piscator wrote:Seth wrote:piscator wrote:It's not a strawman, it's a thought experiment deliberately set up with an extreme case where common sense says let the old man pass on rather than hollow out his bones so he can get another 4 months of ICU before he inevitably, well, passes on.
The decision to suspend care for a patient is between the patient and his or her doctor and nobody else, and that explicitly and specifically excludes government bureaucrats and death panels.
Like the insurance company has nothing to say in the matter...
Well, in a Libertarian model there is no "insurance company" skimming 40 percent off the top. The individual has X amount of money and negotiates with the doctor just as in any commercial transaction. "Health insurance" is a scam based on Jonno-like paranoia deliberately induced by the government and the insurance industry to make money. People don't need "insurance" they just need to put money away in a savings account to pay for their medical needs.
If the old man has a billion dollars and he wants to spend it on every possible heroic effort to keep him alive ten seconds longer, that's his absolute right. If he has zero dollars then he's not entitled to any treatment at all unless he can persuade others to donate on his behalf voluntarily, in which case he is turning the economic decisions over to his benefactors, who get to decide what's done with THEIR money.
Right. Death Panels. Just like every American health insurance company has.
Until Obamacare, contracting with an insurance company was a voluntary act and if you didn't like the provisions of the contract you were not required to sign up...like me...I haven't had "health insurance" since 1996, I just put all that money I would have paid in premiums into a savings account, which makes money for me, albeit not much at the moment, given "quantative easing" and other fucking-about with the economy by Obama and his evil minions.
As stated, his medical expenses would be paid for up to a certain amount decided upon by the people and collected through voluntary taxation to fund such a system. This was a hybrid suggestion to a strawman problem.
As stated, any person's "voluntary" options were 3:
1. Pay into the system and "volunteer" to suspend treatment beyond a fixed dollar amount some time hence.
2. Pay into the system but "volunteer" to not receive any benefits beyond 40 yoa.
3. "Volunteer" to go the fuck someplace else.
Number 3 should be "don't pay into the system and keep your money and pay for your medical care a la carte as needed."
In Libertarianism however, in no case would the government be involved in any way whatsoever in such decisions because the government has absolutely no constitutional authority whatsoever to involve itself or intervene in any medical decision of anyone, anywhere, any time. It's simply beyond the remit of government to deal with individual health care. Government's health care remit extends ONLY to the suppression of communicable diseases to prevent epidemics.
What about the VA? Should that be privatized?
Everything. Just like school vouchers, VA benefits should follow the vet as a voucher that can be used at any medical facility of the vet's choice. Such a voucher would be, according to contract at the moment, unlimited lifetime benefits that force the government to pay for the vet's medical care 100 percent, but the care is provided by the free market, not the government.
What about combat medicine? Privatized too?
Sure, why not? Mercenary armies would provide all those benefits to their employees if they want. If they don't want to, well, that will affect the quality and quantity of warfighters they can hire, and that will affect their effectiveness as a fighting force, which will mean fewer combat contracts because they are poorly staffed. Free market dynamics at work.
What about the Constitution, where it says the government was founded to promote the general welfare?
"Provide for the common defense" means trillions to the NSA and the TSA and Iraq, but "Promote the General Welfare" doesn't mean Jack Shit? Pull your head out of your ass.
Your view of your upper colon must falsely persuade you that everyone sees the world that way. You're mistaken.
