It is not a right, it has never been a right. Now if you want to make it one and justify it, thats fine. But then you will also ration it.
One reason no innovative medicine comes out of Europe is because they ration it, they ration the growth and development. You have the citizen "slugs" who must wait for the proper treatment. And you have the upper class who get the best treatment because they can afford it. In the end the only difference between rationing based on price and rationing based on politics, is that he rationing based strictly on politics, usually sucks. French doctors hate working in France (they are paid roughly what your teachers in the US are paid), and many do come to the US. German healthcare workers hate the system and there are constant strikes, and they can't find enough people to fill the needs of their population and they literally tax the hell out of people in order to cover it.
US rationing which is
partially through price, tends to have a better standard of care, though it doesn't cover all of citizens (85% are covered). So in the US we have a higher standard of health care for 85% of the population and the issue lies in how to handle the 15% (some of whom opt out in order to take home more pay - an option not available in Europe). Throwing out our medical system would be the worst mistake because Americans by and large reject the European system of healthcare. Americans tend to enjoy making their own decisions and using their money as they see fit (I know its a radical thought in socialist countries).
So from our point of view (the US), rights, are especially important and enumerated and not everything that is convenient or desireable is a right.
So lets look at the rebuttal:
1-Our ancestors did not dream of a future where their medical was covered. They dreamed of a future in which they could make their own economic decisions and make their own way. Europe was a paternalistic hell hole for them, that is why they left.
2-We do work and we do pay taxes. But the taxes we pay are not a guarrantee for full medical coverage, and based on that reasoning we might as well pay all of our income to the government and then make economic demands, but that means giving up our rights to choose. Every time we want the government to do something, it means we have to give up some individually based right. If you want the government to have the right to medical care, then you give up your right to choose your doctor, to choose your treatment, to choose much of anything (unless you are, of course the wealthy who don't have to worry about poor healthcare).
3-Our ancestors did not dream of "managing" the western boon. They dreamed of being part of it, of allowing the unfettered individual free to make their own income. Western boon was managed in Europe, that is why they left.
Americans don't trust government, they almost never have. Europeans have always trusted government, they always will, whether that government is benovelent, as many are, or a fascist nazi program (which many have been and will be again), Europeans tend to do those things the government wants. It is their nature, it is their "group think".
But lets talk about socialism:
In the US socialism is not considered a virtue. Group think isn't a virtue. In Europe it is the norm. For univrsal healthcare to work, the population must be easily malleable.
There was a story a month or so back where a rich prominent Canadaian (in politics) caused a ruckus because she went down to LA to get a very specific cancer treatment. This was the best hospital in the world for this specific case. She had the money. On forums some thought this proved something. To me it only proved that an American health care institution was happy to give a non-American first dibs in front of...who knows? A dying father? A dying 9-year old? Native to the country that spawned this hospital? That trained these doctors?
It has nothing to do with "first dibs". It does have something to do with the right to choose, including the rights of individuals outside the US. Socialism sees things as limited and sure, someone could have "dibs" since the healthcare was very limited. There is no "first dibs" (which indicates the idea of a limited abilty to provide healthcare). In fact all who can are allowed to come and take advantage of the healthcare available.
At this point one is forced to ask. Canada, and Europe, with all of its taxes to ensure a great "quality" of healthcare to its people, why is it the best treatment for cancer in the world - a major killer in Europe and the Americas is in the US? Why do they come here, why is innovation dead elsewhere? If it is simply a question of investment, then why is Europe failing miserably in that investment with no innovation to show for it, and in the US, new drugs and treatments coming forward all the time? If you have cancer, you are better off in the US than Europe or even Canada.
France, not surprisingly, has not made the cancer survival rates public.
UK TelegraphSo how does Europe cover all those people. Well, a bureaucracy will tell you that some drugs are covered and some are not. The decision is not based on effectiveness, but cost. Cheaper drugs are easier to deal with. In the UK 41% of the Brits have to wait more than 4 months for surgery. And European health systems have emphasized preventative health care less and less.
Prof Ian Kunkler from the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh, said waiting lists for radiotherapy were partly to blame.
"Although there has been a substantial investment in radiotherapy facilities, there is still a shortfall," he said.
advertisement"We have good evidence that survival for lung cancer has been compromised by long waiting lists for radiotherapy treatment."
Somewhat telling.