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Topic ClosedDo you support universal healthcare?

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Poll Question: Do you support universal healthcare?
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61 [73.49%]
18 [21.69%]
4 [4.82%]
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Padraic View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2009 at 21:55
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by Padraic Padraic wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

off on a tangent.... but I am the curious sort.... I might be ignored...  but I would be at the risk of an interesting tangent...


I am curious just how much personal experience do you all have...that seem to have such a high degree of interest.. and presumably knowledge on the subject


quick show of hands..err... posts..... how many here have insurance under our current system... if you don't.. why....


how many have had to use it. ... for what.... and were you.. as a CUSTOMER.. satisfied.

I'll start....

I ...as one who had employer provided insurance.. wasn't satisfied when my ex-wife got a infection that went septic... and she was in ICU for a week after she nearly died (after being misdiagnosed I might add).   At the end .. we were presented a bill for THOUSANDS of dollars.... insurance only covered 90% of the total....that was in the fine print.. not that we had much of a choice.. since insurance from other providers for a family of 5 would have meant I was working to pay for insurance...


timidly raises hand....

I guess I'll probably be in the minority here, but I am highly satisfied with my insurance.  They cover everything and my co-pays are pretty low.  And hell yes I have had to use it - labor and delivery services for my two kids weren't cheap, and my eldest son spent a week in a hospital when he was six months old....that was a bill I would have had a tough time paying (would have wiped me out, really).  That's why I'm for at the very, very bare minimum some sort of universal catastrophic coverage - no one should have to be bankrupted or wiped out because they or their children got seriously ill.


 . . . Just a little asterisk, here . . .

labor and delivery services are free in England. Embarrassed


I thought all healthcare was "free" in England.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2009 at 21:57
For me, animals have some rights that humans aren't entitled because they can't think for themselves.
Same thing with children, the handicapped and the mentally disabled. Adults have to be responsible with their lifestyle choices. No one but yourself should be responsible for the things that you consciously choose for yourself.  One of the less spoken about arguments is the fact that almost all health-care services are based on treatment and not prevention. I would gladly pay for a health service that focuses on preventive care rather than treatments and has a fully digital chart and prescription system.




Edited by KoS - September 03 2009 at 21:58
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2009 at 21:58
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:


Your tax dollars are at times going to go towards something you don't personally subscribe to no matter how much you rant and rave about it. That's how this society works. Wouldn't you rather have your tax dollars go towards something that is at least MORALLY right?


First off, only talking about "rights" here, of which I think few if any exist. They're independent of society.

Taxes are necessary for a good society, as far as I can tell. But as someone doesn't have a birthright to paved streets, a police department, and public schooling, that person also does not have a right to healthcare, in my mind. Simply, a "right" to anything is iffy to me, because I'm not sure we're special enough to deserve anything purely because we exist. But we can gather around an confer if something is good enough that we should have it (freedom, life, perhaps a degree of healthcare) but calling those "unalienable rights" and so one just brings nothing meaningful to discussion, and presumes things about the universe that aren't, in my opinion.


Okay, so let me ask you this . . . how consistent is your stand on this? Would you also say that animals don't have any 'rights' simply for existing? Or are you one of those people who think animals deserve rights that humans don't?

Also, if you're questioning 'rights' to begin with, I do worry a little. When you say that, I have to wonder . . . would you have been one of those people back in the civil rights movement who said, "Ehh, when we talk about giving these black people 'rights', that's a bit iffy for me. Yep, I'm just not sure. What ARE 'rights', anyway, really?" Seems to me you're only thinking from your own perspective and not considering much else that goes on outside of your general area.

Of COURSE we have rights for simply existing! What was all of that bloodshed over in the past for equal rights and whatnot if rights didn't truly exist? What, it's something we made up? Are you insane?

Perhaps I have misunderstood your point, in which case . . . clarify, please.


