Because if they are Christians they should have to follow the edicts you spelled out in your other posts. But, of course, many don't.
We're getting to a point where if you don't understand Christianity (which is fine), you shouldn't really be telling me what Christians should and shouldn't do. As far as Congress goes, my understanding is that they're there to represent their constituency. Not enforce their Christian/Atheist/Muslim/Wiccan/etc. morals on the populace.
GOP has been saying that for awhile, especially when it comes to Welfare, etc. That it should be up to the individual to determine where and how they give their money to the poor. And I'm not sure why you would say that about me since you don't know what time and money I do donate (and I do) to resolving issues such as those.
My apologies. I was going off of your quote where you said many people "don't give a damn and never will" about helping poor and needy people" and attributed that to you as well. You corrected it in the quote below. I wasn't trying to make a blanket statement.
No, you are mis-understanding my point. It is not I. What I am pointing out is that there is a basic flaw in the approach, put forward by the GOP when dealing with similar issues. Namely that the common person/church/whatever will provide for the poor, needy, etc and that government should stay out. And that flaw is that being humans we are not all created with the same feelings of compassion or charity. Not to mention the fact that if you're relying upon good Christians to take care of everyone you'll be disappointed in the fact that not everyone is a Christian. So at some point you, as the government, will actually have to step in to make sure that CERTAIN rights are protected above all others.
You don't have to make it "good Christians". Lots of people are altruistic. In fact, we regularly get a lot of non-churchgoers of all denominations at our community service projects.
How about if I put it this way...I don't believe in the
federal government's ability to deal effectively with the issues of welfare, food stamps, (if you want to put health care here, fine), etc.
Because I'm also realistic in that it would never get implemented before there would be an armed revolt by some members of society. Because I think for now this is the best compromise and a step away from an old system that is incredibly flawed and based purely on profit. Because for many people still living in the 30's they think socialism is this dirty word which implies Stalin is right around the corner (though he had nothing to do with socialism, he and Hitler seem to be the opposition's poster boy for defeating those notions). If you don't understand where the costs come from in health care then you'll never understand why changing the system goes against your own statement of "keep everything as expensive as you can".
You're probably right...I don't understand why going to the doctor is so expensive. My Regence statement that comes back shows a whole lot of charges, most of which are paid for by the insurance. If I didn't have the insurance, it would be tough to justify those (imo pretty high) charges for the care I received. And yet, you're still not talking about reducing the charges--you're talking about other people (those who pay taxes to the government) paying for it instead of you or your insurance company.
My comment about personal responsibility was a response to your seeming viewpoint that people who suffer financial meltdown for the rest of their lives due to health issues - something I don't think anyone on this board even has an inkling of what it is like - should just suck it up because it's their personal responsibility.
Is there a scale for which financial meltdowns are the responsibility of the tax-paying populace to take care of, and which are the responsibility of the individual and their family/friends/community?
People don't choose their genetics, heck we didn't even know about certain genetic features a decade ago. People don't always choose their health..sometimes they do..but sometimes they don't. So to condemn them for the rest of their lives to poverty because of something they did their best to avoid seems asinine.
Sorry you feel that way. I don't.
Oh, well, since you put it that way then why doesn't a corporation just lie and deceive you, seize your house with armed guards, and kick you to the street forcing you to work in a coal mine as a vassal for fifty years to pay it off? Because you have inalienable rights and legal rights. If you look at the history of the world and the organization between master and servant the logical steps have been to come to the realization that people have inherent rights due just to being a human. If you deny health as a basic right then what stops you from denying the right of people not to be born slaves?
Faith in the Creator is one. That's where those "inalienable rights" come from..."endowed by the Creator with" is the first part of that quote. And those are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We're not (according to Jefferson and the signers) endowed with happiness....we're not endowed with healthy life....we're not endowed with liberty to harm fellow man. Your creep of those rights (paid for by others) isn't something I feel the need to fight for--rather the opposite.