Yes, there's no way to make a hc system that doesn't over-inflate prices... no place on earth has ever done that EVER!!!!
Actually, I just went over how to do that, without the talent drain inherent to a single payer system. Again, reading comprehension ftw.
He said, completely ignoring that i quoted a different part of his post then the one he's referring to (ur story) when i said this.
Oh please, you're the king of selective hearing, only talking about the parts you want to twist to your rhetorical advantage. Address the crux of the matter, don't get bogged down in the minutiae.
So tell me again why is it going to go to waste if they use it on this person?
And do it in 1 word...
You know the one.
Scarcity?
How about the fact that you're trying to limit me to one word answers is a dead giveaway that you can't win this argument without railroading through the oversimplification?
Well that's convenient: "it's only real capitalism up until it reaches it's inevitable conclusion of someone winning!".
Hey, you can't shout fire in a crowded theater, but we still have freedom of speech. This is not difficult to understand. You're trying to force a false dichotomy here.
And my point was that it's obviously not free if you need intervention to keep it "free". But then again that was more me trying to get you to admit to yourself you don't believe in the concept of the free market that the more deluded libertarians do.
Oh, I know I depart a little from the standard libertarian screed on a few points, this one included. But yes, a "free" market does need to be maintained as such, and yes, it's still "free" (as opposed to a centralized, government-controlled market).
Yeah, no, dude, the reason they refused to pay was because their whole incentive is to never pay. They don't actually win anything by letting the hospitals cover their expenses from other areas (like emergency care for poor people who can't pay), they just don't care about it since the higher prices allow them to refuse you claim at higher rates.
Leaving your health in the hands of insurance companies who motive is profit is just a bad idea, since they always make more money from not paying up.
Well, this part I agree with, which is why I am advocating divorcing insurance from the process. Make insurance INSURANCE again, not a faux medical payment plan. A good first step would be moving the paradigm form high premium, low deductible plans to low premium, high deductible plans that work hand in hand with an HSA. Make the patient the customer again, so that there's competition for their dollar, and the doctors work for the patients instead of the insurer.
Also, colluding is always a better idea then competing unless you can push the competition out of the market, or at least dominate them.
Sort of like in baseball, if there were no rules, it'd be a better idea not to drop the bat as you start running bases, so that you could bludgeon anybody who tried to tag you out, and every single would become a home run. That's why competition has to be enforced, because it's what makes the free market work for the consumer, instead of against them.