The health care debate

Aug 13, 2009 09:37

I'm going to wade in to the healthcare debate currently waging. A few points.

1. The Democratic bill does not, in any way, shape or form, resemble the NHS. So deciding to have a huge swing at the NHS "just because" is bad form.

2. Stephen Hawking is British. He was born British, and he lives in the UK. So your argument that "he wouldn't have a chance in the UK" is void, as the man says himself.

3. I'm interested that, thus far, no one has commented on the race relations implications of the proposal and the Republican response. The demographic that would overwhelmingly benefit from free healthcare would be the Hispanic and particularly the African American population, who experience greater infant mortality and have a harder time securing health insurance. The part that would lose out are the wealthy classes (primarily white) that would see their taxes rise higher than their premiums. Yet no-one seems to be commenting on the fact that the Republicans are blocking the reform of a set-up currently massively weighted in favour of whites.

4. Death panels? Seriously? As I understand it, they already exist: in insurance companies, where regular debates on who gets their life-saving op paid for wage. Or, rather, how they can get out of paying for the life-saving op. Again, those that suffer disproportionately are those that can't mount a legal challenge, i.e. the poor and disenfranchised Hispanic and African American populations. Because life expectancy comes into it as well, and the life expectancy of an African American male is 66.1 years, a lot lower than the 73.6 year average for men (wiki has the average male life expectancy at 75.5, which is an even higher gap). By comparison, Costa Rica (with its free universal health care) has male life expectancy of 74.6, Cuba 72.6, Dominican Republic 71.3, and North Korea 69.18 (!!) (linky). So there's something to be proud of, I suppose.

5. For those arguing that Medicaid is just as effective as the NHS, in at least one state, an already paltry provision is about to become even weaker. Those arguing that it's sufficient to meet the health needs of the population without health insurance are throwing ever-smaller scraps from their table and calling it a meal.

politics

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