Needing to eat is neither an indulgence nor an offence, but a misfortune. So if the above quote attributed* to Bevan were valid reasoning then it would imply agriculture should be socialized food should be provided to hungry people
FTFY.
I was hungry this morning. The cost of providing me breakfast should have been shared by the community.
If you lack the means of feeding yourself, it should be.
But I do not lack the means of feeding myself. Do you have any other grounds to think the cost of providing me breakfast should have been shared by the community?
I was hungry this morning. The cost of providing me breakfast should have been shared by the community.
ummm... soup kitchen? Food banks? DUH!
Soup kitchens and food banks have better uses for their limited resources than providing breakfast to a rich guy like me. DUH!
What appears to have escaped you two, though probably not bilby, is that this is not a debate about whether the cost of providing health care to poor people who can't afford it should be shared by the community. It's a debate about whether the cost of providing health care to people who can afford it should also be shared by the community anyway even though we're perfectly capable of paying the doctor or a private cost-pooler ourselves. It's a debate about the U.S. model vs. the British model. The U.S. has long socialized the cost of care for the impoverished; it's called "Medicaid". (The U.S. even abolished private medical insurance, back in 2010 -- although what we have instead is still labeled "insurance", it stopped being the real thing when the ACA outlawed exclusion of preexisting conditions.)
The point of Marshall's philosophical claim Bilby quoted upthread (and of similar claims Bevan actually made*) was never that poor people should get their care paid for by the rest of us, but rather that "no element of commercialism should enter between doctor and patient".
My point is that that's an idiotic way to decide public policy. Whether socialized care of the poor and/or socialized feeding of the poor is better done by socializing the whole system from top to bottom, or instead by providing subsidies and directed attention to the poor while leaving those capable of fending for ourselves to do so, is a complicated technical question with costs and benefits in both directions to be traded off. Any intelligent attempt to answer it for health care needs to focus on the problems specific to health care, not on philosophical nonsense that doesn't know the difference between a medical clinic and a kitchen.
(* For instance, "The essence of a satisfactory health service is that the rich and the poor are treated alike, that poverty is not a disability, and wealth is not advantaged.")
So why shouldn’t the wealthy assist those less fortunate?
Bilby and I are ion a reasonable income, but we still help those less fortunate than us - particularly in my job as a teacher. I buy fruit for brain break, and so many pencils ... just so my kids can learn.
Only arrogant selfish people think that the poor shouldn’t receive assistance.
Hey, if I can afford to go to a better dr for surgery through private health insurance, sure.. my arugument is that that same surgeon should, and mostly would, offer their services to someone not insured. The only difference, IMO, is the use of private to ‘jump the queue’ for non essential life saving surgery.
Case in point, a lady at school and I are the same age. We both have horrible knees….. she waited a year for a knee replacement because she went public. It was deemed category three with means get to it within a year. I needed knee surgery and it was was done within a few weeks. I still didn’t pay much (as per above), which is how insurance is supposed to work.
The US system sucks! Plain and simple. Health care should be for everyone. Simple.
Holy mother of god! Where the bejesus do you imagine you saw me say the wealthy shouldn't assist those less fortunate? Where the bejesus do you imagine you saw me say the poor shouldn’t receive assistance? Where the bejesus do you imagine you saw me say the US system doesn't suck? Where the bejesus do you imagine you saw me say health care shouldn't be for everyone? It's like you didn't even bother to read my post before you hit "Reply" and quoted it back to me and then appended a "reply" that had jack squat to do with anything you'd quoted.
Some time between when I was a kid and now, a lot of U.S. schools gave up phonics and switched to a newly fashionable theory called "whole language", wherein they tried to teach kids to read by telling them to just guess words they didn't recognize straight off and carry on reading, instead of sounding them out and then looking them up or asking the teacher if they still didn't know the word. This practice has the entirely predictable result that the kids don't learn new words by reading them and so never acquire reading vocabularies any larger than their oral vocabularies. One of my nieces was taught this way; listening to her try to read aloud was painful. That's a metaphor for your post -- it reads like you didn't already recognize the line of argument you were seeing, and rather than follow the words and try to understand, or ask me to explain further, you just guessed which argument it was from among those you were already familiar with, and replied to what you imagined I meant instead of replying to what you saw me say. Please do not impute views to me that I haven't expressed.
