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59   MarkInSF   2010 Mar 31, 6:05pm  

AdHominem:

Is it governments job to provide police protection?

Is it governments job to ensure waterways are not polluted?

Is it governments job to provide for proper sewer systems and waste disposal?

Is it governments job to provide inspection for building standards and food safety?

Is it governments job to provide a system of roadways?

Is it governments job to provide a national defense?

Is it governments job to provide regulation for smog emissions from tailpipes?

Is it governments job to provide regulation for banks so they don't claim "profits" and run off with your money?

Is it governments job to provide regulation for life/fire/health insurance companies so they don't claim "profits" and run off with your money?

I'm assuming your answer to all these is *NO*. Though I'd love to hear why you'd answer yes to any.

60   PeopleUnited   2010 Mar 31, 6:21pm  

Mark,

Is it governments job to take from those who have and give to those who do not? I would assume your answer is a whole hearted YES! Since I asked the questions first perhaps you could also answer first? What is governments job? Education, Clothing, Housing, Nutrition, Entertainment, Employment, Finance, Meaning?

What is our job?

61   Â¥   2010 Mar 31, 6:25pm  

And if you are against rationing based on ability to pay, then what other things do you also think we need government to provide for people?

we need a government to guarantee access to everything that is needed to become, and remain, a productive member of society, without regard to ability to pay.

Your minarchist world would be no utopia, even if you could find an economy on the planet run like one. No taxes just means sky-high rents and land values, a Monopoly®-game economy of a few big winners and many people shut out of the wealth game.

62   MarkInSF   2010 Mar 31, 6:34pm  

AdHominem says

Mark,
Is it governments job to take from those who have and give to those who do not? I would assume your answer is a whole hearted YES! Since I asked the questions first perhaps you could also answer first? What is governments job? Education, Clothing, Housing, Nutrition, Entertainment, Employment, Finance, Meaning?
What is our job?

In answer to your questions, mostly NO. Basic survival, yes it does. That's the whole point of police protection or national defense. It would be a little absurd to provide police protection to someone you're willing to let starve to death. So yes, government is responsible for feeding people, at least at a basic level. And I'd add it's responsible for providing many other basics too, as I implied in my questions, along with some education.

63   PeopleUnited   2010 Mar 31, 6:40pm  

Troy says

a productive member of society

That is an interesting and ambiguous concept. Especially in a country founded on the pursuit of happiness principle. If my pursuit of happiness does not meet your definition of "productive member of society" then what? Do you round me up and put me in the ghetto, prison or the work camp? It is dangerous to think in your vague idealistic terms. Furthermore the most important criticism of your line of thinking is that it places the collective and society above the individual. As if a woman or man has to bow to the will of the society, or sacrifice himself for the collective. That is not liberty. That is not what Patrick Henry stood for, and I dare say it is not what the blood of the Revolution was spilled for.

If it truly is governments job to provide all these things, it becomes just another tool of the corporations to make money in the "service" of providing these things. Never mind the fact that EVERYTHING the government has it must TAKE from someone else.

64   MarkInSF   2010 Mar 31, 6:40pm  

CBOEtrader says

Not only does no one seem to be able to answer the rationing question, but most supporters of this bill deny the necessity of discussing the issue.

Nonsense. It hasn't been discussed much in the public sphere in the US, but the limits of public funded heath care has been debated for decades in other countries.

We have public eduction in the US, but we don't guarantee a free PhD for everybody who wants it. This is not rocket science.

65   MarkInSF   2010 Mar 31, 6:43pm  

AdHominem says

That is an interesting and ambiguous concept.

So where is your line? I assume from all your posts you think the government should provide nothing, and citizens should have no legally enforceable financial obligations to one another. Still waiting to hear otherwise.

66   PeopleUnited   2010 Mar 31, 7:01pm  

MarkInSF says

AdHominem says

Mark,

Is it governments job to take from those who have and give to those who do not? I would assume your answer is a whole hearted YES! Since I asked the questions first perhaps you could also answer first? What is governments job? Education, Clothing, Housing, Nutrition, Entertainment, Employment, Finance, Meaning?

What is our job?

In answer to your questions, mostly NO. Basic survival, yes it does. That’s the whole point of police protection or national defense. It would be a little absurd to provide police protection to someone you’re willing to let starve to death. So yes, government is responsible for feeding people, at least at a basic level. And I’d add it’s responsible for providing many other basics too, as I implied in my questions, along with some education.

