Real Health care reform -Universal Single Payer
Aug 6, 2009 — Deanna Lee McGowan
(1 vote)
This article explains the truth about single payer national health care reform.
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Health care..
We all need a loan at sometime or another. We all come up short at times, or have a sudden expense we have to take care of and need a loan – usually something small, to help float the budget until payday. Perhaps an aggravated old baseball injury has thrown you a metaphorical curveball, and you have to get some prescription medication to deal with it. Things happen – and it stinks, but it does happen, and sometimes you really don't have the cash or don't want to use credit cards, or have the time to deal with a bank – and that's why you can get a loan if you need a loan, from a payday loan lender.
It is untrue to say the new
It is untrue to say the new system will be paid for only by the wealthy. There are steep penalties for any citizen that does not purchase health care insurance. There are no such penalties with the present system.
Mandated insurance is a gross violation of individual freedom and our Constitution. The leading promoters of socialized medicine would jail your fellow citizen for not purchasing insurance and paying penalties. Promoting unjust laws in the cloak of a so called just cause is a most despicable pursuit worthy of loud and angry condemnation.
Pity the poor explorers, adventurers, and pioneers that came to this continent without the assurance of “free” health care, like the indigenous that preceded. Those so vociferously seeking unearned services on the backs of the most consistently productive people in history act disgracefully and dishonorably, and should immediately retreat in shame.
To proponents of socialized health care,
If you have the work ethic to rival the regard in which you hold yourselves, a regard so high that you absolve yourself of fundamental responsibilities and make your personal health largely the communal responsibility of all, you likely have some means to voluntarily provide for your own care and possibly even that of a few fellows, ccna, without the need to tax others. You heap the plight of masses, often plights of a self-inflicted nature, upon those neither responsible for such calamities nor promoting the questionable behaviors that may often lead to ill health.
If you do not have the means to care for yourself due to disability, I wish you absolutely no insult nor put forth the notion that all disability is a consequence of ill living or poor choices of the afflicted. Additionally, I have witnessed repeated evidence that there are many disabled that strive mightily to provide for themselves, succeed, and often provide for others, even others most able.
To those seeking free or subsidized health care:
Exactly what citizens do you name as responsible for your increased state of need? Explain why your claims to entitlement are just, and why the compensation provided you should exceed that provided the average citizen traditionally?
How are you more deserving than your neighbor?
What prior actions have you taken as an individual to solve the challenges that face you?
Why did these actions fail?
If you are to receive the generous help of your fellow citizens, what will you do to acknowledge and repay this kindness?
What makes your participation in society a reward for that society, as opposed to being a burden?
Consider that the last is a question that may rightly provoke great fear in the mind of the individual, particularly when it is asked by government. Better for you, that this question be asked by those around you, those that know you, and your peers if you are an honorable citizen. Yet, you would further grant this pursuit of questioning the individuals’ worth to those that have empowered themselves to oppress us by strangling the public throat and raiding the nation’s wallet.
I’d rather avoid the mandated purchase of health care insurance and be labeled a CRIMINAL than submit to the tyrants pretending to champion the oppressed.
Matt John