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by alkonaut 3214 days ago
> If there had not been publically funded schools it would be much harder or impossible to make compulsory attendance laws.

Sorry I can't see that connection now. Publicly funded schools and publicly operated schools are two entirely different things.

> As there is no public healthcare now it's very hard or impossible to make compulsory medical procedures laws. If health care becomes public - the sky is the limit.

Again. a) The funds and the operation are two different thoigs and b) if you start doing medical procedures on people against their will, you are in some kind of dystopian society.

There is no slippery slope here.

1 comments

>Sorry I can't see that connection now. Publicly funded schools and publicly operated schools are two entirely different things.

The compulsory attendance laws do not depend on who operates the school. There are private schools enjoying the same laws.

>Again. a) The funds and the operation are two different thoigs and b) if you start doing medical procedures on people against their will, you are in some kind of dystopian society.

This is not an argument. You could just as well say "If you start sending children to school against their will and will of their parents you are in some kind of dystopian society". All the arguments I've seen here are of the nature "Free healthcare yay! Only idiots think it will come with strings attached from the government. Healthcare is good ergo it cannot turn bad, BTFO!" It's running in circles and if you cannot even consider all the consequences of government policies - good luck in the future, I am out of this thread.