by jimw1949 » Fri Jan 31, 2014 10:21 am
If people can’t pay the deductible, then they can’t pay. Why is that such a big deal now? It didn’t seem to bother you before, why does it bother you now? What should be bothering you is that people are filing for bankruptcy all the time because they can’t pay their medical bills. Not being able to afford our medical bills is a HUGE problem and is a reflection on our healthcare system. When the bankruptcy court rules the medical debt to be null and void, who ultimately ends up paying for that? I'll answer that question, we all do, in the form of higher insurance premiums and in higher costs for medical procedures. In the end it is the taxpayers who wind up footing the bill so in essence it makes very little difference if we pay for it now, or if we pay for it later. Either way, we end up paying for it.
As I said before, there are things about the Affordable Care Act that I do not particularly like, but I do think it is a step in the right direction. I am quite certain some areas of the Affordable Care Act will need to be modified and in some cases perhaps a total change will need to be implemented. But I don’t want to throw out the baby with the bath water. As I have said, I think it is a start in the right direction. If changes need to be made, OK, no problem, let’s make those changes and let’s get it right.
Personally, I would rather see a single payer system. Why do we insist on paying insurance companies to run the health care system? I was reading where the insurance companies are actually charging around 20 percent to handle the system. In other words, as a country, we are paying insurance companies billions of dollars every year to run the system and yet these same insurance companies provide no medical care whatsoever. Why do we continue to do this idiotic practice? If we go to a single payer system, that craps comes to an end and we save billions of dollars.
Since when are countries like Germany, France, Canada, Great Britain, etc, monarchies? Great Britain does have royalty, but only as a figurehead. The British Parliament runs the country.
Look, I think the problem is that you are equating welfare to health care, and to do that is just wrong. Welfare and health care are two completely different issues and should not be thought of in the same way. As do most people, I don’t care to subsidize someone who is sitting on their fat behind so they can eat chips and dips all day and watch a big screen high definition television set. That irritates me more than a little and I don’t saying so either. But health care is different. Health care is something that everybody currently needs, or at least they WILL need, at some point in their life. If nothing else, they need to get regular checkups so that any potential problems can be diagnosed before they become a serious problem. Early diagnosis greatly reduces the cost for treatment and it also keeps the citizens more healthy which reduces health care cost over the long term.
Besides all that, I firmly believe that every citizen deserves to have access to medical care, regardless of their wealth, their race, their color, their sexual orientation, or whatever else they may be. For someone to not be able to seek medical help because they don’t happen to have a lot of money, is, in my opinion at least, a serious statement of the mentality of our society as a whole. To say that not one Republican voted for the Affordable Care Act goes a long way to show how the Party feels about their fellow citizens. When I see someone who needs help, I help them. I don’t check to see what their bank balance is before I help them, I just help them.
I believe if this country is going to survive we need to, as a society, get rid of this ME - ME – ME attitude and start thinking in terms of WE – WE – WE. Every one of us needs to become part of the team and work toward the common good of everybody. I am not saying we can’t do things on our own, like coming up with a better mousetrap and starting a business and make a lot of money. By all means, do that if you can, after all, it is the American way and I am all for that. But in our quest for personal wealth and fame, let’s not forget about our fellow citizens who may be a bit less fortunate than we are.