I think I'm pretty consistent on it. I don't put animals above people at all, but just about equally, perhaps slightly lower. I try to avoid using "rights" in reference to a societal norm like suffrage or something like that because I think it's obvious that we're not born with the inherent right to vote when we turn 18 one day. It's a "right" only in as much as it's something we as a society have called "really good" and "would not like to be without." I still think that's different from saying it's something anyone, past or future should have had. That sounds short-sighted to me, because I'm not ready to say some societal norms should be universal when I don't even know if I'm morally relativistic or not. it's born of uncertainty. I think too many people have the illusion of being certain of many things, least of all that we're born with unalienable rights--only because we currently think we do.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2009 at 22:00
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by Chris S Chris S wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:


Your tax dollars are at times going to go towards something you don't personally subscribe to no matter how much you rant and rave about it. That's how this society works. Wouldn't you rather have your tax dollars go towards something that is at least MORALLY right?


First off, only talking about "rights" here, of which I think few if any exist. They're independent of society.

Taxes are necessary for a good society, as far as I can tell. But as someone doesn't have a birthright to paved streets, a police department, and public schooling, that person also does not have a right to healthcare, in my mind. Simply, a "right" to anything is iffy to me, because I'm not sure we're special enough to deserve anything purely because we exist. But we can gather around an confer if something is good enough that we should have it (freedom, life, perhaps a degree of healthcare) but calling those "unalienable rights" and so one just brings nothing meaningful to discussion, and presumes things about the universe that aren't, in my opinion.


Okay, so let me ask you this . . . how consistent is your stand on this? Would you also say that animals don't have any 'rights' simply for existing? Or are you one of those people who think animals deserve rights that humans don't?

Also, if you're questioning 'rights' to begin with, I do worry a little. When you say that, I have to wonder . . . would you have been one of those people back in the civil rights movement who said, "Ehh, when we talk about giving these black people 'rights', that's a bit iffy for me. Yep, I'm just not sure. What ARE 'rights', anyway, really?"

Seems to me you're only thinking from your own perspective and not considering much else that goes on outside of your general area.
We assume rights by the nature of our species
Humans are brutal in dictating rights and only some special few have expanded on that namely, MLK, Mandela, Ghani etc
Animals force their right to exist, similar functions of survival instincts perhaps?
 
We all know nothing else......because only the stars blink back.......
 
 
 


Okay, that makes sense. Unfortunately, you weren't who I was talking to, so I'm still unsure if that is what HE meant by what he said, but it certainly does clear it up for me on your perspective.

So, rights only exists because they have been dictated to us for the purpose of keeping certain people down. Right?

Well then . . . we should fight for these non-existent, pseudo-rights that you speak of so that we can have non-existent, pseudo universal healthcare.

Regardless of where the concept of 'rights' came from, the outcome is still the same as far as I can see.
And by rights an open forum does not exclude participationSmile
 
Even if it was not mean't for me I responded. OK off at a tangent, sorry about that.
 
I sincerely hope that USA get the healthcare they all wish for.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2009 at 22:02
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:


Your tax dollars are at times going to go towards something you don't personally subscribe to no matter how much you rant and rave about it. That's how this society works. Wouldn't you rather have your tax dollars go towards something that is at least MORALLY right?


First off, only talking about "rights" here, of which I think few if any exist. They're independent of society.

Taxes are necessary for a good society, as far as I can tell. But as someone doesn't have a birthright to paved streets, a police department, and public schooling, that person also does not have a right to healthcare, in my mind. Simply, a "right" to anything is iffy to me, because I'm not sure we're special enough to deserve anything purely because we exist. But we can gather around an confer if something is good enough that we should have it (freedom, life, perhaps a degree of healthcare) but calling those "unalienable rights" and so one just brings nothing meaningful to discussion, and presumes things about the universe that aren't, in my opinion.


Okay, so let me ask you this . . . how consistent is your stand on this? Would you also say that animals don't have any 'rights' simply for existing? Or are you one of those people who think animals deserve rights that humans don't?

Also, if you're questioning 'rights' to begin with, I do worry a little. When you say that, I have to wonder . . . would you have been one of those people back in the civil rights movement who said, "Ehh, when we talk about giving these black people 'rights', that's a bit iffy for me. Yep, I'm just not sure. What ARE 'rights', anyway, really?" Seems to me you're only thinking from your own perspective and not considering much else that goes on outside of your general area.

