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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper argues that the government is best equipped to handle health care for its population. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
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8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KV32_HVgvthlt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
other Americans the same coverage they enjoy. The current system is badly broken and leaves the U.S. shamefully far down on the list of countries that have decent health care;
the situation is made even worse by the exorbitant fees we pay for less-than-stellar medical treatment. This paper argues that the government should provide health care for all Americans. Discussion
One of the most reasoned arguments in favor of government-run health care comes from Thomas Rice at UCLA, who considers the reasons why the government should run health care from
an ethical standpoint. He notes that one of the major considerations about health care in the U.S. is that it costs a great deal of money, and certain groups of
people are literally priced out of the market by the expense associated with seeking care. People are dying because theyre poor, which is criminal in a nation with the money
and power of the United States. However, making sure that access is equal for everyone may involve creating equality in social matters, something that will be difficult and does not
exist now (Rice). "It is, I believe, arguable that to have any kind of plausibility, ethical reasoning on social matters must involve elementary equal consideration for all at some level
that is seen as critical. The absence of such equality would make a theory arbitrarily discriminating and hard to defend" (Rice, quoting Sen 240). It is necessary to accept
inequalities in many cases, but in defending them, "it would be hard to duck the need to relate them, ultimately, to equal consideration for all in some adequately substantial way"
(Rice 240). In other words, its very difficult to justify inequality when someones life may well be at stake. Rice believes that equality is ethical but is most likely to
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