In my
thirties, I wanted to protect a wife and young children and decided that, with
self-discipline, I could buy the simplest and cheapest term insurance at each
stage of life, reducing it as I went along, while putting the difference in premiums
into untouchable accounts to earn compound interest for my family rather than
strangers.
That
oversimplification, granted, leaves out much that is inescapable in human
nature for most people, but the principle involved keeps recurring to me during
the Obamacare crisis as Americans discover the simplicity that a single-payer system could have provided while foreclosing much of the insurer greed and
dishonesty plaguing the ACA now.
Surprises
about the rollout are not the glitches and evasions but the fact that it works
at all at state levels in some places. Frankenstein monsters are clunky in real
life.
Now
heavy thinkers in the GOP are worried that Obamacare failures are only part of
a profound plot intended to fail and seduce voters back into reconsidering the
simpler and sanest solution in the first place.
From
their lips...
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