Also, your argument can be worked backwards. "These jobs may just be a bureaucratic mess that just generates paperwork, but they provide jobs!" turns into "It's ok to make up pointless jobs for the sake of said jobs". If we can do the same amount of work with less people then that should just be a net benefit for everyone. Get angry at whatever is telling you that's not going to happen, rather than the efficiency itself.
No, the existence of a hole you can't easily climb back out of is not a reason to jump down more holes.
The insurance industry is what, in physics, is called an
energy well, specifically one with a barrier: there's a cost to getting in (the deadweight loss of productive labor diverted into paperwork), but it costs more to get back out. I am absolutely in favor of digging out of the well, I'm just telling you
it involves a cost. It's not a magic way to fix the economy, which, let me remind you, is what you said it would be in the post that started off this argument:
We should at the very least start with the obvious changes. Convert to a single payer universal healthcare, cut the military budget by A LOT, and tax the rich more. Then we can see where we stand and adjust from there.
If these are hard problems that require careful unwinding and will cost more than they save, then they are not "the obvious changes".
The fact that the wealth inequality in America has been growing, and the ever growing amount of money being spent on politicians, demonstrates that there are exploits that allow people to avoid their fair share of taxes, and instead just keep pooling assets under their ownership. These people aren't dumping money on politicians because of charity. They expect money back, and they have gotten it.
What actually is the "fair share of taxes" for any given person? Are you aware that, at the most recent federal statistics update, 98% of income taxes are paid by the top 50% of income earners (who make way more than I do), and almost 40% are paid by the top 1% - even though they get less than a quarter of the income? Almost a quarter of all income going to the top 1% is a lot, I certainly acknowledge that, but they pay significantly more
as a proportion in taxes than everyone else. If they aren't paying their fair share, what is their fair share?
And since there are ways to avoid taxes for the super rich(here is a cool pamphlet listing some of the ways),
Have you sourced any of the information in this
infographic from reddit?
Well if you just assume the worse then of course things will go poorly. Of course congress should make a plan and not just rip healthcare insurance out of the economy. Many if not all of the jobs you listed exist for the sake of any business, not just insurance, and any slack cut off of insurance companies can be filled by other businesses (which should probably be subsidized as part of the plan).
You called it the obvious changes to start with. If you meant "the obvious changes we should make only after extensive deliberation, confirmation that they will actually work, and a well-thought-out plan to cover the consequences, which by the way nobody has or even knows how to begin", you should have said so.
And the truth is, there is no such plan. We already know subsidizing businesses —
paying people to do less — doesn't work. The slack cut off of insurance companies will not be filled by other businesses because
those businesses are already filling those needs, and there is a limit to how much anyone needs. You can't actually just pack more dollars or people into the economy and expect it to work out; if you want to improve standards of living, which are the reason people get jobs in the first place, somewhere along the line you have to figure out how to produce more real value.
And finally, the job market is not stagnant. Unemployment is at it's lowest in decades as is the unemployed people per vacancies.
... please. If you aren't familiar with the extensive documentation of the more or less intentional, designed-in flaws in the BLS' unemployment statistics, at least try asking some people who are actually looking for jobs anywhere in the country.