Why do we allow private insurance companies to decide how health care is accessible?

Everybody thinks you are stupid.





And, they're correct. You are stupid. The private sector beats the hell out of government in efficiency. Where government is needed is to do something the private sector cannot or will not do and it is accepted that inefficiency is to be tolerated to get whatever that is done.

After all, countries where the government owns and runs everything, like say, N. Korea, Cuba, or Venezuela, are so efficient that the whole country is impoverished and a creaking economic and governmental disaster.
 
Everybody thinks you are stupid.





And, they're correct. You are stupid. The private sector beats the hell out of government in efficiency. Where government is needed is to do something the private sector cannot or will not do and it is accepted that inefficiency is to be tolerated to get whatever that is done.

After all, countries where the government owns and runs everything, like say, N. Korea, Cuba, or Venezuela, are so efficient that the whole country is impoverished and a creaking economic and governmental disaster.
I never read your posts when you just post links. Or post pictures.
 
Who do you think should decide what health care is accessible?
Not the ones who make more profit by denying care that you have already paid for. Also, they have no product. They stand between the health care you pay for and somehow have the power to meter it out as they decide. They force doctors and hospitals to invest in a staff of workers to handle the deliberately confusing paperwork.
They have doctors on staff whose function is to find a way to deny care. They make more money that way. The CEOs of health insurance companies make huge bucks for fighting peopl trying to get the care they pay for. https://ceoworld.biz/2023/05/10/hig...ceos-raked-in-a-record-123-million-last-year/
 
Not the ones who make more profit by denying care that you have already paid for. Also, they have no product. They stand between the health care you pay for and somehow have the power to meter it out as they decide. They force doctors and hospitals to invest in a staff of workers to handle the deliberately confusing paperwork.
They have doctors on staff whose function is to find a way to deny care. They make more money that way. The CEOs of health insurance companies make huge bucks for fighting peopl trying to get the care they pay for. https://ceoworld.biz/2023/05/10/hig...ceos-raked-in-a-record-123-million-last-year/
Thank you, good post.
 
If government gets to do it, it'll get ten times worse.
Look at this report. Ignore everything except where they discuss "Care process." That's the ONLY category in this report that deals with the quality of care. The entirety of the rest of it measures how socialized the medical administration and pay system is.


They rank the US at #2 behind New Zealand. The US has some of the world's best medical care and treatment. What the US doesn't have is socialized medicine and that's what drags other nations down in terms of care.
 
Medicare for all


Funded by the same method Medicare is currently? How would that work?

Medicare for All (MFA) — a single-payer system that eliminates private insurance and puts every American on a government plan — faces near-insurmountable barriers in the United States. Here’s why it’s extremely unlikely to become law anytime soon:
  1. Sheer cost and the tax problem
    The most rigorous estimates (Mercatus Center at George Mason, Urban Institute, RAND, Charles Blahous for Medicare Trustees) put the additional federal cost at $32–$38 trillion over the first 10 years. That’s roughly double current federal revenue. Even if you eliminate all private insurance spending ($1.4 T/year), the government still has to come up with an extra ~$3 T a year.
    To raise that kind of money you’d need one of the largest tax increases in world history:
    • A 25–30 % national VAT (Europe’s highest is ~27 % and they have private options)
    • Payroll tax jumping from 15.3 % to ~35–40 %
    • Doubling or tripling income-tax rates across the board
      Every politician knows middle-class voters will revolt the moment their paychecks shrink by 30–40 %. That’s why even Bernie Sanders refused to show how he’d actually pay for it.
  2. 219 Republican House seats + 53 Republican senators (as of Jan 2025)
    The GOP uniformly opposes MFA; zero Republicans voted for the 2019 Jayapal bill. You would need:
    • 60 votes in the Senate (impossible without 7–10 Republicans flipping)
    • OR eliminating the filibuster, which requires 50 Democrats + VP who are all willing to nuke it for this one issue
      Even moderate Democrats (Manchin’s gone, but Sinema-style senators remain) won’t touch filibuster abolition for a $35 T program.
  3. Half the Democratic caucus doesn’t actually support it
    In 2025, only ~100 House Democrats co-sponsor the Jayapal MFA bill (down from 120 in 2020). In the Senate, only 14 Democrats co-sponsored Sanders’ bill in 2023, and several (Bennet, Carper, Coons, Warner) have explicitly said they’re against single-payer.
    Polls of Democrat voters show support collapses when you mention “eliminating private insurance” or “higher taxes.”
  4. 400,000+ healthcare jobs disappear overnight
    Private insurers (UnitedHealth, Anthem, CVS/Aetna, Cigna, Humana) employ ~550,000 people directly. MFA wipes most of them out. Those jobs are spread across every state — red and blue. No member of Congress wants to explain to their district why 5,000 high-paying white-collar jobs just vanished.
  5. Hospitals lose 15–20 % revenue instantly
    Current Medicare pays hospitals ~20 % less than private insurance. Shifting 180 million privately insured Americans onto Medicare rates triggers:
    • Mass hospital closures, especially rural (already 140+ closed since 2010)
    • Credit downgrades for every major system (Moody’s and S&P have modeled this)
      Hospital associations (AHA, FAH) spend nine figures lobbying against it every cycle.
  6. The “you lose your current plan” backlash is lethal
    181 million Americans under 65 have employer or private coverage. Kaiser Family Foundation polling:
    • 68 % say they like their current plan
    • Support for MFA drops from ~55 % to ~37 % when people hear “you can no longer keep your private insurance”
      That phrase killed the public option in 2009; it kills MFA every time.
  7. Provider opposition is wall-to-wall
    • American Medical Association
    • American Hospital Association
    • American Nurses Association
    • Pharma (PhRMA)
    • Every specialty society
      All oppose single-payer. Doctors don’t want Medicare’s 30-day payment delays and 30–40 % fee cuts.
  8. State governments revolt
    States currently spend ~$250 B/year on Medicaid. MFA federalizes that cost, but governors lose control and the ability to fund their universities, roads, and prisons with the savings. Red-state governors will sue (they already sued over ACA Medicaid expansion).
  9. No developed country has ever switched from private-dominant to single-payer as adults
    Every rich nation that has universal coverage either:
    • Started with it post-WWII when private insurance barely existed (UK, Canada), or
    • Kept multi-payer private systems (Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland)
      None abolished a $1.4 T private insurance industry after it was entrenched.
MFA would require the largest tax increase in human history, the abolition of a $1.4 T industry, the elimination of 180 million people’s current insurance, and near-unanimous Democrat control plus filibuster elimination — all at once.

