ClimateSanity
New member
In a thread about a Nebraska politician wishing for the assasination of Steve Scalise before it actually happened, it was pointed out that Scalise didn't care if people were thrown out healthcare as if this was a justification for murder.
Obamacare is not a single payer health system but it is closer to it than the one that the house passed a few short months ago.
If something closer to a single payer system is supposedly more humane than the house passed system, it follows that a single payer system itself is surely more humane than health care as it has existed in this country.
Let's compare the single payer system in the UK to the system in the US according to health outcomes.
"US beats the UK in lives saved by healthcare" is an article addressing that very issue written by Ryan Bourne of the Federation for Economic Freedom.
It can be found here:
https://fee.org/articles/us-beats-uk-in-lives-saved-by-health-care/
A portion of the article here:
Last night’s CNN duel between Senators Bernie Sanders and Ted Cruz on the future of Obamacare was pretty illuminating for a recent arrival to the United States, with Senator Sanders’ playbook all-too-familiar to those of us from the UK.
Sanders wants a single-payer socialized healthcare system in the United States, just as we have in Britain. Any objection to that is met with the claim that you are “leaving people to die.” The only alternatives on offer, you would think, are the U.S. system as it exists now, or the UK system.
Sanders did not once acknowledge that the UK structure, which is free at the point of use, inevitably means rationed care, with a lack of pre-screening. He also failed to acknowledge that lower health spending levels (indeed, even*public*spending on health is lower in the UK than the United States now) are*not the same as efficiency—which is about outputs per input.
Obamacare is not a single payer health system but it is closer to it than the one that the house passed a few short months ago.
If something closer to a single payer system is supposedly more humane than the house passed system, it follows that a single payer system itself is surely more humane than health care as it has existed in this country.
Let's compare the single payer system in the UK to the system in the US according to health outcomes.
"US beats the UK in lives saved by healthcare" is an article addressing that very issue written by Ryan Bourne of the Federation for Economic Freedom.
It can be found here:
https://fee.org/articles/us-beats-uk-in-lives-saved-by-health-care/
A portion of the article here:
Last night’s CNN duel between Senators Bernie Sanders and Ted Cruz on the future of Obamacare was pretty illuminating for a recent arrival to the United States, with Senator Sanders’ playbook all-too-familiar to those of us from the UK.
Sanders wants a single-payer socialized healthcare system in the United States, just as we have in Britain. Any objection to that is met with the claim that you are “leaving people to die.” The only alternatives on offer, you would think, are the U.S. system as it exists now, or the UK system.
Sanders did not once acknowledge that the UK structure, which is free at the point of use, inevitably means rationed care, with a lack of pre-screening. He also failed to acknowledge that lower health spending levels (indeed, even*public*spending on health is lower in the UK than the United States now) are*not the same as efficiency—which is about outputs per input.