weejonnie, on 2017-July-21, 05:28, said:
The curse of modern democracy is 'bread and circuses' - politicians give the populace something that is nice and isn't affordable in the medium to long term - and then scream blue murder when a politician from another party realises this and, for the overall benefit of the country, has to take it away.
I am not American, however Obamacare seems to have fit this scenario perfectly. If Americans want 'free' healthcare then they are going to have to pay a lot more for it. The demand for 'better health' is infinite - regrettably the resources to provide it aren't.
In the UK we have a situation where many people require long-term care, for dementia. The costs and resources required are very large. However when one political party put forward a possible solution (a charge against the assets owned by the person) it was screamed down as a 'dementia tax'. In effect people were encouraged to vote for a system that allows other people to hand down their houses to their offspring. A similar situation occurred with 'Student fees' - a promise to let students have their university education 'free' instead of paying $12000 a year. This would cost $140,000,000,000 - and people voted for this party because it would benefit their own children, not realising that their, and their children's taxes would have to increase astronomically to pay for it.
What I would mention, as a viewer from afar, is that a) the anti-Trump faction in Washington seem to leak tons of information that they think would be embarrassing to the President and b) They haven't leaked anything about Trump and Russia (other than bigging up a social gathering with many world leaders as a 'secret second meeting'). The conclusion inevitably (as in the 'dog that didn't bark in the night') is that there is nothing there.
I will disagree with your last paragraph, but before I get to that I want to look for some common veiwpoints in the first three. I doubt we are in total agreement, but perhaps some common ground.
We are being told that under the new plan, one of them anyway, 12m people on Medicaid will be cut off. The figure is sometimes 15m, this includes people who are not yet on Medicaid but who will, or are expected to be, on the program in the future (near future, I suppose). The details keep shifting. Of course there are some on Medicaid who would stay on Medicaid. Of course being on Medicaid is good for the person on it, and of course it costs money. Hence my wish to have a little clarity as to just what Senators would see as the right balance. I would like a Senator to say "The bill I recommend would pay the medical cost for a child in such and such circumstances and not in the following other circumstances". I might agree, I might disagree, but I would know what level of support he thinks society should take on.
You mention college tuition. I was expecting to be responsible for paying my own, but this was helped immensely by an unexpected scholarship that I had not applied for and didn't know existed. My high school math teacher (maths teacher I guess you would say) was watching out for me. But there were still costs, I worked, and thereby hangs a tale. When I started in 1956 it was not all that hard to get part time work paying maybe $1.50 an hour. Sometimes $2.00 an hour. Tuition at the University of Minnesota was approximately $225 a year. You could rent a place for about $50 a month, less if you were hard up and not fussy. You can see how I could have taken care of that even without my good fortune with the scholarship. A friend went to Stanford, another friend went to MIT, their parents could pay for this. But paying your own way can be a good experience. I look back on this as a very important time of my life.. I am not all that interested in having my tax money send a kid to Stanford, but I very much would like it to be possible for him/her to have opportunities at level that I had. .The U of M was a very good place for a person interested in expanding his life. And it was affordable.
We can arrange help in medicine, education and elsewhere that will be good for the person helped and, as a whole, good for the country. We can do this while still recognizing that there are limits to what we can afford. Not all help is necessary or even desirable, but help can be, well, helpful. And good for us all.
So I agree that we have to look at costs while we look at intent. We might be somewhat in agreement on that.
Now to your last paragraph. I confess that I see Trump as truly repulsive, so there is some emotion in this. But I have come to see him as even worse than I thought he would be. As to specifically Russia, he sure acts as if there is "something there". I claim to be at least somewhat even handed in such pronouncements. During all the stuff about Hillary's emails I took the view that if I were she, I would instruct my staff to turn over every piece of email including recipes I had sent to Chelsea. I would make it clear that this should be done so thoroughly that there would be zero possibility of new emails surfacing later. She did not do this and it cost her greatly. I think history is repeating itself on a grand scale. Sometimes there is a there there.