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[–] jaceame 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

I can see that you are focused on self-management. It is obvious that people must learn self-control and have consequences for their actions. What is your opinion of socialized medicine? Or do you prefer affordable insurance driven by competition?

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[–] Yukonman 0 points 6 points (+6|-0) ago 

Socialized medicine has always rewarded an economy with positive benifits by helping to ensure a healthy labour force and mentality.

The externalities given from it outweigh the costs in a cost-benifits analysis

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[–] jaceame 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

Thank you for your opinion.

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[–] sakuramboo 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

I understand the benefits of a healthy labor force, but the younger the person is, the less likely it is that they would require health services. Wouldn't that make it more beneficial the older the work force gets? Instead of a blanket socialized medicine program, to instead have it based on age? For example, in the states, men need to get their prostate checked for cancer starting at 40 years old. So, that would be a good base for when it becomes soclaized. Or, do those rewards also appear at earlier ages, even when large numbers do not require it?

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[–] whitehawk ago 

I disagree with you. Having lived through the Saving and Loans, the 1980 recession and on and on we go. The structures of society benefit Corporations and Individuals, the Freerider mentality that policies and regulations should only benefit Corporations is short sighted. North America is reeling from Reaganomic ideology, there is so much 'trickle up' economics that Money is sitting idle and the utopian idea that Companies would invest the money has faltered. What a lot of people don't understand is some of the poorest countries in the World have the largest discrepancy of income. If Economics were measured to the medical field, it would have corpses laying around and constantly piling up. The 2008 bailouts are the cornerstone that Economic hasn't a clue what's going on, or how to build a solid system. The first book people should have to read for Economic degrees is Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets. That way at least they would understand, that Economic theory has no relevance in reality.

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[–] Yukonman ago 

It has tons of relevance in reality. It's not perfect it's a weird science. We can't test hypothesis in the lab, we can only go off real world data that has tons of variables like random chance. But have an idea of the general direction to go is better than walking blind.