Subj : Re: Single payer health care To : Aaron Goldblatt From : Gamgee Date : Mon Jan 27 2025 18:53:56 -=> Aaron Goldblatt wrote to Utopian Galt <=- UG> I know the progressives want single payer, but unless we pay down our UG> budget deficit a bit, I do not feel comfortable with the start up UG> costs. AG> Reforming our tax system such that all incomes pay something AG> approximating a fair share, and reforming defense spending, would go a AG> long way toward paying for the creation of a national health system and AG> a stable Social Security system. AG> Non-exhaustive example: Defense spending is known to be rife with AG> waste, but efforts to control it and figure out what money is actually AG> being spent on are stymied at every turn (and this week's firing of the AG> Inspector General at DOD will not help). Defense spending is the number AG> general line item in the budget after Social Security (see below), yet AG> nobody wants to make any serious effort to touch it. Social Security AG> used to be the third rail of politics; now it seems to be guns. AG> Non-exhaustive example: Social security could be considerably shored up AG> by lifting the maximum income limit on the tax (currently approximately AG> $176,000). AG> Non-exhaustive example: Taxing capital gains at a higher rate than we AG> do presently, especially for gains values over $1 million. Currently, AG> the individual rate sits at 20%, down from a maximum of 35% in 1979, AG> and the corporate rate sits at 21%, down from a maximum of 35% AG> beginning in 1993. Yet it's well known that large corporations pay AG> little to nothing, sometimes even getting millions to hundreds of AG> millions in refunds. In a fair system, that would not happen. AG> Instead, politicians focus on penny-anty nonsense like cutting NASA and AG> the USPS (both respectively less than 0.06% of the total spend in AG> 2024). The USPS in particular would be self-supporting if not for that AG> silly retirement pre-funding accounting gimmick that no other business AG> in the world is required to use. (And there is a significant argument AG> to be made that not everything must be for-profit.) AG> On the other hand, Republicans seem to have a significant aversion to AG> doing anything at all that will help average people and make their AG> lives easier. Non-exhaustive examples: Proposals to repeal the ACA AG> without any kind of plan to replace it, despite now having had 14 years AG> to come up with something; litigation and plans in legislation to AG> destroy the SAVE plan for student loan borrowers; continual attempts to AG> tighten eligibility for Medicaid, SSDI, SNAP and school lunches. Sounds like you should move your socialist commie-wannabe ass to Venezuela. I hear it's nice there this time of year. .... Your proctologist called - he found your head. --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52 þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL .