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markbrumbaugh
Guest
Well done CPA2
Bingo.I don’t understand…are you saying that you would’t trust the government with a health care system any more than I would?
For a major example of this, simply look at the Great Depresseion of the 20th century.The government continues to promote the myth that the free market is the source of economic instability. “The government blames all problems on external influences beyond its control, and takes credit for any and all favorable occurrences…The government’s behavior documents the reality that **government is the major source of economic instability **(Milton Friedman).”
You understand!For a major example of this, simply look at the Great Depresseion of the 20th century.
All the programs designed to draw us out of the Great Depression simply caused us to wallow in it. Did you ever wonder why it was simply called “A Depression” in Europe? Those guys broke out of it long before we did. Why? Because they let the market cycle back up again on its own.
The great depression was neither governement(at the surface) nor bussines fault. It was inside bankers. We had inflation in the money supply( which was still backed by gold), then a quick large deflation. While most got poor, a few super rich got much richer. Now that money isn’t backed by anything tangable different rules apply.You understand!
During the 1930’s government blamed business for the Depression. (Some things never change.) It was the fault of the capitalism! Keynes entered the picture and monetary policy has never been the same since. Additionally, “**the Keynesian revolution…provided both an appealing justification and a prescription for extensive government intervention **(Friedman).”
Milton Friedman says that the Federal Reserve failed to create bank liquidity. The Fed tightened credit when it should have eased credit. “The depression was a failure of government in an area in which the government had from the first been assigned responsibility – ‘To coin money, (and) regulate the Value thereof’ (Friedman).’
Douglas Noland, like Misses and Rothbard, believes that “Depressions are the unavoidable consequence of reckless boom time money and credit excess, rampart speculation and the resulting severe structural and economic distortions. At some point, bank reserves and ‘liquidity’ become virtually irrelevant to the greater issue of intractable economic imbalances and maladjustments, and the instability of debt structures. This was the case after the ‘Roaring 20’s,’ and it is once again the case today.”
I like your suggestions of how to “really fix the system”: just stop using it! Makes me wonder why people were scared of the supposed ‘death panels’: they should have been falling over themselves to sign up to “fix the system”…Let the market figure it out.
If people can’t afford private insurance, people won’t buy insurance, if people can’t afford the doctor, people won’t go to the doctor, if people don’t go to the doctor, the doctor will not be able to afford the practice, if the doctor can’t afford the practice, then the doctor goes out of business.
I wonder what the medical establishment could bear without insurance and for how long?
Some might say: But the people will get sick and die or the prices will rise incredibly for the rich.
Reply: Better get to work to really fix the system and not base it on socialistic policies. It’s a never-ending upward spiral of prices as long as the money keeps flowing from who/whatever.
The government should stay out of the charity business.
Ahhhh, you miss the point. The Great Depression would have simply been another recession if Government had let the cycle ride out on its own. That’s what the foreign governments did and they broke out of their recesssions years before we did.The great depression was neither governement(at the surface) nor bussines fault. It was inside bankers. We had inflation in the money supply( which was still backed by gold), then a quick large deflation. While most got poor, a few super rich got much richer. Now that money isn’t backed by anything tangable different rules apply.
Sometimes things get “fixed” by getting out of the way, in this case, getting socialists out of the way.I like your suggestions of how to “really fix the system”: just stop using it! Makes me wonder why people were scared of the supposed ‘death panels’: they should have been falling over themselves to sign up to “fix the system”…![]()
Debt is a huge time bomb. The United States is the greatest debtor nation in the history of mankind. The government admitted to a $500 billion deficit for 2004. The government does not count the billions that they borrow from the Social Security Fund, or increased funding for the war in Iraq. Additionally, the average credit card debt in America is at a record $8,500. Household mortgage debt is also at an all time high. Households must spend a record 18.3% of their after-tax income just to service their mortgage debt. By any standard, we were in the middle of the greatest debt bubble of all time in 2004.The great depression was neither governement(at the surface) nor bussines fault. It was inside bankers. We had inflation in the money supply( which was still backed by gold), then a quick large deflation. While most got poor, a few super rich got much richer. Now that money isn’t backed by anything tangable different rules apply.
When exactly did the “socialists” get in the way? What was being done to “fix” the system before the socialist bogeyman got us? If the non-socialists saw the plunder and did nothing are they any better?Sometimes things get “fixed” by getting out of the way, in this case, getting socialists out of the way.
potential discussion points:
Lots of reasons to vote against national health care:
In fact, if you are really interested in learning about this, there are a lot of threads here at CAF on health care and Obamacare and nationalized health care and socialized medicine. So, use the search function. It’s been discussed a LOT.
Why would you want a humongous bureaucracy like the post office or the DMV or the IRS being responsible for YOUR health care? The people working at these bureaucracies that will control your access to medical care or health care are not doctors or nurses; they are basically just clerks with no medical training.
