Still not sure how it relates to my post. My point was that Cruz, the rest of the Republicans, and the Democrats with the exception of Sanders, have no intention of making any meaningful changes to health care policy.
That is completely untrue. They don't intend to make any changes that you LIKE, perhaps, but that's not the same as "no meaningful changes". There is no reason whatsoever to believe that Cruz, for example, will not make every effort to keep his campaign promises, and one of his major promises is a repeal of Obamacare and institution of a free-market healthcare system. Again, it might not be what you like or want, but no one can say that that isn't "meaningful change".
No, I've read his proposals, and they don't make any meaningful changes. They "replace" the individual mandate with tax incentives. That's the same thing with a different name. The only meaningful change Cruz intends to make is getting rid of guarantee issue which is fine in-and-of itself (it's an irrational requirement). But guarantee issue is the justification for the mandate/tax-incentives. Without, there's no reason to gift the insurance industry with mandated customers.
Yeah, um . . . tax incentives are NOT the same thing as a mandate.
That would be the source of our disagreement then. Functionally, and financially, they are exactly the same thing. One just sounds better because it's framed as a 'discount'. But when you think it through, the net result is the same - people who don't do as they're told pay more in taxes.
No, they aren't "functionally and financially exactly the same thing". I can name one extremely major difference between the two: a mandate, by definition, is MANDATORY. A tax incentive, by definition, is not.
I think being voluntary and allowing free choice does a lot more than just "sound better", but maybe that's just me. But maybe if you just start from the assumption that the government has a right to your money whenever and however, then I'm probably not going to be able to make you understand.
Look at it this way: one gets tax incentives to own a home by way of mortgage tax deductions. Would you see that as different from a mandate that everyone MUST purchase a home or be penalized?