Welcome to Debate Club! Please be aware that this is a space for respectful debate, and that your ideas will be challenged here. Please remember to critique the argument, not the author.

Paying the healthcare costs of obesity

Options
1121315171829

Replies

  • Gallowmere1984
    Gallowmere1984 Posts: 6,626 Member
    Options
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    WBB55 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    ...The reasonable choice for anyone who is not part of a two parent married unit and who is unable to independently support offspring would be to not make babies until they are married and financially able to support who they bring into the world....
    To bring this back to the topic at hand, do you then logically believe birth control and abortions and adoptions should be free to all women who are not married or independently financially secure?

    No. Let them keep their legs closed. It's not that hard. And if they have a lapse in judgment and want to put a baby up for adoption, I'm pretty sure they don't have to pay to do that.

    What if they have a "lapse in judgment" and don't want to give their child away? You would want them to be forced to do so?

    What if their legs are forced open, against their will? You would also take away their choice as to what to do in the even they became pregnant?



    To be fair, equating a spawn of rape, to people who just have poor judgment is a bit...out there. In such cases, I'd recommend that the aggressor face prison time, hard labor, and all proceeds of said labor be put into a trust fund for the child, useable by the victim, if she decided to keep the child.
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
    Options
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

  • ogtmama
    ogtmama Posts: 1,403 Member
    Options
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    I'm pretty sure that insurance payments make up the difference but I suppose I could be wrong. But I'm out cause I didn't know we weren't supposed to talk about politics. Have fun!
  • WBB55
    WBB55 Posts: 4,131 Member
    Options
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    Is 28% your marginal rate or effective rate?
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
    Options
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    I'm pretty sure that insurance payments make up the difference but I suppose I could be wrong. But I'm out cause I didn't know we weren't supposed to talk about politics. Have fun!

    Yep.
  • tlflag1620
    tlflag1620 Posts: 1,358 Member
    edited July 2016
    Options
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    WBB55 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    ...The reasonable choice for anyone who is not part of a two parent married unit and who is unable to independently support offspring would be to not make babies until they are married and financially able to support who they bring into the world....
    To bring this back to the topic at hand, do you then logically believe birth control and abortions and adoptions should be free to all women who are not married or independently financially secure?

    No. Let them keep their legs closed. It's not that hard. And if they have a lapse in judgment and want to put a baby up for adoption, I'm pretty sure they don't have to pay to do that.

    What if they have a "lapse in judgment" and don't want to give their child away? You would want them to be forced to do so?

    What if their legs are forced open, against their will? You would also take away their choice as to what to do in the even they became pregnant?



    To be fair, equating a spawn of rape, to people who just have poor judgment is a bit...out there. In such cases, I'd recommend that the aggressor face prison time, hard labor, and all proceeds of said labor be put into a trust fund for the child, useable by the victim, if she decided to keep the child.

    You were equating the two - you said women should just "...keep their legs closed. It's not that hard."

    Do you know what prisoners earn? Do your really expect that dollar or two a day to provide for a child? Who picks up the slack?

    Eta - sorry, it wasn't you that said that, it was newmeadow. I apologize. But the question still stands - do you really think a prisoners wages could even come close to covering the cost of raising a child? Or even the prenatal care if the mother did choose adoption? Or even the cost of an abortion (this has the best chance, after several years)?

  • ElJefeChief
    ElJefeChief Posts: 650 Member
    edited July 2016
    Options
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    The implicit assumption seems to be that the USA's healthcare system is free market while the UK's is not. Not the case even a teeny tiny bit. USA's healthcare market is largely cartelized and corporatized. The UK's healthcare market is largely socialized. I'm certainly willing to believe the UK system's outcomes are better than those in the US (although I'm guessing it's probably arguable and the picture is far more complex than is being suggested here), but given the above, that really isn't saying much.
  • BABetter1
    BABetter1 Posts: 618 Member
    edited July 2016
    Options
    Equality doctrine is already in effect. Let's say I earn $5 per year, and I pay $2 in taxes. And Joe Blow earns $3 per year and pays $0 in taxes because he's exempt. Big Gov will take my $2, of which I will be refunded $0 when I file taxes, and use $1 for deficit interest payments, and they will give the other $1 to Joe Blow who paid in nothing. He pays in nothing, but receives a tax 'refund'.

