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why that was nice
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<blockquote data-quote="SomeGuyDude" data-source="post: 6236349" data-attributes="member: 613531"><p>Nono, I was agreeing with you. That system is EXCELLENT, and any increase in taxes is more than offset by lowered insurance payments. Canadians and Brits pay around 8% of their GDP toward health care in taxes, Americans pay 17% of our GDP toward private health care. A universal system would, on average, cut the amount of money each person spends on health care in HALF, and we'd end up with a way better system.</p><p></p><p>But unfortunately what's on the table in the US isn't even universal, it's a sort of weird hybrid.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SomeGuyDude, post: 6236349, member: 613531"] Nono, I was agreeing with you. That system is EXCELLENT, and any increase in taxes is more than offset by lowered insurance payments. Canadians and Brits pay around 8% of their GDP toward health care in taxes, Americans pay 17% of our GDP toward private health care. A universal system would, on average, cut the amount of money each person spends on health care in HALF, and we'd end up with a way better system. But unfortunately what's on the table in the US isn't even universal, it's a sort of weird hybrid. [/QUOTE]
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