The Caracal Kid posted:
...........protection of public healthcare while creating more opportunities for private healthcare
Don't you see this as one or the other? It seems to me that if you are "creating more opportunities for private healthcare" then you aren't protecting public health care. It's been my experience that when you have a paralell system, that the public health care system looses it's best people to the better pay of the private system. This does indeed benefit the wealthier class that can afford the private care but the rest of us are left with poorer care. The main beneficiaries of course, are the insurance companies and corporate health-care providers. So how would this benefit the population as a whole?
I was impressed by some other issues that came out of this discussion too. I had no idea that anyone but me cared a fig about the environment! I'm glad to see that so many see it as an election issue. The other issue that slipped my mind was child day care. That is an important issue too.
While we are talking about the environment, this is why I'm concerned right now:
Study Shows Heat And Smog Are Killers
http://www.cbc.ca/story/science/national/2005/06/06/smog050606.html
Here is an excerpt from the posted article: The air pollution that causes smog was found to be the cause of 822 deaths a year in Toronto, 818 in Montreal, 368 in Ottawa and 258 in Windsor.
I added it up 822 + 818 + 368 + 258 = 2268
Not an abstract number but 2,268 Canadian people! That's almost as many as died in the attack on the World Trade Center.
No big headlines about this though, no war on terror declared, it just happens slowly and quietly in emergency rooms where young children, and old folks die because they can't breathe anymore.
How to fix the problem? We aren't the first to face air pollution problems; California cities had horrible smog long before it was fashionable in Toronto, so let's look at their solutions. Their big culprit was auto emissions, so they tightened up emission rules and the automakers listened!
I think another big culprit in Ontario is coal-burning power plants and high-sulpher diesel fuels. There are practical solutions to both of these problems too. We have to demand that policymakers make enviromental decisions in favor of our health.
That would mean utilizing proven wind turbine technology like the one on the Toronto waterfront instead of coal-burning power plants. The worst polluters in Ontario are the coal burning power plants.
Wind power isn't the only answer, sometimes the wind doesn't blow enough to provide the power we need, but it's a darn good supplement and excess power can be sold at a profit.
Another very promising source is all that water that flows everywhere in Canada. That's energy flowing right past us to the sea! We can tap into that by building giant hydro dams (proven) or invest in pilot plants to prove the feasibility of small in-the-stream turbines to generate electricity.
Doesn't it bother anyone that we are still practicing third-world policies and killing our people with pollution? The solutions are out there; we just have to demand that our politicians do their jobs and our business.