    ETA: Sorry, this was in response to lemurcat.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    Options
    DrEnalg wrote: »
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    The implicit assumption seems to be that the USA's healthcare system is free market while the UK's is not. Not the case even a teeny tiny bit. USA's healthcare market is largely cartelized and corporatized. The UK's healthcare market is largely socialized. I'm certainly willing to believe the UK system's outcomes are better than those in the US (although I'm guessing it's probably arguable and the picture is far more complex than is being suggested here), but given the above, that really isn't saying much.

    Outcomes are debatable -- depends on what you look at. US costs are higher, though.
  • terricherry2
    terricherry2 Posts: 222 Member
    Options
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    Actually the majority of my tax is paid at around 25%, with no insurance premium on top to worry about.
  • WBB55
    WBB55 Posts: 4,131 Member
    Options
    BABetter1 wrote: »
    Equality doctrine is already in effect. Let's say I earn $5 per year, and I pay $2 in taxes. And Joe Blow earns $3 per year and pays $0 in taxes because he's exempt. Big Gov will take my $2, of which I will be refunded $0 when I file taxes, and use $1 for deficit interest payments, and they will give the other $1 to Joe Blow who paid in nothing. He pays in nothing, but receives a tax 'refund'.

    ETA: Sorry, this was in response to lemurcat.

    I'll go with this. But I think it's more like you earn $4 plus $1 in health care benefits from your job you work hard at. Joe earns $1 at the job he works hard at. The feds tax you $2. You still have $2 plus your $1 in benefits. The feds give $0.50 to Joe and keep $0.50. Joe now has $1.50. You still have $3.

    In my mind, though, you're mad at Joe when who you should be mad at is the person who earns 10x what you make working hard at their job, but still only pays the $2 in taxes. In my opinion Joe and his $0.50 isn't the problem.
  • terricherry2
    terricherry2 Posts: 222 Member
    Options
    DrEnalg wrote: »
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    The implicit assumption seems to be that the USA's healthcare system is free market while the UK's is not. Not the case even a teeny tiny bit. USA's healthcare market is largely cartelized and corporatized. The UK's healthcare market is largely socialized. I'm certainly willing to believe the UK system's outcomes are better than those in the US (although I'm guessing it's probably arguable and the picture is far more complex than is being suggested here), but given the above, that really isn't saying much.

    I don't remember exactly where it was, but there was an independent study done last year of the top 10 economies and their health systems. USA was top for cost and bottom for outcomes. UK was top for outcomes and somewhere near the bottom for cost. Sorry I don't have the link.
  • Gallowmere1984
    Gallowmere1984 Posts: 6,626 Member
    Options
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    WBB55 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    ...The reasonable choice for anyone who is not part of a two parent married unit and who is unable to independently support offspring would be to not make babies until they are married and financially able to support who they bring into the world....
    To bring this back to the topic at hand, do you then logically believe birth control and abortions and adoptions should be free to all women who are not married or independently financially secure?

    No. Let them keep their legs closed. It's not that hard. And if they have a lapse in judgment and want to put a baby up for adoption, I'm pretty sure they don't have to pay to do that.

    What if they have a "lapse in judgment" and don't want to give their child away? You would want them to be forced to do so?

    What if their legs are forced open, against their will? You would also take away their choice as to what to do in the even they became pregnant?



    To be fair, equating a spawn of rape, to people who just have poor judgment is a bit...out there. In such cases, I'd recommend that the aggressor face prison time, hard labor, and all proceeds of said labor be put into a trust fund for the child, useable by the victim, if she decided to keep the child.

    You were equating the two - you said women should just "...keep their legs closed. It's not that hard."

    Do you know what prisoners earn? Do your really expect that dollar or two a day to provide for a child? Who picks up the slack?

    Eta - sorry, it wasn't you that said that, it was newmeadow. I apologize. But the question still stands - do you really think a prisoners wages could even come close to covering the cost of raising a child? Or even the prenatal care if the mother did choose adoption? Or even the cost of an abortion (this has the best chance, after several years)?

    Yes, assuming two things: cost per inmate is left at it's nominal level, BUT said inmate is stripped on any and all added cost "niceties". If it's not required for survivial, it's not provided, and those funds are funneled over.
  • WBB55
    WBB55 Posts: 4,131 Member
    Options
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    WBB55 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    ...The reasonable choice for anyone who is not part of a two parent married unit and who is unable to independently support offspring would be to not make babies until they are married and financially able to support who they bring into the world....
    To bring this back to the topic at hand, do you then logically believe birth control and abortions and adoptions should be free to all women who are not married or independently financially secure?

