Tell me something: Once you pay off your car, you're allowed to choose between continuing with full (comprehensive) coverage, or less coverage, or just liability. If your choice is going with liability and using the difference between comprehensive and liability to buy more food, which one is any reasonable person going to choose? (answer: Liability, of course; and use the extra money for things we couldn't previously afford while paying for comprehensive)
Bad analogy as you are comparing apples and oranges. We are not automobiles and the older we become the more likely we are to need comprehensive coverage ... in fact it is a guarantee as long as you do not die fast of a heart attack or accident.
Bad analogy? Really? Wasn't being required to have automobile insurance one of the arguments used to justify forcing people to buy health care insurance? If it wasn't a bad analogy then, why is it a bad analogy now?
Further, consider your car. You said the older we get, the more likely we are to need comprehensive coverage; isn't the same true of a car? The older it gets, the more likely it is to break down; unless you're saying the analogy fails because we should just ship it off to a junk yard and get a new car, which makes the analogy comparable to "death panels"....
(BTW: Auto insurance was a bad analogy then, and it's not the best analogy now. The better analogy is "maintenance warranty")
What is wrong with helping take care of others? Do you care so little for others that you have no feeling if they suffer?
Strawman. You're not answering the actual question. Should the government have the right and authority to tell you that you have to pay for someone else's insurance? Isn't that the same as legalists telling you that you *have* to tithe?
Is it always, "me", "me", "me"? That does not fit my understanding of the teaching of Christ.
Scripture doesn't cover insurance, now does it? Which scriptural passage or principle are you using to justify this argument?
It takes some time to consider carefully. So, do not get upset if I take a bit of time to answer. Frankly, I would have liked more time to consider my response to your comment, but you seemed to be getting hyper about it. I have decided to generally not reply to smart ***, cutsie replies that really say nothing and are often an attempt to insult.
Frankly, how much effort would it have taken to simply say, "I'm not ignoring you; I'm considering it and will respond when I have a chance"? As old as you and I are, have we forgotten that common courtesy rules say we should at least acknowledge that we're working on a response? I did not intend to be a "smart ***"; my posts were a comment on your lack of acknowledgement.
Read the article referenced in the thread entitled: 10 Reasons Reading the Bible Makes Me More Progressive.
Thanks for your consideration.
I'll have to find that thread; once I do, I'll read it over, and I'll get back to you when I'm done.