Ron Paul says healthcare not a right

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Kassz007, Jul 16, 2009.

  1. I disagree completely.
    It is necessary to correctly define INALIENABLE RIGHTS in order to frame the debate on healthcare, or any other services that anyone cares to discuss. The underlying philosophy lays an important foundation upon which we agree.

    THEN, with that established (what constitutes a RIGHT), we can agree that there are also "common good" services that do exist and are deemed basic necessities by whatever society at large you freely belong to. In a civilized society, we choose to make sure there is level of "safety net" and public provision of the same, at SOME level. If you dont like your current societal definition of these services and the extent to which they are provided and who pays for them and on what terms, then work within the societal reform system to CHANGE the rules, or move to a different SOCIETY.

    We should then be able to have rational debate regarding WHO should pay, how much, when, and expect to receive what. That government will be inefficient and incompetent is assumed and expected, unfortunately.
    Odysseus
     
    #121     Jul 17, 2009
  2. I posted this on the ZeroHedge health care rant, and I'll post it here too.

    Most of the 'philosophical' arguments being presented against any level of socialized health provision is patently flawed.

    --

    There is nothing philosophically wrong about "stealing" from the rich, lucky and opportunistic and redistributing such wealth such that lives are saved. Freedom, when it directly and categorically culminates in the hoarding of material goods, creating and watching television shows such as "Paris Hilton's BFF", is nothing more than a systematic extermination of the less endowed or less capable. Just like every worker must be guaranteed a minimum wage (to prevent outright slavery), every human being must be guaranteed a bare minimum of health care so long as society engages in such obtuse wastes of capital. The reason why the supreme court is able to overturn legislation is because the actions of the Majority can, simply put, be Wrong (i.e. pre-WWII Germany). Like anything in life, what constitutes "wrong" is a highly subjective and contentious matter. But when you have near-fraudulent and devious and opportunistic drug lobbies and health insurance companies, absurd television shows and intense and increasing concentrations of wealth in individuals and parties that increasingly do not engage in the type of altruism the author is describing, when do we say 'enough is enough.' I dare anyone to read The Grapes of Wrath by Steinbeck and argue that such a wealthy society should allow such a poor standard of "living" for anyone, never mind the unlucky farmers and children portrayed in that novel. Because if there was 0 "socialized" health care support for the weakest among us, it is practically a certainty that, at variant points of time, the majority will tighten its altruism in favour of producing the next Bachelorette television series or some other worthy endeavor of the sort.

    ---

    Note that I am not commenting on the relevant economics, efficiencies or exact allocation of socialized care.
     
    #122     Jul 17, 2009
  3. To me they are all the same. (national defense, healthcare, police and the city hall) Either we have them all or we dont have them at all.

    LETS PUT HYPOCRISY ASIDE PLEASE.
     
    #123     Jul 17, 2009
  4. Health care is not a right that is to be provided for you.

    Health care is your own personal responsibility.

    US childhood obesity has increased by 3 times since 1980. 16% of children are obese. 32% are overweight. Results in diabetes, high blood pressure, asthma, etc. More than 60% of adult Americans are overweight, 25% are obese. Heart disease, cancer, arthritis, etc.

    That is an excellent indicator on how well people are taking care of themselves. How can the health care industry or any government plan keep up with what most people are doing to themselves?

    If health care was "free" would people take better care of themselves or just the opposite? Ever see the way people eat when there is lots of free food? Before health insurance was commonly provided by most employers, people took much better care of themselves, they dared not get sick as doctor visits were paid in cash.

    Good job to everyone on their way towards self-induced health problems, whether through ignorance, apathy or outright defiance. The health care industry consumes $2 Trillion per year to try to fix what has been done, $6700 per person. A ''free'' doctor for a quick fix so you can continue to abuse yourselves. A "free" health care bailout for the wrong that you have done to yourselves.

    Morbidly obese Michael Moore makes a good poster boy fighting for your rights.
     
    #124     Jul 17, 2009
  5. LET ME SHOW YOU THE HYPOCRISY HERE

    You claim healtcare is an individual matter, not social. But instead defense is a "common" stuff and we should all pay for it.

    Let me see. The last time this country was invaded was 1812. ALMOST 200 years ago. I would not be so concern with defense, specially when the border is virtually open to illegals, very hypocritical.

    ON the hand, more people die from hospitals "malpractice" than for the next top 5 causes of death. You see..........there is the real war.

    IF YOU WANT TO KNOW
    about the difference of individual vs. community needs I suggest you take PSY-101.
    IT REALLY HELPS.
     
    #125     Jul 17, 2009
  6. I CANT TOLERATE THE IGNORANCE ANYMORE!!!

    You need to see the movie FOOD INC ASAP.

    When you see what you eat, what people eat, maybe then you will reconsider what you think you "know"

     
    #126     Jul 17, 2009
  7. I don't eat any processed, factory food at all. You think people should blame the food industry for their health? Like they don't have a choice of what to eat?
     
    #127     Jul 17, 2009
  8. When you have only 4 producers of food in the country you have a lot of choice of what to eat.

    What about the hospital's malpractice deaths. It is bigger than the next top 5 causes of death. Look it you yourself.

    What then?? Who is responsible??

    WE ALL ARE. That's my point. I am no extremist and I never have an extremist point of view.
     
    #128     Jul 17, 2009
  9. Then where are all the jobs that were supposed to be created by the Bush tax cuts to the rich? For 8 years, the rich knew their taxes weren’t going up, but yet the private sector job market has been dwindling for years.
    Where do you get the figure that they waste 98 cents out of every dollar and what’s your reasoning behind it? A lot of Republicans have the notion that when government taxes people, the money is somehow thrown down a toilet. That’s not true. The sad truth is that if taxes were lowered on the rich and the government cut spending as a result, unemployment would skyrocket. All those people working for the government would be out of a job and most would not be rehired by the rich in the private sector because just like you said, rich people hoard the money. Trickle down economics is the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard.
     
    #129     Jul 19, 2009
  10. I don’t trade for a living, but I do buy my own insurance because no employer I’ve ever worked for provided it. My premium has gone from $135 to $272 in the past 6 years. I can safely say that my income has not doubled in the time period to make up for it.

    You are right, I constantly worry that if I lose it for whatever reason, I won’t be insurable again for whatever reason. I don’t know that universal health care is the solution either, but something’s gotta give. Our system isn’t working.
     
    #130     Jul 19, 2009