fast_eddie_72 wrote:
madmallard wrote:
In reply to Duke:
for correct definintion sake, socialised medicine would be the elimination of an insurance system altogether and the goverment management of health care industry directly in some way, either as single payer, or complete ownership/power of all medical decisions.
You said that a lot shorter than me. However, it would be more than the elimination of the insurance industry- it woul be State employed health care providers, not for-profit doctors.
The important companion point is ansering the question- why is that word being used in association with our health care system when it is not accurate. And the answer has to do with politicians and agendas.
lol. i've been working on my breivity ;p
I would still consider it socialised medicine if the doctors were employed by a private firm. For my definition, it simply has to cross the threshold of direct government management of the affairs.
thats why medicare IS socialised medicine in my view. Just because you goto a private doctor doesn't mean that this doctor is not directly under the government's thumb while caring for you as a participance in medicare. The only thing I would say makes an arguement for me not calling it socialised medicine is that the doctor is not -forced/compelled- to accept the patient...
...for now.
anyways, to your point:
its a bit of a word association problem, really.
people see the compulsion to give the government money in return for no direct service to them as an individual as a tax. People see the compulsion to give the government money for the direct provision of a service to them as a social service of some kind. Socialism and socialised service are of course related, but not synonamous.
Also the so mentioned Obamacare, the promise being offered by people who defend it are basically what are fueling the critics who call it socialised medicine. Obama himself is also fuel on the fire, having been on record stating a preferred goal of his would be single-payer medical for the USA. But the rest of the supporters use language like: "everyone, fair, universal" and are trying to steer the discussion away from the mandated tax and to some of of reform provisions.
They may not realise its futile; because the mandate tax is not going away from the discussion, then its going to get attached to all the reforms, just like it is in the bill.
"Your kid will be able to goto college and stay on your health plan!..... but you are being forced to buy a health plan or be taxed!"
people associate the government forcing you to do anything as a form of socialism, and they aren't completely wrong... but then you add being taxed for doing something the government doesn't want you to do, instead of raising money for the function of government, and thats a form of social engineering. and so now we have about 4 different forms of the word "socialised" validly in the discussion, even if the bill isn't socialised health care. :/
its easy to get confused.