Post inauguration Trump:
Moderator: bbmods
- Tannin
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Oh, there is no arguing the fact that US defence spending is ridiculous. They could cut it in half and still have by far the strongest military force on Earth. Trouble is, they waste two-thirds of it. Given their woeful efficiency, and given the need to deal with Chinese aggression, they have to maintain their current spend, or something approximating it.
By far the cheapest way to cope with China's ambitions to wipe out Taiwan, followed by Vietnam, then Japan and bits of India, is to stop it before it starts.
We failed there - they have already militarised important international waters via their artificial islands - but we are not too late to stop the rot before it goes any further. Like it or not, the US is vital to this.
By far the cheapest way to cope with China's ambitions to wipe out Taiwan, followed by Vietnam, then Japan and bits of India, is to stop it before it starts.
We failed there - they have already militarised important international waters via their artificial islands - but we are not too late to stop the rot before it goes any further. Like it or not, the US is vital to this.
�Let's eat Grandma.� Commas save lives!
- stui magpie
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Education is not federally funded, defence is.David wrote:That's a fact check of some meme I've never seen before, not a repudiation of the (correct) perception that America spends too much on its military.stui magpie wrote:The spend a lot more on health and social security and neither of those systems work.
Article from 2015 about the myth of defence spending.
https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2 ... ternet-mi/
16% defence spending (as per the Politifact article) vs 3% on education. Let that sink in.
https://www.teach-nology.com/edleadersh ... r_schools/The federal government does not officially fund or govern education; this is within the purview of each state. However, the government does mete out a significant amount of funding to states for education based on criteria set by the federal government, therefore it does exert some influence over the state-run systems with its funding. The state governments gather and distribute a significant amount of funding for schools through state sales and income taxes, lotteries, and property taxes. Local governments also often contribute through their respective taxation systems as well.
The USA spends as much on Education as any other country (equal first in funding per student with Switzerland) for some of the worst results. Pretty much same story as Health and Social Security
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
- David
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Whatever the case, Sanders' point is that the US should have universal healthcare (among other things), and the only reason they currently don't is supposedly because it would cost too much. Yet they could save $400 billion a year by cutting defence spending in half and still be by far the biggest military superpower in the world (as if that status were even necessary in order to be able to protect their own borders and help maintain global peace, or whatever it is Americans think it is that their military does). It seems like a pretty easy decision to me.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
- stui magpie
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Sorry that's bullshit talk by Sanders. The US health system is horribly complicated. The US already spends more than double what we do per capita.
https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2020/07/how-d ... -countries
Their whole system would need to be re-designed from the ground up before you could get the kind of universal health care we have here and in the UK.
Like Defence, social security, name something, it's not the amount of money they spend on things that is the problem, it's that the systems are futterly ucked.
https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2020/07/how-d ... -countries
Their whole system would need to be re-designed from the ground up before you could get the kind of universal health care we have here and in the UK.
Like Defence, social security, name something, it's not the amount of money they spend on things that is the problem, it's that the systems are futterly ucked.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
- doriswilgus
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- think positive
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it should be redesigned from the ground up.stui magpie wrote:Sorry that's bullshit talk by Sanders. The US health system is horribly complicated. The US already spends more than double what we do per capita.
https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2020/07/how-d ... -countries
Their whole system would need to be re-designed from the ground up before you could get the kind of universal health care we have here and in the UK.
Like Defence, social security, name something, it's not the amount of money they spend on things that is the problem, it's that the systems are futterly ucked.
You cant fix stupid, turns out you cant quarantine it either!
- stui magpie
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The problem is, the same system that delivers lousy care delivers great research outcomes. Hospitals are private, state funded, LGA funded and all sorts of combinations of the 3 with zero consistency.think positive wrote:it should be redesigned from the ground up.stui magpie wrote:Sorry that's bullshit talk by Sanders. The US health system is horribly complicated. The US already spends more than double what we do per capita.
https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2020/07/how-d ... -countries
Their whole system would need to be re-designed from the ground up before you could get the kind of universal health care we have here and in the UK.