Of COURSE we have rights for simply existing! What was all of that bloodshed over in the past for equal rights and whatnot if rights didn't truly exist? What, it's something we made up? Are you insane?

Perhaps I have misunderstood your point, in which case . . . clarify, please.


I think I'm pretty consistent on it. I don't put animals above people at all, but just about equally, perhaps slightly lower. I try to avoid using "rights" in reference to a societal norm like suffrage or something like that because I think it's obvious that we're not born with the inherent right to vote when we turn 18 one day. It's a "right" only in as much as it's something we as a society have called "really good" and "would not like to be without." I still think that's different from saying it's something anyone, past or future should have had. That sounds short-sighted to me, because I'm not ready to say some societal norms should be universal when I don't even know if I'm morally relativistic or not. it's born of uncertainty. I think too many people have the illusion of being certain of many things, least of all that we're born with unalienable rights--only because we currently think we do.


Thank you for clearing that up.

As for how I respond for that, well . . . go read my last post at the bottom of the previous page in response to Chris S and you'll get the gist. Wink

Whatever we may have already or only 'think' we have, we still need to operate within the world that has been built around us, manufactured or not. I still say as far as 'fake rights' go, healthcare for all certainly seems like something that should have been here all along.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2009 at 22:04
Originally posted by Chris S Chris S wrote:

And by rights an open forum does not exclude participationSmile
 
Even if it was not mean't for me I responded. OK off at a tangent, sorry about that.
 
I sincerely hope that USA get the healthcare they all wish for.


I wasn't saying you didn't have a right to respond. I was just prefacing my response to make sure everybody knew that you weren't speaking for stonebeard. 'Tis all.



Originally posted by Padraic Padraic wrote:


I thought all healthcare was "free" in England.


I don't know. Ask an Englishman. I was just commenting on something that I knew to be true, not something I speculated was true, and to claim that all of England has free healthcare would be a large speculation on my part.



Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:

For me, animals have some rights that humans aren't entitled because they can't think for themselves.
Same thing with children, the handicapped and the mentally disabled. Adults have to be responsible with their lifestyle choices. No one but yourself should be responsible for the things that you consciously choose for yourself.  One of the less spoken about arguments is the fact that almost all health-care services are based on treatment and not prevention. I would gladly pay for a health service that focuses on preventive care rather than treatments and has a fully digital chart and prescription system.




So all handicapped people and children automatically can't think for themselves? Confused

And I'm sure we would all love to have services that prevent people from getting sick, but . . . wouldn't ya know . . . that derned thing known as sickness just doesn't announce itself very well. Trust me, if we could tax people for prevention services, we would. Unfortunately, we can't see the future, so people WILL get sick without warning.

I'm sure it would be quite convenient, though. I can see it now:

"Sir, your tax dollars must go to help this woman"

"Too bad! It's her own fault, she should've taken my money while she was well!"

Ermm


Edited by p0mt3 - September 03 2009 at 23:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2009 at 22:08
I like to get in philosophical discussions...

even if I leave unsatisfied, it keeps my mind sharp. Yay!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 03 2009 at 22:14
Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:

For me, animals have some rights that humans aren't entitled because they can't think for themselves.
Same thing with children, the handicapped and the mentally disabled. Adults have to be responsible with their lifestyle choices. No one but yourself should be responsible for the things that you consciously choose for yourself.  One of the less spoken about arguments is the fact that almost all health-care services are based on treatment and not prevention. I would gladly pay for a health service that focuses on preventive care rather than treatments and has a fully digital chart and prescription system.




Good point, on issues like this in general I am always way way more sympathetic to children and the disabled over adults who have made stupid decisions.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 01:40
Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:

For me, animals have some rights that humans aren't entitled because they can't think for themselves.
Same thing with children, the handicapped and the mentally disabled. Adults have to be responsible with their lifestyle choices. No one but yourself should be responsible for the things that you consciously choose for yourself.  One of the less spoken about arguments is the fact that almost all health-care services are based on treatment and not prevention. I would gladly pay for a health service that focuses on preventive care rather than treatments and has a fully digital chart and prescription system.




