Show me in the Constitution where it is the government's job to provide access to those tools.
I'm pretty sure it comes under life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, which the government is obligated to ensure, right?
As to the minimum wage argument, minimum wage is ENTRY LEVEL pay. I wouldn't want someone to work for me who would settle for minimum wage. If you are over the age of 20 and earning minimum wage, you better be looking for a new CAREER.
I agree that minimum wage is barely enough to live on, but many people out there
do spend their lives working at minimum wage, because that's what unskilled labour pays. Telling people that they just ought to become doctors, or something, doesn't actually help.
I have seen free health care when I was in the military.
US military healthcare is pretty shabby, by all accounts. I'll confess that I've never had the pleasure of it, but I hear quite shocking stories and statistics. It's certainly not the same as the socialised healthcare that I grew up with in Britain.
Thank you very much I will pay for mine and have my choice of care providers. Want to make it easier for the poor? Fine, then give out yet another tax credit.
"The poor" are those people who aren't earning enough to pay significant taxes. If they get a credit for 50% of their contributions, that's not going to buy them any actual healthcare.
Part of me is very glad that you have the privilege to think that "the poor" have easy access to high-paying careers, if only they'd make the effort, or that they can pay for that TB medicine by economising on the luxuries. I honestly wish everyone had as little idea of what being poor in America actually means.
The fictional government in the story was already called Republican in this thread, so that is where this argument stems from.
And all governments called "Republican" are exactly the same. The Second Roman Republic, the Old Republic in Star Wars? There's
no difference at all.
It's clearly a strongly right-wing government, though not one I can see the current Republican party morphing into in the next 20 years. If you were to assume that there are only two political parties in America (and, for that matter, that the story is set in America - I don't believe it was explicitly stated), then it obviously lines up more with the Republican party than with the Democratic party, but I wouldn't agree that that simplification means that the fictional right-wing government represents the Republican party any more than the government depicted in
V for Vendetta bears any relationship to the Conservative party in Britain.
It makes me sick to see people look to a government for support. If we all are "equal" then why should anyone work harder than they need to? I work more than 4000 hours a year at my business. It's hard, but it's better than looking for someone else to provide for me and mine (and the way I'm taxed, several others).
If we are all "equal", why should anyone think that the society around them didn't play any part in their success? Why shouldn't you help to pay for programmes that everyone benefits from, such as roads, pollution controls and, yes, public health?
Really, there's a very simple reason why funding other people's healthcare is a good idea: If your next-door neighbour comes down with cholera, that has a direct negative effect on you. If the pool of potential employees who are healthy enough to do the work you want done is reduced, that has a direct negative effect on you, and on the economy as a whole. Public health is a public good.
As far as brining my introduction into the thread, I put that there AFTER this post.
Ah, so it was a blatant lie from
after you'd proved you were unable to avoid political arguments. That makes it so much better. My apologies.