thegreekdog wrote:I guess you do not want to debate.
No, I am not interested in "debate" with those who shout down honest discussion with their politically convenient gotcha games.
I am all for a good debate - that is a subjective request, surethegreekdog wrote:(1) If you are posting in these forums, I assume you want to either discuss/debate or get approval. I acknowledge that cynical rationale being what it is, that's not something you'd want.
thegreekdog wrote:(2) I will change my opinion. I have changed my opinions based on posts and information in these very forums. In fact, I used to be stridently opposed to government-provided universal healthcare. I am now willing to see what happens.
I am happy to read this - and you are clearly a voice of reason in the echo-chamber.
thegreekdog wrote:(3) I'm not setting up false comparisons. All of the comparisons above are valid. The first is an inherent right (or perhaps a given one, depending on stance on things such as gun control), the second is not a right at all. If there's anything you can glean from this discussion, please take that as the one thing.
Well, I disagree with the comparisons - I consider them false by their nature - different rights, different provisions.
thegreekdog wrote:I believe you think that basic healthcare (as you define it) is an inalienable right (or, to use the term you've indicated above, an "inherent" right). I've always operated under the assumption that inalienable rights were those that were "granted from God" (or nature, depending upon one's belief in God and/or nature)... life, liberty, pursuit of happiness and all that. Now, if you tie in healthcare to the "life" part of that phrase, you could make the argument that healthcare is part of the inalienable right of life, but then we'd get into a discussion of whether we're talking about basic healthcare as I define it, or whether we're talking about basic healthcare as you define it.
In sum, I think our differences do not stem from a disagreement about the role of government in healthcare (although, certainly, I have my opinions on that). I think our differences here stem from your determination that healthcare is a basic right and something that is inalienable or inherent and I think it's more akin to police protection. And, like you said, I do think I'm right in that regard.
Yes, this is exactly our disagreement.