OK so I crunched some number based on my job from last year, I have bumped up a tax bracket or two so this won't be relevant this year. But I paid 12.66% in taxes last year. This year I'm sure will be different but I'm also fortunate enough to not have to pay for any of my insurance any longer minus some Co pays. So for me personally I like the system now, yayyyyyy 1%I just checked my last pay stub. I get paid monthly.
my check before taxes = $4288
taxes taken off = $795
It's not free, nothing isSo you'd rather pay to protect Western Europe from Russia than get free healthcare for every American. Thanks
Straw manSo you'd rather pay to protect Western Europe from Russia than get free healthcare for every American. Thanks
If the government was able to take an honest look at spending and address the fiscally irresponsible programs, taxes probably wouldn't need to be raised.I understand not trusting the government with your money. That makes a lot of sense. What doesn't make sense is that taxes have to be raised. Other countries with similar tax levels manage it. Why would taxes have to be raised?
Apples and oranges. Too many variables to effectively compare and say that it is possible without raising taxes.I understand not trusting the government with your money. That makes a lot of sense. What doesn't make sense is that taxes have to be raised. Other countries with similar tax levels manage it. Why would taxes have to be raised?
All of this. Most American politicians are controlled by corrupting business influences. Their fingerprints are all over the recent healthcare reforms. If I could wave a magic wand and create ideal socialized medicine in the US, I'd do it in a minute.To answer the question in the OP, it wouldn't be possible to keep the tax rate the same and have free healthcare and free university education.
Taxes would have to be raised, and the honest truth is that most Americans trust themselves to spend their money much more than they do the government.
Relatively it is. Pay less, get healthcareIt's not free, nothing is
Taxes will go up, but the idea is the offset will still benefit you as you'll no longer be paying health insurance premiums. However, as @Alco Hauler suggests, easier said than done.Apples and oranges. Too many variables to effectively compare and say that it is possible without raising taxes.
I personally believe that it is not.
You are right, it's not if we stick to the status quo, changes would need to be made, I think some would be worth it, some not.Apples and oranges. Too many variables to effectively compare and say that it is possible without raising taxes.
I personally believe that it is not.
i pay national insurance which is in addition to the tax you mentioned Leigh, so it's not really free healthcare.The UK has free health care. This includes visits to the doctor, operations, A&E etc. There is a fee for prescriptions (about £7 I think) but if you are under 18 or unemployed, you are exempt.
Taxes on earnings here are:
£0 - £10,600: no tax
£10,600 - £42,385: 20% tax
£42,385 - £160,600: 40% tax
over £160,600: 45% tax
Pensions are tax deductible, so I personally whack a shit load of cash into my pension to get me onto the lower tax rate.
There are other taxes. Sales taxes, tax on petrol etc is typically higher than the US I believe. But for free healthcare and heavily subsidised education (mine was free), it's a decent trade off.
No, it's a direct reflection of your comment.Straw man
Agree, the systems are very different and it's not a simple process by any stretch of the imagination.Apples and oranges. Too many variables to effectively compare and say that it is possible without raising taxes.
I personally believe that it is not.
It is extortion. Not insurance, not with $6000 co-pay, out of pocket, or whatever cute term we can attach to it. Americans pay the most ridiculous premiums for the most ridiculous coverage.But remember, I haven't been to a doctor in about eight years. And now that the Affordable Care Act was passed, it is mandated that you carry a private insurance policy, or you get fined by the government...
I consider myself a moderate politically neutral individual and i would answer yes to both of those questions.Two simple questions:
1) should your taxes fund a national healthcare system?
2) should your taxes subsidise higher education?
Even most moderate and politically neutral Americans would answer no to these questions, despite the fact that most would be far better off.
I'm not proposing a tax increase, BTW. Just a redistribution of tax spending.
Why is that? Residual fear of "communists" from the cold war? Would social programs like these work in the US?
There is quite a large class divide in the US, with Jim Crow laws still existing until the 1960s etc. Maybe the adjustments need to be more gradual.
The VA is corrupt as fuck.I agree, the VA systems is the only government run healthcare I've dealt with as a civilian. If how that is run is any indication of how a single payer system would work in our society then no thanks. It's an absolute mess.
Now I do like the idea of a single payer system IF we could get it to work here. I think the current Healthcare system is fucked and obamacare didn't do much outside of raise people's insurance premiums.
They actively sought you out for registration? How convenient of them to pass a bill disguised as progressive healthcare reform when in reality it was just an attempt to strong-arm uninsured American into buying into the system. Unreal.But they wanted to fine me for last year. So glad I'm not a US citizen yet, because I could tell them to go fuck off. After a year being herrassed by text, phonecalls, e-mails to encourage healthcare insurance participation.
i'd like to slip him my left on principle for how far he takes being an asshole.and he's a dick about it.
Can you post example of this, I'm super curious how thay whole thing works.It is extortion. Not insurance, not with $6000 co-pay, out of pocket, or whatever cute term we can attach to it. Americans pay the most ridiculous premiums for the most ridiculous coverage.
Having lived in Europe for 25 years and see what universal healthcare can be like, this here in the US I call extortion. I am more than happy to pay a ridiculous amount on my premium, but then I want to be insured to the tits, NO CO-PAY. Healthcare, much like the prison system is an industry designed to generate money and jobs no matter what the concequences. Forgetting what it was there for in the first place.
But they wanted to fine me for last year. So glad I'm not a US citizen yet, because I could tell them to go fuck off. After a year being herrassed by text, phonecalls, e-mails to encourage healthcare insurance participation.
I'm not going to say he's wrong about what he says, because a lot of it has merit, however sometimes it's not what you say, but how you say it that catches you an ass whipping.One quick off topic, what is people's problem with Michael Moore. Did he lie? Cheat? What is it?
The guy isn't right about everything he says, that's for sure.Informative stuff, thanks guys. I'm trying to VU but I'm only limited
Yes
Hahaa a plus in my book, unless it's Richard Dawkins pompous.I'm not going to say he's wrong about what he says, because a lot of it has merit, however sometimes it's not what you say, but how you say it that catches you an ass whipping.
The US government is not to be blindly trusted, that is for sure. But the biggest fuck overs in American history are done by private companies. The banks, the fed, lenders, all private companies... so for us it is between a rock and a hard place. So I understand your sentiment, but I think we tend to forget that corporate America is just as corrupt, if not more, than the government. The government at least can be "somewhat" held accountable. So the money that we do trust ourselves to spend more than the Government, does then go to companies such as Enron, Adelphia, Bear Sterns, Lehman Brothers, and AIG. Our money ends up in a corrupt cess-pool none the less. I can see why people scream for regulation.Spoken like a true commie.
To answer the question in the OP, it wouldn't be possible to keep the tax rate the same and have free healthcare and free university education.
Taxes would have to be raised, and the honest truth is that most Americans trust themselves to spend their money much more than they do the government.
Never heard of him, i'll look him up.Hahaa a plus in my book, unless it's Richard Dawkins pompous.