Since I have no access to HC now, what difference would that make to me?
And how is that different than what I have now?
No, actually I'm not.
I've written reams about why single payer health care insurance won't work to our advantage, and about the shortcomings of socialized medicine, too.
But I am telling you that the fact that fifty million or more of us have either no health care, or health care that is becoming far too expensive and increasing more difficult to get, too, is going to drive this nation into some kind of socialized medicine.
Obviously if you have no HC coverage, something bad is better than nothing at all.
And with each layoff, and with each failing of the private HC industry to treat their cusomers with respect, the political pressure to FIX THIS CAPITALISTIC ******* MESS is going to increase
Yup. But wait, you forgot the period when the single payer makes the best and brightest even more outrageously weathy than they are already.
THEN the rationing will commence...once the market drives up the cost of HC to levels even higher than it is now...when HC is costing us not 17% of the GNP, but 25% of it.
One would hope it works that well, Tech.
After all, I HAVE a license, dude.
Unless you have some bizarre circumstances going on, you can have health insurance if you want it. I pay for it myself. I know others on here that do as well. My employer offered some outrageously expensive insurance that would have cost me triple what I pay per month for insurance.
Now I pay $400 per month for a family plan with dental coverage too. So, I don't know what you have going on, but insurance is affordable and available. I'm not a fan of the system as it stands. I think it needs a lot of reform, but citing incorrect statistics is not going to make it better. If you've looked at this issue as much as you say you have, you know there are not 46 million people that go year after year without health care coverage.
In economics they refer to the concept of "frictional unemployment" that's the number of people who are unemployed because they are either moving, changing jobs or careers, retraining etc. etc. This concept is clearly applicable to the health insurance situation, since it is tied to our jobs. There is a certain percentage of people that are "frictionally uninsured."
There is an additional percentage that are uninsured because they are "young and invincible"....or so they think. Better to spend that money for beer on Friday than insurance all month. The only insurance I maintained when I was young was car insurance. Then there are the people that qualify for a government program but have not entered it for whatever reason. (They don't know about it, they dislike government assistance in any form etc.).
I'm probably skipping a few, but you get the idea. It's a free country, people don't have to maintain insurance if they don't want to. But, then at the bottom, there is a residual of people who want insurance, but don't qualify for a government program, insurance is not offered by their employer and/or it's too expensive to purchase.
If the choice is spend Trillions to change to a more fucked up system, or pay for health insurance for those people, I'm all for just paying for a cpl million people to have health coverage.