I've just been interested in Neoliberalism for a while now — frank
Why is the state good? You could say states are natural and that health and goodness are equivalent. Healthy pine trees are good. Healthy states are good — frank
He said "pretty much" (not "every single one"), and if the best counter you can find is China, you're pretty much conceding the point. Here's a list of countries with universal/singlepayer/government-provided health care. Its.. pretty long. But sure, China's not on it- what a compelling argument. — Seppo
Also probably worth noting that basically all comparable countries to the US have better health outcomes with universal/public health care than the US does with its private system. Better outcomes, with a lower price tag, and these national programs tend to be wildly popular. — Seppo
So this one's not even a fair fight; universal healthcare is a no-brainer. — Seppo
My son, we are prone to find evil interesting, and our God-given curiosity may want to investigate it. Beware of Darkness, — Bitter Crank
Well, you could say that the state is good because it maintains cohesion in society, it provides infrastructure and services, it defends society against external and internal enemies, etc. — Apollodorus
Except for the defense part, all those things can be done by religion, right? — frank
But the State does a better job of providing social cohesion which over-arches sectarian and partisan interests (at least, most of th time). — Bitter Crank
Western Europe, North America, Japan, and some other states have, it seems to me, done a pretty good job. — Bitter Crank
Not in itself, but the fact that all our peers are doing means it should be considered. — Seppo
The real argument for it, is the fact that it delivers better outcomes at a lower cost. — Seppo
Yes, as opposed to the issue being what's wrong with the USA. — frank
What should the state be responsible for? And why? — frank
This is from a website commenting on how wealthy nonprofits are like they don't have to plan for the future. Their CEOs do make insane salaries, tho. — frank
It all looked kind of reddish purple. — frank
Don't you see the link? I think it's obvious.How do you see that relating to the OP? — frank
Cooper examines and links a series of policy domains in which the traditional family was explicitly adduced to substitute for multiple aspects of the social state. In her telling, market privatization of social security, health care, and higher education involved “responsibilizing” individual men, rather than the state, for teen pregnancies, parents, rather than the state, for the costs of higher education, and families, rather than the state, for the provision of every kind of care for dependents —children, disabled, the elderly.". — frank
If you have market privatization of health care, it is very likely that the services of doctors salaries are higher. — ssu
The cocktail effect makes it close to impossible for large groups to fall into a vicious circle that's impossible to recover from — Christoffer
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