@freemo I think that banning health insurance could get rid of this problem overnight.
Ya know I never considered banning health insurance... and I was about to say that sounds idiotic... but as I try to type it i just keep going "he aint wrong".. if everyone had to pay cash people would be pissed as fuck at the rip off prices and might actually demand some change.
The problem is people dont know how to fix problems. So while they would demand change that demand would be "make it free for everyone!" and then we are right back at having insurance again.
@freemo @realcaseyrollins The other problem with that is that, even with reduced prices, most people still wouldn't be able to afford emergency care. That leads us to a place where laborers end up disabled for life because they can't get a broken arm treated promptly.
Making it free up-front would likely be more economically viable than dealing with the long-term systemic effects of people not getting the care they need (similar to how we deal with homelessness and drugs: just endlessly throwing money at enforcement instead of prevention).
Fair point. I would say the middle class could afford emergency care if appropriately prices (after all insurance costs more than paying out of pocket **on average)... but your right that the poor would be left in the dust and rely on charity.
Savings based on what? Insurance is there to make money, it **cant** provide any savings on average unless it operates at a loss.
Now if you are talking about the savings that is created because insurance companies negotiate lower prices, that is the very thing outlawing insurance is intending to get rid of, to make sure the prices the average person gets is the same as the "real" price insurance gets. The fact that they scam you into insurance by charing individuals astronomically higher prices is the very thing that needs to be illegal.
@freemo @realcaseyrollins No, no, I'm talking about how much the average American has saved up, i.e. how much they have in their bank account to pay for emergencies sans insurance.