no evidence to support them (like pharma being declawed ).
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Old 10-10-2007, 01:01 PM   #220 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
yet you feel that the government should outlaw smoking, maybe drinking, or at least anything else that you feel is bad for people? are you confused maybe?
I don't remember naming alcohol. Cigarettes are addictive, therefore those who smoke them are by definition entrapped, or NOT FREE. If you smoke, you're not free. If you don't smoke you are free. See? Simple.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
we still have chem spills, hazardous material issues, pirates and boating accidents, the presidents brain is missing, handicapped people still get dismissed, what arts, what humanities, how many thousands of mentally ill people go without medical care, and the park service? what a mess. nice try though.
You're right! Those completely unsubstantiated claims negate the effiency and effectiveness of all of the federal organizations I named!

Nice try, indeed.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
you're obfuscating the issue by saying that everyone pays for and utilizes ALL police functions because they can't fend for themselves, yet no police department has ever been held liable for failure to protect an american citizen. What is it we're paying for again?
Go down to the police station and ask them. Ask them how many of their fellow officers died trying to protect someone. Go down there and ask how many criminals they've helped to apprehend. Go down and ask how many crimes they could have prevented because they were able to stop a criminal from striking again.

That's what we pay for, and as someone who lives in the safest large city in the whole country, I know this.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
You know not what you speak of. I had military health and dental care and 16 years AFTER, I still have the holes they drilled in my molars that they just didn't fill. Military medicine sucks ass. Prison medical care is better because a wacko liberal group decried the prison system for letting violent criminals waste away in their cells. Medicare and Medicaid, public health systems BTW, continue to drop their coverages while raising their rates and fees. Stop looking through the beer bottles at universal health care.
You know not what you read. I was not talking about military or prison health care. Please reread what I said. Privatization of the military (google Blackwater) and privatization of prison systems has led to massive corruption and is tremendously expensive.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
The ONLY thing that keeps costs down is competition in the market and that is NOT just a freshman view.
You're right. Some people actually graduate having actually only taken econ 101. It's sad. The point is that they didn't do any work outside of that one class on the subject. The idea that everything is black and white in economics is actually something one might think before econ 101. The market is a living thing, and the nuances are amazingly complex. In this case, it's a waste of time to just say, "Competition is great! Go team free market!" It's no where near that simple.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
In this you are right, however, the government isn't interested in profit, they are only interested in spending humongous amounts of money that they take from US. It has been that way throughout history, still.
Some members of the government are interested in spending a lot (Republicans in the white house) and some aren't (Democratic Senators). We live in strange times.
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Old 10-10-2007, 01:09 PM   #221 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
I don't remember naming alcohol. Cigarettes are addictive, therefore those who smoke them are by definition entrapped, or NOT FREE. If you smoke, you're not free. If you don't smoke you are free. See? Simple.
ah, so nobody CHOOSES to have a cigarette, they are simply addicted and can't function correctly anymore, so we MUST help them, cause it's bad, mmkay? please.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
You're right! Those completely unsubstantiated claims negate the effiency and effectiveness of all of the federal organizations I named!
are you trying to say we've NEVER had a chem or hazardous material incident? is NOT JFK's brain missing from the archives?



Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Go down to the police station and ask them. Ask them how many of their fellow officers died trying to protect someone. Go down there and ask how many criminals they've helped to apprehend. Go down and ask how many crimes they could have prevented because they were able to stop a criminal from striking again.
yes yes yes, of course they will TRY, but it's NOT their job to protect YOU as an individual. If you think it is, you might read 'Castle Rock v. Gonzalez' and prepare for an eye opener.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
That's what we pay for, and as someone who lives in the safest large city in the whole country, I know this.
Then you better tell Bloomberg he's a liar, because he's said that NYC is the safest large city in the country.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
You know not what you read. I was not talking about military or prison health care. Please reread what I said. Privatization of the military (google Blackwater) and privatization of prison systems has led to massive corruption and is tremendously expensive.
my bad, I did indeed misread your statement, but to even further prove my point, these 'privatized' orgs are getting paid BY THE GOV, so I'm still right. Things run by the gov or paid by the gov, simply suck ass and money.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
You're right. Some people actually graduate having actually only taken econ 101. It's sad. The point is that they didn't do any work outside of that one class on the subject. The idea that everything is black and white in economics is actually something one might think before econ 101. The market is a living thing, and the nuances are amazingly complex. In this case, it's a waste of time to just say, "Competition is great! Go team free market!" It's no where near that simple.
If the market is a 'living' thing, then why on earth would you want to take the life out of it by regulating it to death?

