How SHOULD Health Care Work?

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Vern, that’s not really fair. I’ve provided many examples in this thread alone of similar people. They are not mythical. They are real people, really struggling. Go back and reread their stories.
Sure.

Let me point out once again, a family is a responsibility, not a right. If you cannot afford to support a family, don’t start one.

Get a job. Work. Learn. Get promoted. When you can afford to support a family, then you can start one.

Yet there are those who would have us believe that most people are on minimum wage, have six kids and an invalid mother to support,
 
Sure.

Let me point out once again, a family is a responsibility, not a right. If you cannot afford to support a family, don’t start one.

Get a job. Work. Learn. Get promoted. When you can afford to support a family, then you can start one.

Yet there are those who would have us believe that most people are on minimum wage, have six kids and an invalid mother to support,
So poor people should not get married? If they get a job at, say for the continuation of this conversation, McDonalds, and they do as you say…work, learn, get promoted, and someday manage the place, they should not get married? Or the person who went to community college and works at an office who got promoted to office manager making, say, $30k. He should never get married? Since when did marriage be a priveledge for only those who make enough money? :confused:
 
Sure.

Let me point out once again, a family is a responsibility, not a right. If you cannot afford to support a family, don’t start one.

Get a job. Work. Learn. Get promoted. When you can afford to support a family, then you can start one.

Yet there are those who would have us believe that most people are on minimum wage, have six kids and an invalid mother to support,
Ooops. Hit “send” too soon. Go back to my examples.
One woman I know is a single mother who is trying to raise her children and all she is qualified for is this type of work. Going back to school is a wonderful option, but she simply doesn’t have time. She is working full time, and has to take care of 4 children in her SPARE time.
She was able to support her children until her husband died. So you’re “don’t get married if you don’t have enough money scenario” doesn’t work here.
I also know another woman who works at McDonalds. She is the mother of 6. Her husband’s job doesn’t offer affordable health insurance. Her children are covered by the state. She and her husband are uninsured.
He once had health insurance with his job. They made it too costly by raising the premiums and cutting his salary. He’s been searching for a better job, but the economy in our state is terrible, and he has had no luch. So you’re “don’t get married if you don’t have enough money scenario” doesn’t work here.
I know a man who works at Burger King because he lost his job to downsizing and hasn’t been able to find employment other than BQ since.
Again, you’re “don’t get married if you don’t have enough money scenario” doesn’t work here.
 
Yet there are those who would have us believe that most people are on minimum wage, have six kids and an invalid mother to support,
Ugh. Sorry for serial posting, but I can’t let this go. I don’t think anyone insinuated that most people are on minimum wage. I think we are saying that enough people are that we shouldn’t let them fall through the cracks.
 
So poor people should not get married?
A person who cannot support a family should defer marriage until he can support them. To do otherwise is to behave irresponsibily.
If they get a job at, say for the continuation of this conversation, McDonalds, and they do as you say…work, learn, get promoted, and someday manage the place, they should not get married?
When they can support a family. Not before.
Or the person who went to community college and works at an office who got promoted to office manager making, say, $30k. He should never get married?
When they can support a family. Not before.
Since when did marriage be a priveledge for only those who make enough money? :confused:
Marriage is neiter a privilege nor a right. It is a responsibility. If you cannot or will not carry out your responsibility, don’t take the vows.
 
Okay, I obviously don’t agree with your position at all, but we’ll have to agree to disagree on who should or should not get married. That said, please respond to my last post to each individual situation I laid out for you, where your “don’t get married if you can’t afford it” situation doesn’t apply. What about these people?
 
The reality of health care is that there is no correlation between health insurance and access to health care.

The reality of health care is that paperwork costs exceed the actual costs of delivering treatment.

The reality of health care is that junk lawsuits dramatically increase costs.

The reality of health care is that rising malpractice costs – driven by junk lawsuits – are making some specialties (like obstetrics) increasingly rare.

The reality of health care is that there are legal obstacles in the way of getting low cost health insurance – you can’t shop across state lines, small businesses can’t band together to bargain for employ health plans, and so on.
I almost mentioned this. About half of “medical” employees are there to interface with the insurance and governmental bodies involved in paying them. Then there are the “clearing houses” the collect the bills and send them to offices, and the insurance companies themselves, which act as litigator, sponge, and profit reducer, and the government which acts as a litigator, sponge, and profit reducer.

But, if you’re paying in cash, you have to pay more. Actually, they can pro bono a service in some cases to compensate.

The system is very strange and works surprisingly well for giving people a right to health care they don’t have. Rich people hate the system and poor people are ashamed to use it. Whataugonnado?
 
Okay. Therein lies our confusion here. 😃 I mean to say “who continue to make poor financial choices”. I’m sorry. I should have included that. I figured you’d know what I meant because the issue at hand was finances and health insurance. When I re-read my post, I understand your confusion. Sorry!
You don’t have to worry about me. I may get worked up about some issues, but I am not easily offended. I have been through much worse in my life and everyone at my age has.

The problem between us is that if the “victim” as first postulated is not sympathetic enough, you change the circumstances to make the “victim” more sympathetic. You did that with the single mother who was actually a widow, and now are doing it with the gunshot victim.

