Ex-Cyber wrote:I'm guessing that most of the people who have actually needed major treatment are in that 10%... it's pretty easy to be satisfied with a service when you don't actually rely on it.
I don't doubt that, but I do doubt that they couldn't afford to pay for their own health care insurance (not broad, encompassing plans but for the very basic plans). At least 5% of the currently uninsured is employed and should have the money for their own health care insurance if they bothered. 10% are unemployed but even if we assume the vast majority of them lack health insurance (and that the groups of people are the same, discounting those under Medicare or uninsured students), how many of them have critical illnesses? Half? A quarter? A tenth?
Even when I was living in poverty as a child (a family of 3 living off a stipend of $1000/month), my parents still bought the bare minimal health insurance for me just in case I got into an accident. We never had to use it but it was good to have something there in case. So I have little sympathy for folks with ailments who really need major treatment (but not life-threatening, since hospitals would have to accept you anyway) and didn't bother insuring for that possible scenario. But whatever, now they're getting a second chance while people who have led a healthy, active lifestyle who didn't need insurance will be obligated to pay for it against their will.
Ed Oscuro wrote:It's also worth pointing out that some people are going insane imagining that the new legislation will somehow magically strip away their insurance (as I pointed out two posts ago - those comments were from a real-life "conversation" I had a week or so ago).
It will strip service in that doctors will see you for a shorter time or after a longer wait. When you add a bunch of demand into existing supply, you can't avoid that. Massachusetts has been a great example of the dysfunctionality this type of reform may cause in the US. I think the bit about destroying everyone's existing insurance has just come out of a general lack of understanding about what the bill does (although I'd be surprised if more than a dozen people in the world have thoroughly read the full bill, manager's amendment, and reconciliation bill).
GaijinPunch wrote:Taking away an American's ability to sue? You might as well take away their hands.
Probably so. There needs to be better guidelines too. Maybe a faster sweep through appeals for nonsensical tort cases.
Anyway, I've lived in China before. Health care there is actually pretty good in urban areas but the lines are long (unless you have connections) and it's completely out of budget, which wouldn't work in a democratic government. Otherwise, follow the Scandinavian model and have ludicrous taxes? Not in the US please. As for people currently under mandated health care who don't like it, again, look no further than Massachusetts, where those not pleased with the effects of its health care reform plan have outnumbered those in favor.
Everybody has wanted health care reform, just not in the socialist manner in which this was presented. Ultimately, it's the republicans' fault for not introducing a more moderate health care bill when they were in power; now, they're in no position to complain. Passing this proves Obama's point about change but disproves his rhetoric for compromise; this change is about as major as if the republicans had found some loophole to overturn Roe v. Wade on their watch (and which I would've found deplorable). Maybe all this fear is unjustified, but my gut tells me otherwise.