beej67, firstly, let’s clarify our terms. While certainly not the exact same thing, the free market and capitalism are not mutually exclusive terms. To say, “but the free market is when things are traded fairly, whereas capitalism is when companies try to cheat consumers for profits!” is analogous to my (mocking) definition that “the free market is when good things happen and when bad things happen it’s not the free market”. It doesn’t work that way.
Capitalism sets up the “market” and the “free” part comes from removing restrictions and regulations such that consumers and producers can operate independently. In reality, you can’t have a producer (of any substantially large size…to say produce drugs safely) that operates independently of a capitalist market. Therefore, the free markets operates within a capitalistic frame work and advocating for a more free market healthcare system is to advocate for a more capitalist healthcare system. The only way it isn’t is if you are advocating for market anarchism (which I mean in an ideological way and certainly not a disparaging way. In fact, it would be quite interesting if you were). However, you’d have to not just blow up the entire US healthcare system but fundamentally change the entire US economic system (in which capitalism is just a little, teeny, tiny bit rooted). The only practical way to limit the effect of profit-driven capitalism on healthcare is to limit participation in the market and move to a universal healthcare system.
beej67 said:
What we have now is a perfect blend of the worst and most expensive elements of both systems, because that's what funnels the most money to the following groups…
I agree with this for the most part. However, your (and my) issue with the prime objective being to funnel money to individuals and corporations is an issue with a right end aspects of this blended system, not a left end aspect. Moving towards the left end, and a universal healthcare system, addresses this issue. This is one reason why universal healthcare systems, in the real world, continually rank head and shoulders better than a privatized system. The other is that whole equity thing and supporting the disenfranchised in your society...you know, leftist nonsense.
beej67 said:
Your comparisons to England and Sweden are hollow and pointless, because England and Sweden don't have anything like what we have here. Our laws are written by corporations.
How so? All countries that have universal health care systems moved from non-universal health care systems to universal health care (UK – 1948, Sweden 1955, Canada 1968, etc).
If we can’t use universal healthcare as an option to compare against than what are you advocating for? What is your plan? What is a “truly” free market healthcare system? What it sounds like is “if you can pay for it directly, you can get healthcare.” No insurance companies, no middle men, no support for low-income. If this is correct then you’ve describe a system that is the most apathetic, inequitable system imaginable.
beej67 said:
replaced simply with education and individual responsibility
So in this free market utopia every citizen has the access to proper medical education such that they can self-diagnose without error, won’t abuse an uncontrolled drug market and every citizen has the money to afford the drugs that they need (through accurate self-diagnoses). This system perfectly encapsulates the two fundamental and fundamentally incorrect assumptions of free market ideology:
1) Opportunity applies equally to everyone. There’s no such thing is social, cultural, economic impediments.
2) Once a fully free market is obtain, people will magically live altruistically, co-operatively, and efficiently. While under restrictions/regulations, people are selfish, greedy and lazy (“lack of an individual’s motivation to keep their own costs down and the systems motivation to do everything to drive costs up”).
zdas04 said:
I can't find a single example of where providing health care (or most any other service) is enhanced by a central government getting involved.
Honestly?
zdas04 said:
How the heck do you resolve your right to pursue happiness with my right to liberty not to pay for your pursuits
It’s not right to pursue happiness, it’s right to life.
Access to healthcare should NOT be a purchasable privilege in the richest country in the world, it should be a right. But at the end of the day, if you feel you have the “right to liberty not to pay for” others right to life, then what can I say – we wish to live in different ethical worlds.