I don’t care how sympathetic the victim is. This may surprise you, but I want everyone to be healthy and to receive appropriate health care. This includes the baby born with only half a brain and the child rapist murderer serving a life sentence for his crime.
The difference is not about whether or not they should get treatment, but what they are required to do for themselves in a just society.

My concern is about how we bring that about, who pays for it and how it is done. My concern is about taking responsibility at all the different levels. No one gets a pass on his or her own responsibilty because something is hard. The person most concerned and responsible about my health is me, I believe the federal government should be the last resort for solving most of our problems, not the first.
 
Sure.

Let me point out once again, a family is a responsibility, not a right. If you cannot afford to support a family, don’t start one.

Get a job. Work. Learn. Get promoted. When you can afford to support a family, then you can start one.

Yet there are those who would have us believe that most people are on minimum wage, have six kids and an invalid mother to support,
Other cultures promote this type of activity by requiring dowries of some sort and/or continued support by the male’s parents.

It isn’t a fool proof system, but a different one to consider.

And in regards to this thread, the Church is to remove from a culture that which does not contain Truth and retain that which does.
 
A person who cannot support a family should defer marriage until he can support them. To do otherwise is to behave irresponsibily.
I object. Marriage is a means by which the poor, by means of joining their work and resources, can escape from their condition.

This is harder now than in the past, because the dollar is eroding, and there are less non-college level education jobs. So, the situation is more complex. To fix it requires complex systems to assist these people.

When I say that, I am not determined that they be tax systems. Normally, it is cultivating a change in the culture that is most important. But, the situation is eroding fairly quickly for one of this magnitude, so it seems precipitous to some… I am certain the means are available, even if the will is not.
 
I thought I had read every post in this thread at least once, and I don’t recall anyone saying that a gunshot victim should be turned away unless he has insurance, not even the “mean ones” like me and the other guy who posts a lot. It would be a violation of medical ethics and a criminal offense in most states

Personally I just don’t see how it is wrong to expect every adult to live in a way that allows him to take care of his own business. “We are all responsible” has become another way of saying, “No one is responsible.”

Who should be responsible for the medical bills of the gunshot victim? How about the guy shot him? Does anyone disagree with that? If it was a justified police shooting the state gets to collect whatever it can from the person who is really responsible.
I didn’t say anyone said that here…I’m saying that is what we also need to take into account…that the costs of that does get passed on to all of us. It’s not so much that people are going to doctors and getting in free…as a matter of fact, most doctors have a strict policy of paying at the time of service. But, many people without insurance visit emergency rooms for all types of ailments…ranging from mild to severe…(not just emergencies) and emergency room costs are more than a dr’s visit…so, I’m just pointing this out, that these costs are absorbed by all of us who pay for insurance. I never said anyone here said that…sorry if that was inferred, but that wasn’t my implication.
 
Sure.

Let me point out once again, a family is a responsibility, not a right. If you cannot afford to support a family, don’t start one.

Get a job. Work. Learn. Get promoted. When you can afford to support a family, then you can start one.

Yet there are those who would have us believe that most people are on minimum wage, have six kids and an invalid mother to support,
Everyone doesn’t have the same opportunities. Yes, in some ways, we ‘create’ our own opportunities…what is that saying? Luck happens when we prepare to do the right things? Something like that. But, many people…it’s cyclical…the welfare system is what needs reform. Welfare was never intended to give people a free ride for life…to keep generations dependent on it. I think that one should be on welfare for two years…that’s it. Like unemployment…when my husband was laid off many years ago…he was only allowed unemployment for a year…and thankfully, he found work before that, but the point is, that welfare should have the same stipulations. Not just…here’s your meal ticket for life, and you don’t need to ever go find work…or work that supports your family. If you give too many handouts, some (many) people will take advantage. Yes, welfare is necessary for those who truly need it…but many stay on it, and it just gets passed on as a ‘way of life’ for many generations.
 
The problem between us is that if the “victim” as first postulated is not sympathetic enough, you change the circumstances to make the “victim” more sympathetic. You did that with the single mother who was actually a widow, and now are doing it with the gunshot victim.
Right. I was doing that on purpose because it should not matter if the “victim” is sympathetic or not. that’s what I was trying to say. We are so judgemental of others…of who is deserving of our sympathy and our tax dollars, that we often don’t look at the big picture. WHY is that woman a single mother? Maybe she’s divorced, Maybe we was never married. Maybe she is a widow. We don’t know her story, therefore we should not judge her out of hand when she picks up her welfare check or is in need of government-subsidized health care.
 
Right. I was doing that on purpose because it should not matter if the “victim” is sympathetic or not. that’s what I was trying to say. We are so judgemental of others…of who is deserving of our sympathy and our tax dollars, that we often don’t look at the big picture. WHY is that woman a single mother? Maybe she’s divorced, Maybe we was never married. Maybe she is a widow. We don’t know her story, therefore we should not judge her out of hand when she picks up her welfare check or is in need of government-subsidized health care.
That is a fundamental problem with any governmental system, you give out aid too freely it can set itself up to be abused, and possibly more than that, it can systematically encourage conditions that causes those who are victims to stay “victims.” On the other end of the spectrum if aid given is too restrictive, it causes those who people actually think ought to receive the aid not receive it.

