Just out of curiosity, exactly why do individuals disagree with obama's health care plan, or are people just sticking to their "party line"?
Originally Posted by thorough9
Disclaimer: Having not read that replies that followed, please note that I'm not responding to or taken note of any retorts that were made from this point in the thread)
As a conservative affiliated with the Republican party who is in disagreement with parts of the healthcare plan that was, more specifically, formulated by the Democratic congress and ultimately signed approvingly by Obama:
*First there are fundamental Constitutional disagreement on the legitamacy of the plan. While I understand the desire for people to want to provide for people's health and well being, if we place plans that ignore the Constitution that sets up the framework of what the federal government is empowered to do and has no power to do legitimately, then no law can be unconstitutional and anything may be passed. There were questions of whether the Bush administration was violating the Constitution and subsequent laws that further defined the right to privacy in the tapping into of communications by Americans to people outside of the United States. If those actions make the reader inflamed by the Bush actions are cool and collected by the healthcare law, they are most likely to be the type that are blindly-loyal to the Democrats or liberal stance and cannot see their own hypocracy at anytime. In both situations, its a very grey area of trying to do good while questioning if it is legitmate.
In healthcare, it violates the Constitution's 10th Amendment to reserved powers to the State and individual liberties. The federal government is not empowered to regulate, control, or provide healthcare. That's why healthcare laws vary state to state. Other methods than the current system needs to be developed (up and including a Constitutional amendment) that will allow for portablility of healthcare and individual carried healthcare insurance than employment-dependent(essentially) healthcare insurance system.
*The federal government cannot 'force' an individual to buy something they do not want. The analogy normally is that the States 'make' you buy car insurance, so why can't it make you buy health insurance. States making you buy car insurance is because you choose to have a car; if you do not buy a car and walk, bicycle, ride the bus, you do not have to buy insurance; and most states only require that you buy liability insurance, so the person YOU hurt if you cause an accident will be taken care of, not you.
*The healthcare law will bring about nationalized government healthcare insurance because the insurance companies which manage risk by measuring how much money will need to be accummulated to pay out any claim and still turn a profit (since it cannot print its own money like the federal government). If nationalized healthcare was run perfectly, yes, it would be a great thing. However, what are the chances that it will be run perfectly like any public or private organization? When a local government runs a school, there is some opportunity to move to another school district that is performing (yes, i'm simplifying for THIS discussion's sake); but if nationalized government healthcare is provided, there is no other game in the nation; you leave the United States (though again, maybe it would also be moving because it may no longer be a land built on freedom and liberty to choose).
*Government healthcare becomes political football. Each election, each Congress, how and what healthcare will be provided will be based on the elected officials and the influence of special interest groups. While currently having a healthcare system that is employer-purchased-oriented system is not completely thoughtful of the employee that exercises the insurance, it is not dependent on which party is in power. How children are taught is currently heavily influenced (in generaly) by the elected officials to the school board. How medicaid dollars will be provided to states is heavily influenced by the party in power and the laws and executive orders they make. Whether abortion will be covered or not covered for the federal-funded program or that federal-funded program is based on party in power. It is unwise having politicians (even when some are good and mean well) in control of an individual's healthcare needs.
This is why I am against the healthcare law that passed in 2010. It does not mean there is nothing 'good' in the law; there are many parts Republicans and Democrats agreed on that came into effect almostly immediately because they were agreeable all around (such as not rejecting coverage of pre-existing conditions of minors, which yes could or could not be covered by the federal government's right to 'regulate interstate commerce').
So that is my 'non-haterade', principled disagreement with the so-called 'Obamacare'.