Even during peak progressive power (2009–2010 with 60 Senate Democrats), they couldn’t pass a public option, let alone single-payer. Nothing fundamental has changed since then except the price tag got bigger and Republican opposition got stronger.That’s why Medicare for All remains a messaging slogan, not a viable 10-year policy.
 
We don't really. We regulate the crap out of them.


Which adds to the cost.

Government regulation drives up the cost of private health insurance—and thus what you pay in premiums, deductibles, and out-of-pocket expenses—in several direct, measurable ways.

Here’s how:
  1. Mandated benefits force you to buy coverage you don’t want or need
    Every state plus the ACA requires insurers to cover dozens of services: acupuncture, fertility treatment, maternity even for single men or post-menopausal women, unlimited mental-health days, autism therapy up to age 25 in some states, hair prostheses (wigs), pastoral counseling, etc. Each mandate adds roughly 1–5% to premiums according to actuarial studies. The Council for Affordable Health Insurance counted 2,271 separate benefit mandates across 50 states as of 2023; that’s ~45 extra things you’re forced to pay for whether you use them or not.
  2. Guaranteed issue + community rating = massive adverse-selection premium spiral
    ACA rules say insurers must accept everyone (guaranteed issue) and can only vary premiums 3:1 for age and 1.5:1 for smoking—nothing for health status. A healthy 30-year-old in New York now subsidizes a 63-year-old with diabetes by about 400%. Result: young healthy people drop out → risk pool gets sicker → premiums jump 20–40% a year until the next bailout. CBO estimated community rating alone added 20–30% to individual-market premiums permanently.
  3. Price controls on hospitals create hidden taxes passed straight to private plans
    Medicare and Medicaid pay hospitals ~74¢ and ~67¢ respectively for every dollar of cost (MGMA 2024 data). Hospitals offset this shortfall by charging private plans 275–479% of Medicare rates (RAND 2024). That’s literally a tax on privately insured patients to subsidize government programs. A hospital that gets $10,000 from Medicare for a procedure will bill a private plan $35,000 for the exact same thing. You pay that overcharge in higher premiums.
  4. Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) rules turn insurers into claims-processing utilities
    ACA forces carriers to spend 80–85% of your premium dollar on claims or rebates. Sounds consumer-friendly until you realize it kills competition on administration and forces insurers to raise premiums to hit the ratio when claims spike (COVID, new weight-loss drugs, etc.). UnitedHealth’s 2024 10-K explicitly says GLP-1 drugs added $2,000–$3,000 to per-member annual costs because they can’t cut admin to absorb it.
  5. Certificate-of-need (CON) laws block new hospitals and surgery centers
    35 states still require government permission to build a new MRI scanner or cardiac cath lab. This protects incumbent hospitals from competition, letting them keep prices 30–50% above competitive markets (FTC data). North Carolina’s CON board just blocked a new physician-owned hospital in October 2025—meaning higher prices for everyone with private insurance in the Triangle.
  6. Risk-adjustment and reinsurance games transfer billions from efficient plans to sick pools
    ACA risk-adjustment takes money from insurers with healthier members (think young-tech-company plans) and gives it to insurers with sicker members. In 2023 this transferred $11.6 billion. Your premium pays for someone else’s liver transplant even if your plan never sees that claim.
  7. Endless compliance paperwork
    HIPAA, MACRA, No Surprises Act, transparency rules, 2715 summary-of-benefits templates, etc.—the American Action Forum estimates regulatory compliance costs the health system $61 billion annually, with most of that landing on private plans. UnitedHealthcare alone employs ~18,000 people just for “regulatory and compliance.”
Net effect: a 40-year-old non-smoker in a high-regulation state like New York now pays ~$9,500 a year for a silver plan that cost ~$2,800 in 2000 dollars (MEPS data adjusted for inflation)—a 240% real increase almost entirely explained by accumulated regulations.

Strip away the mandates, rating bands, CON laws, and cross-subsidies, and private plans would cost 30–50% less overnight. Every dollar of that savings would go straight back into your pocket.
 
Coverage for all, not just those rich enough to afford it.


How would you suggest caregivers be paid for their services?

How would facilities be paid for? Who'd pay for the maintenance, administrative costs, and utilities?

How would medical products, drugs, and devices be funded?
 
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