@Reagaknight,
Reagaknight;26356 wrote:Yeah, health care is a problem. No, we don't fix it by expanding the thing that caused the problem in the first place, government involvement.
That isn't what the movie concludes, but then again you don't want to see it.
I haven't seen it, and I consider his stuff "entertainment" first and "factual" second.
The main point is that the "managed care" practiced by private health care
providers in this country is managed to make them the most money it can
and they don't give a damn about the customers.
But hey, that's capitalism. No one HAS to take whatever insurance they're
offered at work. If there was enough demand health care would become more
competitive and the public as individuals would have more power.
Michael Moore is a capitalist, too, and there's nothing wrong with him making
his products and selling them. That's the American way, and people have a choice in whether to see the movies or not.
You choose not to, others choose to see them.
I'm for smaller government, and I'm decidedly anti-corporate. I don't see that
much of a difference to either end, really, just callous bureaucracy.