Rob Roy
Well-Known Member
Actually the "least bad" option would be for people to make their own decisions, live with the consequences and leave other people alone. Rationalizing that somebody else should make decisions about another's life, liberty and property because "they" have gotten away with it before conflicts with the general principles of liberty.-I buy my own insurance individually, but through an exchange my state has set up, so I get a relatively good rate for an individual policy. It's an hmo network type plan where I can only go to certain providers. No complaints though really. Currently, I work as a freelance translator and have a part-time job as an innkeeper. Ok, your turn...
-I don't like the insurance mandate either, but it's the 'least bad' option. Medicare for all or a public option would have been my preference, but politically those weren't possible. Again, the "choice" people make to go without coverage, ends up costing everyone who does have insurance, when those people show up at the ER and can't pay their bill. Unless you get everyone covered or you start turning people away at the ER, that will continue to be the case. You can talk around that all you want...
-The FDA regulatory process has nothing to do with the healthcare bill. The avastin recommendation was based on the clinical issues NOT cost. I know the pharma lobbies and their whores on capitol hill want to turn it into a political issue, but it really isn't. The same thing would have happened before the bill passed...
-Why are all the credit card companies based in south dakota, delaware, utah etc.? Do you think it might have something to do with the fact that there are very lax laws regarding usury in those states? The same thing would happen with the health insurance industry. This has nothing do with consumer choice. Even the savviest, smartest consumers can't get a credit card from a company that isn't based in one of these states....because there are none.
There is an easy solution, stop asking government to control other people's lives at the point of a gun. The means, using force, of achieving an arguably good thing, can never be justified. Taking care of people is a good thing. "Taking" from people is a bad thing.