That is Your interpretation.
My interpretation is that people are responsible for their lives. The most anyone, from corporations to the government, can do is offer options and let the people chose.
Regarding health care, which includes the insurance aspect of it. Health care is a product and a tangible one. If we allow the government to compete in one product, then why not another ? Why not allow the government to compete against General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler for my money for a car ? A government designed car ? I -- via my tax money -- designed a car to compete against private enterprises for my own money ? It is not absurd as you think considering the lengths of which people interpreted the role of the government in our lives.
Here, the government dictates what cannot be sold due to health hazards through laws.
It may also enforce negative feedback, like warning signs on cigarettes.
I have no problems with the government giving me safety information on which car is safer than another, which health care/insurance plan is better than another, or even which brand of potato chip have more calories than another. But that is the extent of it. I -- via my tax money -- funds an agency that gives people
INFORMATION ? Absolutely a positive thing to do.
It is assumed that most people actually believe that it is bad to harm themselves,...
And somehow Americans are less capable at this than Europeans ?
...and with the exception of alcohol, where you can be banned from buying, there are really no restriction on what you eat, or how you live.
Sorry, but if you eat to the point of excess, such as obesity, then just like alcohol, the government should regulate what you eat. After all, it is for your own good.
The cost of our health care per capita is much lower than the cost per capita in the US, and we do not have the risk of ruining hospital bills, so we are certainly more efficient.
The cost issue is a complex one that involves factors that most people do not consider, such as population size or diversity of the same, or the philosophical debate on whether health care/insurance should be a non-profit venture or a capitalistic one.
In the US, the Shriners and St. Joseph children's hospitals do not bill families, but these places are supported by donations. In a perspective, those donations can be seen as a form of insurance, just that it is not specific to your family. But that can be remedied through reformation of the current health care/insurance laws. We can make it so that the people can have affordable health care/insurance without governmental intrusions.
The core issue and difference here is how we view the role of the government in the people's lives. If you feel that the government is a saintly organization, then of course
YOU would support governmental controls of your health. If I believe that the government is a demon that must be tolerated and constrained, then of course I would vote to keep the government out of my personal life, most importantly of all, what to do with my body.