Preventative care although I'd bet a lot of people would be lazy to even get it.
We could have that here without the government involved. Maybe there are barriers the government could lift, maybe consumers need to become more proactive, maybe we have cultural issues beyond the scope of government control that need to be addressed, but there's no reason the private sector can't handle preventative care, and if the government stopped devaluing our dollar and taxing us into the ground a lot more people could afford it than can now.
If you're arguing for Paul's position, then why couldn't they reduce prices and stuff with universal healthcare?
If you're arguing for Paul's position, don't you see the problem in advocating such a massive welfare program that forces people to subsidize others?
And there might very well be some reduction in administrative costs because of universal health care, but there would be other costs that would go up, whether the quality of care or the loss of incentives for innovation, for example, to say nothing of the oversight being done by political bureaucrats.
Under a free market system, consumers and private watchdog groups keep an eye on the industry, while the government is responsible when there are violations of contractual obligations, when misinformation is being spread, etc. In other words, the government is a measure of last resort, and is a separate entity from the provider.
Under a government system, on the other hand, the government is essentially monitoring itself and is the only recourse for holding the system accountable, which in my judgment is a severe (and frightening) conflict of interest. It's the fox guarding the henhouse.
Again, before we jump to a universal health care system, let's at least first look at ways to scale back government in areas where it might be causing some of the issues. Don't try to fix a system of bad policies by tacking on even more policies until you get rid of those underlying problems.