E
Ender
Guest
Because it is simply not possible. Our limits may be higher than those of Bangladesh, but we have limits nonetheless. As a practical matter, unlimited health care cannot be provided by any government. Rationing is unavoidable, the only question is the manner in which it will be done. The NHS does it by increasing wait times … and refusing treatment. For example (from their own statistics):Why is that the only remedy? Why can’t we think to increase it to a maximum for everyone?
Patients still waiting for a 1st outpatient appointment following a GP referral
For (e.g.) the London area, only 43% of patients were seen in less than five weeks (123,114 of 286,627).
Not living in England I don’t really know anything about the NHS but perhaps you can help explain these statistics:
June 2008: Decision to admit -1,209,177 … Patients admitted - 1,069,193
So - does that mean in that month alone almost 140,000 patients were refused treatment (and this does not include the over 270,000 Removals, Deferrals, and Suspensions)?
performance.doh.gov.uk/waitingtimes/index.htm
No, he would have left the things of Caesar for Caesar to figure out. Wishful thinking is no substitute for reality, and the reality is that it is irrational to believe that everyone can be given the same level of health care.Oh, Jesus would have used accounting to view an economy over human life?
Do we? Are our Christian obligations satisfied by helping only Americans? Isn’t everyone our neighbor? Why aren’t you calling for world wide universal health care? Isn’t that what Jesus would want?This is America and we most certainly have the resources.
Demonizing your opponents is not actually an argument and adds nothing to the discussion.The biggest majority of this discussion, nationwide, is about money and not about what’s morally right…
Ender