Re: O.T.: Will We Ever Have Health Police?
Posted: Wed Aug 05, 2009 3:30 pm
If you look at the history of totalitarian societies, they have been promoting the idea of 'euthanasia' of certain classes of people. I put regulatory denial of health care in elderly people in the same category as gassing Jews in concentration camps, or in-vivo infanticide for purposes of convenience. The decision to provide or withold care of the elderly should be a decision between a patient, their doctor and their immediate family. Bureaucrats need not be involved. (I am dealing now with a close elderly friend who refused life-saving surgery because he was afraid of one of the pre-surgical tests. Tests he feels are mandated by lawyers rather than medical common sense.)
The real problem with our health care system is talked about regularly here: rampant greed. If the greed would be removed from the system, health care costs would plummet. One way of doing this would be to almost completely deregulate health care, but have severe penalties for those who abuse the system. This would promote honest-to-goodness competition, and that has always driven prices down and improved choices. Part of this would include an implication that people must be responsible for their own decisions.
I have a good health care plan now. But if I were to lose my job, and even if I did have to use public health care for a while, I would much rather pay my own way then have someone do it for me. I am solely responsible for my own actions, or inactions.
All the proposed health care plan does is systemize much of the greed, and regulate everything into oblivion. It is a leftist control-freak's dream-come-true. It is a deeply flawed plan and belongs in a dustbin behind the Capitol building.
The real problem with our health care system is talked about regularly here: rampant greed. If the greed would be removed from the system, health care costs would plummet. One way of doing this would be to almost completely deregulate health care, but have severe penalties for those who abuse the system. This would promote honest-to-goodness competition, and that has always driven prices down and improved choices. Part of this would include an implication that people must be responsible for their own decisions.
I have a good health care plan now. But if I were to lose my job, and even if I did have to use public health care for a while, I would much rather pay my own way then have someone do it for me. I am solely responsible for my own actions, or inactions.
All the proposed health care plan does is systemize much of the greed, and regulate everything into oblivion. It is a leftist control-freak's dream-come-true. It is a deeply flawed plan and belongs in a dustbin behind the Capitol building.