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by bane
4786 days ago
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But they're already elected and already regulating. The counter argument is an argument against regulation, period, let lawsuits and the free market sort it out. The theory goes, people won't go to doctors that reuse stitching needles vs. the doctor down the street who does. This is not a theory I subscribe to -- that's the politest thing I can say about it. |
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You missed my point. You can't protect against every kind of malicious behavior. Therefore, whether you have regulation or not, people are going to die from doctors doing stupid/evil things. And your retort still applies: "You're fucked. Oh well." (I'm not saying this justifies freed markets! I'm saying this makes your argument bunk.)
This is the third and last time I'm going to say it: your appeal to emotion applies equally in both state regulated markets and freed markets.
> The theory goes, people won't go to doctors that reuse stitching needles vs. the doctor down the street who does.
That's a red herring to this entire discussion. You were criticizing the idea of "suing" being a bad solution and yet, you've dismissed freed markets for a completely different reason here.
The whole point of suing in this case is restitution. Just because you're dead because of a gross needle doesn't mean someone can't sue the doctor on your behalf. This gives doctors the same kind of incentive to treat you well in a freed market as in a state regulated market. (e.g., They do bad things and they have to pay a price.)
You're trying to discuss two entirely separate issues: 1) pressures on consumers aren't good enough to keep them away from bad people and 2) pressures on doctors aren't good enough to keep them from doing bad things. I recommend refocusing your argument to clarify what exactly it is you're trying to say.
And if you can't manage a polite response, then g'day.