How could you prevent pneumonia, or appendicitis? Sorry, but apart from some very specific infectious diseases most medical problems are not the result of improper prevention.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 02:11
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:

For me, animals have some rights that humans aren't entitled because they can't think for themselves.
Same thing with children, the handicapped and the mentally disabled. Adults have to be responsible with their lifestyle choices. No one but yourself should be responsible for the things that you consciously choose for yourself.  One of the less spoken about arguments is the fact that almost all health-care services are based on treatment and not prevention. I would gladly pay for a health service that focuses on preventive care rather than treatments and has a fully digital chart and prescription system.




How could you prevent pneumonia, or appendicitis? Sorry, but apart from some very specific infectious diseases most medical problems are not the result of improper prevention.


Exactly what I was saying. I also think it's funny how the post suggests that children and handicapped people somehow can't think for themselves.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 02:33
Bad word choice is all my fault, but any person with some intelligence could get the gist of what I was saying by the context alone. But, seeing as this is a political discussion, all rationality is throw out the window.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 04:12
Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:

Bad word choice is all my fault, but any person with some intelligence could get the gist of what I was saying by the context alone. But, seeing as this is a political discussion, all rationality is throw out the window.


If you feel like you have been misunderstood, simply explain and rephrase what you were trying to say. Don't bring intelligence and choice context into question. That doesn't really solve anything.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 04:58
The really chilling future healthcare-by-insurance offers us is the genome. We will be assessed at birth and will have to pay differential premiums based on gene predictors. This may well be rational and economic, but something in me rebels when the medically disadvantaged are financially penalised.

This talk of individualism is, in my view, uninformed by history. We are a communal species. We achieve greatest efficiencies by cooperation, not competition. That's how we caught the mammoths, that's how we harvested our crops, that's how we defended our cities. It is only a country that believes these basic communal things secure that can indulge in rampant individualism - and we've seen in the wake of 9/11 just how draconian that country could be in limiting liberties in the quest for communal security. Even in the USA individual rights are subservient to those of the community. Those who think otherwise, the Constitution notwithstanding, might benefit from considering history.

So to healthcare. I live in a country where universal healthcare is a right. There is health insurance, and we do have a private system, but our public system is robust and works well. Like all such systems it is under pressure because of the baby boom bubble and the dramatic rise in elective surgery. New Zealand is not a democracy and is not socialist, but we as a people would never tolerate a system like that in the USA. To deny a fellow citizen access to care is tantamount to shoving them outside the gates of the city when the enemy comes into view. To withhold your largesse when someone else is in need - whether from their negligence or not - is one of the most selfish and abhorrent things a human being can do. I believe every single one of you who has participated in this debate would open the gates of the city, even if it meant a little more crowding and a little less food.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 06:17
All I have to say is - I hope none of those 20-year-olds will have to learn they are not God the hard way. You can lead the most careful of lives, and still get sick and die - or have an accident not through your fault, and become disabled. I had a cousin, a very high-ranking judge, who died in under two months, at the age of 52, of a particularly virulent form of cancer. She had had checkups a few months before she died, so she did take care of herself - but that didn't prevent her from getting sick and dying all the same.

As to healthcare not being a right, well... It is easy to say when you are 20. Lose your good health, and then come and tell me. I am sorry if this post implies any negative wishes on my part, but seeing people speak of other people's lives in such terms makes me sick. In the past few years I have seen the fragility of our human condition first hand, and like to believe it taught me a lesson. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 07:13
Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:


As to healthcare not being a right, well... It is easy to say when you are 20. Lose your good health, and then come and tell me. I am sorry if this post implies any negative wishes on my part, but seeing people speak of other people's lives in such terms makes me sick. In the past few years I have seen the fragility of our human condition first hand, and like to believe it taught me a lesson. 


In the past few weeks, I've gone through something similar.

My aunty passed away due to cancer, which was preventable, but due to her insanely spotty public healthcare, she didn't make it...

I have a firm belief she would still be here if not for the sh*ttyness of the Australian public health system.

I don't feel comfortably going into any more details, so I'll leave it at that.

What Raff said is right; Its hard to say until you're affected first hand by it.


-Joel



Edited by progkidjoel - September 04 2009 at 07:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 07:24


Cute, but of course an inappropriate analogy.  People are required by law to treat their children humanely and with medical care.