There are SO many horror stories with universal health care. And the name is even misleading. It’s really enforced one-size-fits-all access to a waiting list. If you are too sick, you will get a “pain pill” because if you use up too much money, the doctors will be forced to deny care to you.
In Canada and the UK, there are stories about long delays for admittance to a hospital. Not enough MRI’s. All kinds of problems. You need to read both sides. Check with www.heritage.org There is a big debate going on.
And then you need to look at how the words are being spun.
It’s not universal and it’s not health care. One minute it’s about hospital care; then it’s about health care; and then it’s about getting insurance.
Keep in mind that right now, already, the problems are CAUSED by Congress because existing laws have created problems getting insurance and existing laws have prevented hospitals from getting reimbursed from insurance companies. Medicare reimbursement affects what insurance will pay. The IRS will not allow full deduction of costs or tax credits and Congress sets that. Why not let individuals buy HSA policies? They work and people like them, but the government WILL NOT permit them. Interstate competition works. Lots of issues. Caused BY government.
Basic health care is not carried out by hospitals. Or doctors. BASIC health care is on you. If YOU smoke. Or if YOU drink a lot. Or if you are overweight. That is something you control. A lot of health issues can be controlled by eating the proper foods. Or getting some basic exercise.
Some people need mammograms early in life; others don’t, but the administration has set up criteria for late mammograms.
IN FACT, * [It was Ezeckial Emmanual, pretty sure] stated the other day that people who are overweight might be denied medical care. In other words, they will control what you eat.
With government controlled health care, you will have no appeal and no place to go if you don’t like what you get. You have to take what they give you. Free and open competition works. Everywhere it is tried.
Some current articles:
humanevents.com/article.php?id=35314*
Excerpt:
The market-oriented health care reforms they [Republicans] champion – letting individuals deduct their medical expenses from their taxes, allowing insurance companies to operate across state lines, tort reform to reduce costly malpractice suits to reduce health care costs – aren’t being considered by the Democrats and will never be. This impasse can only be settled at the ballot box in November when GOP officials are betting that Democrats will suffer heavy losses in the House and the Senate.
lucianne.com/thread/?artnum=526787
dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1255858/Neglected-lazy-nurses-Kane-Gorny-22-dying-thirst-rang-police-beg-water.html
redstate.com/tags/index.php?tag=health-care
humanevents.com/article.php?id=35925
humanevents.com/article.php?id=35922
humanevents.com/article.php?id=35929
humanevents.com/article.php?id=35916 [scroll down to abortion]
England has nationalized / universal health care. But people over 55, people like your parents, are leaving. Why are they leaving? Why, when they are getting into the years when they are likely to need more health care, are they leaving England?
The reality is that what they call “universal” health care, just isn’t very good; certainly not good enough to encourage them to stay in their home country.
lucianne.com/thread/?artnum=526788
dailymail.co.uk/news/arti…er-abroad.html
Supposedly they can get the same “universal” health care in other European Union countries.
I don’t know.
A lot of Europeans are moving to the United States.
The post office, the military, and the government space programs have all become humongous bureaucracies, slow to change and they have to be forced to adopt changes, usually by people who get punished for forcing the bureaucrats out of their comfort zones.
Think of how inefficient government monopolies are compared with competitive private sector enterprises. The telephone company used to be a monopoly. It was a very good service. However, there was zero innovation and the cost was very high. The old AT&T did a lot of things well. They invented “C” for example. But when the government finally allowed competition, innovation skyrocketed and costs dropped hugely. People can complain about their present service, but usually if you’re not happy you can change your internet provider or your carrier and you can buy telephones anywhere. It used to be that if you wanted a phone, you HAD to buy it from AT&T; they were big, heavy, clunky, expensive and designed to last 50 years or more, and except for a few push button models, they mostly had rotary dials. Now you have a huge variety of features, none of which were even thinkable when AT&T had a government monopoly.
Innovation comes from the private sector.
Why on earth would we want to turn the most important life-giving or life-endangering sector over to the government?
Actually, if left to free and open interstate competition, the insurance companies serve us just fine.The worst possible thing we can do is nothing.
What competition? There’s like 3 holding companies that own basically every insurance brand you can think of.Actually, if left to free and open interstate competition, the insurance companies serve us just fine.
So you would rather have just one holding company, i.e. the federal government?What competition? There’s like 3 holding companies that own basically every insurance brand you can think of.
Holodomor, The Great Leap Forward – explain that “bogeyman” to the 50 million dead.When exactly did the “socialists” get in the way? What was being done to “fix” the system before the socialist bogeyman got us? If the non-socialists saw the plunder and did nothing are they any better?
Some of these views would be laughable if they weren’t so (and I shrink from using that very, very overused and tired word) scary.
Ideology at the service of people is one thing but people at the service of ideology?![]()
Yup.So you would rather have just one holding company, i.e. the federal government?