S
St_Francis
Guest
I think it would be lovely if we could have sharing between the rich and the poor so that no one was ever in need, but what I see is that it is financially unsustainable. In the US, we spend a huge percentage of our federal expenditures on “entitlements.”
The health care program Medicare started on the 1960s to help provide health care for the elderly has blossomed into a huge expense, with more increases to come as the baby boomers retire.
Social Security was set up as a ponzi scheme which will collapse because the number of children in a family went down so precipituously that where there were 13 workers per retired person in 1960, there are now only 3, and that is with the expansion of women’s iemployment.
The state medicaid programs continually have to lift their income levels because the price of health care and insurance rises so much more quickly than people’s incomes.
I see the mess Europe, with much higher taxes than ours, is in, and I see us follwing the same undisciplined road.
How can we justify following the liberal (in its current sense) path if it is going to leave oir nation bankrupt?
The health care program Medicare started on the 1960s to help provide health care for the elderly has blossomed into a huge expense, with more increases to come as the baby boomers retire.
Social Security was set up as a ponzi scheme which will collapse because the number of children in a family went down so precipituously that where there were 13 workers per retired person in 1960, there are now only 3, and that is with the expansion of women’s iemployment.
The state medicaid programs continually have to lift their income levels because the price of health care and insurance rises so much more quickly than people’s incomes.
I see the mess Europe, with much higher taxes than ours, is in, and I see us follwing the same undisciplined road.
How can we justify following the liberal (in its current sense) path if it is going to leave oir nation bankrupt?