The WHO's healthcare report, Singapore, etc
All of which I replied to earlier when Reelya brought it up. Singapore has far more controls and direct government intervention than the US does, but it also has a far less messy regulatory system than the US. For example, medical licensing, insurance incentives (subsidies/tax incentives), insurance mandates (depending on the state), mandates as to what insurance HAS to cover (again, depending on the state), government ownership of nearly all the hospitals despite nominally being in a "market" system, FDA licensing (Which is almost exclusively favourable to the most gigantic of pharmaceutical companies), Medicare, Medicaid, the Veteran/Indian Health Service, etc etc etc
The same applies to most of the countries brought up, really. Even France has a significantly more streamlined system than the US does. Now, onto the next argument, I may as well open with a quote from a different discussion:
No country in the world has a fully private healthcare system (and that would be including the USA), so showing off how highly rated non-private healthcare systems are is a bit like a mid 17th century demographer coming to the conclusion that, because almost all of the richest/most successful countries are presently controlled by emperors or kings, the only way a country can be successful is to be ruled by an emperor or king.
No country in the world has a free market in healthcare. Do you understand? Not one. Some are closer than others, and you can directly compare one country to another to see which is closer to having a free market (for example, Germany vs Sweden), but to claim that it's superiority is proven because Socialized Healthcare System A is better than Socialized Healthcare System B is rather silly.
Now anyway, back to the WHO survey, one reason it's biased is that it ranks "fairness" right beside "responsiveness" (How good the quality of the system is actually considered to be, which the US actually came first in) and "effectiveness" (which is a statistical measure of mortality rates, etc). Keep in mind, "fairness" is actually measured multiple times, so it happens to be heavily weighed compared to the other factors.
Effectiveness is ranked by a nation's mortality rate increase of decrease over the years. However, this doesn't take into account non-healthcare factors, such as increases in wealth, murders, car accidents, smoking, etc etc etc that are not directly affected by healthcare systems.
Fairness is measured in that it expects citizens to pay the same amount of money in proportion to how much they have for their healthcare, regardless of sociopolitical status (so, say, the billionaire and the poor man both pay 10% of their income for healthcare). Yet this (A) doesn't reflect the actual quality of healthcare in any meaningful sense (again, France was rated quite low in terms of "responsiveness", yet because everyone pays the same amount they were boosted by this statistic) and (B) obviously favours the more socialized systems, because the more socialized systems would be FUNDED through a tax system rather than case by case!
Responsiveness, the remaining measure (though again, the other measures are effectively variations on "fairness", which constitute over half of the rating IIRC) the actual measurement of quality and satisfaction on the part of patients, the US actually comes first. Meanwhile, countries such as France and Italy fall quite a ways behind here.
Oh, and this was taken in 2000, so it's somewhat out of date. For example, Greece was originally in 14th place, quite respectable going by the survey. Yet as of 2012,
Greek pharmacists can't even get aspirin. Considering the present Eurozone Crisis, I'd imagine that if the WHO made a 2012 survey, even with the old ratings, a lot of those top countries would have fallen quite a ways.
It proves that you are either a troll or have no idea what you are doing.
And why would you need to "prove" that I'm a troll if you weren't more interested in attacking me than attacking my arguments?I'd argue both the government AND the corporation are doing something bad there...
And scriver, you just supported his point. He says the corporation buying it from the government is fine, but the government DOING it is bad. Similar to the way purchasing medical care is fine, but if the doctor uses organs harvested from orphan nun-scouts against their will, that is NOT fine. That the abuse is on the government end, not the corporations end for simply purchasing a potential service that is defacto legal.
(I'm not actually buying this - without ethics and moral expectations, capitalism and the free market fall apart, and the corps here are definitely violating those)
The corporations are hardly innocent of any wrongdoing, it's just silly to say that they are the root of the problem when their powers and benefits are derived from government support.
Nice example of 'socialism' on the glass there buddy.
I think we all know who the "anonymous source" is here. Besides that, that still isn't relevant to the argument at hand unless you prefer personal attacks over actual arguments.Besides that, the "anonymous source" neglects to mention that a certain individual made a personal profit scamming other Bay 12ers, and basically trolled the people he didn't like out of the game (the results of which you can find yourself in the SimRepublic thread if you're honestly interested and not simply interested in trolling, which I'm beginning to doubt). However, again, this is the American Election Megathread, not the "Calling people stupid" thread, so I'm not seeing the point of it coming up.