feuervogel: (godless liberal etc)
feuervogel ([personal profile] feuervogel) wrote2011-02-08 10:56 am

"socialized" medicine: not as bad as cons would have you believe.

In fact, it's a hundred, a thousand, times better than the system that killed Melissa Mia Hall, who had no insurance, as a freelance writer, and began suffering chest pains due to a heart attack and died in her home because she couldn't afford to go to the doctor, let alone the hospital.

To those of you who believe the free market can and should sort everything out, this is what you're advocating. If taxation is theft, free market health cover is murder.

Do you wonder why I, as a tenuously employed person with no health benefits of my own who aspires to be a freelance writer (as all novelists are) -- a job that almost never has health benefits -- would rather move 4400 miles, a 9-hour flight, and a 6 time-zone difference to a country that mandates health coverage and provides it for those who can't afford it themselves through taxation?

Germans aren't afraid of the social contract or of helping out those in need through vile governmental muggings in dark alleys taxation. Fucking American selfishness needs to die in a fire.

[identity profile] jon-leonard.livejournal.com 2011-02-09 07:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Where do you draw the line between a failure to act and the malice required to call something "murder"? Obviously saying "It's manslaughter!" or "It's an unfortunate death!" doesn't have the same punch to it, but ...

I have two working kidneys, and could probably save some stranger's life by donating one. Is it murder that I have not chosen to do so?

At less personal cost, I could still probably be employed developing medical devices, which would probably save lives. Is it wrong for me to be trying to help educate people instead (occasionally volunteering).

Or, alternately, you're credentialed to work as a pharmacist, which could easily save someone's life. It'd even pay better.

If it's not a matter of personal responsibility, is it the state's fault for not forcing us to work in these roles?
kirin: Kirin Esper from Final Fantasy VI (Default)

[personal profile] kirin 2011-02-09 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't want to put words in anyone's mouth, but I think a main point of the phrasing is a parallelism to the common libertarian meme of "taxation is theft", which is seen as similarly hyperbolic.

(Er, reading again, that's already in the post, in passing. Ah well.)

[identity profile] jon-leonard.livejournal.com 2011-02-09 10:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Indeed. Perhaps she didn't mean any of it as a starting point for discussion, but I don't think it all that useful to trivialize either murder or theft.

But hiding behind it, there is a real discussion about the proper role and techniques of government. Yeah, there are nutty libertarians who equate taxation with theft, but those really aren't the people who are potentially persuadable; better to make a novel argument, rather than try to sound as nutty as the libertarian fringe. As a side matter, it isn't typically a conservative position (assuming that's what's meant by "con") to view taxation as theft. Complain that taxes are too high, sure, but that's not the same thing as saying they should be zero: In much the same way that I can say that teachers in the local district are probably overpaid (at least if you count the value of the benefits package) without saying that all teachers should be volunteers.

I am genuinely curious as to where Akiko draws the line between a genuine moral obligation to provide medical help and something that would merely be admirable.

[identity profile] jon-leonard.livejournal.com 2011-02-11 12:18 am (UTC)(link)
There's an interesting distinction between removing life support and not supplying it in the first case, and a number of grey areas involving the desires of the patient; but taking that at face value:

Is the party not-in-power really the responsible actor?

But to summarize what I understand of your position: There's no individual mandate to action, as that's covered in state action. Also, raising taxes has either trivial social costs, or costs small enough to be outweighed by the (assumed) benefits of universal health care.

Is that pretty close to what you mean? Obviously I disagree on a lot of it, but that's different from not understanding your position in the first place.

[identity profile] jon-leonard.livejournal.com 2011-02-11 06:41 am (UTC)(link)
You blame the GOP for repealing ACA. As they don't control either the Senate or the Presidency, they can't repeal anything. So either political discussion is comparable to murder, or "repeal" means something other than it usually does. ("Attempt to repeal", "Suggestion to repeal", "Political grandstanding", maybe?)

I think I understand your position on a mandate to action: I don't view paying taxes as an action per-se, since it's sort of involuntary. But that's probably just a minor matter of wording.

Fundamentally I think I view the cost/benefit tradeoffs differently, and to a certain extent the mandate; I'd tend to argue from a utilitarian perspective, and I don't think things like the ACA actually improve things. But ... so it goes.