Teacher here, so let’s a leave the teaching reference alone.
I found it a bit shocking that a teacher would display such poor reading comprehension.
Your quote:
I was hungry this morning. The cost of providing me breakfast should have been shared by the community.
I think you picked up on the sarcasm, but just in case, I was pointing out to bilby that my hunger is a stupid reason to think society should pay for my breakfast.
My response was about soup kitchens - aka the community providing food for less fortunate.
That was your first error -- soup kitchens were not on point. You appear to have seen me indicate that I don't think society should buy me breakfast and illogically jumped to the conclusion that I don't think society should buy
anyone breakfast. That's the Hasty Generalization Fallacy. Why did you do that?
Your quote (Bilby’s editing included because you are getting me at the end of a very hard very long week so I am leaving it there - and yes I get the irony of the fact that me typing the explanation is propbsblyblonger than editing the quote but hey.. Sue me)
Needing to eat is neither an indulgence nor an offence, but a misfortune. So if the above quote attributed* to Bevan were valid reasoning then it would imply agriculture should be socialize
So I refer to the soup kitchen again. Why shouldn’t those less fortunate be assisted by those than can?
Good grief!
Why shouldn't your wife not be beaten?!? Your question assumes facts not in evidence!
I pointed out your mistake. You doubled down on it. So I pointed it out again. And here you are,
tripling down on it. Stop asking "Why shouldn’t those less fortunate be assisted by those than can?" until you find somebody who implies those less fortunate shouldn't be assisted by those that can! This is not rocket science.
Do you seriously believe socializing agriculture is the only way a society can have soup kitchens? No? Then how the bejesus do you convince yourself my opposition to socializing agriculture is a good reason for you to conclude I'm against soup kitchens? What the hell? The Soviets socialized agriculture and caused a famine. The PRC socialized agriculture and caused a famine. North Korea socialized agriculture and caused a famine. The Khmer Rouge socialized agriculture and caused a famine. The US did not socialize agriculture, did not cause a famine,
and set up soup kitchens!.
You APPEAR (don’t really want to be sued) to not care that there are those less fortunate than you who need food and medical assistance….
Show your goddamn work! No, I bloody well do not APPEAR to not care that there are those less fortunate than you who need food and medical assistance. That is a whole-cloth figment of your imagination. I did not give any such appearance out; your opinion is something your brain did to itself.
The quote in the meme bilby posted expressed the sentiment that something being neither an indulgence nor an offence, but a misfortune, was a good reason for society to pay for filling
everyone's need of that thing, not just a good reason for society to pay for filling
poor people's need of that thing. So I offered myself as a counterexample, a person whom there is no good reason for society to subsidize,
because I'm not poor.
Would you walk past a nun having a heart attack?
Stop making groundless insinuations.
IMO medical assistance is akin to food and shelter - necessities of life.
I like this quote,, and I think it sums up why UHC is needed….
Mead said that the first sign of civilization in an ancient culture was a femur (thighbone) that had been broken and then healed. Mead explained that in the animal kingdom, if you break your leg, you die. You cannot run from danger, get to the river for a drink or hunt for food.
Well, in the first place, Mead was evidently not an evolutionary biologist. The ability of bones to heal themselves from breaks is not something that animals spent five hundred million years evolving without consequently surviving, just in order to preadapt their human descendants for the day when we'd invent civilization and finally get some payoff from all their investment.
Second, and more to the point, why the bejesus would you assume UHC being needed is a good reason to think somebody's argument for the NHS must have been valid? It's perfectly possible to make health care universal with a mixed public/private system. Here you are, over and over, seeing me point out that a pro-NHS argument is illogical, and apparently fervently believing you saw me denounce Medicaid.
Every time you lecture me about helping the poor, you are falsely and groundlessly insinuating that I need a lecture on helping the poor. Every time you do that I will have good reason to lecture you about improving your reading comprehension.