Good lord, setting aside that I don't have insurance, have never been to a dentist though I definitely need to do so, and as long as I can remember have avoided injuries for a handful of primary reasons: initial pain, possible impairment, and dreaded costs.
A 10 year old who just got hit by a car at a crosswalk and has a mild concussion shouldn't be fighting with the folks in the back of the ambulance because they don't want to incur the costs of a trip to the ER, but I sure the fuck did, and this was back in 1990 so no "good old days" to look back on fondly, healthcare was as expensive and fucked up back then as it takes for the mutant zombie romneycare-resurrected-into-obamacare beast to be an improvement.
That shit has all been discussed though, what's got my eye twitching is the "my tax dollars" nonsense going on.
If you're looking at a local tax, then yes, that revenue actually gets used for operations and so forth.
A federal tax is what would be compared against a federally funded healthcare system, yes?
Well, the government doesn't need you to give the money back, they issued it in the first place, they don't sweep up a big pile of tax receipts and push them over to the local jets-n-tanks-r-us store, they mark the tax revenue down as a decrease on the circulating money supply and respond accordingly.
Your federal taxes don't pay for shit, that is an absurd idea. government accounting bears no resemblance to household finances, how can we kill this misinformation? People see taxes coming out of their paycheck and like to connect it with a little counter over in D.C. or something that increases by that amount. If there is any counter it would just be the cash in circulation and it would tick down. People hear "deficit" and think about being short when trying to buy something or pay a bill, but all it means is that the circulating money supply ticker is positive, i.e. less money has been deleted from circulation than was added to it, so it's probably sitting somewhere, mostly the pockets of a few rich fuckbags, but hey.