Greetings from the Great White North
Without producing any hate, tell me if you would support health care if it looked like this;
- Insurance companies cannot deny you coverage because of a pre-existing condition.
- Taxpayer money will not cover abortion
- You don’t personally pay health bills, just prescriptions
- Since Americans already pay among the lowest taxes in the developed world, they can live with them heightened just a little bit.
- The rich should be taxed more because they aren’t going to miss na extra few percent and the lower and middle class are taxed less.
Tell me what you think and if you’re against it, tell me why.
- Yes
- Given
- Impossible
- NOPE
- HECK NO
If this were the extent of the package (or even just the first two) no.
I think the system should be based at the state level, if MA wants socialized, let them have it… Also, let each state enact the system in steps, so that the effect of the various pieces can be noted and corrected for.
All the federal government should do is : apply the existing anti-trust laws to insurance companies and open the market opened across state lines.
Within any given system real health care reform needs to happen (not just an insurance fix), including a heavy emphasis on preventive care (Higher rates for smoking? Sure. Other
risky behaviors? Yup! I would actually go so far as to support a vice/luxury tax on high fructose sweeteners, fast food, frying oil, etc. (yes, knowing it would be passed on to consumers). The money raised from such a tax would go toward funding Medicaid/Medicare. Tighter restrictions on food stamps (only cover necessary food items, nothing subject to above tax).
I oppose no-copay plans because they favor irresponsibility. If we were all paying via taxes, a <$50 copay would help prevent hypochondriacs from sinking the system. If we controlled the costs in the markets, then having a copay generally lowers your premium or deductible.
As far as wealth redistribution through the progressive tax, this is fundamentally unjust (as in it denies justice and the equal right to private property). A consumption tax is far more reasonable (particularly a small luxury tax), as it allows anyone to avoid the burden by living frugally. Currently the poor don’t pay taxes, they tend to end up with a net benefit from the gov., the really rich pay most of the taxes, ala Marx.
Beyond those ideas there is the possibility of: health cooperatives, expanding HSA’s, small business and individual pools, penalizing ER abuse, etc.