dajo9;842849557 said:
You offer no solutions. Obamacare is the compromise and it is working well in places where it has state support (At least it was until Trump stopped the subsidies). If Republicans bring it down Millenials will usher in single payer health insurance. Your generations answer of "I got mine" will not hold in the long run.
I'm not trying to be rude here, but Odonto's last post just seems to carry so many fundamental misunderstandings of how health insurance works, it's no wonder he has no ideas about how to solve the health care crisis. For example, this:
OdontoBear66;842849545 said:
young healthy are penalized if they don't overpay for unneeded medical care to try to balance the books.
I mean, really?
That's how insurance works. It only works if people pay in when they are young and healthy, so that when they are old and sick there is enough money to cover their treatment. To call this "unneeded" is to basically say, "The problem with insurance is that it's insurance." It's nonsense.
Our system worked reasonably well back in the 50s and 60s when almost everyone had insurance through a large company or a labor union, which have big pools that everyone (young and old) pays into. It doesn't work so well now that we have a more "free agent" economy with people moving around, working multiple jobs without benefits, etc. (Another factor was that hospitals and insurance companies were non-profit back then . . . not by law, but by custom. Things changed when they realized they could make profits.) The answer to this problem is not to wash your hands of it and say, "Maybe it will just work out on its own." Lots of other countries have tried that. They've all wound up with either government-run health coverage or heavily regulated and subsidized coverage.
Times change, the economy changes, people change. The country needs to change with it. If your answer involves 20 million people left without health care, I'm going to say it's the wrong answer.