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Jan 21, 2010 20:14

You know, I find it odd that so many Americans have been willing to step up and donate $10 via text, or buy a tshirt, or send money to the Red Cross, or whatever else they do for Haiti, but have proven completely unwilling to pay a little bit more in taxes to help provide healthcare for themselves, their parents, their children, and their neighbors ( Read more... )

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caseyptah January 22 2010, 01:52:56 UTC
I don't find it odd at all. It's one thing to see so much suffering on TV and decide to make a one-time gift to help out in the only way you can. It's another thing to sign up to give thousands of dollars to the government annually for the rest of your life.

Seeing as how 40 percent of Americans pay no income tax, I have a hard time feeling like I have to do MORE of my part to help them out with their health insurance.

Not to get all conservative on you, but I don't think raising taxes is the answer.

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chlorinegoddess January 22 2010, 02:17:34 UTC
It's a good point. And I fully appreciate the difference between a voluntary donation and coerced forcing-money-from-your-paycheck. This was more a passing observation than anything else (which accidentally turned into a rant about the whole Massachusetts thing which has been severely irking me, but not for the reason that it seems to be irking the rest of the Democratic populace. Even NPR. Seriously, NPR. I expected better.).

But regarding your point: personally, for me, it's less about raising taxes than reallocating my income. We pay so much, as a nation, for health insurance. If I could spend the same amount, or even a bit more, and more or less ensure that I - and everyone I know - would have appropriate coverage for the rest of my life, sign me up.

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caseyptah January 22 2010, 02:22:58 UTC
Right. I mean, the whole health care system is broken and the whole health insurance system is just fucked. I feel like we need to wipe the slate clean or something and rebuild it from the ground up. And there are so many problems! For instance, one of the things that drives up costs is that uninsured people end up going to the emergency room for their care and costing tons of money which hospitals never collect, forcing them to raise prices in generaal. But then you have the people with great health insurance who, BECAUSE they have great health insurance will go in for every little scratch and demand an MRI or two, or three. And that brings up the costs of our insurance premiums. And it's just a big, big mess.

But generally, I think the government could do a lot better job of budgeting and if they raised my taxes only a little but I knew that it was being used efficiently to provide health coverage, I would be all about that. It's just hard to picture the government doing anything efficiently... ever.

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chlorinegoddess January 22 2010, 02:35:03 UTC
True, true. Which, in a way, gets back to my secondary point - why can't our government get anything done properly, ever????

(As a side note, when I was working at the Science Museum, they got rid of 100% coverage and people pitched a fit. I was like, really, people?? One hundred percent coverage??? That's just insane.)

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kitkatlj January 22 2010, 23:46:17 UTC
Maybe a lot of the people at the Science Museum really couldn't avoid going into debt (or deeper debt) w/ less? *shrug*

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