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Some members of the government are interested in spending a lot (Republicans in the white house) and some aren't (Democratic Senators). We live in strange times.
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA, dems aren't big spenders? BWAHAHAHAHA
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Old 10-10-2007, 01:41 PM   #222 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
ah, so nobody CHOOSES to have a cigarette, they are simply addicted and can't function correctly anymore, so we MUST help them, cause it's bad, mmkay? please.
Addiction is the opposite of freedom. Would you want someone to have the freedom to go to prison?
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
yes yes yes, of course they will TRY, but it's NOT their job to protect YOU as an individual. If you think it is, you might read 'Castle Rock v. Gonzalez' and prepare for an eye opener.
I was ther when you found that case like a year ago, no need to lecture. It doesn't change the fact that they do protect.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
Then you better tell Bloomberg he's a liar, because he's said that NYC is the safest large city in the country.
Please
Murder rate per 1,000 residents:
San Jose - 0.0285
NYC - 0.0664
violent crimes rate per 1,000 residents:
San Jose - 3.8351
NTC - 6.7305
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
my bad, I did indeed misread your statement, but to even further prove my point, these 'privatized' orgs are getting paid BY THE GOV, so I'm still right. Things run by the gov or paid by the gov, simply suck ass and money.
They are run privately.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
If the market is a 'living' thing, then why on earth would you want to take the life out of it by regulating it to death?
I don't want to be mean, but that's the worst argument I've ever read.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA, dems aren't big spenders? BWAHAHAHAHA
They were 7 or 8 years ago. Not so much now, compared to $500 billion for a war. Sorry to have to break it to you. The Republicans are the spenders now.
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Old 10-10-2007, 01:54 PM   #223 (permalink)
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really quickly before i head home...

Quote:
What if a doctor accidentally cuts off my arm? Seriously? That's going to be your argument? Give me a break. Most malpractice suits are about mistakes. A sutcher is left in place, a vein is nicked, or some gauze is left in the body. Most of those cases can be resolved 100%. In the rare cases that's not true, other arrangements can be made. If, for some ludicrous reason, someone were to cut off your leg (wtf?), then that person shouldn't be practicing medicine. He should be a butcher or something.
Really, though, I was expecting a better argument than that. Jeez.
My statement isn't to evoke hyperbole but to state, malpractice happens, people don't do 100% great jobs all the time. Mistakes happen. You're for fix it right up and send them on their way.

Quote:
Lol... so when was the last time you ate a can of tuna and died from mercury poisoning? Or is death an advantage? More hyperbole, exaggeration, and appeals to ignorance.
Really? Then why the warnings about pregnant women not eating fish??? Becuase there is some risk there... Again, I'm comfortable with some regulations that govern how the business is allowed to run, that's not being ignorant and exaggeration. It's simple facts. Cal OSHA makes sure you have a safe plae to work right?
Quote:
Only a freshman economy student thinks that competition is always necessary. And only someone who's too stubborn to admit he or she is wrong would stick to an argument like "freedom is always 100% right". Freedom is not only subjective, but it's relative. There's no freedom for me to have 100% free healthcare. There's no freedom for people who are broke to get any health care. What about their freedom?
Really? Then we shouldn't have deregulated airlines, utilities, charter school systems because the government should know better and performs better.

Quote:
The government is not a corporate entity, and it's not profit driven.
I think you don't realize that most cities and counties are incorporated. They are corporate entities, they may not be profit driven, but they are still corporate entitities.

