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blixa442
Guest
You're making it sound as if there are only two countries in the world with health care system. Take a good look at your atlas. There are over 200 countries on the map.
While it may be true that wealthier individuals would stand to pay for better care overall, it is absolutely false to suggest that low income or middle-income people would not also benefit from private clinics or services. How do I know this? Because I personally know people who go abroad for medical care (generally NOT the US) and spend inordinate amounts on private healthcare, in essence voting with their feet, and none of them could be described as wealthy. Why? Because time is worth more than money
Intuitively, I'd think the issue isn't so much so whether it is privately owned or publically owned, but how it is all managed.
Former U.S. president Bill Clinton warned Canada last night not to go down an American-style, privatized health-care road.
What makes him think that we're headed that way? We're not even remotely close Swedish-style, privatized healthcare, nevermind American.
Why should someone else's myopic ideology be a threat to my health? This is why private/public parallel systems make complete sense.




