bws94 wrote:Rainyy wrote:bws94 wrote:We can agree to disagree about Trump not being ruled by personality and emotion
You misunderstand. We completely agree in this regard. Trump is a petulant, inflammatory, and unhinged person.
But despite my distaste for his personal characteristics, I still view his policies with the same cost-benefit analysis I would use to view that of any president.
I am preaching to the choir when I say his recent policies fail this cost-benefit analysis spectacularly.
The thing is, I like that he'll cut the fat in government spending. And I hope that he can get down the outrageous cost of pharma medications, that will benefit everyone. There are some policies that I do agree with and support of his. Though, not many So, if you're saying cost-benefit analysis, ok.
Like most institutions susceptible to criticism, there's usually an overarching 1-3 line narrative explaining why its evil that doesn't really capture the real problems.
Pharma costs so much in large part due to R&D of the industry. It's not that companies are just seeking to rip off people left and right, it's that it cost a ton to pay people to do the research , run clinical trials, be HIPPA compliant, etc.
Where things break down are the incentives doctors have to prescribe particular brand drugs and the amount of money that can be claimed on insurance for products and procedures. Doctors want to pay off their ridiculously expensive med school bill. The cycle continues...
IMO, national health care shouldn't even be a political issue. A country's #1 goal ought to be prudence, and keeping its citizens healthy and active for as long as possible is key to this. National health care needs to a focus of the future so U.S. citizens aren't financially ruined forever by an emergency room visit and an overnight stay.
Trump would win a lot of people over if he could actually convince the GOP that national health care isn't a bad thing.