Babe, I share your view on a system that is clearly hijacked by corporate interests along with legislative authorities advancing their own interest at the expense of everyone else. However, I am having a difficult time precisely understanding your objections as you do not define the terms you're using, making them sound a bit empty. You seem to support the idea of organized labor and other socialist principles, but you use word socialism as if it's a taboo. You keep bringing up freedom and liberty, but you seem to mostly relate it to personal income.
More importantly, you continue to bring up the typical conservative complaints against people abusing the system, or claims of government inefficiency. Both complaints were addressed in this thread several times, including the article that I linked, and which you concluded to be factual.
As the article mentions, government run programs like medicare are far and away the most efficient healthcare programs in the U.S. by any conceivable measure. And fraud is so incredibly rare (compared to private systems) due to the resources invested in fraud prevention, that it's barely worth mentioning. Sure people will sometimes make unneeded visits to doctors and hospitals, but that again seems to relate simply to your central theme of personal control of one's income being the most transcendent moral prerogative.
And remember, the U.S. is not the only country on earth. Government run healthcare works elsewhere. Other countries still manage to advance medicine and provide good care to their citizens. Without bankrupting their economies. There are the typical complaints about supposed long lines and what have you, but I'll take that over millions of people who cannot get healthcare at all, and millions more who are forever enslaved due to their bills. And so should anyone who mentioned humans right as often as you do. How can someone so compassionate be so focused on controlling every last penny earned?
More importantly, you continue to bring up the typical conservative complaints against people abusing the system, or claims of government inefficiency. Both complaints were addressed in this thread several times, including the article that I linked, and which you concluded to be factual.
As the article mentions, government run programs like medicare are far and away the most efficient healthcare programs in the U.S. by any conceivable measure. And fraud is so incredibly rare (compared to private systems) due to the resources invested in fraud prevention, that it's barely worth mentioning. Sure people will sometimes make unneeded visits to doctors and hospitals, but that again seems to relate simply to your central theme of personal control of one's income being the most transcendent moral prerogative.
And remember, the U.S. is not the only country on earth. Government run healthcare works elsewhere. Other countries still manage to advance medicine and provide good care to their citizens. Without bankrupting their economies. There are the typical complaints about supposed long lines and what have you, but I'll take that over millions of people who cannot get healthcare at all, and millions more who are forever enslaved due to their bills. And so should anyone who mentioned humans right as often as you do. How can someone so compassionate be so focused on controlling every last penny earned?