Valid question
I think your question is a very valid one, (national safety) and it does not have to be viewed as off topic since it affects healthcare budget in both the US and Canada. It is easy enough to stay within the healthcare discussion.
Many countries have lived within their own borders for the most part, traded with others to get the resources needed, and life goes on for them. By looking at Canada's budget carefully, you can see they have done a pretty good job at keeping things fairly even. (Hopefully, Canadians will not be influenced by watching our government in action.)
Other countries, the US included, have literally gone to 3rd world countries and garnered their resources for a song. As the affected countries grow and develop, they begin to realize there are plenty of other markets besides the US that are willing to pay them more. The war was the US knee-jerk reaction to being dissed. The US government was perfectly willing to overlook Sadam's taunting behavior until it was clear he was not going to be selling as much oil to us or for a cheap enough price.
The US doesn't make many goods anymore. We farm that stuff out to other countries because the US businesses make high profits using foreign workers in striving countries. Our highest priced real estate (like most of Manhattan) is owned by other countries. Two thirds of our money is invested outside the country, so when the US citizens don't have money to spend, the economy plummets. This is why Bush is pushing through that tax rebate because most citizens will spend it, thus creating sales in the market arena, which in turn ups the statistics for sales. This makes the US look like it is doing better internally, although it is really like your parents giving you money that you can only spend at your family's store. It produces receipts that your family has done more business, when in reality, it came from the family business cash register to begin with.
While this money is going through this silly cycle, it is not available for healthcare. This makes less freed money in the pie chart and the government is well aware that many people will consider their rebates as a windfall and are more apt to spend it than not. (If everyone just kept it at home, and didn't bank it, the leaders would really be in a quandary because their ploy would look awful statistically.) So anyway, the Pentagon part of the pie chart will stay pretty constant until the government gets the oil.
My husband and I have an airtight passive solar home (no solar panels needed) and as long as the sun is shining, my heating bill is zero. On cloudy or really cold days, we heat with wood. This type of living is terrible for the government and the oil companies, because the US economy would collapse if all its citizens were not purchasing oil products. Until the businesses come up with another resource to generate sales, they will keep pushing oil at us.
If you really look at an Atlas and determine who is truly interested in wasting time and resources to invade the US, the list is very short. What most countries want is for us to go home, and leave them alone. Yes, there are a few countries that definitely need watching, but we could be more effective by getting out of the countries who are not any threat. Our military is spread out way too thinly. There is a saying...."don't be dumb enough to make more enemies that you can handle". Bush is definitely going over his limit, and our military families and citizens without healthcare are paying the price with their suffering and deaths. Sadly, I do not see this changing in the near future. Do you?
Just throwing out this thought.... addressing the amount of time Canadians have to wait to get some medical treatments. If the 50,000,000 uninsured people in the US all had equal healthcare like Canada, what do you suppose the wait times would be in the US? Even more to the point, if most Canadians could get faster medical care by denying a million of your weakest citizens (mostly elderly, children, mentally ill, homeless, and jobless) any healthcare, would that be an acceptable solution?
It's a lot to think about.
Take care,
Beth
I think your question is a very valid one, (national safety) and it does not have to be viewed as off topic since it affects healthcare budget in both the US and Canada. It is easy enough to stay within the healthcare discussion.
Many countries have lived within their own borders for the most part, traded with others to get the resources needed, and life goes on for them. By looking at Canada's budget carefully, you can see they have done a pretty good job at keeping things fairly even. (Hopefully, Canadians will not be influenced by watching our government in action.)
Other countries, the US included, have literally gone to 3rd world countries and garnered their resources for a song. As the affected countries grow and develop, they begin to realize there are plenty of other markets besides the US that are willing to pay them more. The war was the US knee-jerk reaction to being dissed. The US government was perfectly willing to overlook Sadam's taunting behavior until it was clear he was not going to be selling as much oil to us or for a cheap enough price.
The US doesn't make many goods anymore. We farm that stuff out to other countries because the US businesses make high profits using foreign workers in striving countries. Our highest priced real estate (like most of Manhattan) is owned by other countries. Two thirds of our money is invested outside the country, so when the US citizens don't have money to spend, the economy plummets. This is why Bush is pushing through that tax rebate because most citizens will spend it, thus creating sales in the market arena, which in turn ups the statistics for sales. This makes the US look like it is doing better internally, although it is really like your parents giving you money that you can only spend at your family's store. It produces receipts that your family has done more business, when in reality, it came from the family business cash register to begin with.
While this money is going through this silly cycle, it is not available for healthcare. This makes less freed money in the pie chart and the government is well aware that many people will consider their rebates as a windfall and are more apt to spend it than not. (If everyone just kept it at home, and didn't bank it, the leaders would really be in a quandary because their ploy would look awful statistically.) So anyway, the Pentagon part of the pie chart will stay pretty constant until the government gets the oil.
My husband and I have an airtight passive solar home (no solar panels needed) and as long as the sun is shining, my heating bill is zero. On cloudy or really cold days, we heat with wood. This type of living is terrible for the government and the oil companies, because the US economy would collapse if all its citizens were not purchasing oil products. Until the businesses come up with another resource to generate sales, they will keep pushing oil at us.
If you really look at an Atlas and determine who is truly interested in wasting time and resources to invade the US, the list is very short. What most countries want is for us to go home, and leave them alone. Yes, there are a few countries that definitely need watching, but we could be more effective by getting out of the countries who are not any threat. Our military is spread out way too thinly. There is a saying...."don't be dumb enough to make more enemies that you can handle". Bush is definitely going over his limit, and our military families and citizens without healthcare are paying the price with their suffering and deaths. Sadly, I do not see this changing in the near future. Do you?
Just throwing out this thought.... addressing the amount of time Canadians have to wait to get some medical treatments. If the 50,000,000 uninsured people in the US all had equal healthcare like Canada, what do you suppose the wait times would be in the US? Even more to the point, if most Canadians could get faster medical care by denying a million of your weakest citizens (mostly elderly, children, mentally ill, homeless, and jobless) any healthcare, would that be an acceptable solution?
It's a lot to think about.
Take care,
Beth