Quote from jueco2005:
From a philosophical point of view you are 100% right. But this is not philosophy 101. This is real life.
We are forced to pay for so many things that It doesn't bother me to pay for a million more.
If you oppose healthcare, you must also oppose having a city, state or federal police. You must also oppose the army, the border patrol, immigration and many other stuff that we normally pay for (way more than healthcare) without much bitching in forums like this one.
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