As usual, babe can't seem to distinguish me from some demon in his mind. I have no interest in telling other people how to live. I do think that people should not have to devote three hours of research into every fifteen-minute interaction with a doctor, just to be safe. You are not protecting people by forcing them to use their own learning to research medicine, especially when their learning are in fields that are not at all medically related. You are throwing them to the wolves. It's not as if we've never had societies with medicine men and a complete lack of medical standards. Such societies were the norm over most of the world for most of history. We created our medical beauracracy as a response to the horrors its lack unleashed.
I don't think governments are particularly compassionate nor competant, but they can provide minimals level of both when the people running the government are interested in so doing. A society with strict construction codes will see fewer house fires and less corporate pollution. A society with strict medical codes will have healthier people per dollar spent. The only liberal thing about it is recognizing that we all impact society with our decisions. If I build my house with substandard conditions, and it catches fire, the whole community is endangered, and the whole community pays to have it put out. If I see some quack and my preventable illness gets worse, I use more sick days at work, and this affects my coworkers and my business's owners. Humans have been living in regulated groups since well before historical times, because we are the sorts of social animals that form interdependent societies.
Your continued, ignorant blather about the nature and purposes of public education is quite offensive, frankly. My parents were both full-time teachers, both sought to inculcate critical thinking as well as class material, both loved the ideals that shaped out country, both believed in liberty and creating self-aware people. As shocking as this may be, you can instill these values without teaching Latin or Greek.
I agree the caseloads of medical professionals are too large. This is the result of market forces on healthcare, the market forces you want to unleash to an even greater degree.If you really want an hour of a doctors time, feel free to pull a grand out of your wallet. Sure, that's three weeks wages for some people, but what the heck? Free markets rule!
The AMA works in a variety of ways to help lower health care costs, but the primary drivers of health care cost increases in this country are (in no particular order) the use of increasingly expensive treatment protocols for otherwise untreatable diseases, technological advancements, an aging population, and the increase in maintenance treatments. Which of those do you think the AMA controls? Your answer is to allow the purveyors of coffee enemas to make the same medical claims as purveyors of chemotherapy (more likely, the purveyors of coffee enemas will make stronger claims, that's what quacks have done in the past). I don't see how spending 10% of the cost to get 0% of the effectiveness is a good strategy, but if people see them be advertised as being equally effective, they will believe it. I'm just not heartless enough to allow people to die because they lack the time or ability to carefully research such decisions.
Scare tactics, fear-mongering, and exploiting ignorance are the very tactics you are using. If you want to dispose of them, I suggest you work on the plank in your own eye. I agree more education is better. If you have a suggestion for a way to separate caqpable professional caregivers from incapable caregivers that is not already alvailable, let's hear it. Right now, your demogoguing and proposing solutions that worsen the problem, instead of improving it.
I don't think governments are particularly compassionate nor competant, but they can provide minimals level of both when the people running the government are interested in so doing. A society with strict construction codes will see fewer house fires and less corporate pollution. A society with strict medical codes will have healthier people per dollar spent. The only liberal thing about it is recognizing that we all impact society with our decisions. If I build my house with substandard conditions, and it catches fire, the whole community is endangered, and the whole community pays to have it put out. If I see some quack and my preventable illness gets worse, I use more sick days at work, and this affects my coworkers and my business's owners. Humans have been living in regulated groups since well before historical times, because we are the sorts of social animals that form interdependent societies.
Your continued, ignorant blather about the nature and purposes of public education is quite offensive, frankly. My parents were both full-time teachers, both sought to inculcate critical thinking as well as class material, both loved the ideals that shaped out country, both believed in liberty and creating self-aware people. As shocking as this may be, you can instill these values without teaching Latin or Greek.
I agree the caseloads of medical professionals are too large. This is the result of market forces on healthcare, the market forces you want to unleash to an even greater degree.If you really want an hour of a doctors time, feel free to pull a grand out of your wallet. Sure, that's three weeks wages for some people, but what the heck? Free markets rule!
The AMA works in a variety of ways to help lower health care costs, but the primary drivers of health care cost increases in this country are (in no particular order) the use of increasingly expensive treatment protocols for otherwise untreatable diseases, technological advancements, an aging population, and the increase in maintenance treatments. Which of those do you think the AMA controls? Your answer is to allow the purveyors of coffee enemas to make the same medical claims as purveyors of chemotherapy (more likely, the purveyors of coffee enemas will make stronger claims, that's what quacks have done in the past). I don't see how spending 10% of the cost to get 0% of the effectiveness is a good strategy, but if people see them be advertised as being equally effective, they will believe it. I'm just not heartless enough to allow people to die because they lack the time or ability to carefully research such decisions.
Scare tactics, fear-mongering, and exploiting ignorance are the very tactics you are using. If you want to dispose of them, I suggest you work on the plank in your own eye. I agree more education is better. If you have a suggestion for a way to separate caqpable professional caregivers from incapable caregivers that is not already alvailable, let's hear it. Right now, your demogoguing and proposing solutions that worsen the problem, instead of improving it.