The uninsured are uninsured, regardless of whether they could be insured. For example, I have enough money to buy flood insurance. That doesn't magically make me insured if I happen to lose property to rushing waters. None of those 47 million has a plan that covers preventive care.
9/17/2008 12:16:31 AM
and 50% of them don't care enough to do anything about it. If they don't care, then why the fuck should I? Then, another 10 or 12 million are illegal immigrants, who, well, let's face it, have no business getting anything off the public dime.And, again, if we reigned in the cost of healthcare that is rising due to government meddling, then maybe, just maybe, they wouldn't need insurance anyway, now would they?
9/17/2008 12:29:08 AM
9/17/2008 1:07:10 AM
if those foreign professionals are truly qualified and can get certified, then sure, assuming that no other Americans are qualified. Of course, that would require the gov't to stop limiting the number of doctors in the first place *cough*meddling*cough*.
9/17/2008 1:16:14 AM
9/17/2008 1:22:47 AM
your point being? Why import in labour if it isn't necessary?
9/17/2008 1:24:46 AM
Because foreign professionals would work for less, thus lowering prices. This would benefit all consumers. Such savings are the supposed point of free trade.
9/17/2008 2:18:22 PM
can we please embrace some Darwinism here and say fuck'em.There's to many people on the planet as it is.Seriously though, lack of health insurance personal problem, no matter how many people have it. You want health insurance, get a job that offers it. There a plenty of hard, shit, awful jobs out there that come with okay enough health coverage. And most of them are always hiring, why, because the jobs suck.
9/17/2008 5:45:02 PM
9/17/2008 9:32:23 PM
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9/17/2008 10:10:35 PM
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9/17/2008 10:26:11 PM
Young doctors with sweet rides, sprawling homes, and beautiful wives.According to Michael Moore, anyway.
9/17/2008 10:32:01 PM
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9/17/2008 11:48:39 PM
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9/18/2008 12:08:44 AM
9/18/2008 12:45:15 AM
9/18/2008 2:11:18 AM
9/18/2008 7:36:39 AM
A few things:Part of the rising cost of health care is simply the rising cost of health equipment. I'm a little surprised this hasn't been mentioned. That new MRI isn't going to pay for itself, it has to be used. Couple that with the fear of litigation for failing to perform a thorough examination and the fact that the insurance company and not the individual will bear the cost of a questionably necessary scan and you've got part of the driving force behind the rise in unnecessary health care.
9/18/2008 8:11:58 AM
9/18/2008 12:51:18 PM
9/18/2008 1:48:02 PM
9/18/2008 2:14:26 PM
9/18/2008 5:35:31 PM
^ Alfie Kohn would be the classic source. For example:http://books.google.com/books?id=bLudHIk3gsMC&pg=PA185&lpg=PA185&dq=harms+of+competition+%2B+intrinsic+motivation&source=web&ots=7FfOWY839n&sig=UCOxmhLmlRCHZDHIIHnRCqslqLg&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#PPP1,M1You can also check on the Anarchist FAQ on the subject:http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/1931/secI4.html#seci411
9/18/2008 6:56:28 PM
That addresses competition, though I'm not convinced.But what about rewards? Studies of animal psychology show that positive reenforcement (that is, rewards) generates the best results when trying to train an animal or bring out a particular behavior. If I recall, you're one of the people who believes that we're nothing more than machines responding to external inputs in predicable and measurable ways, so why do you think we are significantly different from animals enough to not be effectively motivated by rewards?
9/18/2008 7:13:07 PM
9/18/2008 7:19:35 PM
9/18/2008 9:28:45 PM
Sorry, that should be intrinsic motivation. If you're doing something for a reward, you opinion of the task's innate worth drops. And yes, I linked to some.[Edited on September 18, 2008 at 9:30 PM. Reason : worth]
9/18/2008 9:29:47 PM
9/18/2008 11:22:17 PM
Both Kohn and the FAQ section cite all sorts of psychological studies. Kohn may be the main dude publicizing the data, but the data comes from various researchers. I want to make that clear.
9/18/2008 11:28:39 PM
Is this really a surprise? Have any of you been to an ER? Poor people/people without health insurance are less likely to get checkups and preventative health care, don't have a family doctor to see for minor ailments. Combine that with higher obesity, diabetes, etc. rates among the poor and there are many reasons driving high health care costs. This is why lack of universal health care is sometimes billed as a free rider problem and efficiency issue.
9/19/2008 3:03:34 AM