Harry Pollard wrote:
Brad,

I've already told you that you are too good to be anxious about
small things.

Thank you. But I still think that goodness is its own reward (or as the cliche might go, a cup of coffee regularly costs $1.85 in Starbucks, but it's only $1.85 if you are good).


At the end of 20 years, your doctor will probably retire, so you will have to get used to another.

My current doctor is younger than I am. He "inherited" me from a doctor who retired (and who was older than me).


Groups of doctors are better than single doctors, for they can fill in for each other. There's always a doctor there when you need him.

True enough. My doctor is in a group practice that probably has over 50 doctors on its staff, if not more than twice that many.


The difference between entities such as Kaiser and (say) the Canadian National Health Service, is that Kaiser has to compete. If standards go down they will lose members to a competing service.
[snip]

Maybe here is a place where we can get some "traction"
on the issue of competition.  If "Kaiser's" standards
go down and/*or* some other "private" provider
offers better service *or* lower rates (perhaps with
worse service), "customers" may move to the
competing service.  But who are the customers?
Not individual putatively free persons like me (and
maybe you?), but corporate entities: businesses,
universities, government agencies, etc. for whom
individuals work.  This is obvious, but doesn't
it get to the heart of your idea of competition and
"free markets"?  The rich, do indeed have a free
market, but not persons below what I have
cynically called the Golden Parachute Line.

The Canadian Health Service is subject to change, too.
The specific mechanism would be different (e.g.,
the legislature taking action). If you say
this kind of institution is [even?] more difficult
to change than "private" institutions like
"Kaiser", I don't disagree, but aren't we
talking in all cases about what social order is
legislated and enforced, not "whether"?

But isn't the issue exactly what kinds of institutions
with what kinds of external controls will work
best for an "us" which is composed of a very
large number of indiviuals who, no matter
what shape the institutions take, are not
"players", "customers" or whatever one wishes
to call the shapers of the institutions, but
rather have our choices shaped by external
forces, be they "private" (corporate) or
"public" (i.e., governmental, which we know
may be largely a veil for furthering of
"private" interests)?

Don't you think that neither "socializing" not
"privatizing" solves the problem, so that
neither the socialists nor the "neo-cons"
can have a simple answer?

But I think that,
given the forced choice, I would tend to
side with the socialists (or, of course,
if they exist,
the moderates, who may be the best of all...),
because the "neo-cons" and persons like
George W Bush seem not to care how much
people other than their privileged
clique suffer, or how much they themselves wilfully
*add* to people's sufferings.

Do you really believe that most persons
compete on a level playing field, or that
the field could be levelled, or even that
if it could be that to do so would
be desirable?  One of the
conundrums from "Philosophy 101" is --
I forget its name -- the issue of
what constitutes justice, since some
persons are crippled and some can run
a 4 minute mile, etc.  Should the
4 minute milers take al and the
cripples freeze to death in garbage dumps?
Should the con-man cripples take all
from the honest athletes, etc.?

Best wishes to all!

\brad mccormick

--
  Let your light so shine before men,
              that they may see your good works.... (Matt 5:16)

Prove all things; hold fast that which is good. (1 Thes 5:21)

<![%THINK;[SGML+APL]]> Brad McCormick, Ed.D. / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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