I see you as a disrespectful, inconsiderate, selfish, young tough guy ... — James Riley
When the US was debating universal public healthcare, one of the things that derailed it was the Republican argument that there would be "death committees" that would be charged with determining who was provided care and who wasn't. The Democrats responded that was hyperbolic and inaccurate. As you've stated it though, you seem to accept that some government accounting committee would in fact intervene in the decision of who gets what health care and who does not. That is, you seem to be generally agreeing there will be and should be such death committees. That seems to me a hard strike against public health care ever coming to exist in the US if it were to move forward in the way you've suggested. — Hanover
What we should be forbidden to consider are factors surrounding the ethical worth of the two individuals, where the good hearted humanitarian gets the heart but Ebenezer Scrooge is left to die or where the prostitute is overlooked, but the community leader gets the nod, or, more pointedly, where the vaccinated gets care and the unvaccinated gets denied. — Hanover
You can frame it any way you like - it doesn't change what taxation is. — Tzeentch
For taxation to be theft, there must be a right to pre-tax income. Legally, this is clearly not the case. — Benkei
First of all, if you're not interested in argumentation, get the fuck out of here. — Benkei
I've not argued might makes right anywhere nor does it logically follow from my arguments. — Benkei
You have an opinion about what belongs to who and use it to justify taxation. Taxation relies on threats of violence. — Tzeentch
The important difference with universal healthcare and private healthcare insurance is that the decisions on what to cover isn't a cost-benefit analysis with respect to profit for private companies but instead about an efficient distribution of cost and effective care. — Benkei
This is a misrepresentation of my argument. I'm not arguing about the moral worth of a person, I'm arguing about taking into account culpable behaviour that contributes to the hospitalization. In a car accident where there's a victim and a speedster and only one operating room available and operating one means the other dies, I'd save the victim first. Why? Because the perpetrator has culpably contributed to his own hospitalisation. That lowers the responsibility on others to save him. I don't find this an ethically difficult position to hold. — Benkei
This will take us maybe too far afield because I don't want to turn this into a debate over the virtues of capitalism versus socialism, but, suffice it to say that even in a purely profit driven environment, a business entity must remain focused upon supplying services based upon the demand if it wants to realize profit. That is, an insurer can't expect to have subscribers if it excludes benefits for expected illnesses. — Hanover
Ought we afford them less care than others? — Hanover
The simple part is that more or less everyone wants the damn pandemic to be gone, to a reasonable extent, and so sensible people follow protocols to do theirs in whatever ways (mask, sanitize, distance, etc). Vaccinations are a great step forward. — jorndoe
So in your hypothetical it is not just harder not to comply, but it is made impossible, essentially. — Tzeentch
A situation in which states have absolute supervision and control of their citizens' wealth reeks of totalitarianism — Tzeentch
even in such a state there need to be laws against avoiding taxation through things like undeclared work and citizens bartering among themselves. — Tzeentch
No, not really, the government could simply spy on people, and if it thinks they've not declared work or income in kind, it just takes what it thinks it's owed. — Isaac
Why do you think I am opposed to agreements? — Tzeentch
If there is no law against circumventing the system the government puts in place, you do not think people would try their best at doing just that? — Tzeentch
The result of our agreement, about who owns what, (for which we used the democratic system) is that the government owns 20% of the pay you take home. — Isaac
You seem to think that, rather than by agreement, you get to decide whatever you think is your property. — Isaac
In all, whilst I think vaccination has a few merits as a choice of preventative measure to bolster a flagging health system, it's knocked out of the water by a half dozen other far more suitable candidates, all of which are being ignored solely for ideological reasons — Isaac
I never agreed to that. — Tzeentch
I haven't shared any opinions about what I believe belongs to who. — Tzeentch
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