gbasden wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08, 2024 8:02 pm
Holman wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08, 2024 9:07 am
gbasden wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08, 2024 2:28 am
Holman wrote: ↑Sat Sep 07, 2024 2:55 pm
I think many people who call themselves "fiscally conservative" would leap at the opportunity for, say universal healthcare paid for simply by making corporations and the richest people pay their genuinely fair share of taxes.
Is this sarcasm? I legitimately can't tell.
I didn't mean it sarcastically.
I would say that from my experience, most people who call themselves "fiscal conservatives" don't seem to want corporations or the rich taxed and argue against the smallest increase in the availability of healthcare as "socialism/communism".
In other nations fiscal conservatism means a balanced budget with a surplus an d only investing in things that have a return on investment. Not just in monetary terms for the budget but in terms of things like increased economic growth more broadly.
Take our current health system. The government as it stands pays more on health per person than other countries. Then we pay more on top.
https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/cha ... 02019-2022
And compared to the UK it’s even worse:
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-42950587
Then the world:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of ... per_capita
It’s all just one big grift. We pay more as a society, state federal and individual and get less than other countries. No wonder the health companies don’t want it to change.
It’s socialism for the rich.
The far rights solution is to force other countries to pay more for “our” medical discoveries using our corporations.
Funnily enough many things we pay through the nose for now have been known since before the Second World War and were often invented or discovered by non Americans.
Many key drugs weren’t invented by Americans:
Insulin- a Canadian
Antibiotics - a Scotsman
Ventolin - an Englishman
One vial of insulin only costs between $2 and $10 to make, depending on the type. However, for consumers, one vial of insulin can cost between $50 and $1,000, and a pack of insulin pens can range from $45 to $600.