Sigh.
Not even close.
The only thing socialist about AARP is that they associate.
There really is no point in using the term. It adds no information value whatsoever. If something is a net bad idea, that will be true regardless of whether it is based on some socialist ideal, or on a system driven by pure greed (capitalism), or something else entirely. Calling something socialist simply allows you to characterize it as bad while remaining too intellectually lazy to think about why.
Insurance schemes - well, all insurance, whether auto, life, health, property, etc., is based on the same principle: spread the risk. Most of us can afford a $75 doctor's visit while few of us can afford a million dollar organ transplant, so we share the risk. The basic principle is that the larger the risk pool the lower cost for all of us. I have friends who prefer to "hope" they remain lucky - they are actually more socialist, because if they aren't lucky they will rely on public infrastructure to save their lives, they don't assume they will just die if they can't afford care.
Affordable Care in the US (this is an international list) exists because the only way to pay for more universal health insurance is lower the cost by spreading the risk pool as wide as possible. I'm not fond of mandatory coverage but I can see how the math works out.
You asked for it, you got it.
"Sigh"
[No comment.]
"The only thing socialist about AARP is that they associate."
[Then, I guess the rest of your rambling post is to be defined as a commentary on capitalist ("pure greed") health care?]
"Insurance schemes - well, all insurance, whether auto, life, health, property, etc., is based on the same principle: spread the risk." Most of us can afford a $75 doctor's visit while few of us can afford a million dollar organ transplant, so we share the risk. The basic principle is that the larger the risk pool the lower cost for all of us."
[For the record, those young U.S. millennials are 1) not signing up at all, and paying the tax penalty, or more commonly 2) signing up to get their surgery covered and then quitting.]
"Affordable Care in the US (this is an international list) exists because the only way to pay for more universal health insurance is lower the cost by spreading the risk pool as wide as possible. I'm not fond of mandatory coverage but I can see how the math works out."
[The current math in the U.S, (where we don't pay 65% of our wages in taxes, as in Deutschland), is that ALL of the insurances companies (that are still participating in this ludicrous fantasy) have jacked up their premiums and deductibles by 40% to 60% a year.]
And, while we are at it, all of the orchestras in Europe would be flat broke (as in the U.S.) if it wasn't for a socialist government sponsored subsidy. This is due to the fact that the millennials in their countries are not participating (going to concerts) just like it is in my country. Hey, no problem, just assess another "tax."
Why? The stuffed shirt/classist/elite Oligarchs (who always know what is best for us) have alienated anyone under the age of 35 (and a large percentage of everyone else), by their hubris and high concert ticket prices.
Finally, you cannot import the Chinese to mitigate the causality and the associated dynamic of this particular situation. It is of your own making!