An argument for a libertarian approach is that iy allows healthcare costs to evolve naturally by market forces. — frank
That isn’t an argument. There’s a missing premise, presumably that it’s good for healthcare costs to evolve naturally by market forces. But is it? — Michael
The libertarian argument is old now, so I assumed an American reader would know it.
For non-Americans: it holds that natural evolution, though sometimes harsh, ultimately brings sustainable and robust entities into being. — frank
That may be true if you’re talking about the evolution of species by natural selection but you’d be equivocating if you then apply this to this metaphorical “evolution” of drug prices.
2m — Michael
The argument assumes that the basic principles of evolution apply in a variety of situations, so it's not equivocation. If you object to the wider application, could you explain why it should be restricted? — frank
The basic principal of evolution is that the heritable characteristics of biological populations change over successive generations due to mutations making an organism more likely to survive and reproduce given its contemporary environment. — Michael
Because the actual effect this is having on people with medical issues in America doesn’t look at all to be desirable. — Michael
Again, you're totally failing to grasp the libertarian argument, so your objection is missing the target. I think you hit the cat. — frank
Because they aren't in favor of harshness. They're opposed to government interference.The libertarian ideal is that harsher circumstances such as these for the wider population are good for the wider population then why are they so against the governnent raising taxes on everyone directly? — Baden
If the argument is that it results in more robust corporate entities in the pharmaceutical sphere... — Baden
For non-Americans: it holds that natural evolution, though sometimes harsh, ultimately brings sustainable and robust entities into being. — frank
In short, a free market allows a society to face environmental pressures directly instead of cushioned by a government that may do more harm than good in the process of trying to alleviate suffering. — frank
The reality is that drug prices, deductibles, and insurance with sufficient coverage are unaffordable to most Americans — Michael
What exactly do you expect to happen if prices are regulated? — Michael
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