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May 16, 2008

Comments

Ron Dean

Between an insurance company and government, I'd take the government every time. We're back to the let them eat cake argument. I've got enough to buy all the health care I want and I don't want anyone messin' with that.

Beth

Has anyone thought about the fact that if we end up with some form of 'national' healthcare, that the government will, in essence, become the employer of all the doctors, nurses, dentists, x-ray techs, etc.? When budgets have to be cut, and jobs end up evaporating because the taxes aren't covering it, how many people will be willing, much less qualified, to attend to the needs of their loved ones recovering from surgery because there are not enough nurses?

In countries with true socialized economies and healthcare, it is not unusual for the "best" doctors to only work 6 months out of the year. And, heaven knows, we all expect the best.

In Canada, not too long ago, the 'average' wait, for a woman diagnosed with breast cancer, for her FIRST visit with a specialist was 10 weeks! So if I get an appointment tomorrow, someone else ends up waiting 20 weeks! (We are talking averages here, remember.) Do you want that person to be your wife, mother, sister, daughter? I certainly do not.

If I may borrow from Barry Goldwater, "A government big enough to give you everything you want, is big enough to take everything you have."

How quickly we forget . . .

Ron Dean

Except for the socialism/communism part, I agree with Bruce. Otherwise, all 250 million of us are entitled to have the same "best" one orthopedic doctor treat our sprained knees.

Bruce Grant

Finally someone tells the truth!

OK, so let's have a two tier system - those without care now get the basics, those that can afford better - get better. Problem--the democrats want one system for all (as usual), and then flatly deny there will be rationing. Hillary's previous plan said you could not get that hip operation at 70 even if you wanted to pay for it yourself, as that would not be fair to those who could not afford to pay for it. So let me get this straight--I can pay for my own care but will not be allowed to, if in fact someone else could not afford it. That's Socialism, scratch that - that's Communism.

Ron Dean

No one appreciates a "let them eat cake" argument more than I, but for a huge proportion of our population "some" care is better than the "no care" they're getting now. You want to opt out of a national health care program at your own expense? Fine. Do it. Just don't deny essential care to those most in need because your child can't play football until he gets his hernia repaired unless you pay for extra insurance.

Henry C GrosJean

If you review every country that has some form of national health care it is without question that the only way costs are controlled is by rationing. This may be a hard pill to swallow since American's want everything "yesterday."
Henry C GrosJean
Independent Agent - since 1979
Phoenix AZ

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