You apparently don't understand what "public" means. It means that the "cans" provide for the "can'ts" and "won'ts". You do this by either forcibly extracting the cost from a providing class or by forcibly extracting the service from the professionals.
It means exactly what Rolex said.
Furthermore, just about everything Rolex stated is true.
I can see your point of paying for those who are unwilling to contribute themselves, but what about what Gavagai said about the people who are willing to work and contribute, but can't secure full-time employment (36 hrs./week here in PA). What about the senior citizens? I can tell, as my 87 year old grandfather lives with my wife and I, that MediCare is a crock and that he is damn lucky that he has a secondary insurance.
I also understand what Rox is saying, to a point. Americans, by and large, have become very lazy, complacent, and do not take care of themselves as well as they should.What I refuse to accept is the "burden" that insurance companies have to bear. They collect from both ends: the patients for the health care insurance AND from the Doctors with the (ever increasing and ridiculous) malpractice premiums. To ice that cake, somehow it is becoming more and more common that the insurance companies get to make the decision about what is "medically necessary" . Yes, it's a business based upon risk, but why refuse anyone. Wouldn't it be just as profitable to adjust premiums based on AMOUNT of risk?
I cannot say I am a big fan of socialized health care either. Not until all Doctors (and health care providers as a whole are all required to adhere to a higher standard to get into, or stay in, the health care system. Most doctors these days are like a M.A.S.H. unit. Diagnose and treat the symptom instead of the problem. "Here take this pill." Fear not, the drug manufacturers are cashing in on that one, also. I live about 5 minutes from Merck and in the past 20 years, I have seen their campus grow from a couple of acres to more than a square mile in size.
It's a shame that we, as Americans, live in one of the most prosperous countries in the world, but yet, cannot seem to take care of our own people (for whatever reason). One would think that as ingenious and resourceful as we pride ourselves to be, that we could figure this one out.
I do not even have the time to rant about how our vets are treated, either. How the very people who have pledged their flesh and blood to keep this country safe and free so that these big companies don't need to worry about socialism, etc, cannot even receive decent care for injuries sustained while in the line of duty just confounds me to no end.
Once the power to decide what is needed for a patient has been wrested from the insurance and drug companies and given back to the folks who have gone to school for years and years to become doctors, perhaps then things will be a bit more fair.