kalm wrote:CID1990 wrote:
i didn't say it was radical, klam - you think that just because some far left progressive ideas have become more mainstream (mainly through the ramrod method) that they are somehow now moderate
they are not
socialized medicine, single payer - they are on the same end of the political spectrum as they have always been
You seem to think it's more important which side of the spectrum they come from than whether they're beneficial. Of course me, being the non-partisan centrist that I am could care less.
They're mainstream, not radical, but not moderate. Gotcha...

Socialized medicine is hardly "beneficial", unless high wait times for routine services, the government-doctor relationship out weighing the patient-doctor relationship, the two-tiered system for haves and have nots, and forcing good doctors out of primary care to be "beneficial"
Socialized medicine is at the disproportionate expense to the middle class even in countries where it works the best. The only "benefit" in the UK and Canada is it has forced malpractice lawyers back into the divorce business
It is a populist left wing concoction that has merely traded one set of problems for an even worse set
But I don't have to tell a realistic, thoughtful centrist like you - you already know it in spite of all the duck quacking you do