| > And I and many others are not. You should recognize that this is a _political_ issue where there is no objectively better outcome Luckily the rich are a minority and this is a majority rule system :) There is 100% an objectively better outcome. Better care for more people, fewer people falling through the cracks is objectively better. There are objective rankings of healthcare system quality. > Higher taxation has long run drags on innovation and wealth building. And not dying if a small business owner gets sick has a long run boost to the economy. Individuals being able to take risks without fear of death and pestilence has a long run boost to the economy. A carpenter having all their fingers re-attached instead of just some of them has a long-run boost to the economy. Small and mid-size businesses not having to administer health plans is a boost to the economy. > I'm okay with that if it means I have more job opportunities and ability to build my wealth. You'll still have your chance lol. > I wouldn't accept a 2 month average wait time for something as simple as cataract removal, that's for sure. Cataracts develops slowly over a period of years. It's explicitly one of the lowest priority surgeries you can get for that reason. It took you 10 years to develop you don't need it out by Monday, late February is fine. (NOTE: In some provinces your data shows you can get it out in 2 days in Canada). It's nuts to think that you should be able to pay more to get your decades old cataract out by Monday so that someone who was in a car accident can get in line lol. So yeah you absolutely would, and you wouldn't care at all. Either way, America will almost certainly land on a two-tier system where you can still get your way. > The quality of life loss in that time is immense. This is exactly the reason progressives can't get any legislation passed in Congress. It's simply not. Sorry. Data and satisfaction surveys disagree, but also - only for the few who can afford to jump the queue. There's very few of those so they're not really represented in surveys. > Good luck passing any legislation over the lobbying of the AMA then. Single payer in Canada passed explicitly against the wishes of the entire North American medical establishment. "The organized medical establishment was not nearly so reticent and mounted a ferocious propaganda campaign fronted by the local College of Physicians and Surgeons with the support of the Canadian Medical Association (CMA), the AMA, the local economic elite and most of the media in the province." [1] We got it done before, we'll get it done again. You've been fed a crock. Sorry. [1] https://canadiandimension.com/articles/view/the-birth-of-med... |
Hmm, is that why the Build Back Better Act got killed in part by House Democrats wanting a SALT cap repeal? "The rich" you're thinking of excludes a large percentage of high earners who live in high CoL areas but are not wealthy. I'll remind you 20% of California earns more than $162k [1]. That's a lot considering the win margin of the general election and most CA state propositions. Enough to tip elections.
> And not dying if a small business owner gets sick has a long run boost to the economy
"Small business owner dying because they got sick without insurance" just doesn't happen. This is a strawman.
> You'll still have your chance lol
Average house price in Frankfurt is 7200 euro/sqm [2]. Tell me again how you can pay for a 200sqm house (=1.4M euro) when European software engineers make less than half of what American engineers make and get taxed more? A new grad at Uber in Europe makes 87k EUR [3]. A new grad in the US at any big name tech company makes more in the range of $180-200k. So your pay is more than double and you get taxed less, meaning you build wealth in the range of 3x as quickly.
[1]: https://www.thecentersquare.com/california/california-househ... [2]: https://www.ft.com/content/3e4f8c40-1dca-447e-a3c4-69911cfc1... [3]: https://blog.pragmaticengineer.com/software-engineering-sala...