FalseFlagg K
Well-Known Member
Ok so. 1. I like cheese.
Now I’d like to point out I don’t profess to know anything like all the detail of all these factors in the US because I live in one of the better, fairer countries on earth. We have a public health system funded by a 1.5 % ? Levy on our personal income tax. As well as a private health system for those who prefer that, although once you make over a certain amount you’re financially pretty much forced to take out private cover. I certain think it’s monstrous that if you can’t afford health care you don’t receive it, that just seems inhumane. And the control and corruption of big pharma over the health care industry in the US is despicable.
Similarly we have compulsory % contribution from employers to retirement funds only to be accessed upon retirement which is a great thing.
We had free tertiary education from the early 70s until the late 80s, replaced with a government run higher education contribution scheme which is basically a load only indexed to CPI I think that is a good balance between people contributing but having the chance to access University education based on merit
I don’t know a lot about public housing so I can’t really comment
I do think Australia is crazily over governed. The amount of our taxes that are wasted by bloated government departments that are almost universally incompetent and inefficient is eye waterying. So I am in favour of a good amount of social services being rooted in Government but if we could have then run a lot more efficiently somehow that’d be great. I have come to really not appreciate people in the public service who mostly never ever pay for any mistakes made as opposed to those of us running small businesses who do. Government jobs here are crazily cushy and easy street compared to a lot of the private sector.
Welfare / social security I favour although I really believe that incentive to work and achieve is vital for the human spirit. I would err on the side of there being a significant advantage to having a job even a lower paying one compared to being fully in benefits
And so the same as far as government should control the means of production / industry as little as is practically possible. People should have incentive to do things, achieve things for themselves as much as is possible in principle
I’ll leave it at that. Hope that makes sense ?? Happy to have anything pointed out / questioned
Now I’d like to point out I don’t profess to know anything like all the detail of all these factors in the US because I live in one of the better, fairer countries on earth. We have a public health system funded by a 1.5 % ? Levy on our personal income tax. As well as a private health system for those who prefer that, although once you make over a certain amount you’re financially pretty much forced to take out private cover. I certain think it’s monstrous that if you can’t afford health care you don’t receive it, that just seems inhumane. And the control and corruption of big pharma over the health care industry in the US is despicable.
Similarly we have compulsory % contribution from employers to retirement funds only to be accessed upon retirement which is a great thing.
We had free tertiary education from the early 70s until the late 80s, replaced with a government run higher education contribution scheme which is basically a load only indexed to CPI I think that is a good balance between people contributing but having the chance to access University education based on merit
I don’t know a lot about public housing so I can’t really comment
I do think Australia is crazily over governed. The amount of our taxes that are wasted by bloated government departments that are almost universally incompetent and inefficient is eye waterying. So I am in favour of a good amount of social services being rooted in Government but if we could have then run a lot more efficiently somehow that’d be great. I have come to really not appreciate people in the public service who mostly never ever pay for any mistakes made as opposed to those of us running small businesses who do. Government jobs here are crazily cushy and easy street compared to a lot of the private sector.
Welfare / social security I favour although I really believe that incentive to work and achieve is vital for the human spirit. I would err on the side of there being a significant advantage to having a job even a lower paying one compared to being fully in benefits
And so the same as far as government should control the means of production / industry as little as is practically possible. People should have incentive to do things, achieve things for themselves as much as is possible in principle
I’ll leave it at that. Hope that makes sense ?? Happy to have anything pointed out / questioned