Federalist 41: James Madison
Some, who have not denied the necessity of the power of taxation, have grounded a very fierce attack against the Constitution, on the language in which it is defined. It has been urged and echoed, that the power "to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debts, and provide for the common defence and general welfare of the United States," amounts to an unlimited commission to exercise every power which may be alleged to be necessary for the common defence or general welfare. No stronger proof could be given of the distress under which these writers labor for objections, than their stooping to such a misconstruction. Had no other enumeration or definition of the powers of the Congress been found in the Constitution, than the general expressions just cited, the authors of the objection might have had some color for it; though it would have been difficult to find a reason for so awkward a form of describing an authority to legislate in all possible cases. A power to destroy the freedom of the press, the trial by jury; or even to regulate the course of descents, or the forms of conveyances, must be very singularly expressed by the terms "to raise money for the general welfare." But what color can the objection have, when a specification of the objects alluded to by these general terms immediately follows, and is not even separated by a longer pause than a semicolon? If the different parts of the same instrument ought to be so expounded, as to give meaning to every part which will bear it, shall one part of the same sentence be excluded altogether from a share in the meaning; and shall the more doubtful and indefinite terms be retained in their full extent, and the clear and precise expressions be denied by signification whatsoever? For what purpose could the enumeration of particular powers be inserted, if these and all others were meant to be included in the preceding general power? Nothing is more natural nor common than first to use a general phrase, and then to explain and qualify it by a recital of particulars. But the idea of an enumeration of particulars which neither explain nor qualify the general meaning, and can have no other effect than to confound and mislead, is an absurdity, which, as we are reduced to the dilemma of charging either on the authors of the objection or on the authors of the Constitution, we must take the liberty of supposing, had not its origin with the latter.
In other words, "promote the general welfare" is not a mandate for Congress to do whatever it likes, it's a general statement of policy, nothing more. As Madison says, if what you (and the contemporary objectors) claim is true, there is not only no need for paragraph after paragraph of limitations on Congressional power, there is no need for anything else in the Constitution. If the Congress were intended to have plenary, sovereign powers like the King of England (which by the way the Founders had just tossed out of the country on his ass) then the Constitution would say something like, "The Congress is empowered to provide for the general welfare of the People," which would be an unlimited power, something that was never intended and was explicitly denied by the people who wrote the document.
Your argument has been debunked for some 238 years.
In short, a degree of freedom with no utility and heaping lots of downside, vs simple common sense.
It's none of your or anybody else's fucking business how a person spends his money on health care.
It is, even in your ideology, when he's a fucking member of my healthcare insurance fucking pool and my fucking money's involved.
No, it's not. You joined the insurance pool knowing what the terms of the contract were, and just as you have to put up with his using whatever resources he chooses to use, he has to put up with your use of resources. The allocation of those resources in a contractual risk pool relationship is delegated to the managers of the risk pool. If you don't like the way the pool is set up, then get out of the pool.
My insurance company has teams of lawyers working diligently to root the fuck out fraud and waste. They're trying to keep their fucking jobs after careers of rooting out preexisting conditions to deny claims, and removing long time policyholders before they're likely to file claims and cost fucking money.
That's what you contracted with them to do.
They'll have to work for the fucking government to feed their fucking kids if they can't earn their fucking keep in private contract law, so they're hustling motherfuckers. Why the fuck do you fucking think that is? Because it IS my fucking business how you spend my fucking money. Fuck.
But we're not talking about your health insurance company, we're talking about an individual who has a vested entitlement to lifetime medical care created by the government. When the government says "we'll take care of you" then that's a contract, and a binding one. Governments however usually do everything BUT take care of us, as the VA scandal proves. The sole reason they get away with shit like that is because it's the government, which can simply tell objectors to fuck off and die and there's no way to hold anyone accountable.
Which is exactly why the government must not be allowed to have anything at all to do with health care. Period.
You were forced by ideology to choose the former, of course. Your ideology has in fact limited your freedom to exercise common sense. You sensed this, so you imagined up a lump sum disbursement to make it look like you weren't so ideologically hidebound and blinkered.
I based that on the stated presumption that the taxpayers had approved some sort of social welfare/health care system that offered government-provided health care. That would not exist under Libertarianism at all for the aforesaid reasons.
Why wouldn't it? Would the Dictator not approve even if the taxpayers agreed?
I said it was a thought experiment. It was only two sentences. You took it on.

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It was a strawman and we are discussing it. What's your beef?
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"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
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