Rockindeano wrote:Predictable reply. Oh and thanks for telling me to fuck off.
My analogy is dead on. I am making the point that a soldier is no better than a private citizen. They are both AMERICANS. I knew you would fly off the handle t the military analogy. EVERYONE should have insurance, period. I am done with you on this. I got my bill. For you people to want to repeal this mkes me sick. God help you if you ever need insurance, or you ever get denied life threatening service. Just unbelievable how you Cons can think the way you do.
No one wins unless we all win.
Dean, you are TOTALLY missing the point here. For you to say "God help you if you ever need insurance, or if you ever get denied life threatening service..." just shows you ignorance. Why wouldn't a person want to be DENIED life THREATING service??? I certainly don't want a service that is going to threaten my life...
On the other hand, I do want to receive services that are life saving. There are laws in place to prevent hospitals from denying patients treatment when true medical emergencies exist. If a patient shows up to the hospital with a severed femoral artery NO ONE is going to be asking about insurance information before giving stabilizing treatment-they won't be doing it now and they won't be doing it in the future. (Spare me the examples of patients dying in ED waitng rooms....those are VERY rare cases and there's usually more to the story) However, it's the more common health ailments that will be the problem-the government will dictate what can and cannot be treated, how it can by treated and when it can be treated...the art of medicine will be lost and the art is more imporatant than the science, although, I don't expect you to understand that.
Reform needs to happen but it needs to start with insurance companies-the make WWAAYY to much money and don't cover enough. It needs to start with drug companies-they spend way to much trying to "buy" doctors and therefore way overcharge for drugs. It needs to start with medicare and medicaid reform and I fully believe that the first thing that should be put in place is a medicaid co-pay. It doesn't have to be a big amount but just enough that people will think twice about going to the ER for a cold. If they truly cannot pay the copay they can submit request to waive the copay. I could go on forever but it would be lost on you anyway so why bother?