What gives your plan the moral highground here Prince? I'm not seeing it.
Would having a decentralized health care network be so frakkin' abhorent to you that you refuse to consider trying to help make it happen?
Quite frankly, I don't think it will or can work. It lacks any coherent pooling of resources and management thereof. Whereas, with the NHS (as an example) it has been proven, over time, to work effectively in providing care to the people, even to the poorest and most disadvantaged.
Your loose network of charities and generous doctors has never been proven to do anything more than help with a few cases here and there, which has great merit, please don't get me wrong - but in terms of equality and getting care to everyone who needs it - it just does not hold water.
You have
not shown otherwise. You've given theoretical, ivory tower arguments. Some of your colleagues here have taken pot shots at other national systems, but of course ignoring the log in their own eye, so to speak (which in fairness you've not done).
I've heard whining about some individuals having to pay more. I've heard whining about not wanting to pay for someone else's healthcare. I've heard complaining that the taxes aren't transparent enough and that states
must pay for this through sales taxes - which I find a purely puerile and bizarre argument.
I've heard defense of the current system as being incredibly expensive, but worth the money because it produces better results. That argument basically ignores all available data and reason.
What I have not heard is why other nations cover their entire population with less expense
per patient and
as a percentage of GDP than the United States, yet socialised medical care is some sort of nationalised evil that
must increase costs because a few tiny economic professors said so.
What I have not heard is why most Canadians, Brits, and Swedes
like their healthcare systems and find the American system to be backward. Meanwhile, arguments here try and claim the opposite is true - again in the face of all available data and reason.
Lastly, I have not heard a counter proposal that is proven to lower costs
and provide equality in healthcare for everyone. I'm impressed that you have an alternative system in mind Prince, and I respect your point of view over many others, but you have no real evidence of its value. You have a patchwork system already in place that fails to do what you are asking it to do in much greater numbers.
It amazes me that a public pooling of resources is looked upon with so much disdain, whereas a private pooling of resources (which essentially is all an insurance company is) is looked upon with such respect by some.