metis
aged ecumenical anthropologist
Because it not only is illogical, but in order to implement it would require massive changes to our entire directly and indirectly-related economic and educational systems that would only be possible to implement using the polar opposite of a libertarian/anarcho approach.Hold up. You're getting a bit presumptuous there. It's true that I can't think of a place where anarcho-capitalism has been implemented, but that doesn't mean it doesn't work. Of course, if it has been implemented and it failed, someone let me know (cite your sources, please). You seem to be implying, Metis, that anarcho-capitalism healthcare can't work, but how do you know unless it's been tried?
It used to exist as such if we go back many centuries ago whereas groups did not have any health-care system that was organized on anything beyond the local level, but as time went on and things in general became more complex, countries had no choice but to abandon it. On a small scale with simplistic equipment and no extensive educational requirements, it can and has worked, but the minute you go on a larger-scale, matched with more sophisticated equipment, and also a higher training for medical personnel, it breaks down, which is why no country today has it.
If it could be done, some country somewhere would have done it by now because it would be less expensive, thus less costly to the state, thus a strong incentive to implement it-- but it logically cannot work on that kind of scale because of the factors that I mentioned.