... man, I'm not awaken enough at the moment to tell if that's satire or not. I'm just going to assume for the moment it's parody so the nap I'm about to take doesn't feel inclined towards thinking about it.
I'm happy to inform you it's not, and if you'd care to defend your point instead of conceding it with a poorly placed jab at my opinion I'd be happy to listen (and most likely rebut) your argument.
I'd like to make a point that if you think the USA is a welfare state you need to put down the Ayn Rand and take a look across the pond at some welfare states.
(That, for reference, was an unwarranted jab at your personal beliefs. We get more than enough people posing ultra-capitalist "burn the state"-level views that the first reaction to most statements like yours, especially from people whose opinions are not already known, is to to ascertain whether they were serious and it's worth debating or whether they're being sarcastic / irritating people for the sake of kt.)
TL:DR back off yo
Well, it's hardly "ultra-capitalist." So... IDK what to tell you, mate. I'm a pretty moderate guy, I just don't believe in universal healthcare. I support social welfare as far as medicare and medicaid go, and even wish medicaid was bigger. But I find it abhorrent that middle class folk pay more for no benefit. I mean, how far can you expect one individual to care about another he or she has never had any sort of contact with or even knows exists across the nation? I get it, we all pay in for the greater good, but jeez, my family pays nearly 50% of their incomes in taxes. That's messed up, I don't want to be paying more so that I can have WORSE healthcare than I already had and that maybe some guy I've never met doesn't die.
What's more likely:
A: you stay in the same wealth bracket as your parents and eventually need some kind of healthcare
B: you become a billionare and remain perfectly healthy forever.
Well although not really the crux of what I was saying, a more relevant situation would be a child achieving higher than their parents and entering the next tax bracket. I mean, on the federal level you could reasonably go from 15% to 28% (or more) in a single generation. I'm not knowledgable enough to tell you the increase on national healthcare rates, but it exists. Either way, you're paying the money, but at least in privatized healthcare when you pay a lot of money you get better care. What I was really saying is that no matter how you cut it, you're gambling with your money. If you lose with private healthcare you pay a lot upfront, but no matter what happens with nationalized healthcare you pay a moderate amount... forever.
not to mention that the whole story about private care being better is an utter pipe dream. It has been proven time and again that socialized healthcare is a far more efficient way to go around.
Not really. Seems it's a pretty split topic. As far as I can see one isn't really better than the other, you're simply trading certain aspects of the care you receive. I mean, if we had a truly nationalized healthcare system, why would you expect it to be more efficient than the private one? Efficient in the sense that more people will be receiving care, but on the whole, everyone will have to wait much longer, and then of course, there is still the issue of a smaller group of people paying more than a large group of people--which is messed up man.