Is Health Care a Right or a Privilege?
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This week on This Ain't It, we dig into health care—how we got here, why it works the way it does in the United States, and who gets left behind when coverage is treated as optional instead of essential.
We talk through the current news around expiring ACA subsidies, rising premiums, and what it actually means for families who already live paycheck to paycheck. From there, the conversation zooms out into the history of American health insurance, how employer-based coverage became the norm, and why the U.S. broke from other developed countries that chose universal care.
We also wrestle with the moral and theological questions underneath it all: what Scripture says about caring for the sick, why GoFundMe has become a stand-in for compassion, and whether health care should be considered a human right or a market privilege. Along the way, we reflect on our own experiences with insurance, life abroad, and the disconnect between political talking points and real-world consequences.
It's a conversation about policy, power, faith, and what it says about a society when access to care depends on employment, income, or luck.
SHOW NOTES:
History.com - How Health Insurance Got Its Start in America
Matthew's blog posts:
The History Kept Hidden from Me
The Costs of Graduate School and Healthcare