Snowy

Excellent read on why voters need to contact their reps on health care change.

Comments

I say the same thing about bad jobs - often we don't realise how bad the job was until we are out of it and in a better job...the same with health care no doubt.
So true, FD, although it's more a case of swings and roundabouts, I suppose.

I am reminded of words of wisdom I saw on a wall in a cafe in Noosa many years ago. "Life is like a shit sandwich. The more bread you got, the less shit you have to eat." The wisest words I ever read up till that point. That was in the days before I watched the Simpsons...
[this is good]
Excellent, Snowy.

Some nice stats to work with.

I wonder at how the US has managed to suppress better treatment for the poorer members of their society. The carrot of someday making it big has always been part of the answer I guess.

Especially telling is the Canadian incentive to start a small business. The Yanks have always believed they promote self starters into business but the don't think about the higher risk of leaving health benefits behind. This is a double whammy. Less folk risk making the leap and those that do can crush their health from working too hard and not affording early intervention. If you do make it in the States you really have to have had a good run.

The EEC have some nice stats along these lines too. I forget the margin but a startup in Europe has a clearly better success rate and their overall wealth levels are higher too.
Sara Robinson writes good stuff. In the above article she puts a different slant on the health care discussion that I had just never considered. I have often pointed conservatives to this, this and this for an expat American's take on the Aussie health scheme. Invariably, they'll respond with some comment about Nanny State or some such nonsense. The truth is that they just don't want to believe that other countries do some things better than the U.S. The Whitlam government never does get due credit for introducing Medibank, later to become Medicare.

For all the mud people throw at Medicare and our public health system, in the main it just works. Sure, people bitch about the system being overloaded... but maybe people just don't consider that that happens because the system IS accessible, unlike in the US where it is simpler/cheaper to just die.

An excellent post Snowy. Brings the health care debate into sharp focus.

As in everything, Ninja, it's only the whingers who are vocal,. The vast majority who have no complaints remain silent. That isn't to say the system's perfect, but no-one's claiming that. At least we can go through life without the fear of being bankrupted through health bills, and that has to be a huge plus.
The funny thing about the Nanny State comment is that it's simply a quick grab to hide the fact that their system doesn't work and costs a mint. Any sort of examination shows them that most other countries have it worked out. They are a first world country running a 3rd world health system.

Of course the beneficiaries of their system are wealthy and highly motivated towards protecting their income stream in spite of the overall damage it does to the country. Of course they will line themselves up as patriots in spite of putting themselves ahead of their country.

Meanwhile the Nanny State comment provides a convenient excuse for a viewpoint they haven't seriously thought about. Perhaps Obama should push hard on the Economics of the matter and blow the cost argument out of the water.
I see where Mad Monk Abbot is running with Nanny State mantra too. Which doesn't surprise me at all...
Didn't see that from the Mad Monk Snowy, but I'm not surprised and look forward to blogging about it.

I'm just waiting for the reshuffle to get stuck in.
Here's the nanny state comment, Pete.

Talk is that Abbot will get Immigration so that he can tap into to the Pauline Hanson vote.
Bewdy, Snowy.

Good to see young Tony is still one of Kevin 07's biggest assets.

The "hoping that folk" don't smoke in the car with their kids looks a hell of a lot like the Red neck approach to gun control in the US. Let's not make any rules but trust to common sense.

It only works if common sense becomes more common.

I'll have a play with this Abbot material tonight. Thanks for the tip.

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