This cartoon says "animal-owners."  Am I to understand you tacitly support slavery, Slart?  Wink

Wait a minute...didn't I say I wasn't coming in this stupid thread anymore?  LOL  Carry on, you wayward sons.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 08:01
Good grief this thread's difficult to follow.   Confused Anyway Yep Epignosis I've just been catching up on the last days posts and you did say you were off for a beer and wouldn't be coming back!  It's all quite interesting though. 
 
Ages back someone said the health service is free in England  and of course it is in the rest of the UK too.  Its only free at the point of delivery and we pay through our taxes.  You will find some people who think a private system more efficient but the majority agree with our current system but it is expensive (I heard the NHS is the third biggest employer in the world behind the Chinese army and something else which I missed. )
 
I have another question for our American friends (Its your debate after all).  Preventative healthcare has been mentioned a couple of times here (Not always with any sense) one of the ways of making any health system more efficient is to stop people getting sick in the first place so a lot of money has been spent in this country on things like cancer screening to catch it before it gets hold.  I am guessing that in the states you would have to pay for this so the majority of people would avoid it as I guess it is expensive.  How does the current system deal with this issue? Do you have any preventative healthcare?
 
If you think you shouldn't help pay for screening cos why should you pay for someone elses treatment then bear in mind if someone gets cancer and it is not spotted till late then you will be paying more on your insurance contributions as the treatment will be conciderably more expensive.  You pay for their treatment whatever. 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 08:46
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Am I to understand you tacitly support slavery, Slart?  Wink

Yes but only tacitly. Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 09:21
Originally posted by akamaisondufromage akamaisondufromage wrote:

 
I have another question for our American friends (Its your debate after all).  Preventative healthcare has been mentioned a couple of times here (Not always with any sense) one of the ways of making any health system more efficient is to stop people getting sick in the first place so a lot of money has been spent in this country on things like cancer screening to catch it before it gets hold.  I am guessing that in the states you would have to pay for this so the majority of people would avoid it as I guess it is expensive.  How does the current system deal with this issue? Do you have any preventative healthcare?
 


Of course!  And if you are on an insurance plan, they will cover things like mammograms, colonoscopies, etc.  I assume Medicare pays for these things as well but I'm not 100% positive.

Our healthcare here is excellent, for the most part - our problems are not with quality, but with access and affordability.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 11:20
Well you all have had a reasonably civil discussion without me, so I'm going to keep out as much as possible. I am going tell my personal story to at least give a reason why I'm such a boor about these things.
 
I'm a primary doctor in a community clinic. We see mostly Medicaid, Some Private Insurance, and uninsured on a sliding fee scale. The uninsured range from small business owners who have elected not to carry coverage to workers for small businesses that don't carry group coverage to part timers and independent contractors who can't afford coverage to homeless. The homeless include substance abusers, mentally ill, and folks just down on their luck. I have plenty of patients who don't work but should be, and I have alot of patients that have no skills and the unskilled jobs simply aren't out there right now.
 
I deal with insurance companies trying to get out of paying every day. I deal with the fact that Medicaid doesn't pay their bills for months on end and many providers will not take patients with Medicaid. I'm left scrambling trying to figure out how to get people care every workday.
 
I have private insurance through my wife, who works as a doctor for a much bigger private system. Our care and coverage is excellent as long as we stay within their system which happens to include a world-class hospital, so we are really lucky.
 
Both my wife and I are children of teachers. When we were young, our families were poor but all the basics were provided for. Now our children have more privelege than they should despite our attempts to keep them grounded. I've been at both ends, and I am no more worthy of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness now than my father was as a beginning teacher working full time plus doing construction to keep us going. Yet the socio-economic difference is staggering.
 
I am the American dream, and it is not fair. I did not earn the differences in privelege I have. I was blessed with a love of science and some idea of how the education system works. The fact that I will get the best care in the world while the guys working in the steel mill get the shaft is not fair. They have a big group plan too, but their union negotiated terrible health benefits in exchange for no pay cut.
 
I frankly don't know what the answer is, but this isn't it.
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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