You’ll understand I’m not interested in ceding control of public health to a proponent of tinfoilia. (You have to pay because childhood poverty, malnutrition, and the many attendant ailments that share map overlays with poverty and/or industrialization, are not the fault of those most affected but instead are negative externalities of ou…
You’ll understand I’m not interested in ceding control of public health to a proponent of tinfoilia. (You have to pay because childhood poverty, malnutrition, and the many attendant ailments that share map overlays with poverty and/or industrialization, are not the fault of those most affected but instead are negative externalities of our nicer life opportunities. Don’t think of dis-ease as individual; it manifests individually but infects or affects the community or society.
I agree with you that there is are some arguments to be made for publicly funded health care. The problem is, we have such a corrupt system administering that health care.
How many public health dollars were spent on covid vaccines? Or covid countermeasures (ventilators, midazolam, remdesivir etc.)? Or paying off hospitals and doctors to go along with the scam? And how much are we paying for all the vaccine injuries, those that have already manifested, and those that are yet to manifest?
I “chose” not to take the vaccine, yet, as a tax payer, I have to fund all of this?
If we are going to have a debate about the pros and cons of publicly funded health care, we have to find a way to make sure the “health care system” is not a slush fund for the pharma-medical complex.
You’ll understand I’m not interested in ceding control of public health to a proponent of tinfoilia. (You have to pay because childhood poverty, malnutrition, and the many attendant ailments that share map overlays with poverty and/or industrialization, are not the fault of those most affected but instead are negative externalities of our nicer life opportunities. Don’t think of dis-ease as individual; it manifests individually but infects or affects the community or society.
I agree with you that there is are some arguments to be made for publicly funded health care. The problem is, we have such a corrupt system administering that health care.
How many public health dollars were spent on covid vaccines? Or covid countermeasures (ventilators, midazolam, remdesivir etc.)? Or paying off hospitals and doctors to go along with the scam? And how much are we paying for all the vaccine injuries, those that have already manifested, and those that are yet to manifest?
I “chose” not to take the vaccine, yet, as a tax payer, I have to fund all of this?
If we are going to have a debate about the pros and cons of publicly funded health care, we have to find a way to make sure the “health care system” is not a slush fund for the pharma-medical complex.