Notice how, like, EVERY other country in the world that doesn't have our shitty privatized healthcare system hasn't collapsed into a pile of rubble like you seem to suggest will happen if we switch to universal healthcare (which you provide no reasoning to at all, just asserting that disaster will happen).
I didn't say it will collapse into rubble. I said it would increase the deficit. It also reduces quality of care. However, it's a fact that those countries' healthcare systems are heavily subsidized by the US. If the US goes single-payer, it actually has knock-on effects that will bring down the quality and increase the price for ALL of them.
You stop the CEOs from hoarding the money, by not letting them get the money in the first place. If there is universal single payer healthcare, there are no more CEO positions for all these health insurance companies. This isn't just an understanding of economics. You don't seem to even understand the concept of what single payer itself is.
You're talking about
just insurance companies? Bro, that's peanuts. It's a meaningless amount of money.
But since you were talking about
taxing those CEOs, if you're ending health insurance, you're not getting any tax dollars from them, so how are you breaking even again? And remind me, what happens to all the people who work for those insurance companies? Do they just politely evaporate?
Also, have you not seen the Panama papers? This isn't up for debate. You are denying reality itself here.
I've seen them, but it sounds like, like a lot of people, you didn't understand them, lol. Probably got your interpretation from a Voxsplainer.
The scale of the US public debt is over thirty trillion dollars. The scale of the deficit is one and a half trillion dollars a year. There aren't enough tax havens in the world to fix that.
ETA:
No, you also need the goods to be purchased.
"purchased" is also an abstraction.
I forgot to respond to this part. You still need those people to take care of the population, just like they previously did. The primary people losing their jobs are the ultra rich positions. And lawyers and whatnot, but their jobs do not outweigh the huge burden that would be lifted off everyone else.
Okay, but you just ended all the insurance companies, so everyone who works at an insurance agency is unemployed, down to the clerks and office janitors. And even the lawyers, whether you care about their jobs or not, like to feed their kids every day. Now all those people are either competing for the fewer jobs left, bringing down wages for everyone, or drawing an unemployment check, increasing the deficit again.
How many people do you think will even want to be doctors and lawyers, if being a doctor or a lawyer stops being a high-status money-maker (which is already in the process of happening)? How many people are going to pay for the extensive schooling with no chance of return? What happens to the professors and administrators at medical and law schools when demand collapses?