Rpruett said:
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1. Yes, costs are a major part of the issue. Interesting fact is that countries like the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Ireland, Australia, Japan, and South Korea spend almost half per capita on healtchare than we spend in the US, and that's a biproduct of providing universal healthcare for their citizens:

And we're a far cry from having the "best" healthcare in the world.
Healthcare, like roads, is an essential service that provides consumers with relatively limited access to competition. This inhibits free market forces from properly effecting prices like in other, more competitive markets (luxury goods like consumer electronics). People will rarely refuse healthcare if they need it, and this allows prices to unjustly balloon, which is partially why increases in healthcare costs in the US have far outpaced inflation for years (2006, http://www.shrm.org/hrdisciplines/benefits/Articles/Pages/2011CostTrend.aspx2011). This is also why around 60% of those who file for bankruptcy in the US do so because of unexpected medical bills.
A public or single-payer healthcare system both removes the profit motive driving privatized healthcare and removes much of the bureaucracy and administrative costs that come with a privatized system. You won't have issues with hospitals having to make deals with multiple insurance agencies, or patients having to find a hospital that supports their insurance company under a fully nationalized or single-payer plan. Everything would be streamlined considerably. For example, South Korea has an excellent single-payer healthcare system.
Even in a privatized system with lowered costs, you would still have some people going without proper medical care, and this is not just in today's society. Should we also prohibit access to police and fire protection based on one's income?
2. Those who aren't scholars simply won't partake of the offered education. Even if someone of lesser intelligence decides to give school a shot, if they drop out within only two weeks, what costs have they added to the total? It would actually be hard for someone to abuse a social service like education, because only those sticking with and passing classes are those adding to the service's total cost.
As for the costs of private vs nationalized education, the same issues with healthcare apply. College costs are also far outpacing tuition, despite larger class sizes and less services now being offered at many schools compared to several years back.
And the fact of the matter is, a college degree is now crucial for a vast majority of decent paying jobs on the market, unlike several decades ago. Not allowing someone of intelligence to pursue such a career path merely because they cannot afford it is unjust.
Plus, a more educated society is better for everyone involved.
3. People who think we're blanketly "overtaxed" usually don't understand the value of taxation, or the value of a society pooling its resources for the common good of its people.
I agree that we are over-taxed in certain ways. For example, I think the amount of people's money that is spent on funding overseas bases is far too much. However, I think the amount of people's money going towards our highway system, for example, is perfectly fine. I would appreciate more of our current tax dollars going towards services that are benefitial to myself and others, and an increase in taxes in addition to that if it would allow for an ever higher standard of living for the majority of the population. Public healthcare and post-secondary education are examples of this.
4. Why would anybody trust a corporation with power more than a government? At least we can vote/force politicians out of government. If a corporation becomes equally as powerful as a government, through monopolies and what have you, we'd first have to deal with the government's implicit support of the corporation before doing anything to reign in the corporation.
While young, corporations are held accountable both to each other and to consumers, but once they reach a certain point, both these forces have little effect on a corporation's power. At this time, corporations are only held accountable to the government, which is in turn held accountable to the people. Without the government holding corporations at bay, we're fucked.
5. The only difference between paper money and gold-backed money is that gold can only be mined at a certain rate, while the fed can print as much money as it wants.
Ultimately, the main issue still remains. The value of gold is not and never will be universal, and its value will fluctuate based on how it is viewed in the marketplace. Right now the value keeps going up and up and up, but it's only a matter of time before people realize that the item they have (a shiny chunk of rock) is considerably less valuable than what they're paying for it. It's a bubble, just like land. Only, unlike land, people aren't getting loans to buy it.
6. Letting corporations run wild in the name of "freedom"?







