JHZR2
Staff member
Originally Posted By: simple_gifts
Some really good observations in this thread. Whether ACA gets us there, it is in everyone's best interest to have healthy Americans and have them have the ability to recognize illness early, so more costly procedures or diability benefits are not needed. x million people without coverage doesn't make their healthcare needs disappear, it aggravates the situation, moving cost onto those who do have coverage (fairness anyone?)
For those who don't like subsidizing others care, kindly remove your children from public school; I don't have kids and dislike subsidizing the raising of kids I did not choose to have, and apparently you can't afford to educate.... j/k, sort of. Point is society benefits from having healthy (and educated) people.
And your comments are really great too. Some people took offense to some of the things that I said, and certainly they are entitled to their opinion. But I see it exactly as you do. The cost to society don't just go away because we choose to ignore them. That's just mathematics. Blend a little bit of a compassionate heart into the mix, which would obviate why I joked about the euthanization metrics before, and one can rationalize but nobody wants to see anybody deaden the gutter, yet nobody necessarily want to pay out of their own pocket for themselves let alone anybody else.
And the reality is that we have an unhealthy population, not even top 20 in the world for lifetime, and we're slipping to every Asian country when it comes to education, and so we have issues. Throwing money at any problem isn't necessarily the best solution. But to gripe about the true actuarial cost of insuring the population, is just funny to me. These people either disappear or they die. That's just natural fact. Past history as indicated that we certainly don't have a population that is proactive about their health, Nora population but is willing to pay the bills for their own treatment. Nobody has the like the laws and situation as it currently exists, certainly anything needs to be innervated a good number of times before it's perfection. But what annoys me is the desire to play ostrich to so many things that in the end all do indeed cost us. The more unfortunate thing is that so many intend to Paula to size this stuff instead of calling a spade a spade and actually having a reasonable discussion based upon the mathematics and physics of reality.
Some really good observations in this thread. Whether ACA gets us there, it is in everyone's best interest to have healthy Americans and have them have the ability to recognize illness early, so more costly procedures or diability benefits are not needed. x million people without coverage doesn't make their healthcare needs disappear, it aggravates the situation, moving cost onto those who do have coverage (fairness anyone?)
For those who don't like subsidizing others care, kindly remove your children from public school; I don't have kids and dislike subsidizing the raising of kids I did not choose to have, and apparently you can't afford to educate.... j/k, sort of. Point is society benefits from having healthy (and educated) people.
And your comments are really great too. Some people took offense to some of the things that I said, and certainly they are entitled to their opinion. But I see it exactly as you do. The cost to society don't just go away because we choose to ignore them. That's just mathematics. Blend a little bit of a compassionate heart into the mix, which would obviate why I joked about the euthanization metrics before, and one can rationalize but nobody wants to see anybody deaden the gutter, yet nobody necessarily want to pay out of their own pocket for themselves let alone anybody else.
And the reality is that we have an unhealthy population, not even top 20 in the world for lifetime, and we're slipping to every Asian country when it comes to education, and so we have issues. Throwing money at any problem isn't necessarily the best solution. But to gripe about the true actuarial cost of insuring the population, is just funny to me. These people either disappear or they die. That's just natural fact. Past history as indicated that we certainly don't have a population that is proactive about their health, Nora population but is willing to pay the bills for their own treatment. Nobody has the like the laws and situation as it currently exists, certainly anything needs to be innervated a good number of times before it's perfection. But what annoys me is the desire to play ostrich to so many things that in the end all do indeed cost us. The more unfortunate thing is that so many intend to Paula to size this stuff instead of calling a spade a spade and actually having a reasonable discussion based upon the mathematics and physics of reality.