http://www.hulu.com/watch/345056/the-colbert-report-wed-mar-28-2012#s-p1-so-i0
Relevant
...or declare me an enemy combatant and execute me with a flying death bot.
And yet even Colbert misses the irony in his own statement, about which president authorized that strategy more than his predecessor and then
doubled down on eroding civil other civil liberties. So why not just sign up for the next thing?
Even if you make the argument that universal healthcare is worth the sacrifice, the market which will control healthcare will continue to evolve, change and find new ways to eke more money out of the arrangement and restrict access to healthcare that people signed up to get in the first place. We can't fully predict what position this law will leave Americans in, in 10 years. Because it will mostly be run by an industry that loves to experiment with new ways to get rich.
I'll admit my position is 100% anti-capitalism, but I think given the way Obama's presidency and the last 12 years have gone for America that I have good reason to worry.
To me this somehow feels a lot like considering buying life insurance. About the only difference between health insurance and life insurance is that you're guaranteed to make use of one while you're still alive. For a healthy individual with a good life style, that's a significant chunk of money you'll be paying out over your life time for calamity and decrepitude. (As an aside I wonder how much of these costs the public has to eat comes from people at the end of their lives who still choose to have extended medical treatment?)
I mean Christ, roll it into the tax code just like social security and all the other obligations Americans are willing to accept as part of being a citizen. Why this hard-on for a market-oriented solution? Because the insurance industry is worried they'll be squeezed out by a more service-focused provider like the government? Boo-fucking-hoo. It's like the market is free and fair except when it's not.
I'm kind of hoping that SCOTUS just rules this another form of taxation and kicks it back over to Congress, that can try to legislate in a way that's less likely to play directly into the hands of those who want to profit from us. I don't share the Republican cackling glee that this will probably get killed by SCOTUS, it's really pretty damn tragic. But it's frustrating to me too because it's always this moral/ethical/legal compromise with Obama's policies. And not just of the typical political variety that's part of life, but stuff that truly makes me question who he is going to bat for.
This is all about the method of providing the benefits.
Damn right. And it's a method based on way too much subservience to the insurance industry, or fear of trying to set up a government-run health care system through more taxation, because it's politically unpopular to do so and way more beneficial to groups with lobbyists to do it this way.
I'll grant him that though, Obama probably tried and couldn't sell a solution to Republicans that involved more taxes. But if had used presidential authority to ram through something that didn't come with all this baggage, we'd
still be in the same place right now: in front of SCOTUS on some element of the healthcare plan. Except he'd (probably?) have way more support it than he currently does for the mandate. I'm sure Republicans would like nothing more than to have this come back to Congress so they can try to kill it. But with Obama re-elected, he could quit pussyfooting around with Republicans and quit handing us these godawful compromises.