Okeefenokee wrote:
I have to make money for everything. I have to pay for the house, and the clothes, and the food, and the cars. I don't put healthcare or medication in a different category. It's all just shit you need to live, and when the time comes that you need it, you have to pay for it.
That literally takes life down to a luck-based lottery.
A poor person can get by with minimal housing, can only consume a certain amount of food, only needs so much clothing.... but, one person may need $400K in medical care and another may never need any. It's the only commodity where the needs (not wants) are so vastly different.
I get you don't want to pay for your neighbor's cancer treatment and you don't want anyone to pay for yours. Should you get to a place where you have a loved one who needs every available resource you have, plus tens of thousands more beyond that, will you take comfort that you never had to give a penny so someone else could get that care?
Realistically, how do you see that playing out? Are you comfy that people will literally have to sit and watch as their loved ones die in agony because they couldn't afford chemo or drugs?
This is a very tough issue, and, at the risk of repeating myself, the answer isn't black & white.
Also, to everyone, please quit conflating health insurance with health care. Americans don't need health insurance; they need health care. Insurers need us to need insurance.
That said, I don't trust the government to fix this. Everything they touch turns to poop. There's got to be some sort of solution. I don't trust the free market on this - an epi pen that went from a few dollars to a few thousand dollars overnight is proof that the free market will not help control health care costs.
So, what's the answer?
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