Quote from: cheryl reeves on May 29, 2017, 08:40:02 AM
I dislike too ask but where in the U.S. Constitution is it worded that taxpayers pay for Transgender or cis gender health care? Remember for free Healthcare and surgeries someone has to pay for it so you can have this care. This is the problem with social economics /socialism expecting those who work to support those who don't work. When was the last time you thanked a Taxpayer for your free healthcare?
Hi Cheryl, Happy Memorial Day. It's a leap that because someone is seeking treatment for their dysphoria that they are necessarily not contributing. Speaking for myself, I do pay taxes, and I do seek treatment, much of which is covered by my employer-provided insurance. So, is my treatment paid for, at least in part by tax dollars? Maybe not directly, but I'm not taxed on the value of insurance received, so perhaps in the intricacies of finance, taxes and insurance, I get a tax benefit which could be interpreted as money from the government for my treatment. There. Now is it right or fair that someone whose employer provides less comprehensive insurance, or pays less taxes, or lives in a state requiring additional gates before delivery of gender-related services gets less than I do? I find it VERY difficult to say "yes."
Taking a slightly different perspective, if we consider our competitive position in the world, the U.S. had long enjoyed its status as the provider of the best health care, and hosted one of the happiest, most satisfied populations on Earth. This is no longer true. We have been since surpassed on both counts by European liberal social democracies, like Denmark, Norway, Finland and the Netherlands. Now, if you believe that it's not in our nation's interest to provide the best health care, to everyone, and to provide for a citizenry that proclaims to the world that they are happy and proud of the life they lead, as supported by a responsive government, I'm curious about what kind of measures we ought to be using in order to guide our lawmaking and social systems.
We are still among the richest of nations on the planet, and in fact, outperform most of those aforementioned countries. So why are we unable to provide for similar levels of social services to our people. We're literally protecting our people less well than other nations who are poorer. If we, as individual citizens, were making this kind of comparison to our peers, we would certainly try to adopt best practices to improve the value received for our money. Well, if we do that as a nation, we see that the best performing nations provide their people comprehensive health care. If we choose not to follow that path, we ought to do so recognizing that we are deliberately sacrificing the happiness, and in many, many cases the lives of people in order to hold to some other value. I personally don't think there is a higher value for us to hold, but I'm certainly listening. Please take care.
Erin