Fair enough. We are mostly on the same page then. And as far as basic survival, that is not the job of the government either. It is your responsibility. It is my responsibility. The universal truth is that we are responsible for ourselves and our neighbors regardless of what government we have.

The problem is that these problems are local problems. They need to be handled on the local level. Now some communities may choose to have government handle them formally (I don't prefer this because it is a pass the buck type of attitude but it may work on a small scale where people are more accountable to one another), and other communities will have other solutions based on charity and personal responsibility.

We also have to make allowance for deliberate poverty. Some people actually choose to live like bums and do not want to work for a living. In a truly free society they need to be allowed (not encouraged) to do so. They also need to be allowed to suffer the consequences. I agree that it is a bit strange for a city to provide police protection to someone who its citizens are willing to let suffer and die (I am not condoning or suggesting that) and yet our life and laws are full of such contradictions. We will fight tooth and nail to save a whale or and injured bird and yet we slaughter pigs, chickens and cattle by the thousands every day. We will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to fight to save the life of a premature baby but that same aged baby is chopped to bits and sucked through a tube as a matter of routine by the abortionist.

Rather it is our responsibility as individuals to deal with each problem and person individually. There is no substitute for personal responsibility. Take care of yourself and those around you. If we do this, then we don't need a big government that becomes a parasite and tool of the corporations.

67   EBGuy   2010 Apr 1, 1:06pm  

Given that we spend 16% of our GDP on healthcare, with France coming in a distant 2nd place with 11%, we will have an immediate need to ration care.
Admittedly, this is from the ABA (but so be it -- it's a nice summary). Cost containment doesn't have to be a dirty word: Over time, there have been innovations in cost containment among health insurers in a multi-payer system. Out-patient surgery, which is less expensive than in-patient surgery, is now common. Pre-certification has reduced hospital admissions and concurrent review has reduced length-of-stay in hospitals.

68   Â¥   2010 Apr 1, 1:45pm  

AdHominem says

As if a woman or man has to bow to the will of the society, or sacrifice himself for the collective. That is not liberty. That is not what Patrick Henry stood for, and I dare say it is not what the blood of the Revolution was spilled for.

ZZzzzzz. The 19th century came after the 18th century, and a lot was learned about "liberty", and how the rich can seize it from others.

A grand total of 13,000 people voted for President in 1792. That time of villages and towns is long, long gone.

FWIW, I'd like to think a straight land value tax would be enough, or nearly enough, to support the modern-day US of A. Kneecap rentierism, and it'd be a lot easier for everyone to make ends meet in this country.

This site is rife with people proud of the rental property empires they are assembling. Makes me sick.

69   CBOEtrader   2010 Apr 1, 1:49pm  

MarkInSF says

Nonsense. It hasn’t been discussed much in the public sphere in the US, but the limits of public funded heath care has been debated for decades in other countries.

Every country does this in a different way. There is no default method. Canada uses a very different method than Germany. It would be prudent to know how our glorious leaders and their hired army of bureaucrats plan to ration care here.

MarkInSF says

We have public eduction in the US, but we don’t guarantee a free PhD for everybody who wants it. This is not rocket science.

Now we're getting somewhere. So, what is the healthcare equivalent to a high school diploma? Fixing broken bones, flu shots, etc? Then what is the college and PhD healthcare equivalent? Cancer treatment, heart transplant? Obviously hi tech and expensive cutting edge treatments will still be there. Since everyone can't have access to the most expensive treatments, who does? No one? Only the rich? Only government employees? How is it decided that you are one of the important people who has access to top tier care, whereas someone else should only get high school diploma level care? You claim this is not rocket science, but no one has any good answers. Many supporters of this bill even seem to believe that by some magical efficiency fairy, the government will have enough money to buy presidential level care for everyone.

70   CBOEtrader   2010 Apr 1, 1:54pm  

Troy says

ZZzzzzz. The 19th century came after the 18th century, and a lot was learned about “liberty”, and how the rich can seize it from others.

Troy, are you really saying that the constitutional ideals are out of date?...

Troy says

FWIW, I’d like to think a straight land value tax would be enough,

...while at the same time advocating the Georgist philosophy that has barely been discussed since 1890?
Just pointing our the silliness of that logic.

