No, I don't want socialized medicine because of the tragedy of the commons.
Is that a problem in most other countries with socialized medicine? Any?
No, I don't want socialized medicine because of the tragedy of the commons.
You're a rhetoric pumping machine, KOC. Trust me on this: you don't understand the first thing about politics and the foundations of positions. Quit the partisan ******** and learn a thing or two. It's ok to think about things more and hate the big, bad other side less. You've been warned enough already. Yes, I am the keymaster and gatekeeper....
You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to franklin again.
Do you have statistics to back that up one way or the other (kids injured by neglect from parents addicted to opiates versus those injured from being stuck in cars)? Or, just blather?
Make it. Compare the societal effects of legal heroin and legal prostitution to legal alcohol, and show why they are worse. I don't think that case is easy to make, at all.
How is allowing people to get married "meddling in it"? Is allowing heterosexuals to marry "meddling in it"?
Is that a problem in most other countries with socialized medicine? Any?
Please keep arguing the case for legalizing heroin.
Which disease does alcohol spread?
I'm going with common sense on the first.
Yes, in Canada for instance they have to wait for long periods to be assigned a doctor(limited resource is depleted), and have long waits for "specialty" procedures (it ain't beneficial for a doctor to specialize). In England they have problems with keeping their hospitals sanitized. People are afraid to go because they will come out with something worse than what they went in with. Those are just a few of the problems.
In order to keep arguing it, I would need to start arguing it. You claimed you had an easy case to make, so make it...
So, you can't make a case after all. No surprise. Just rhetoric.
Which of those come from the tragedy of the commons, as opposed to employee resource issues? How did you make that determination?
The sky is blue.
Are you being disingenuous?
I view "the employees" as the commons.
I view "the employees" as the commons.
with the new Health Care Bill reducing the amount that someone can sue for malpractice which will reduce the amount of malpractice insurance that doctors have to have to cover themselves.
Employees are not a limited resource. The tragedy of the commons does not apply.
Now, there may be a valid point that a single-payer system is often accompanied by insufficient pay to providers, resulting in provider shortages. However, that is a more specific system than socialized medicine represents generally, and is not a scenario that is reflected by the term "tragedy of the commons".
I'm applying tragedy of the commons to socialized medicine because doctors (employees) become a limited resource, as you just pointed out.
Except, doctors are not a limited resource. They can be hired. They can be trained. If you offer doctors more pay, or make it less expensive to go to medical school, you will get more doctors.
Link?