Like Defence, social security, name something, it's not the amount of money they spend on things that is the problem, it's that the systems are futterly ucked.
Our system is just not transportable to them, redesigning the system would require cooperation from the states and counties and the private entities.
1 alternative would be to create a government run insurance scheme (which would be against everything the country stands for) that provides free emergency care for anyone on Social Security but the problem with that is many of the poor and disadvantaged aren't on social security.
The perception that you can fix a problem by throwing money at it only demonstrates a complete lack of understanding of the problem.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
- David
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100%. Specifically, the insurance companies need to be taken on and defeated; it’s largely because of them, and the hodgepodge mix of private and public healthcare (the latter mostly for seniors and army veterans), inconsistent state laws and the employer contribution, that US healthcare is such an expensive, bureaucratic, inaccessible nightmare. Medicare for all would probably actually be cheaper in the long run because it would remove a lot of those inefficiencies and middlemen from the system. At this stage it’s such a mess that there’s pretty much no alternative but to tear it all down. There’s absolutely no reason why it can’t be done. It’s not about throwing money at the problem without a plan attached; it’s about working out precisely what needs to be done, working out how much it will cost (incl. to divert funding and responsibilities from the states), and then directing the right amount of money at it.think positive wrote:it should be redesigned from the ground up.stui magpie wrote:Sorry that's bullshit talk by Sanders. The US health system is horribly complicated. The US already spends more than double what we do per capita.
https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2020/07/how-d ... -countries
Their whole system would need to be re-designed from the ground up before you could get the kind of universal health care we have here and in the UK.
Like Defence, social security, name something, it's not the amount of money they spend on things that is the problem, it's that the systems are futterly ucked.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
- Tannin
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Sorry, bit of a misquote there - but your words seem to fit the misquote as well as they do in the original.David wrote:Specifically, the insurance companies need to be taken on and defeated; it’s largely because of them, and the hodgepodge mix of private and public healthcare (the latter mostly for seniors and army veterans), inconsistent state laws and the employer contribution, that Australian healthcare is such an expensive, bureaucratic, inaccessible nightmare. Medicare for all would probably actually be cheaper in the long run because it would remove a lot of those inefficiencies and middlemen from the system.
�Let's eat Grandma.� Commas save lives!
- stui magpie
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nah, bullshit.Tannin wrote:Sorry, bit of a misquote there - but your words seem to fit the misquote as well as they do in the original.David wrote:Specifically, the insurance companies need to be taken on and defeated; it’s largely because of them, and the hodgepodge mix of private and public healthcare (the latter mostly for seniors and army veterans), inconsistent state laws and the employer contribution, that Australian healthcare is such an expensive, bureaucratic, inaccessible nightmare. Medicare for all would probably actually be cheaper in the long run because it would remove a lot of those inefficiencies and middlemen from the system.
Our system is by no means perfect but it's pretty damn good
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
- doriswilgus
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Almost but not quite finished yet.And there’s still the possibility of the courts deciding the election.And if that fails,there’s always the chance of another insurrection.So still not over yet.Pies4shaw wrote:Did they finish counting the votes, yet, Doris?doriswilgus wrote:I must say it’s not looking good for Trump.I’m starting to think that he mightn’t be able to hold onto power after all.Oh,wait a minute.........
- Tannin
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Stui, you are saying that the Australian healthcare system is NOT
* expensive?
* bureaucratic?
* inaccessible?
* nightmare?
You have fair-dinkum rocks in your head. The American system is worse, of course, any fool knows that, but pretending that the Australian health system is in good shape is laughably naive.
* expensive?
* bureaucratic?
* inaccessible?
* nightmare?
You have fair-dinkum rocks in your head. The American system is worse, of course, any fool knows that, but pretending that the Australian health system is in good shape is laughably naive.
�Let's eat Grandma.� Commas save lives!