Big0ne
Shared on Mon, 10/05/2009 - 13:44I have purposely remained mostly quite on the topic of Health Care Reform for the last several months because quite frankly it's all very confusing to me. Dealing with insurance companies is confusing. Dealing with the government is confusing. Sorting through the noise of both health care workers and lobbyist and political hacks and pundits is doubly confusing. I still have a lot of questions but I am slowly starting to formulate my own opinion on the matter.
First off, can we stop calling this a "moral" issue? This, oddly enough is the cry coming from the left (usually). Aren't these the same people who'd like to keep morals and politics seperate? This is a argument ripe with "slippery slope" trappings. Do I have a moral obligation to provide someone else with medicine? Do people have a moral obligation to work for and towards their own well being? What moral standard is the whole thing based on anyway. This has become a fairly secular country and I dare say we don't want to get in the business of defining that moral standard in this environment. Health care would become the least vitriolic of our arguments.
The biggest problem I have right now with the proposals coming out of Washington is that they don't really seem to address the problems they claim exist and that most people wish would change. On the one hand they tell us that the current health care system (specifically the insurance industry) is broken yet on the other "you can keep your existing plan if you want." Nice mixed message there.
Here's another one I don't get. "We will make it illegal for insurance companies to deny coverage based on a preexisting condition." Sounds good. Except. No one is talking about how much that coverage is going to cost. If I'm a 50 year old man with cancer, I'm guessing that while Blue Cross can't deny me, they can also make it so unaffordable I might as well not get it anyway.
Not only that but the scuttlebut is is that insurance is going to be required for all citizens. Setting aside personal freedom issues here for a bit, if I have to get insurance yet I have an expensive preexisting condition, is the Government mandating that I go broke? The only way to stop this scenario is with price controls. I haven't heard word one about price controls. If the government is mandating coverage and the only way to ensure that coverage is with price controls, isn't that already a Government run Health Care Plan? At this point you'd just be using private companies to push the paperwork.
Polititions keep talking about the unnecassary bureaucracy of the insurance companies that drive up costs. "They don't actually provide anything" is the chorus. Well, if they decide to go with a single payer plan, aren't we just trading one bureaucray that doesn't provide anything for another?
There's another pet peeve of mine that been really preeminent lately. "We are the only industrialized nation in the world not to offer Government run health care." So what! That's the equivolent of going to your mommy and saying, "Everyone else is jumping off a bridge." That has to be the weakest argument of all. In the end if we want Government health care, that's our decision to make. We have to do what's best for us as we see fit. I don't give a frog's fart what the people in France do.
I guess while I tend place less faith in the ability of the Government to manage health care than I do in the ability of the private sector, I'm not willing to say that a Government run plan is the end of the world as we know it either. In the end, we all pay. If the government takes it over, we pay in the form of taxes and if the employers keep providing the benefit, then we all pay in the form of higher prices on the things you buy. It seems like the only real way to eliminate bloated bureaucracy and control your own health care is to pay for it yourself.
One last thought. I wonder if the whole root of this problem isn't technology. It seems like in the last 20 - 30 years we've made such huge advances in technology at large and medical treatment systems in particular that maybe we've out paced our ability to pay for it. I wonder if we were to wait a few years (not saying that we should) if this would become a non issue.
- Big0ne's blog
- Log in or register to post comments
Comments
Submitted by Rau on Mon, 10/05/2009 - 14:33
Submitted by TheDastard on Mon, 10/05/2009 - 14:48
Submitted by BrainHematoma on Mon, 10/05/2009 - 18:34