Quote:
Its population reached 3,000 by 1850, the year the city was incorporated. San Jose served as the state’s first capital from 1849 to 1851,
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Old 10-10-2007, 02:09 PM   #224 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
They are run privately.
But where does there money come from? hence the reason I said those run by or paid by the gov.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
I don't want to be mean, but that's the worst argument I've ever read.
yet, so very true. What you are wanting to do with universal health care is remove health care completely from a free market environment, placing it in the hands of a government agency for the sole purpose of regulating prices, which will regulate treatment, which will stifle new discoveries in medicine, which will drive med professionals who WANT to make money, out of the trade, thereby regulating the health industry in to a slow agonizing death.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
They were 7 or 8 years ago. Not so much now, compared to $500 billion for a war. Sorry to have to break it to you. The Republicans are the spenders now.
schumer, kennedy, biden, clinton, and pelosi/feinstein have never met a spending bill they didn't like, unless it was thought up by republicans. THEN the only reason they opposed it was they wouldn't get credit for it.
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Old 10-10-2007, 02:17 PM   #225 (permalink)
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Yes Malpractice happens. Massive settlements also happen. Those are what I take issue with. If there was policy to guide malpractice instead of litigation, the whole thing would become cheaper.

As for the fish, yes, there is could be a small amount, but it's only dangerous to a fetus. It's not going to kill you. That's because of the FDA.

Some cities are incorporated, but not the Federal government.

Discoveries in medicine happen at the same rate in the UK and France as they do in the US, therefore socialization does not stifle progress.

How much have the Dems spent in the past 15 years? Now how much has the GOP spent? The GOP spends more.
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Old 10-10-2007, 02:30 PM   #226 (permalink)
 
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Hillary and Barak proposed a "policy guide to malpractice" in 2005 and its also included in Hillary's plan.

Its called the Medical Error Disclosure and Compensation (MEDiC) Act. Its explained pretty well in this article by Clinton and Obama in the New England Journal of Medicine.

http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/354/21/2205
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Old 10-10-2007, 02:31 PM   #227 (permalink)
 
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Cyn--what's your opinion of the Icelandic health care system?
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Old 10-10-2007, 06:32 PM   #228 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by abaya
Cyn--what's your opinion of the Icelandic health care system?
I've not spent much time paying attention to it. I can only say what little I know is based on the small demographic that it has to encompass. Since the entire population of Iceland is just over 300,000 it is an unfair model to compare since it may not scale very well into the millions.

Taxes are quite high based on what I read an know. I'm not sure how much of that gets redirected to healthcare coverage, but the $104 paid into the Eldery Construction Fund doesn't appear to include the healthcare costs, but just the construction and operation of the facility.

Quote:
Iceland tax rates:
36% Income tax
24% VAT
14% tax on foodstuffs
5% social security tax

In addition to the above, each individual pays a flat tax of 6,314 krónur ($104@60k/$1) per year to the Elderly’s Construction Fund, a central government fund used to finance the construction and operation of nursing homes and care centres for the elderly. Persons under the age of 16 and more than 70 years old are exempt from this levy, as well as those with an income below 948,647 krónur in 2006.
I do have a pair of friends in Aukureryi who work in hospitals and I don't recall ever having a conversation about the healthcare system itself. We've discussed the technology and logistics of the hospitals, but not how the system pays for itself.
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Old 10-10-2007, 07:47 PM   #229 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth

yet, so very true. What you are wanting to do with universal health care is remove health care completely from a free market environment, placing it in the hands of a government agency for the sole purpose of regulating prices, which will regulate treatment, which will stifle new discoveries in medicine, which will drive med professionals who WANT to make money, out of the trade, thereby regulating the health industry in to a slow agonizing death.
What is great about a free market enviornment for health care, as seen today? The way it has stagnated has left with prices beyond their reach. Similarly while those with coverage, are alarmingly finding their prices out of reach and being unfairly denied. Healthcare is a bit too tricky for free market economics to work. There is an unfair balance of information within the system. It is not something where information about prices is disclosed easily. A consumer cannot simply choose which will be "cheaper" for him very easily as he does not know what ailments he will have down the line, and which provider option will help him out the most. Competition, as many people see in a free market works best to help the consumer when price information is easily found and transparent, thus leading to actual choices. The way the current health care works, has very little practical information for a consumer to make a choice, hiding many details in the fine print while luring people with clever marketing. Competition is great, when it is transparent, not inherently obscure as it is with health care.
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Old 10-10-2007, 08:30 PM   #230 (permalink)
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I just found something I recall reading the other day

