This is besides the point that, again, up until the 70s, American healthcare was as cheap as in any other country (nearly all of which already had socialized systems, by the way) and of similar quality. Prices only shot past CPI after healthcare began to be dominated by insurance companies and people were divorced from their costs. I could continue, but for once, I'm going to ask you; what do you think caused this sudden, inexplicable increase in costs?
I personally think it's the lack of socialized health care that's shot up the prices, though admittedly I only hold this as a factless opinion at the moment.
Having read your original post, I fear I may have misunderstood your initial point. I was under the impression you said that
all social systems increase costs, when you actually said it was
just the US. (Apologies for that.) Do you have any support for the idea the Only In America, would socialized healthcare be more expensive? Is it just the fact that it's partially implemented? Or what? I would find it incredulous that only the US couldn't succeed at this goal.
And once more on
Big Pharma: I didn't say ads would be the only step, but it certainly would help a bunch.
I can imagine those "disease advocacy" ads could point to an informational website, which
just so happens to mention Foozatril way more often than Prescriptix. There are most likely many other things you'd have to watch out for once there's an ad-ban.
Also, that particular facet of tort law sounds hideous. The motivation for its existence is understandable, however one should remind the lawmakers that medicine is more than just "pick the one that wins most often".