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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!spool.mu.edu!agate!stanford.edu!rutgers!cmcl2!panix!major!dos
- From: dos@major.panix.com (Dave O'Shea)
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
- Subject: Re: Rush -- Insurance and AIDS
- Message-ID: <i7kBwB3w165w@major.panix.com>
- Date: 25 Dec 92 04:04:41 GMT
- References: <1992Dec23.133453@IASTATE.EDU>
- Organization: Spaceley Sprockets, Inc.
- Lines: 42
-
- dickw@IASTATE.EDU (Richard Wallingford) writes:
-
- > Rush was talking about people whose insurance gets canceled when it
- > is found that they have AIDS. He thinks it's just fine that they're
- > canceled because they caused their own condition (he used the analogy
- > that fire insurance won't pay if you set your own house on fire).
- >
- > I don't think Rush understands insurance very well. First, his
- > analogy is faulty because fire insurance *will* cover accidental
- > fires started by the homeowner (i.e. grease fire) and most AIDS
- > cases are contracted by accident (even if there is stupididty and
- > ignorance involved).
- >
- > Second, if a person has health insurance *before* he/she gets AIDS,
- > then the insurance company should be required to pay up to the maximum
- > lifetime benefit of the policy. Risk is the whole principal behind
- > insurance coverage. The insurance company is "betting" that you won't
- > get sick and you're "betting" that you will. Both parties are agreeing
- > to take the financial loss if they lose the "bet" by signing the policy!
-
- Most health insurance policies are written for a specific period of
- time; they're reviewed at the end of each period, and if the claims have
- been low, the rate is adjusted accordingly, and if the claims have been
- high, the rate will be adjusted likewise. A good insurance company will
- write a policy on anything - even fire insurance on a house that's
- already half cinders - but the rate will correspond to expected losses.
-
- > If the person has AIDS and is trying to get health insurance converage
- > after the fact, then they should be denied because there is no risk
- > to either party (Insuree is guaranteed to come out ahead and the
- > insurer is guaranteed to loose money).
-
- Again, not necessarily. I'll gladly give you $100,000 worth of insurance
- on a car that's headed off a cliff - but the rate's going to be, you
- guessed it, almost $100,000 - since there is a *very* good chance that
- the policy will be paid out.
-
-
-
- --
- Socialized medicine: Health care with the compassion of an IRS auditor, the
- intelligence of a DMV employee, and the cost control of the Pentagon.
-