Captain Seafort wrote:That depends on what they think. If the opinion of the majority of the population has little practical impact on the lives of their countrymen, fair enough. If it gets people killed, then as Tsu said the opinion of the majority should be disregarded. If they don't like paying a bit more so that lives can be saved then a) that's their problem and b) they can go and fuck themselves with a cattle prod.
Perhaps, perhaps not. However, a dissection of the merits and pitfalls of republican government is beyond the scope of this discussion and
maybe for another thread. Likewise, a treatise of "Why Seafort thinks everyone who isn't British
* is an asshole" is probably more suited to an opus in league with Gibbon.
* I may amend "British" to "English," because I'm not quite sure how you feel about the Scots, Welsh, or Irish.
Captain Seafort wrote:1) Which country, and what's the problem(s) with it?
Italy, evidenced by a physician who had worked in Sicily, Rome, and Napoli. The issue is that a set dollar amount for healthcare
per capita was set per fiscal year; if that had been exhausted, you had to wait until the next fiscal year for diagnostics, non-emergency care, etc. The report came from my cardiologist, one Mariano F. Battaglia, M.D., F.A.C.C. It came up because he suggested a stress test and echocardiogram, and noted that because of the date and the number of different specialists I'd seen, if I were his patient in Italy I'd likely have to wait until the next fiscal year before I could have those tests done.
Captain Seafort wrote:2) Does said system leave over 15% of the population up shit creek without a paddle?
Well, it affects everyone, as described. The main issue he noted is that people tend to not seek care for anything that doesn't involve severe blood loss, amputation, or worse, because they're trying to bank their alloted care for when it's needed. When one of my kids has a fever longer than 12 hours, I take him or her to the doctor; in the system described above, I likely wouldn't in case I needed to "save" that allotment of health care. The fact that said fever may either be just an upper respiratory bug, or may be the onset of Lyme Disease which can leave a child arthritic and crippled if not treated soon enough is just a sad fact of the matter.
Captain Seafort wrote:Actually I'd describe it as "public mandate unless it results in people dying necessarily".
You can describe it as a cow's ass if you want; it doesn't change the fact of what it is. Whether that overarching is good or ill is, as I mentioned, not part of this discussion.
Captain Seafort wrote:We do. As I said, we tried the alternative and realised what a bad idea it was.
The fact that you guys couldn't handle a non-monarchial society is immaterial. The original point to this line of discussion was that monarchial government did some bad shit in your country's history, but you still have it. It's hypocritical to say that our government hasn't got everything right so it should be shitcanned, while you're unwilling to do so.
Captain Seafort wrote:This is bullshit because there's absolutely nothing preventing an individual taking out private health insurance.
Ah, here's the confusion. You believe you know what our system is like. The above was send in the context of instituting a NHS-type system in the U.S., and as such is completely wrong. Unlike the UKoGBaNI, we here in the States don't have money trees. If the average American's annual healthcare budget is spent on either private insurance or as taxes to support a NHS is immaterial - when it's spent, it's spent.