heavyblinker
Posts: 3623
Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: MasterJaguar01 OK. You are making an assumption that there are always more people to pay in. Therein lies the problem. When you have a population that is generally unhealthy, unskilled, or otherwise NOT contributing to society, you have a threat to sustainability. And no, I am NOT pointing to ANY group of people in particular. I am making a general statement. It seems to me the solution here would be to give them things like jobs, a clean environment, security, a good education, etc. If you're not pointing to any specific group, then how does this connect to Economic Nationalism? So the problem isn't that austerity has made local conditions more difficult for everyone, including the people who have lived there all their lives? In times of economic hardship, everyone's health will suffer, and there will be fewer people paying into the system as well. Economic Nationalism doesn't seem to concern itself with public vs private health care... it's more about blaming non-Americans for everything. If the solution is to create jobs and stimulate the economy, Economic Nationalism is the LAST thing they need, as nothing destroys an economy faster than a trade war. All I am seeing here is the argument that because times are tough, it's time to scream 'every man for himself!!'. quote:
ORIGINAL: MasterJaguar01 As I said earlier, I support the principles wholeheartedly. Does that mean high tariffs, xenophobic immigration policies, and isolationism? Maybe, if you're Steve Bannon. That is where he and I diverge. Generally speaking.... If we take our eye off the ball with regard to our own sustainability, our own society and social safety net start to erode. If we maintain unfavorable trade policies, and do not restrict individuals who lack a potential to contribute to society, and instead simply draw from our social programs, we erode our ability to sustain these programs. Who are these individuals who lack a potential to contribute to society? Should we also do this for people who are already living in the country? If there's a recession or even a depression because of all of this anti-globalist backlash, do we just start cutting people off because they can't get jobs or look after themselves properly? How do you even determine someone's potential to contribute, seeing as they haven't actually proven themselves yet? I know that Canada tends to favor high-skilled workers, but then after they arrive, they find their degrees are worthless, can't get jobs, and end up being pushed into low-skilled occupations. I also know that Australia rejects potential immigrants who are obese. I suppose you could say something along the lines of 'we already have more than enough dead weight here', and I'm not suggesting that criminals and terrorists and such be allowed in (though they might not be a drain on the health care system), but I also think that investing in immigrants can pay off in the following generations. It can't be a coincidence that a lot of successful entrepreneurs are immigrants-- they are less soft, more appreciative of the opportunities they've been given, often have a solid work ethic, etc. I think the big problem is the wealth gap and general lack of economic mobility/opportunity. 'Economic Nationalism' will only exacerbate that problem. quote:
ORIGINAL: MasterJaguar01 How did the Soviet Union last from WWI until Reagan said "Mr. Gorbachev. Tear down this wall"??? (No I am not crediting Reagan) - Economic Nationalism. You could not get OUT of the Soviet Union, but you couldn't get IN either. In return, your government provided you with shitty housing and shitty healthcare for free. Let's go back to the UK. Crappy income for providers and nurses is nothing new in the UK. It has been going on for decades. Still, the UK maintained its high quality healthcare system, and providers were more than happy to participate. The population was not very diverse, and was generally healthy. What changed? Lack of Economic Nationalism. Massive unvetted (from a merit (propensity to contribute) perspective, not a criminal one) immigration. First, from Eastern Europe, and then more recently from the Middle East. No, I am NOT saying anyone is a bad person. Nor am I blanketly saying that any group of people are bad. I am saying that, in addition to seeing patients that are generally healthy, providers now have to see extra patients who are not as healthy, and in some cases are unable to contribute very well to the tax base. All for the SAME low pay. I am more than happy to debate what the optimal healthcare (or any other social) system should be in the U.S. in another thread. My point is... It makes no difference how far to the left or how far to the right it is. If we can't sustain it (i.e. More people are taking from it than contributing to it). It will fall apart. I AM saying that we need to be mindful of our trade agreements and alliances (not blanketly withdraw from them). AND I AM saying that we need to build a merit-based immigration system (refugees exempted) Canada, Australia, etc... already have a merit-based immigration system. I don't know about the UK. However it doesn't make sense to me to have a merit-based immigration system while also slashing public services and making health care even less socialized. So he is going to avoid letting the deadbeats in so they won't be able to get crap educations, work shitty jobs, eat junk food or go without a doctor? And yes, updating trade agreements isn't something that I would ever argue against, but you can't just focus on your losses and proclaim a trade agreement a disaster. The TPP might have resulted in manufacturing taking a hit, but the US also would have gained a significant foothold in an area that China will now probably come to dominate. The worst of it is all of this 'the most powerful nation on Earth is a victim of the outside world' bullshit-- it's that fascist sense of persecution that the American right specializes in, especially when it comes to guns, immigrants, librul policies, racism, sexism, etc... only with the outside world as the enemy. I don't know how anyone can't hear echoes of pre-WWII Germany in such rhetoric.
|