Worse mass transit? Are you seriously bringing this up as a point in favor of "socialized countries"? Have you noticed how big the United States is recently? While better mass transit would be nice, the United States is bigger than the entirety of Western Europe combined by far and is culturally predisposed to individual automobiles to the point where you won't get people to use that vaunted mass transit system.
One, have you ever been to New York, D.C., or some other city that actually has a something like the metro or the underground? In such places, most people walk. Trust me, I've been to such a place before, and spent more than a few weeks there.
BFD. London's public transport is shoddy and it's not unheard of for people to be seriously injured there. See? I can point at shitpiles all around the world when it comes to mass transit, even in the vaunted socialist countries of Europe where clearly they are better because they are European OMGZ.
Using this as a barometer is
absolutely silly. Talk about Canada's mass transit, or Russia's, and then get back to me. (Oh, wait...their situation, barring a little more investment--not much--in light rail, is a hell of a lot more like the United States's. So they make you look even sillier.)
Two, just traveling within a single state can be rather annoying - all we have for that level are cars, because planes and trains don't go to every city within a state. Why? An area the size of South Carolina in Europe has much better transportation between cities.
And that area in Europe is far more urbanized. The two have nothing to do with each other.
Go find the awesome public transport around vineyard country in France--which is a lot closer to what South Carolina,
and most of the United States, is like than the Berlin frigging Metro Area or whatever area you have in mind. Go on. I'll wait.
Three, everyone just using their own cars is both wasteful of limited resources and expensive, when alternatives are available. While the government would be spending more money on mass-transit systems, individuals would be saving money on it - even if there was a tax increase. Mass transit costs less, hands down.
Horseshit. Mass transit costs less
in a very limited set of circumstances. You go build a goddam rail line across the Great Plains and you run it as a nonprofit and you see how much red ink you spill. There are two stretches in the United States where it even begins to make sense on a non-metropolitan level, and neither of them can make a buck because
nobody wants to take them. This is not a train-and-bus culture, this is a car culture. It has nothing to do with socialism, and trying to use it as a "socialism is better" argument is
beyond disingenuous.And on health care, Blacken, you're just using a paranoid "slippery slope" argument. It is, as I see it, one of the weakest arguments possible. The only reason I ever see behind it is either paranoia or spite for the opposition; no basis provided for why that will happen or even if it is likely.
Oh, please. Bread and circuses have been a problem as far back as the Roman fucking Empire. If you're going to try to call it paranoia,
take a look at history. When the people can vote themselves what they want and
not have to figure out how to pay for it,
they always do. Do you seriously have to ask
why that is? Gee, I don't know, maybe because then they're insulated from the cost of their fuckups and they can pass it right on to the guy who
didn't fuck up? Why in the hell do you think that such a huge part of the drumbeat for American UHC boils down to decoupling what people pay from what problems they've inflicted to their own bodies?
People hating responsibility and avoiding it given the chance. Shocking. What a news headline that is.
health insurance companies are probably the least regulated industry in America. They're specifically exempted from the Sherman Anti-Trust Act for God's sake.
That? That right there?
That's the problem. Treat them like every other company. Take away their antitrust exemptions--but when you do it,
let them actually compete. Right now, they aren't dinged for monopolistic practices because the states regulate them to hell and back. My insurance in my home state is nearly four times as comparable coverage in the next state over because of state-level regulations that make the cost of doing business prohibitive. Competition means letting me buy insurance from the company in New Hampshire instead of Maine, because it's cheaper there for the exact same quality.
Don't let state governments forcibly segment the market. Combine risk pools from varying states. Stop
fucking it up and the market can sort itself out. The free market is an imperfect creation, but in this case, when the costs of bad decisions are actually
put upon the people who make them, it can work just fine.
But why won't they? Why will those supposedly well-meaning idiot authoritarians in Washington just traipse right down the road of "legislate everything"? Because it's not about
your health, it's about
control. The more control you give the government, the less inclined they must be to actually be responsive to the will of the people. Unchecked government exists to perpetuate itself, nothing more and nothing less--and the UHC silliness is an excuse to grow fat.