I agree.
But, that’s a partial picture at best.
Neither Obamacare, nor the “public option,” nor
a true “Medicare for All,” as best as I can determine, have adequate cost
controls compared to other developed nations.
The failure to stipulate that such cost
controls need to be part of national health care is, let's call it ...
Paleo-progressivism.
I don't want "Medicare for All" if
we're still spending 50 percent more per capita than other developed nations,
or more, for health care.
Period.
There are times where legitimate financial
constraints on medical insurance under any name need to be considered.
And, if doing so gets a label of “neo-progressivism,”
I’ll wear it.
I’ve hammered on this issue since 2009.
And will continue to do so.
Medical education costs much more than elsewhere
in the developed world. States are restraining college and graduate education
costs less and less.
State insurance regulation departments are
paper tigers. Obamacare proposes no such federal department, nor would “Medicare
for all” proponents who don’t accept the reality that even in other countries
with national health care, it doesn’t cover everything and private insurance
still has some working space.
Meanwhile, with the current “Medicare for
seniors,” Congress routinely proposes new restrictions on doctor payments only
to waiver them within a year; what would make Medicare for All different?
And, the American culture is attuned to
believing the lie of Sarah Palin’s death panels. Even worse, for a country
allegedly so highly Christian, as compared to other developed nations, the US
has a fear of death that is, itself … morbid!
Add that up, and the increasingly expensive “end
of life care” that thoughtful people know we can afford less and less, yet
still pay for more and more, is becoming a lead anchor.
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