And yet it's not. I've spoken to countless people from England and Canada, and have heard an overwhelming bias against universalized programs. They don't like having to wait a month just to get a doctor's appointment or the quality of the services they get. And most people I spoke to were young, healthy people.
This is the first thing you've said that's been a good point. I'll concede that much to you.Whether or not I get sick I rely on public healthcare to keep my town healthy and well. Like I said, there's a total double standard there.
No, universalized means that everyone in the country/world pays for it. I don't pay for the police in New Mexico. I don't pay for the fire department in Utah. I pay for what I immediately use and depend on. That's the core difference.And those other systems aren't universalised? I mean really, everyone pays for them and yet a person can employ their own inhouse security/fire/medical personnel. It's just with a 'universalised program' everyone has access regardless of their place in society.
That doesn't mean that I forgive or condone it. I fight with a lot of my energy to put people in office that would reduce the federal income tax. Also, government officials often do not pay high taxes at all. Finally, you keep saying "it'll happen anyway." This is the sort of mindset that makes things go from worse to worst. This is not OK. How can you live with that mentality? Nothing ever changes with that sort of mentality. The revolutionary North Americans didn't just figure "We'll get taxed by the British anyway so more representation really doesn't matter." Where would we be if they did?Because you're also paying taxes?
People in the government here pay taxes just as they likely do there. People in the government are often better paid too so they likely pay more in tax than I do. I'm sure if the government here has more rights than I do here, the same applies to you and so whether or not you are ok with it, it'll happen either way.
Sure.It's getting to you, eh? roflmfao
@Alpha: Yes, some people do in fact earn inheritances. It is a benefit they deserve for their ancestors working their asses off. While I would prefer someone to work for their own rewards, it was within every right of that boss's parents to leave him that inheritance. Furthermore, what gives him the right to own all of that property and earn more than the people working under him is that it's a heck of a lot harder to run a company than it is to ring up groceries. Most people tend to overlook this.
Nobody deserves that sort of guarantee. People need to earn those rights, whether you like it or not. Just because I was born, I did not deserve to have everything given to me without effort. Neither did you, your president, or the chimney sweeper.Humans deserve some guarantee that they will have food, shelter, clothes, health, and an education.
They are. If 51% of the country all at once decided that they wanted all black people to be forcibly removed from the country, it would have to happen. As hyperbolic as that is, I get what you're saying. But that is in fact what happens. While it's typically the much richer people (heads of corporations/companies/etc.) that run the core of the country, they rarely get any say of what goes on unless they bribe the hell out of a politician. Which I absolutely do not condone.Slavery would be...where the interests of one group are irrationally and inequitably given precedence over the other.
And the concept you aren't grasping is availability and personal property.The concept of necessity is the main thing you guys aren't grasping, or at least, refusing to.
I have seen this term "social responsibility" come up before. I'm not really sure how to take it or how to respond to it. Again, I get what you're saying, but I just don't agree with it. In a totally selfless society, nobody would have any property of their own. Nobody would care for themselves. And the first person to work for themselves would be deemed an outcast. That seems nonsensical to me.You call it leeching and mooching, I call it social responsibility, moral concern and selflessness.
As much as it might anger you, it is completely within the upper class's right to have a child. And I am not denying that lower class citizens have that right, too. I am just claiming how unfathomably irresponsible it is. When a sixteen-year-old living in the projects of Detroit has a child, why is it suddenly my concern to pay for that baby's hospital bills? Nobody has been able to give me an answer other than "social responsibility", which to me sounds like a cop out.As much as we claim that class boundaries don't exist, a child born to an upper class family will remain upper class. They can access a good education, and then a good, upper class job, to support the next round of upper class progeny. A lower class family, without adequate Government support, is incredibly likely to remain lower class. If this wasn't the case, then we wouldn't even have a lower class, right? I'm mean, if it's simply a matter of working hard, then the majority of the world wouldn't be lower class, right? Yeah... structuralism ftw.
And finally, the part of the post actually directed towards me:
But you're not more of a slave without the state. I've heard this argument countless times, as well. If a free-market capitalist existence was ever to come into fruition, every man has the ability to fight to his last breath to get a job and work his way up the ladder. Even McDonalds has stories posted all over their stores of people who started as cashiers and worked their way to being regional managers. While this doesn't have the same pizazz as "store owner", it's a hell of a lot better than cashier and makes a whole lot more money. Even the poorest person has the opportunity to walk into a store and apply for a position and work his way up. Life at that point is based on ability and qualifications, not need.Well, in a market situation, I don't choose to be hit by negative externalities (but I am), and I would like to benefit from positive externalities (but I can't). Where's my freedom? Without the state, I am more of a slave.
After reading through this previous paragraph again, I realize it, too, is rather hyperbolic. But I hope the point makes its way across. If not, I'll do my best to better explain why there is essentially no slavery without the state.
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