Rising costs from technological advancement. I seriously doubt it is getting more expensive to maintain the same standard of care apart from any simple supply/demand reasons, which are anything but "plutocratic". And just forget the irony of using that word to apply to the U.S., when you're comparing socialized countries favorably to it.Turquoise wrote:
....except for the fact that rising costs and considerably less accessibility to the average person render this "free market" rather.... plutocratic. In effect, our current system mostly just benefits the rich and insurance agencies. It really fucks over the average person.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Forcing a moral standard on the system in spite of human nature is being ignorant of it, serving the same need by exploiting basic human nature in a free market is using human nature to your advantage. No reason to paddle upstream if you can get to the same place going down.Turquoise wrote:
Allowing a vital need to be distributed solely by the market would appear to be ignorant of greed in human nature.
What about everyone else who doesn't have to pay to insure those 40 mil?Turquoise wrote:
Uh, I wouldn't exactly consider the 40 million uninsured to be "happy."Flaming_Maniac wrote:
This is my point . Bargaining is satisfaction of mutual need, the only possible way that all parties come away happy, satisfied that they have not been cheated out of their work. It seems that socialists fail to see this, not making the connection between producer and consumer happiness, focusing only on the consumer's well-being. Whether that is achieved through reasonable means or by unnecessarily screwing over someone else does not appear to present a dilemma.
Trade results in the traders being happy...if you don't have anything to trade, how can happiness be gleaned from that circumstance? The only thing you can do is spread around the misery.
How?Turquoise wrote:
Yes, but having a huge tax pool to work with would.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Because the demand is high for medical technologies, there is an incentive to lower the cost of the technology is well. Medical care is expensive it is true, but not the run-of-the-mill stuff we take for granted. First-aid supplies, cold/allergy medicine, penicillin that makes short work of what very well may have been a life threatening disease a century ago. The problem is people feel entitled to the absolute best, technology that cannot be distributed without extreme cost to society. No matter how many people need it, it doesn't lower the cost of what it takes to produce it (in the short term).
links I provided to Berster7 if you aren't reading that exchange.Turquoise wrote:
Except for the fact that under our private system, we pay more currently than we would through taxes for a universal system. We pay more per capita than any other country.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
But you're not managing anything, you're just compensating. You may be more efficient, but now even more money is spent on healthcare that people don't need enough to pay for themselves.
http://www.scribd.com/document_download … _password=
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/publicatio … 49_ERP.pdf
The first one is fairly long, but it's good. If you still don't want to read it I pulled some quotes above.