I wonder if we're using the wrong paradigm to frame our domestic #healthcare debate. Instead of "left vs. right" and "freedom of choice," underpinned by the increasingly ridiculous reliance on our capacity to make rationale, cost-effective decisions at the point of sale, maybe we should think about healthcare as part of a societal services layer.
To analogize, we can all develop in machine language, but, as the Commodore 64 has long given way to cloud services, having the freedom to twiddle one's bits is frankly counter-productive. In that same vein, increasing levels of abstraction - our societal services layer - have freed us to be more productive, absolving the lot of us from having to worry about the nitty-gritty of natural disasters, homeland security, clean drinking water, etc.
"Americans have spent the last decade arguing loudly about whether and how to provide insurance to a relatively small percentage of people who don’t have it. Singapore is way past that. It’s perfecting how to deliver care to people, focusing on quality, efficiency and cost."As a reasonable capitalist, I'm no fan of unwarranted government overreach, but if the "socialist paradises" of Singapore and Taiwan can create workable healthcare services layers within the context of the free market, I'm optimistic in our ability to achieve similar outcomes... if we put our minds to it.
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