Quote from AAAintheBeltway:
If good intentions were results, we could all just vote for the most far-out liberal and live happily ever after. Unfortunately, there is this thing called reality that intervenes.
How much of the country's GDP would you devote to "free" health care? How would you ration it? Because I've got news for you pal, there isn't enough of it to go around. And when someone else is paying, people feel very free to go to the doctor every time they have the sniffles or anything else. Make them pay for it out of pocket and they magically find ways to cope.
The first thing that happens in socialized medicine--please let's call it by its proper name-- is that the government tells you which doctor you can see and how often. They tell you which operation you cna have, which one you can wait months or years for, and which one you can never have. Guess old Uncle Ernie will just have to deal with that bum ticker himself, but at least it didn't cost him anything, other than half his paycheck. Better to have the best in prenatal care for that tsunami of illegals coming here for the free care. Hey, choices have to be made, and Hillary Clinton is eager to make them for all of us.
Medical schools will have to be modified somewhat. Of course the government will be in charge of deciding who goes and what they are allowed to study. Don't want to waste resources on a lot of superfluous plastic surgeons, do we? As in all socialist utopias, there will be a few exceptions. Members of congress and the administration will continue to get first rate luxury care. Isn't that what's government's all about? Establishing priorities.
So I take it that your answer is that none of the Republican Presidential candidates support the right to life for poor working people who cannot afford health care. That in essence, they only support the right to life across the board for unborn people - once you are born, your on your own.
That's all I asked. It was a simple question, and di not require a round about convoluted excuse for the Republican stance on the real right to life.
Now may I inquire why this Republican administration supports universal health care in Iraq, paid for by Americans, but not universal health care in America? (We won't even get into why the same administration is opposed to Iraqis having arms to ward off a tyrannical government or foreign invaders.)