Re: How much is a life worth?
[TI] Sitting Duck,
If you want a legitimate response, make a legitimate post. Repeatedly ignoring what I posted and arguing against straw-men and bickering about red-herrings is either trolling or just stupid. Neither trolling nor stupid deserves respect, and I'm not going to pretend to respect either.
"I realised that you had said you supported safety nets for the poor but I believe you are contradicting yourself, which I challenged you on in the previous post but you still haven't rectified."
I told you that I support public funds providing healthcare--from the free market--for those with legitimate need. This is drastically different from government-provided care where government bureaucrats, not the free market, determine what care is available. My position is not complicated. If you repeatedly display that you have trouble understanding this simple position and think it's contradictory, that's your problem. Your willful ignorance does not deserve respect or a more civil response. You're either trolling or not interested in putting any thought into your response, and neither case deserves any sort of feigned respect or civility.
" My point was that whether the state pays for everybody or whether the state just pays for "the poor" however you want to define that is just a matter of degree, and you still require some method to decide who gets treated and how much you are willing to spend on them."
Let the free market decide, is my position. I've been clear on this. It results in better care for more people without hindering free market principles advancing medical science as a whole (ie, improvements in care over time). Catastrophic care is not that expensive, even with the government hindrances in the free market which I have outlined and are a significant problem, raising the price of healthcare. A safety-net for the poor can provide catastrophic coverage for all of those with legitimate need without anywhere near the costs of reductions in quality of government system which you support.
"I thought this was an interesting statement. Firstly, I didn't advocate using their age, I was advocating using the number of years by which life could be extended."
Which is intrinsically tied to age (not exclusively... duuuuhh), so my referencing age did not miss the point.
"I chose an 80 year old and a 20 year old because in most cases the 20 year old would have longer left to live beyond treatment than the 80 year old."
And I said I think you're an arrogant brat for thinking you can legitimately/morally/effectively create any system using such measures to make any judgements.
"I explained why I didn't think your example's cannabis or alcohol consumption should stop them being treated."
Seeing as alcoholism and 0 desire to work are both tied to shorter life expectancy and quality of life, they're inherently tied to your life-expectancy metric. I was just pointing out that what you propose would obviously take those things into account. Contradicting yourself and saying life expectancy and quality of life should NOT be taken into account in the cases of alcoholic deadbeats doesn't really matter.
"If you really think this is the case perhaps you should re-read your "responses" and critically assess whether you have really formulated an argument or whether you have just stated something with no supporting logic."
I generally just read what you post and rip it apart, then berate you for posting so thoughtlessly. People are reading what you post. You just keep repeating that you have this great idea. I criticize your idea and you just ignore my criticisms, repeating yourself as if I hadn't already responded to what you repeat. Nobody is impressed by you being impressed by you.
"This is not showing that the loss of freedom you claim exists by having to pay taxes to pay for healthcare (which you advocate doing anyway to pay for the poor), this is just stating an opinion as fact. Likening paying taxes to slavery is unfounded hyperbole."
The level of taxation you propose by a government-run healthcare system faaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaar exceeds what I support in government-provided funds for the legitimately poor. If you want citations for this simple fact, you're probably 12 and I'm happy with you thinking I haven't made a legitimate argument. Such a level of taxation inherently limits freedom, which I take issue with. Rather than justify such a loss of freedom, you're just pretending that magically subsidies for the poor require as much money as an entire government-run healthcare system. zzz
"No I'm not, I'm proposing that a group of experts make evidence based judgements on what is or isn't good value for money and what is or isn't affordable given the known size of the total pot of money available."
Yes, you are. Your "group of experts" is, as I said, "government bureaucrats." And them deciding what is a "good value" is them making decisions which the free market, ie the consumer, can make better than they can. Calling government bureaucrats "experts" is an appeal to authority; it doesn't negate the fact that you are, in fact, supporting taking away decisions from consumers in the free market in favor of government bureaucrats rationing care.
"it has to be related to concepts such as pain due to medical conditions rather than a judgement of the decisions the person has made in their life or whether they drink alcohol because that is completely objective"
Alcoholism has known medical effects, which were obviously what I was referencing in regard to quality of life and life expectancy.
"I am not proposing rationing of care, I am accepting that rationing of care is an inevitability because the healthcare budget is finite, and with that in mind I am advocating a method of rationing. I'm sure even your beloved health insurance companies must have some measure of value for money when deciding what they will or won't pay out for."
But I'm a capitalist who isn't trying to deny the fact that capitalism and economic freedom benefit everybody. About 50 studies have been done on quality of life and economic freedom, and every single one of them has found a positive correlation. I'm arguing that the free market provides more for everybody than socialized care. In conjunction with this, I support subsidies for the legitimately needy within a capitalist system to give them access as well.
You could certainly legitimately dispute what level of care should rightly be subsidized under what I support (I'm not concerned if it doesn't cover nose and boob jobs), but this is beside the fact that what I support (capitalism, free markets, free people) provides better care for everybody and advances in the field of medicine as a whole. Amerika (again, as very flawed as its healthcare system is) makes far more advances in medicine than Cuba and North Korea and many broke-ass European countries combined. Advances in medical care are a good thing. I like them. You obviously don't care about them.
"Frankly I have no idea whether "high end healthcare" is better in the USA or UK or anywhere, but I am not attempting to have a competition."
I'm not pretending that I did anything to earn it. It's no concern of my ego. But if you don't know the facts of healthcare quality and what is afforded to the average citizen living under different systems, you're hardly in a position to argue what produces the best results.
Thank you, this latest response was much more responsive. I don't particularly have a problem with it.
I don't take this crap personally, and my use of rather offensive language is out of general disgust and boredom, not emotion. ![]()
But I have challenged the hell out of your views. You just don't seem to like it. ![]()