| > The idea that this is going to be more expensive/isn’t paid for is ridiculous because it eliminates all of the money spent by private corporations on what should be a public service This is just a plain criticism of capitalism in general. Does this logic apply to everything else? Like food? Housing? In practice we have a great example with public education: an expensive, unequal base level that americans avoid if they have the money to. > It’s crazy that the government was able to shirk it’s responsibility to look after people and place that unfair burden on businesses.
> . It’s time to relieve businesses of the burden of dealing with their employees health I agree, although I would like to note that historically this made sense from an administrative standpoint. Back in the 20's, administrative work of insurance was like half the cost. It wouldn't be so expensive today with electronic payments and all. Its the same logic behind payroll taxes (those that work pay it) mostly because its easy to do, not because its fair or good. Its true that businesses would love not to manage training people about healthcare, but then the government will have to do it and that won't come cheap. That will be an interesting challenge. The M4A plan of no copays no nothing, that would eliminate that instruction is a pipe dream. > It doesn’t increase the size of government, those are flow-through dollars, they go in one side and out the other. Hey come in. <They are in a federal bank account.> <They are processed by a claims office that decides what to pay and what not to pay>
They come out. Whatever claims are not paid, its money leftover for spending in whatever initiative the government wants. In fact advocates for socialized medicine like Sarah Kliff want that to happen so the government can set prices. Since its your only employer (no competition with private insurance) you say you accept it or you close down. > If anything consolidating these disparate services should represent an administrative efficiency And if it doesn't, whats the way out? > Yes the government can then change health policy, that’s the point. Maybe thats your point, but I don't want in on that. I dont want the government deciding for me. So I dont want to go thing by thing: we disagree, you envision a government administration to be great and fantastic, and I see it as unfair and oppressive. Lets compromise on our different of beliefs: lets advocate for a public option. Government offers something, insurance offers theirs, they compete in the open market, you get what you want and I dont need to confront. I do want some other things though! |
It's like offering government fire insurance only to buildings already on fire, in high-risk areas and below-code, leaving all the not-on-fire up-to-code buildings for the "free market." It's insane.