Subject: Responses to the responses to the responses.
Author:
Posted on: 2022-08-26 22:18:30 UTC

Are you saying that non-income tax payers should pay for access to public property? Because then it isn’t really public property.

If this is actually asking about the right of noncitizen immigrants, documented or undocumented, to enjoy public property, I should point out that noncitizen immigrants do pay taxes. The ITIN was created specifically so noncitizens can pay taxes but not get any Social Security benefits. So, in fact, they already paid for the public property and resources that they use, and it's one of the few public things they can use.

I’m not sure why the private sector would meet public needs, that’s not really its job.

What exactly are you suggesting the public needs are? What role do you want government to take? We've talked plenty about my perception, so I'm curious about yours.

And doesn’t inflation, which is caused by government spending increase that cost of living?

Inflation is reduced by both cutting spending and raising taxes, which is what the Inflation Reduction Act aims to do. You have to do both. In this case, the IRA is levying a new tax on profitable corporations.

Again, I'm anti-debt, so I don't really like all the spending, but ideally if the government were to cut spending, it should be on things like the military (we outspend basically every other country here, including China), and not on anything that directly benefits the lives of Americans. I believe it is necessary to have government spending on domestic issues.

I don’t know about you, but I a) don’t want the government in charge of my healthcare any more than it is; I find that whenever the government makes something, it is always inferior. That, and you cannot opt out of governmental services. b) I don’t want to pay more in taxes for said inferior services. c) I don’t like the idea of having the government hand out money to people who choose not to work, the idea seems extremely unfair.

I've spent the past few years in Japan, and I think the Japanese national healthcare model is a good one for government-allergic folks. The point of a national healthcare system is to be able to make sure the people who do not have insurance through their employer can still access affordable health care, because the government plan's prices are meant to be competitively low and encourage private insurers to also lower their costs. When I go to the doctor in the US on Blue Cross Blue Shield, I have to pay $25 for a consultation (that's without any prescriptions for things!). Hospital stays, ambulances, each test taken to diagnose something -- they lead to thousands and thousands of dollars because healthcare insurers have no competition and thus no incentive to lower prices.

This is how so many Americans land in debt and lose their homes -- not because they're frivolously spending, but because they or someone they care for has gotten sick and racked up an expensive hospital bill that they cannot pay off, and subsequently cannot pay anything else either and thus lose everything they have in life.

But when I go to the doctor in Japan, I pay the equivalent of $25 for the entire visit: drugs, tests, the visit itself. This is because the national health care system has subsidized the cost. It is literally the same quality as I would have in the US. The prices are not high in the US because it's better quality. They're high because insurance companies want more money.

In Japan, if your employer offers health insurance, then you do not need to use the government insurance plan. The presence of the national system also means that any doctor or clinic will accept your insurance -- none of the ridiculous HMO/PPO system where if you go out of network you get charged horrible rates. That's not providing the full range of choices that capitalism entitles us to have, right? Why be forced to go to a doctor you don't like, because the doctor you do want is out of network?

Basically, if you don't want to be in a national health insurance system, you don't have to be. But having one ensures that other people -- your neighbours, your friends, even yourself if you lose your job and the insurance it provided because of some unexpected illness -- don't fall through the cracks and die because they can't afford to go to the doctor.

I really hope I do not need to drag out articles telling you how exploitative the American healthcare insurance system is.

And as for the government handing out money to people who don't work -- how does that tie into the healthcare argument? Please explain exactly who you mean by "people who choose not to work", because too often I see this as a dogwhistle for various -isms that I am sure you do not ascribe to. Tying access to healthcare through work is easily exploitable -- part-time jobs and contract work, for example, are not covered by a company's health benefits. Given the rise in independent contract and part-time jobs, that's a lot of people who either have to pay for their own insurance or risk going without and getting hit by high prices. That's more unfair to me even before we get into people who aren't working.

(Edited for clarity)

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