« 401 Not O(k)? | Main | The Wordsmith » 05 Dec 2008 08:46 am Learning To Love SocialismEzra Klein responds to my post the NHS:
Satisfaction is a subjective function of subjective expectations. If you have the kind of expectations that many Brits have for their healthcare system, it is not hard to feel satisfied. The Brits are very happy with their dentists as well. And there is a cultural aspect here - Brits simply believe suffering is an important part of life, especially through ill health. Going to the doctor is often viewed as a moral failure, a sign of weakness. This is a cultural function of decades of conditioning that success is morally problematic and that translating that success into better health is morally inexcusable. But if most Americans with insurance had to live under the NHS for a day, there would be a revolution. It was one of my first epiphanies about most Americans: they believe in demanding and expecting the best from healthcare, not enduring and surviving the worst, because it is their collective obligation. Ah, I thought. This is how free people think and act. Which, for much of the left, is, of course, the problem. TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e20105363212b2970b Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Learning To Love Socialism'
Satisfaction and Quality In Health Care Reform |
