I said that hospitals invest in new equipment. This fuels the companies that invest in the R&D to create new equipment or do you think that a company will spend billions of $$ to invent the next generation of equipment if there is no market in which to sell it?
I never side-stepped the argument. You obviously did not re-read my first statement with the corrected definitions in mind. Never would I claim that insurance companies invest in medical R&D. That is not their concern. They are in the insurance business, not the healthcare business.
Please do take to time to try and understand an argument before spouting off contradictions to statements that were never made.
I do understand that you can not plan for everything. That is where, assuming you have planned for some type of catastrophe and the one you experience is abnormally burdensome, charity organizations could step in to help. I do not believe in helping those that do not try to help themselves. If you make $40K/year and do not put at least 10% into savings than you are fiscally irresponsible and should suffer the consequences. So many people live outside their means and then complain that life to too tuff. Does the person who claims they can not pay their daughter's medical bills have cable tv, more than one vehicle, drink beer, etc? If so than they have caused their current situation and should find a way to deal with it.
Yes it would be very tough in the first several years as it requires a large shift in the way our country view personal responsibility. Many would die and that is tragic but would lead us back to a sense of personal accountability that is sorely lacking in this country.
Before any attacks come on me claiming that I must not know what it's like to be poor let me assure you that I am very familiar with what it means to live from week to week not knowing if you will be able to pay the electric bill, buy food, etc. I grew up in a household making less than $30K combined income with 3 boys. My parents had to prioritize and spend wisely to provide for us. We could not afford health insurance and set up payment plans when I would break a bone or my brothers would get sick. Never once did my parents apply for social assistance because we did not need it although many making much more than them thought that they did (and got it).
I worked hard in HS and got into one of the best schools in the nation only to find that I could not afford to go. It took some maneuvering but my mother got her boss to co-sign the loan for the first year. I was able to get the subsequent years loans through a federal subsidy and have just recently been able to take advantage of the market rates to refinance and use a drop in equity to pay off the loans (several 10s of thousands of $$).
After school I lived on couches, with girlfriends, etc for years due to the job I sought (very low pay, long hours, etc) and worked odd jobs consistently. Lost a motorcycle to collections, went badly into debt, and hit rock bottom. I have several years on record where my income was below $10K and I never applied for gov't assistance. It has been many years since I decided to get myself out of that condition, working everything from McDonalds Assistant manager, short-order cook at a small bar, painter, landscaper, etc finally ending up as a temp with a company that saw my potential and I have moved up the ladder since.
It is ok to let people hit rock bottom where they have to go hungry, get their cable tv cut off, no electricity (I've done that when I was a kid and as an adult) because it will show them the necessity of good fiscal management. You don't have to go to college to learn this but we, as a society, seem hell-bent on keeping others from learning these type of lessons.