by Byron100 » Sun 22 Jun 2008, 13:42:41
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Naturally, as someone with no health insurance, I fully agree with Threadbear.
The current system is hopelessly corrupt and dysfunctional. Most health care workers agree with that (I worked as a pharmacy journal editor for many years and got the inside scoop, believe me). The current system can hardly be held forth as an example of the marvels of the free market. For one thing, it completely bypasses 40 million or 50 million Americans! I guess they just don't count, right? Well, lose your job and suddenly you're one of them.
Only relatively high employment has kept the US health care "system" afloat. Rising unemployment would knock the last leg from underneath the rickety structure.
We are already taxed, quite heavily. That tax money is misallocated on "defense" companies, a bloated imperial military, and 750 military bases, many with masseurs and swimming pools, which operate on highly socialist principles.
The hypocrisy of "leaders" who oppose universal health care transgresses loathesomeness into ludicrousness. All they are doing is protecting the insurance industry, which keeps them in office.
+1
You've hit the nail right on the head. The US health care system SUCKS...no buts, ifs or two ways about it. Yes, I have private health insurance. But it costs me so much per year, and has such poor coverage, it's really not much of an "insurance" plan at all. Furthermore, nearly half of all health care expenditures is from the government, which makes it even more difficult for the "free market" to operate.
Sadly, but 100% true, I want to see a 1918-style pandemic to hit the United States, just to crush the current system into dust (especially health insurance companies!), and that way, we can just plainly start all over again.
I'll make this real plain and simple. Free, sustainable, *basic* health care for everyone...let's get this into the Constitution, as well as basic old-age pensions for everyone (in case they try and gut Social Security to pay for more wars.) The GDP loading can be held at a low, fixed level by law, to prevent runaway health care inflation (sorry doctors, the gravy train is at the end of the line for you guys.) Basic rationing systems can also be put into place that would discourage unhealthy activities, such as tobacco use and abuse of alcohol / drugs / junk food / refusal to exercise, etc. There, problem solved.
Then maybe, just maybe, we can get our collective heads together and figure out how to feed ourselves in the post-peak depression.
Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide...
...and the meek shall inherit the Earth!