rconnor said:
Fundamentally, I feel we are pretty close to the same core understanding of the issue but our solutions go in completely different directions. We both see the US as an corporate oligarchy and that this has directly caused the healthcare system to not be in the people’s best interest. Your stance, if I can attempt to paraphrase and correct me if I’m wrong, is because of the corporate corruption of the political system, healthcare shouldn’t be controlled by the government (i.e. universal/socialized). Instead, it should be allowed to operate, as much as possible and as closely as possible, directly between the producer and consumer.
Only for the things we can shop for. Not for the things we can't. We can't shop for emergency services, yet emergency services are the primary reason everyone pays insurance. Emergency services should be single payer, paid out of taxes, just like the police and the firemen. I am arm and arm with you on that one. If you don't know what you're shopping for, you can't shop. I can't even shop for insurance properly not knowing whether I'm going to get in a car wreck or have a stroke or none of the above. You can't shop when you don't know what you're buying.
Our system tries to make us shop for emergency ailments in advance. That's dumb.
Then our system obscures our ability to shop for ailments that we could ordinarily shop for. Like cancer or prescription drugs. Equally dumb.
rconnor said:
My stance is that the “producers” in this case will, as they always will in a capitalist economy, put profits before creating an equitable healthcare system. That same corrupting influence on our government is now directly, and with less regulation, in charge of the healthcare system.
Only because we're not allowed to shop around. The consumer can vote with his dollars if he knows what he's shopping for. Corrupt and Evil corporations go the way of the Dodo Bird once people are given the choice to spend their money elsewhere. General Motors makes crappy cars, therefore they fail and Toyota grows.
Right now, we don't have any real choice in the matter. And Obamacare is even worse, because those of us who chose not to pay into the pot are now FORCED to buy the flawed, screwed up product, by the very government you want to put in charge of everything.
rconnor said:
Even though the government is far from perfect, it is much more accountable to the people than a for-profit hospital or big pharma company.
No it's not. It's not it's not it's not. I can choose not to give a company my money. I cannot choose to not give government my money. And now, with Obamacare, the government is forcing me to give money to the very company you seem to hate so much. I remind you...
beej67 said:
Your position, and the position of the whole industry to date, suffers from the two fundamental flaws of nanny state progressivism:
1) People can't be trusted to do what's right for themselves
2) The government can't be bought
Your progressive government is bought. The people you voted for are bought. The head of the FDA is a Montsanto lobbyist. The head of the FCC is a Comcast lobbyist. Obamacare was written by lobbyists. The fundamental underpinnings of progressive nannystateism don't work if the government is bought.
There is no vote I can cast on election day that is for someone who isn't bought.
rconnor said:
Now to your two objections to my ideology:
1) I think that people, in mass, will naturally do what’s right for themselves but not what’s right for society. That’s my point.
And government will, in mass, naturally do what's right for the people who bought it, not what's right for society. That's my point. It's been that way since the Sumerians, and it has never changed. You have been duped into thinking that the people you vote for are doing what's right for society, when actually they're just jockeying for insider trading positions.
...and funneling money to the people who donate to their reelection campaigns...
...and cutting deals with those same corporations to find fat, high paying lobbyist jobs for themselves when they quit politics...
2) I touched on this already but I absolutely agree that government can be bought. However, I still have much more say in how the government works than I do how corporations work.
You do not. You have an infinite amount of say in what a corporation does with your money because you can choose not to give them your money. You have no say in what the government does with your money, because when you go to the ballot box, you are choosing between two bought candidates with different colored shirts on, each of which is going to do the same thing once he gets to Washington, which is take money from lobbyists and then invite the lobbyist to write the laws. You have no say in that.
You have no say in state government either. You have some say in local government, because you can talk to your local representative, and your vote means something to them. Our modern system at a national level simply turns money into votes via marketing tricks. We're a cashocracy. Sweden isn't. That's why you can't do Sweden's system here.
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