in the Iceland Review:
Quote:
09/26/2007 | 11:28

Healthcare System in Iceland Criticized
Pétur Blöndal, an MP for the Independence Party (Sjálfstaedisflokkurinn), says the healthcare system in Iceland is running at increased loss after hospital staff began encouraging patients to undergo expensive and unnecessary treatments.

“It is extremely destructive,” Blöndal said, referring to patients being submitted to hospital when they only need treatments during the day, because such treatments can be very expensive while hospitalization is free, Fréttabladid reports.

While the patient is spared the bill, the healthcare system has to cover it. One bed space at the National Hospital costs about ISK 60,000 (USD 962, EUR 680) for every 24 hours.

Sigursteinn Másson, chairman of the Organization of Handicapped in Iceland (OHI), agrees. “I know many employees within the health sector feel bad about charging high sums to people who often have little money,” Másson said. That’s why hospital staff often recommends unnecessary hospitalization, he explained.

Másson suggests all charges for healthcare service be suspended, but Blöndal does not agree that is the best solution.

The government’s agenda includes simplifying and lowering the cost of the healthcare system. But the system is “incredibly complex,” Blöndal said, adding that, “The goal is to even out the charges to lighten the burden on those who already have sums too high to pay.”
euro.who.int
Quote:
The Icelandic health system is characterized by the dominance of the public sector (see Table 3). It is financed 82.9% by the state, either directly from the state budget or indirectly through the State Social Security Institute (SSSI). State tax revenue is derived approximately 30% from personal and corporate income tax, 35% from value added tax (VAT), 10% from social security taxes, 5% from net wealth taxes and the rest from other sources. That portion of health care services that are not tax financed, answering to 17.1% of the total, is almost exclusively financed by direct household payments, primarily the private partial payment of specialist consultations, outpatient operations and dental care, as well as co-payments for pharmaceuticals.

Private health insurance hardly exists in Iceland, and health services provided by employers are very limited. As described above in Historical background, this arrangement has continued more or less unchanged for a long time, and there are no plans to change the main system of health care financing coverage.

According to the Health Services Act and the Act on the Rights of Patients, every citizen has the right to the best health service available at all times. persons who have been resident in Iceland for at least six months are entitled to health care. The Minister of Health and Social Security can issue exemption from the mandatory six-month period of residence. Necessary in cases of emergency may be paid even when the stipulated waiting period six months has not elapsed. The Minister can also decide that the SSSI pay according to international agreements the costs of medical assistance rendered to foreign nationals staying in Iceland temporarily. The law prohibits discrimination against patients on grounds of gender, religion, beliefs, nationality, race, skin colour, financial status, family relation or other status. Children under the age of 18, including stepchildren and foster children, covered by their parents’ health insurance. Opting out is not possible.
Please note the LAST words here, opting out is not possible. You MUST contribute to the fund. I also see that one pays about 60%+ in taxes to the state contribution.

