Let me start with MassPackersFan's last question. No, a public option doesn't "force" you to take what it offers. Not yet anyway.
But let me respond with another question or two: Which enterprise, one has the greater ability to restrict your choices and options? One with tens of billions of dollars worth of assets at its disposal (an insurance company, say, or a bank), or one with tens of trillions of assets at its disposal, plus the ability to print pieces of paper and call them "dollars" or "US Treasury Bonds", plus the ability to enforce its will through taxation, law enforcement, and a monopoly over socially legitimate coercion?
I tell the insurance company (or another private company) to fuck off, what can they do to me? Refuse to trade with me. Refuse to offer me services.
I tell the government to fuck off, what can they do to me? They can take my money. They can take my land. They can take my guns. They can take my cell phone and anything else they want. They can make me "voluntarily" pay income taxes. They can suspend habeas corpus or any other rights of mine, or even kill me in the name of "national security."
They can. And history shows they have. Over and over again.
They can regulate the fuck out of me, and they have. Over and over again. To the tune of hundreds of thousands of pages that I am required to obey upon penalty of the law because "ignorance of the law is no excuse." Even though to read said laws and regulations at the rate of one book per day it would take me something between one and two years and I wouldn't even touch the hundreds of thousands of pages of court opinions to which I am subject. And in the meantime they'll change tens, or even hundreds of thousands of those pages, so a quarter of what I've read is out of date by the time I'm finished.
And they can do it without even reading the damn things first themselves. Some people have made a big deal of the fact that a thousand pages or so of health bill is put into effect without the morons of Congress having read them first. Well, guess what? That's the tip of the iceberg when it comes to abdication of responsibility. Because I can guarantee without having read the thing that said unread health bill will come with a "delegation" of rule-making and adjudicatory authority to unelected officials that
dwarfs a thousand pages by
at least an order of magnitude.
All of it backed up by the coercive power of the IRS, the FBI, the Department of Justice, and the rest.
Yes, private industry has screwed me, and will again. But to compare that possible to the repeated gang rapes that the state can and will and has, repeatedly, been allowed to commit.....that's an error of proportion akin to saying we need to protect ourselves against the next Jeffrey Dahmer or Ed Gein the way we need to protect ourselves against the next Hitler or Pol Pot.
Okay, I get it. People don't trust their insurance company or their employer or Bad Corporation X. Fine. I don't trust the bastards much myself.
But why in the heck do you trust an organization that, despite having power that dwarfs the largest of evil corporations, has shown itself to be even less trustworthy?
I just don't get that.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)