Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
This is not at all easy for me to answer, although I very much want to say yes.
OMG, you're dying??![]()
Having supported multiple loved ones with terminal illnesses, even having watched my mother fall to one (when she was 30), I know what this looks like. I know the suffering and I truly believe worrying about the devastating financial burden only serves to make this infinitely worse for the person. I would very much like to see that stressor alleviated, at the very least the medical costs.
Yet, health care is such an explosive and divisive issue here in the states. People don't seem to be thinking of all humans as worthy, especially by comparison to the almighty insurance corporation.
Issues like these, that I think SHOULD unite us but actually divide us make me sad for this country.
I suppose my answer to your question is yes, truly, but that I'd like to see many other changes along with that, mostly on the people to change, and for the government to be responsive and not just power-driven.
This makes sense in my head...
if a person of limited means is given 12 months to live, should they have all their health, social care and basic income paid for by the state?
Yes.
Happy Mothering Fucker Day!
I say no ..... I personally think that it is extra-ordinarily arrogant that the State should consider it has a role at all.
Insofar as the state takes over the role of family, that diminishes the role of family generally - what was a family duty tends to become an entitlement from the state which in turn erodes the importance of personal relationships.
.......
Having said that, it is difficult to know what to do about people who have no, money, no family, and no friends.
I answered no. I very much appreciate the things pointed out in the post above. I agree that medical care should be covered but I don't think that is the biggest concern. Terminal illness is already a qualifier for government assistance. Social care and basic income are where I struggle with the yes response.
It would be hard for me to define social care. There is a cultural component. Some people consider death a rite of passage that is surrounded by ritual. Others cling to religion. These are areas that I do not believe can be handled by agencies far removed from the personal experiences associated with dying. Respite care for families can be provided by agencies like Hospice and Visiting Angels.
I applaud healthcare institutions who have bothered to establish Hospice (and similar) agencies as a part of their standard services. It isn't realistic to be willing to help people with every aspect of health except for when it's failing. I wish there was something we could do for people who only have 12 months to live simply because they're aging. Without the terminal diagnosis, it can be difficult for them to access additional resources.
I suppose my true response is that I think these services should be available but not because of a federal mandate.
But that's the point. It's about money, about independence. Not about relationships. If a person that lived his own life and made his own money can't do that because of his disease, he's a finacial burden to his family, no matter how deep the relationship is. Just because I have to pay for somebody doesn't mean I'll get a better relationship to that person.
LMAO The state will send assessors to appraise your assets then schedule hearings to decide your benefit, two weeks after you expire.
To clarify, in the UK social care covers washing, dressing, feeding, etc. Essentially, anything that isn't strictly medical care.
Also, I thought it would be assumed that individuals and their families could decide to opt out.![]()
I let this pas before the edit, but we're talking about the poor correct?
Is that class going to ever opt out of any freebie?
![]()
![]()
If you say yes, for the reason of independence, then you still pay the cost, you just do not see it because it is an indirect payment to strangers and to your family member, when terminal, from strangers. In the former case you incentivize strong familial bonds, and in the latter case you make justification for weaker family bonds
Let us expand the scope of this issue just a tiny bit more and submit that if we know they only have 12 months to live, then a cost benefit analysis tells us that assisted suicide with dignity for the financial strength of the community and greater independence for the individuals in it who are still healthy and contributing to the tax base and no longer burdened by these "costs" to society is a beneficial thing.
PS: I fear too often that these threads devolve into, "I am compassionate and caring and the fact that you will not accept and adopt my superior position means that you are selfish and the selfish are hateful and now I really hate you. You're less than human."