One of the links that I read puts Icelandic healthcare as 40% of the national budget.
Quote:
All hospitals have excellent standards of medical care. Iceland runs one of the most expensive health-care systems in the world, the cost per capita being $1,353 (PPP value). The health-care system, as a whole, receives 40,5% (in 1989) of the national budget, education comes in second with 15%, while other categories are well below 10% each. The Icelandic health-care system is considered among the best in the world.
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Old 10-11-2007, 03:49 AM   #231 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by behindalens
What is great about a free market enviornment for health care, as seen today? The way it has stagnated has left with prices beyond their reach. Similarly while those with coverage, are alarmingly finding their prices out of reach and being unfairly denied. Healthcare is a bit too tricky for free market economics to work. There is an unfair balance of information within the system. It is not something where information about prices is disclosed easily. A consumer cannot simply choose which will be "cheaper" for him very easily as he does not know what ailments he will have down the line, and which provider option will help him out the most. Competition, as many people see in a free market works best to help the consumer when price information is easily found and transparent, thus leading to actual choices. The way the current health care works, has very little practical information for a consumer to make a choice, hiding many details in the fine print while luring people with clever marketing. Competition is great, when it is transparent, not inherently obscure as it is with health care.
The problem here is that todays healthcare system isn't based on free market. It's based on insurance rates of profit and loss. Theres absolutely no medical thought put in to the process and with the insurance industry 'controlling' costs, prices rise due to the limited venue in which medical care can be obtained.
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Old 10-11-2007, 04:03 AM   #232 (permalink)
 
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Thanks for the info, Cyn. The question is, would you live here, given what you know about the Icelandic health care system and how much of your income would be going to fund it? Personally, based on the health care system alone, I'd rather live here than in the US... and I wouldn't mind seeing something like the Scandinavian system implemented in the US, either. Yes, Iceland is small, but the other Nordic countries are not so small, and they do manage their health care just as well (in my opinion). Just a thought.
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Old 10-11-2007, 04:36 AM   #233 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by abaya
Thanks for the info, Cyn. The question is, would you live here, given what you know about the Icelandic health care system and how much of your income would be going to fund it? Personally, based on the health care system alone, I'd rather live here than in the US... and I wouldn't mind seeing something like the Scandinavian system implemented in the US, either. Yes, Iceland is small, but the other Nordic countries are not so small, and they do manage their health care just as well (in my opinion). Just a thought.
I'd love to live in Iceland, not based on the healthcare system available and not because of the promiscuous hot Icelandic women. It is strictly because of the locale.

As an American citizen the problem with living in another country (expatriation) is that I am liable to pay US taxes and the taxes of the expatriating country. So it is a double tax hit.

My choices for living places are based more on my ability to have quality of life and disposable income. Healthcare is only a factor if I'm not gainfully employed by a company that provides healthcare benefits to their employees, that is a slim to none proposition. I'm quite selfish when it comes to spending the money that I earn. I'm happy to give it to friends and family as needed with no expectation of reciprocity, but strangers on the other hand, I'm not so fast in giving it out.
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Old 10-11-2007, 05:24 AM   #234 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
As an American citizen the problem with living in another country (expatriation) is that I am liable to pay US taxes and the taxes of the expatriating country. So it is a double tax hit.
I know this is off topic, but expatriate US citizens only have to pay tax in the US if they earn over a certain amount (I believe this year it is $85,000), and if they do they only pay tax on the excess.
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Old 10-11-2007, 06:29 AM   #235 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
I'd love to live in Iceland, not based on the healthcare system available and not because of the promiscuous hot Icelandic women. It is strictly because of the locale.
You might want to reconsider that statement!

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Old 10-11-2007, 09:24 PM   #236 (permalink)
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10/11/2007 | 12:41

Committee Established to Improve Healthcare System
Minister of Health Gudlaugur Thór Thórdarson has established a committee to simplify the public’s financial contribution to Iceland’s healthcare system. The committee is headed by actuary and Independence Party MP Pétur Blöndal.

“Currently there are many different systems that don’t work together,” Blöndal told 24 stundir daily (previously Bladid). “The goal is to reach out to those in need of assistance. Systems that are supposed to be socially just are often so complicated that they become socially unjust.”

Blöndal’s committee will focus first on repayments for medicine and then go through every aspect of the health insurance system, one at a time. Thórdarsson’s goal is to transform the system and simplify it.

“Regulations on the price of medicine are so complicated that one cannot help but ask whether there is any rational reasoning behind it,” Blöndal said. “The logic behind the current system seems to be that if diseases are fatal, people have increased rights to repayments. But people who suffer from long-term diseases often have difficulties paying for medicine, even though the disease isn’t fatal.”