Though, to be honest I think there is a lot of value in the Georgist philosophy. It would be interesting to see a microcosm of this tax system.

71   EBGuy   2010 Apr 2, 5:05am  

@CBOEtrader, End of life care is the low hanging fruit; everyone knows it. Maybe there will be a serious discussion after the next election cycle. Research suggests that this wouldn't fall under the category of rationing (bring on the death panels)...
The reality is that patients want to have a say in what happens to them when they're sick and, more often than not, they don't want heroic and often hugely costly measures to save them. In the new study, researchers found that more than 90 percent of the adults who had living wills requested either limited care or "comfort care" at the end of life. Only 1.9 percent (a total of 10 patients out of 3,746) asked for "all care possible." Doctors must acknowledge this and have honest and informative conversations with their patients. In another study, published in 2008, researchers found that end-of-life discussions resulted in less aggressive care—including ventilation and resuscitation—and earlier hospice enrollment, which equaled better quality of life for patients.
I'll give you this, though, the first study may be biased as, by its nature, it selected the population willing to think about end of life issues (by virtue of them having living wills).

72   Vicente   2010 Apr 2, 6:35am  

I fail to understand why we go to the expense and red tape of Death Panels?

Why can't their family members leave their elders out in the woods to be eaten by wolves?

I suppose we need them for people with no directly identifiably living relatives though.

73   simchaland   2010 Apr 2, 9:08am  

Soylent Green

74   elliemae   2010 Apr 2, 10:37am  

End of Life Care is a huge money-making endeavor. Hospices are paid $140/day (minimum) to provide care for patients, which translates into a weekly nursing visit, aide visits 3x/wk, chaplain visit monthly and social work visits every month, plus medications & supplies - even if the patient is in a nursing home receiving 24 hour care. Hospices are springing up everywhere, and their marketing practices are unbelievable. They'll tell you that you don't have to be dying to receive hospice care.

Hospice does have its place, but as long as they're allowed to sign anyone one and figure it out later, hire non-medical marketers to evaluate a patient, and are paid the same amount whether the person is already receiving 24 hour care in a board & care or nursing home, this care is expensive and often redundant. Physicians should feel comfortable to prescribe end of life meds without the added expense to the system of placing the patient on hospice.

People do want to be comfortable at the end of their lives - but they should have options beyond someone shoving hospice down their throat. Especially if they're in a hospital that owns a hospice or home health company they're pushing on the patient, or if the doctor is the medical director of the hospice. There's a lot of reform needed.

75   elliemae   2010 Apr 2, 10:37am  

Might I add that the biggest changes to hospice occured during the republican administration? There's huge home health/hospice lobby...

76   PeopleUnited   2010 Apr 11, 1:28pm  

elliemae says

Might I add that the biggest changes to hospice occured during the republican administration?

and therefore are bad

77   elliemae   2010 Apr 11, 3:14pm  

AdHominem says

elliemae says


Might I add that the biggest changes to hospice occured during the republican administration?

and therefore are bad

No, they're bad period. But since some people around here consistently assign blame I thought I'd head that one off at the pass.

78   PeopleUnited   2010 Apr 11, 3:58pm  

Hey, you are the one who brought up the Republican association. Anyways hospice is only bad because it is another program where the recipients get benefits that they don't pay for, while the government pays for "services" that likely would not be paid for by anyone if they had a choice. In other words it is NOT a free market, just another wealth transfer scheme dressed up in a bleeding heart social program.

79   elliemae   2010 Apr 11, 4:21pm  

AdHominem says

Hey, you are the one who brought up the Republican association. Anyways hospice is only bad because it is another program where the recipients get benefits that they don’t pay for, while the government pays for “services” that likely would not be paid for by anyone if they had a choice. In other words it is NOT a free market, just another wealth transfer scheme dressed up in a bleeding heart social program.

we all pay medicare taxes out of our paychecks. hospice patients get benefits that they do pay for - and the program saves money. It's just rampant with fraud. People would (and do) pay for hospice if they need to, and people choose to have hospice services. Once again, you don't know whereof you speak.

I don't even need to say that last part. If you're speaking (posting), it's a sure bet you haven't a clue what you're talking about.

80   Bap33   2010 Apr 11, 4:24pm  

Hospice care giver ..... A tuffer job I can't imagine.