It reminds me of the aid given for Katrina. News stories cried out that aid wasn’t receive fast enough. The restrictions where loosened, then months later, news stories cried out that aid was being abused.

In my opinion this is one fundamental problems I see that might come with universal health care. The program will either balloon with expenditures as well as abuse, or the program will be underfunded, which will mean some range of people not getting health care, health care infrastructure decay, and immoral cost cutting being imposed such as euthanasia.
 
Right. I was doing that on purpose because it should not matter if the “victim” is sympathetic or not. that’s what I was trying to say. We are so judgemental of others…of who is deserving of our sympathy and our tax dollars, that we often don’t look at the big picture. WHY is that woman a single mother? Maybe she’s divorced, Maybe we was never married. Maybe she is a widow. We don’t know her story, therefore we should not judge her out of hand when she picks up her welfare check or is in need of government-subsidized health care.
Ah, but her circumstances do matter. Government is not giving away its own money. It is giving away money taken from the people who earned it. Government may have the duty to be a good steward, but the track record on that score is miserable.

As I tried to say before, if there is a living father for her children she has an obligation to demand just support from the father, even if she does not want to deal with him. That support is the absolute right of the children and even best for the father to be called to do his duty.

There is a big difference between being judgemental and exercising prudent judgement. A lot of people are deliberately blurring that line to avoid their own responsibility. Prudent judgement is not a vice, it is a virtue.

Deciding who is deserving of sympathy and who is deserving of our tax dollars are two different considerations.
 
Ah, but her circumstances do matter. Government is not giving away its own money. It is giving away money taken from the people who earned it. Government may have the duty to be a good steward, but the track record on that score is miserable. .
The problem is, then, who’s morality do we judge her by? As Catholics, we obviously belive that morality should never be relative, however, not everyone in the US is Catholic. Do we judge her by the athiest’s moral values? The Christian’s? Do you judge her by whether or not she’s broken any laws?
 
The problem is, then, who’s morality do we judge her by? As Catholics, we obviously belive that morality should never be relative, however, not everyone in the US is Catholic. Do we judge her by the athiest’s moral values? The Christian’s? Do you judge her by whether or not she’s broken any laws?
No I am not saying that we judge her at all. I am saying that we judge each case by objective criteria. The duty to support your children is not just Catholic teaching, it is enshrined in the statutes of our civil government. That is the very same government that you want to dispense other people’s money without determining whether or not the law has been followed. Is that your position or not?

I can even think of an out for you. Feel free to use it only if that is truly your position. Are you saying that we should assume that all recipients of government aid have complied with applicable law and are truly entitled to that aid? Then we can cut costs by getting rid of the Government Accounting Office and a lot of the state and federal prosecutors who deal with welfare fraud.
 
No I am not saying that we judge her at all. I am saying that we judge each case by objective criteria. The duty to support your children is not just Catholic teaching, it is enshrined in the statutes of our civil government. That is the very same government that you want to dispense other people’s money without determining whether or not the law has been followed. Is that your position or not?

I can even think of an out for you. Feel free to use it only if that is truly your position. Are you saying that we should assume that all recipients of government aid have complied with applicable law and are truly entitled to that aid? Then we can cut costs by getting rid of the Government Accounting Office and a lot of the state and federal prosecutors who deal with welfare fraud.
I’m not sure I understand what you are asking me. Do I think people should commit fraud to obtain benefits? Absolutely not. I’m not sure where fraud entered our conversation.

I’m saying (perhaps not clearly or eloquently enough) that sometimes people need the help of their government to help feed, shelter, clothe, and care for their families. I think that aid should come from family first, but in our current culture and society, unfortunately there are many broken families and this isn’t always possible…especially in the poorer parts of society. If a single women with kids needs gov’t assistance with food, shelter, or medical care, she should get it. Whether she is a single mom because she is a widow, or because she made a mistake and married then divorced the wrong guy, or because she made a mistake and had a child out of marriage when she couldn’t afford one shouldn’t matter. She still has a family to care for. And our gov’t should care.
 
Okay, I obviously don’t agree with your position at all, but we’ll have to agree to disagree on who should or should not get married. That said, please respond to my last post to each individual situation I laid out for you, where your “don’t get married if you can’t afford it” situation doesn’t apply. What about these people?
We should do what we can to help the poor – but bear in mind Saint Paul’s cautions about excessive charity and its negative effect on the recipients.

When you look at the poor, you find they fall into several categories:
  1. The chronically poor – the third or fourth generation on welfare.
  2. The metally ill.
  3. The drug and alcohol abusers.
  4. The unfortunate ones who simply cannot make a living, try as they might.
There are others, but this list will do for illustrative purposes. The first three categories defy our best efforts. The fourth category is the group that with help can become self-supporting.
 
There are others, but this list will do for illustrative purposes. The first three categories defy our best efforts. The fourth category is the group that with help can become self-supporting.
Okay, then. Based on my examples of real people, specifically, how do we help them?
 
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