Blöndal’s vision for the future is that people should be entitled to free healthcare after reaching a certain limit in expenses, no matter whether they have used their money to pay for medicine or to go to the doctor.
More on Iceland's healthcare system from today's Iceland Review: "people who suffer from long-term diseases often have difficulties paying for medicine, even though the disease isn’t fatal.” It may not be a perfect system but it doesn't seem like it's "cheap" either.
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Old 10-12-2007, 09:21 AM   #237 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
.... I'm quite selfish when it comes to spending the money that I earn. I'm happy to give it to friends and family as needed with no expectation of reciprocity, but strangers on the other hand, I'm not so fast in giving it out.
Cynthetiq....the results are in.....and your politics seem to contribute to conditions that benefit the few, to the detriment of the many....Denmark's stats are on the right....and they seem to indicate that....when government defers to free markets to "sort out" the distribution of wealth....wealth simply buys sufficient power and influence to control the government and the "free" market.

The UK, US, and Mexico, end up being much harsher places to live than in Denmark or in France....it doesn't have to be that way....but the wealthiest won't permit the status quo to be any other way....in the case of attempts by government to more equitably distribute health care....or any other "wealth", it is the controlling group who have the money to produce and distribute the "Harry and Louise" ads...... which work to undermine the effort.


https://www.cia.gov/library/publicat.../da.html#Intro
Because of high GDP per capita, welfare benefits, a low Gini index, and political stability, the Danish living standards are among the highest in the world. A major long-term issue will be the sharp decline in the ratio of workers to retirees.

<b>Denmark's stats are on the right</b>
GDP - per capita (PPP):
$37,100 (2006 est.) France =$31,200 (2006 est.) United Kingdom = $31,800 (2006 est.) USA= $43,800 (2006 est.) Mexico= $10,700 (2006 est.)

Unemployment rate:

3.8% (2006 est.) France =8.7% (December 2006 est.) United Kingdom = 2.9% (2006 est.) USA= 4.8% (2006 est.) Mexico= 3.2% plus underemployment of perhaps 25%

Population below poverty line
N/A .......... France = 6.2% (2004) United Kingdom = 17% (2002 est.) USA= 12% (2004 est.) Mexico= 40% (2003 est.)

Household income or consumption by percentage share:

lowest 10%: 2% France = 3% United Kingdom = lowest 10%: 2.1% USA= lowest 10%: 1.8% Mexico= lowest 10%: 1.6%

highest 10%: 24% (2000 est.) France =24.8% (2004) United Kingdom = 28.5% (1999) USA= highest 10%: 30.5% (1997) Mexico= highest 10%: 35.6% (2002)

Distribution of family income - Gini index:
23.2 (2002) France =26.7 (2002) United Kingdom = 36.8 (1999) USA= 45 (2004) Mexico= 54.6 (2000)
Inflation rate (consumer prices):
1.8% (2006 est.) France = 1.5% (2006 est.) United Kingdom = 3% (2006 est.) USA= 2.5% (2006 est.) Mexico= 3.4% (2006 est.)

Investment (gross fixed):
22.2% of GDP (2006 est.) France =20% of GDP (2006 est.) United Kingdom = 17.2% of GDP (2006 est.) USA= 16.6% of GDP (2006 est.) Mexico= 20% of GDP (2006 est.)

Public debt:

28.1% of GDP (2006 est.) France =64.7% of GDP (2006 est.) United Kingdom = 42.2% of GDP (2006 est.) USA= 64.7% of GDP (2005 est.) Mexico= 20.7% of GDP (2006 est.)

Current account balance:
+$4.941 billion (2006 est.) France = -$38 billion (2006 est.) United Kingdom = -$57.68 billion (2006 est.) USA= -$862.3 billion (2006 est.) Mexico= -$400.1 million (2006 est.)

Exports:
$93.93 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.) France =$490 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.) United Kingdom = $468.8 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.) USA= $1.024 trillion f.o.b. (2006 est.) Mexico= $248.8 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.)

