Thread: Gunner's kind
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Ed Huntress Ed Huntress is offline
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Default Gunner's kind


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On Jul 11, 5:57 am, "Ed Huntress"
All three of you are as nutty as fruitcakes.
What happened to the three of you, did you all start taking the wrong
drugs
and get confused? You've got it all backwards.

--
Ed Huntress


I believe that healthcare should be a choice, not something that is
mandatory.


Wait until you don't have a choice, and then see how you feel about
healthcare being "mandatory." Gunner's case, which he described here some
years ago, is a good example. His wife needed expensive care. They didn't
have insurance. So, what's he supposed to do, let her die?

I had a heart attack last year and the hospitals charged me $220,000. I had
very good insurance. The insurance company paid the hospitals $48,000, and
they apparently were happy. What was I supposed to do, negotiate with them
while they had me stuck full of tubes and they were rushing me into the
operating room? Is this a hospital, or a Mexican trinket shop?

The idea that healthcare should be a "choice" is unmitigated nonsense. There
is no choice. Hospitals have to care for you whether you can pay them or
not. That's the law in almost every place. You aren't going to say, "oh,
gosh, too bad, my wife has to die." Unless you're suicidal, you aren't going
to refuse necessary care. If you want to make it all a "choice," then you'll
have to provide fast-freeze lockers to take care of the bodies that get
stacked up outside of the main doors to the hospitals.

Your idea is as nutty as theirs, Dan. And, like Gunner, there is no chance
in hell you're going to shrug and say "too bad" if your family member is in
desperate need and you happened to make the wrong choice. All that's going
to happen is what's happening now: people who can't get insurance (I
couldn't get it at *any* price for a few years before 1980, until the laws
changed) or who can't afford it are going to wind up getting emergency care
on the public's tab. And it's going to be an inefficient mess, because it's
a pasted-together system that squeezes the hospitals and everyone else until
each mess is settled. We have one local hospital that just went under for
this very reason (Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center). For charity care,
they get paid $0.40 on the dollar, and it broke their back. Now the other
close-by hospital is so jammed that my mother's doctor won't even send her
there. And he's on their staff!

I also believe the same for retirement. You should be
able to opt out of Social Security. Maybe there should be a way you
could prove that you providing for yourself and then pay a smaller
amount to a system to help pay for those less fortunate.


Maybe. But that's a different thing altogether.

As it is we have dead doctors collecting from Medicare. And Social
Security funds being used by Congress to fund other things. My kid is
likely to pay more into Social Security than he will ever collect. A
negative return on his " investment ".


That's greed and corruption, not the structure of the healthcare system. If
you figure out how to keep people from being greedy and corrupt, let us
know. Their greed and corruption doesn't go away when everybody has to pay
their own way or die.

I can not imagine Congress coming up with a good plan for universal
healthcare. Look at their plans for the mortgage industry.


Their plan for the mortgage industry was the LACK of a plan. It was the
libertarian plan -- pretend the problem isn't there, and maybe it will just
go away. But it doesn't go away. It just rears around and bites us in the
ass. That was a case of giving free license for greed and corruption.

I don't think those three are nutty. Countries that have universal
healthcare have their problems too.


Of course, but they have better healthcare and live longer.

A friend of my wife's husband
needed an operation in New Zealand and was scheduled to have it done
in two years ( in Austrailia yet ). Fortunately it was reported in
the papers and some other poor ******* got bumped.


Take your anecdotes and stack them up against the reality of the numbers. If
you want, I'll point you to the epidemiological data sources I used in my
medical editing work. Then you'll realize how silly the anecdotes sound in
comparison.

--
Ed Huntress