Today's Talking Point
Dec. 1st, 2005 01:00 amGovernment coverage for all catastrophic health care costs is a pro-business solution. Everybody wins.
-Health care companies could predict their costs because they know their ceiling, and then develop affordable plans and make a profit.
-Businesses would then be able to cover all their workers, knowing premiums will remain relatively stable.
-When small businesses and the self-employed can afford health care, because costs have lowered, the biggest percentage of the American health-care crisis will be taken care of. Then we can turn our attention to what's left.
-Health care companies could predict their costs because they know their ceiling, and then develop affordable plans and make a profit.
-Businesses would then be able to cover all their workers, knowing premiums will remain relatively stable.
-When small businesses and the self-employed can afford health care, because costs have lowered, the biggest percentage of the American health-care crisis will be taken care of. Then we can turn our attention to what's left.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-02 04:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-03 03:46 am (UTC)I can make it _a_ Talking Point, but not _the_ Talking Point. While 241 is definitely hyperbole, I probably do have at least 40 other rants involving things like sustainable agriculture, security and privacy, (I've added several more since I started reading Bruce's blog), cultural intolerance, sustainable housing, architectural design, women's clothing, the food and wine industry, and gaming. With my educational background and work experience in biology, ecology, environmental politics, insects and Integrated Pest Management and Biological Control, my prime talking points are really about agribusiness and sustainable agriculture.
But I will rant about Health Care from time to time (especially when the insurance premium is due). I suppose I could post all of my rants ...ahem... Talking Points on my own Journal, but that probably requires more typing than I want to do. But it's probably a good project, anyway, so maybe I will.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-03 06:53 am (UTC)