Imports:
$89.32 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.) France =$529.1 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.) United Kingdom = $603 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.) USA= $1.869 trillion f.o.b. (2006 est.) Mexico= $253.1 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.)
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Old 10-12-2007, 09:25 AM   #238 (permalink)
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Old 10-12-2007, 09:44 AM   #239 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
Cynthetiq....the results are in.....and your politics seem to contribute to conditions that benefit the few, to the detriment of the many....Denmark's stats are on the right....and they seem to indicate that....when government defers to free markets to "sort out" the distribution of wealth....wealth simply buys sufficient power and influence to control the government and the "free" market.

The UK, US, and Mexico, end up being much harsher places to live than in Denmark or in France....it doesn't have to be that way....but the wealthiest won't permit the status quo to be any other way....in the case of attempts by government to more equitably distribute health care....or any other "wealth", it is the controlling group who have the money to produce and distribute the "Harry and Louise" ads...... which work to undermine the effort.
Denmark's taxes are some of the highest in the world. A ceiling put in place to not exceed 59% of income. So for each $1 I earn I get taxed $.59??? Fuck that and the rest of the people.

Put this into dollars and cents and look at how many hours you have to work in order to purchase something. I look at things like American Tax Freedom day where every year we work MORE days to pay our taxes than less. In 1990 23-Apr was Tax Freedom day with taxes at 30.80%. In 2007 30-Apr is the day with taxes at 32.69%. A whopping WEEK extra I have to work for a 2% increase.

Sorry, no thank you. As I continue to raise my standard of living by increasing my wages, I don't want some asshole who sits at home playing Xbox because he doesn't feel like working to benefit more from it.

Quote:
Denmark's taxes are among the highest in the world. Danish residents are liable for tax on global income and net wealth. Nonresidents are liable only for tax on certain types of income from Danish sources. In 1999, the total collected taxes amounted to 51% of the GDP.

The corporate income tax in Denmark is 30%, which must be prepaid during the income tax year to avoid a surcharge.

Personal income tax is collected at state, county and local levels. A tax ceiling ensures that combined income taxes do not exceed 59% of income. Income tax rates are progressive: 39% on income up to €22,118; 45% on income between €22,118 and €36,025; and 60% on income above €36,025. Several kinds of deductions or reductions can be applied to taxable income. There is also a voluntary church tax with an average rate of 0.8%. The social security contribution from employee earnings is 9%, 8% for unemployment insurance and 1% for special pension scheme savings. The voluntary church tax and social security contributions do not count toward the 59% tax ceiling. Tax is withheld at the source. Foreign researchers and key employers may qualify for a gross tax of 25% on their salary instead of paying regular income tax. They are still liable for 9% social security contributions.

Denmark's main indirect tax in the value-added tax (VAT) first introduced in March 1967 with a standard rate of 10%. The current standard rate of 25% was introduced in January 1992. Daily newspapers and a few other goods and services are exempt for the VAT.
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Old 10-13-2007, 07:36 AM   #240 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Discoveries in medicine happen at the same rate in the UK and France as they do in the US, therefore socialization does not stifle progress.

How much have the Dems spent in the past 15 years? Now how much has the GOP spent? The GOP spends more.
I would think that more vaccines and cures would come out of a government run system that wasn't driven on keeping people dependant on their patented medicines.

Both parties are big spenders. And I don't like the idea of high taxes to pay for healthcare either.

But everyone needs some level of healthcare, even if it is the catostrphic type. It shouldn't cost too much (under $10/month, free if you are poor), and most people would never use it. But if they get into a car crash, get shot, or cut off a finger, then they would be protected from the multi-thousand dollar hospital bill. You never know when it will happen or who it will happen to, and nobody would want it to happen to them. If you work or have some money, then you could get better coverage.

But I doubt a universal health insurance policy would include different tiers for people to choose which level of care they need. I can choose which level of car insurance I have, but I am required to carry it to protect the other guy at a minimum. I don't see why it would be different with healthcare, you can't choose to be healthy or not. If you could then no one would be in the hospital.
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