    No. Let them keep their legs closed. It's not that hard. And if they have a lapse in judgment and want to put a baby up for adoption, I'm pretty sure they don't have to pay to do that.

    What if they have a "lapse in judgment" and don't want to give their child away? You would want them to be forced to do so?

    What if their legs are forced open, against their will? You would also take away their choice as to what to do in the even they became pregnant?



    To be fair, equating a spawn of rape, to people who just have poor judgment is a bit...out there. In such cases, I'd recommend that the aggressor face prison time, hard labor, and all proceeds of said labor be put into a trust fund for the child, useable by the victim, if she decided to keep the child.

    You were equating the two - you said women should just "...keep their legs closed. It's not that hard."

    Do you know what prisoners earn? Do your really expect that dollar or two a day to provide for a child? Who picks up the slack?

    Eta - sorry, it wasn't you that said that, it was newmeadow. I apologize. But the question still stands - do you really think a prisoners wages could even come close to covering the cost of raising a child? Or even the prenatal care if the mother did choose adoption? Or even the cost of an abortion (this has the best chance, after several years)?

    Yes, assuming two things: cost per inmate is left at it's nominal level, BUT said inmate is stripped on any and all added cost "niceties". If it's not required for survivial, it's not provided, and those funds are funneled over.

    Is medical care one of those "niceties" you'd deny them under your plan?
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
    edited July 2016
    Options
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    Actually the majority of my tax is paid at around 25%, with no insurance premium on top to worry about.

    That's nice for you I guess.....

    For what I make, it's in the 28%. Socialize healthcare (purely estimating of the Canadian model), it would be in the 38-40% range. Get it under 5% of gross (because premiums aren't taxed), I can listen.
  • WBB55
    WBB55 Posts: 4,131 Member
    Options
    RGv2 wrote: »
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    Actually the majority of my tax is paid at around 25%, with no insurance premium on top to worry about.

    That's nice for you I guess.....

    For what I make, it's in the 28%. Socialize healthcare (purely estimating of the Canadian model), it would be in the 38-40% range. Get it under 5%, I can listen.

    The only people who pay 28% effective federal taxes in the US are in the top 1%. Effective tax rate chart, uses 2010 data.
  • Gallowmere1984
    Gallowmere1984 Posts: 6,626 Member
    Options
    WBB55 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    WBB55 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    ...The reasonable choice for anyone who is not part of a two parent married unit and who is unable to independently support offspring would be to not make babies until they are married and financially able to support who they bring into the world....
    To bring this back to the topic at hand, do you then logically believe birth control and abortions and adoptions should be free to all women who are not married or independently financially secure?

    No. Let them keep their legs closed. It's not that hard. And if they have a lapse in judgment and want to put a baby up for adoption, I'm pretty sure they don't have to pay to do that.

    What if they have a "lapse in judgment" and don't want to give their child away? You would want them to be forced to do so?

    What if their legs are forced open, against their will? You would also take away their choice as to what to do in the even they became pregnant?



    To be fair, equating a spawn of rape, to people who just have poor judgment is a bit...out there. In such cases, I'd recommend that the aggressor face prison time, hard labor, and all proceeds of said labor be put into a trust fund for the child, useable by the victim, if she decided to keep the child.

    You were equating the two - you said women should just "...keep their legs closed. It's not that hard."

    Do you know what prisoners earn? Do your really expect that dollar or two a day to provide for a child? Who picks up the slack?

    Eta - sorry, it wasn't you that said that, it was newmeadow. I apologize. But the question still stands - do you really think a prisoners wages could even come close to covering the cost of raising a child? Or even the prenatal care if the mother did choose adoption? Or even the cost of an abortion (this has the best chance, after several years)?

    Yes, assuming two things: cost per inmate is left at it's nominal level, BUT said inmate is stripped on any and all added cost "niceties". If it's not required for survivial, it's not provided, and those funds are funneled over.

    Is medical care one of those "niceties" you'd deny them under your plan?