81   elliemae   2010 Apr 11, 4:34pm  

The person who is actually caring for the dying person is the hero - the hospice comes in at most an hour a day. The other 23 are provided by the caregiver, usually a family member. It's unpaid, hard and emotional work.

I can't tell you how many times I stood in a patient's house, with a teeny little wife and a large man dying in the bed, wondering how they do it? Seeing them get neighbors to help out a little but otherwise being on their own. It's amazing how they do it, and I hold the highest respect for the 24-hour caregivers.

82   PeopleUnited   2010 Apr 11, 5:58pm  

elliemae says

I don’t even need to say that last part. If you’re speaking (posting), it’s a sure bet you haven’t a clue what you’re talking about.

When all else fails you always have that to fall back on. So you have that going for you....

83   PeopleUnited   2010 Apr 14, 4:48pm  

elliemae says

and the program saves money. It’s just rampant with fraud.

isn't that an a contradictory statement?

84   elliemae   2010 Apr 14, 5:48pm  

AdHominem says

elliemae says


and the program saves money. It’s just rampant with fraud.

isn’t that an a contradictory statement?

No.

85   tatupu70   2010 Apr 15, 9:21pm  

says

The primary role of government is law enforcement, punishing evil, protecting our borders and citizens from without and pursuit of liberty, life and happiness.

It's pretty hard to pursue life and happiness when you are dying of cancer... So, I'd say keeping citizens healthy is a role for government.

86   RayAmerica   2010 Apr 16, 11:44am  

tatupu70 says

It’s pretty hard to pursue life and happiness when you are dying of cancer… So, I’d say keeping citizens healthy is a role for government.

Some people would define happiness by having a big screen TV. Should the government provide that for its citizens?

87   tatupu70   2010 Apr 16, 11:54am  

RayAmerica says

Some people would define happiness by having a big screen TV. Should the government provide that for its citizens?

So, in your mind owning a big screen TV is the same as being alive?

88   RayAmerica   2010 Apr 17, 12:44am  

tatupu70 says

So, in your mind owning a big screen TV is the same as being alive?

Read very, very slow. I suggest one word at a time. I said "some people" would define happiness by having a big screen. Meaning, that there are people out there that think the government is the provider for all their wants and needs. Furthermore, the actual quote is "life, LIBERTY and the PURSUIT of happiness." Taking your logic to the next step (and there will always be another step), a person that has a toothache can't "pursue" happiness because they are in pain. Should the government step in and take care of their toothache ... or headache ... or whatever? And what about the money that is removed via taxation from producers in order to help these people pursue their happiness? Is that infringing on their liberty?

89   tatupu70   2010 Apr 17, 1:04am  

OK--

I read it VERY slowly. But, I still come to the same conclusion. So, what you're saying is you have to find where to draw the line, right? I guess I'd say that keeping its citizens alive does not cross the line. Buying them a big screen does.

It would actually reduce costs for the country as a whole. Lost productivity costs would outweigh the extra health care costs...

90   RayAmerica   2010 Apr 17, 1:37am  

What about people that are obese? Should we all take care of the fatties of the country that can't stop eating Big Macs, greasy French fries and ice cream? Or those that have lung cancer that just happened to have smoked for the last 30 years? Where does the list end?

91   elliemae   2010 Apr 17, 2:13am  

Should we pay for people who lack compassion and believe that they're better than many other people, while claiming to be a victim of the system? Angry people who yell A LOT on interweb forums? Where does the list end?

92   RayAmerica   2010 Apr 17, 4:11am  

elliemae says

Angry people who yell A LOT on interweb forums? Where does the list end?

You can count on me. I think you should be covered.

93   tatupu70   2010 Apr 17, 4:13am  

RayAmerica says

What about people that are obese? Should we all take care of the fatties of the country that can’t stop eating Big Macs, greasy French fries and ice cream? Or those that have lung cancer that just happened to have smoked for the last 30 years? Where does the list end?

It doesn't end. You cover everyone. And along with that you develop incentives/penalties to help people eat healthier and stop smoking.

94   RayAmerica   2010 Apr 17, 4:18am  

tatupu70 says

It doesn’t end. You cover everyone. And along with that you develop incentives/penalties to help people eat healthier and stop smoking.

So you favor rewards/penalties re: lifestyle choices?

95   tatupu70   2010 Apr 17, 4:30am  

Yes--we already have this.

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