A random person said:
Lazier Than Thou said:
A random person said:
Lazier Than Thou said:
A random person said:
Lazier Than Thou said:
A random person said:
I'm for a mixture. People can try to become rich and competition is good for the consumers, but wealth gets spread around so no one has to be poor and businesses are regulated to stop monopolies and bad business practices that hurt the consumers (if it wasn't for consumer advocacy we wouldn't have airbags as standard).
Really, I believe in a comfortable living always being available and allowing people to strive for greater wealth and power through superior business (the wealth spreading would just inhibit hilarious amounts of wealth that's only useful if you want to gold plate everything).
But definitely have universal healthcare. Peoples lives aren't just a business.
I'm curious as to how you expect your utopia to pay for this "universal health care." Obama-care is estimated to cost $1.5 TRILLION and that's the rough estimate.
Good point. As much as I preferred Obama to McCain (didn't hate McCain himself, but Palin made me scream WTF!), he seems to have problems with responsible spending. The best plan I can think of right now would be for the government to provide cheap insurance and have some tax payer money go towards healthcare (like Canada), but with private insurance companies competing with government healthcare, but I'd have to analyze Obama's plan for a more in depth idea.
So you want Medicare? A government program already in existence that is said by one David Walker former Comptroller of the United States Government to cost an estimated $2-3 Trillion dollars in unfunded liability? http://www.forbes.com/2006/11/05/walker-gao-concord-face-cx_rs_1103autofacescan04.html
Or maybe you were referring specifically to Medicare part D passed through by George W. Bush which will have the same unfunded liability, but in the area of $17 Trillion.
Or maybe we not make the government run our medical system. Just a thought.
Medicare only applies to those 65 or older or who have a few other conditions, had to be said.
Oh snap, you really showed me. I mean, how could I possibly come back with anything, seeing as how you totally destroyed my argument about it costing a ton of money by telling me that it only effects a certain percentage of the population? It's not like that very argument is actually a point my favor as the liability is huge on the part of the government for a program that is actually only used on a small subset of the population.
Ok, I did support your initial point about the current system being bloated. What I would want would be healthcare for all and not just those few people.
And medicare is horribly bloated as you demonstrated, yes. We should have the system cover everyone, as I just stated. And yes, government health care is expensive. I still say go with a government insurance option.
Alright, suppose we go with government run health care. How do we afford it? With the current budget of the US, how do we have enough money on our plate at the current time without adding upwards $1.5 trillion or however much it's going to cost?
Not only do you have to take into account the fact that this last February the government spent(or made a bill to spend over a course of 10 years or something) $789 billion that the government
does not have and will have to borrow, but they're also talking about what could possibly be
another stimulus package that would be even bigger than the last one. http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/bal-bz.hancock10jul10,0,6622609.column
So just from those things how is it going to be even possible to pay for all this!?