    If it's not acutely lifethreatening or infectious, then yeap. I have precisely zero sympathy for rapists, and would actually prefer execution or chemical castration in cases with proper evidence (DNA and obvious signs of physical trauma, etc.). However, that execution bit would prevent their being useful in this particular instance.
  • ogtmama
    ogtmama Posts: 1,403 Member
    Options
    WBB55 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    WBB55 wrote: »
    newmeadow wrote: »
    ...The reasonable choice for anyone who is not part of a two parent married unit and who is unable to independently support offspring would be to not make babies until they are married and financially able to support who they bring into the world....
    To bring this back to the topic at hand, do you then logically believe birth control and abortions and adoptions should be free to all women who are not married or independently financially secure?

    No. Let them keep their legs closed. It's not that hard. And if they have a lapse in judgment and want to put a baby up for adoption, I'm pretty sure they don't have to pay to do that.

    What if they have a "lapse in judgment" and don't want to give their child away? You would want them to be forced to do so?

    What if their legs are forced open, against their will? You would also take away their choice as to what to do in the even they became pregnant?



    To be fair, equating a spawn of rape, to people who just have poor judgment is a bit...out there. In such cases, I'd recommend that the aggressor face prison time, hard labor, and all proceeds of said labor be put into a trust fund for the child, useable by the victim, if she decided to keep the child.

    You were equating the two - you said women should just "...keep their legs closed. It's not that hard."

    Do you know what prisoners earn? Do your really expect that dollar or two a day to provide for a child? Who picks up the slack?

    Eta - sorry, it wasn't you that said that, it was newmeadow. I apologize. But the question still stands - do you really think a prisoners wages could even come close to covering the cost of raising a child? Or even the prenatal care if the mother did choose adoption? Or even the cost of an abortion (this has the best chance, after several years)?

    Yes, assuming two things: cost per inmate is left at it's nominal level, BUT said inmate is stripped on any and all added cost "niceties". If it's not required for survivial, it's not provided, and those funds are funneled over.

    Is medical care one of those "niceties" you'd deny them under your plan?

    If it's not acutely lifethreatening or infectious, then yeap. I have precisely zero sympathy for rapists, and would actually prefer execution or chemical castration in cases with proper evidence (DNA and obvious signs of physical trauma, etc.). However, that execution bit would prevent their being useful in this particular instance.

    Everybody in jail is not a rapist. In fact the vast majority are in for non-violent drug offenses.
  • ElJefeChief
    ElJefeChief Posts: 650 Member
    edited July 2016
    Options
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    DrEnalg wrote: »
    RGv2 wrote: »
    Soooo happy to live in the UK with socialised healthcare, paid for through taxes and which has better clinical outcomes and is cheaper per capita than private models. And I say that as a high rate tax payer who likely pays for the healthcare of others that are less well off than me. I get why so many Americans are so wedded to the insurance system, given that huge corporations have told people for years that anything else is filthy communism or giving away their hard earned money to the lazy, but I just can't get my head around it.

    I guess I just prefer paying 28% in taxes rather than 38-40%, but that's just me.....

    The implicit assumption seems to be that the USA's healthcare system is free market while the UK's is not. Not the case even a teeny tiny bit. USA's healthcare market is largely cartelized and corporatized. The UK's healthcare market is largely socialized. I'm certainly willing to believe the UK system's outcomes are better than those in the US (although I'm guessing it's probably arguable and the picture is far more complex than is being suggested here), but given the above, that really isn't saying much.

    Outcomes are debatable -- depends on what you look at. US costs are higher, though.

    I'm willing to believe that, I suppose - in the United States our healthcare market is drowning in a welter of laws, regulations, and edicts that have resulted in a schizophrenic, duplicative morass of subsidies, welfare programs and entitlements that aren't free-market in the least, have high administrative costs, and end up increasingly enriching corporations and bureaucrats to all of our detriment.

    Still, I'm not sure why the argument against the above should be "just socialize everything like the UK." I get that the NHS brings out a weird sense of defensive patriotism in the Brits, but I don't think because the US system is so increasingly flawed means we should go ahead and jump right into a different flawed scheme.

    How about we try the free market? When in comes to information technology, which comparatively has been subject to far less regulation in the USA, consumers have for the past several decades reaped the benefits of a blistering pace of innovation combined with steadily decreasing costs.

    Wouldn't that be nice in healthcare? Just a thought.