Message from @pandaxcentric
Discord ID: 464078485497839616
but it's quite stretched cus they can't get enough staff in
I mean, if I can make as much with a 4 year comp-sci degree, why spend the 8 years plus specialization to be a doctor?
honestly I think private healthcare with price transparency makes the most sense
yes, but I must agree that there should be a system for the financially impared
in the US, you don't know what a bill is going to be until you've paid it
Yeah, turns out if you have taxpayer funded institutions they kinda break down when over 200,000 immigrants per year enter such a small country, 60%+ of whom take out of welfare rather than pay into it. If the fucking issue wasn't so wrapped up in tripe about bigotry anybody would be able to understand the basic maths of it. Add to that the fact that under labour NHS funding was boosted by private finance initiatives, probably to avoid increasing taxes, now the whole system is deeply in debt. Welfare and nationalised health insurance can be great things, but not when they're put under such stress and when the rules are so exploitable.
Healthcare systems are very tricky to structure. If you have an injury it could be more benneficial to society for it to be repaired to that you can continue with your job, then you be impared by the injury or their fiancial burdens it could take on your job
IT should be like perscriptions: you have to have specific requirements to get it for free
Certificates
then theres the issue of overpopulation and open borders (no limits) making the population multiply at unforseen rates that our infrastructure cannot support.
For a start I'd say you have to be a British citizen to get any welfare or NHS treatment. Alternatively you have to have been paying tax and contributing to the system for several years if you aren't a citizen. This would put off people who are just showing up to reap the benefits of a system they haven't contributed to. It's essentially theft.
I wholeheartedly agree
I've had talks with friends about this...if you aren't going to restrict immigration to net contributors, then you have to restrict the benefits that immigrants can receive
at the very least, if you're going ot a country as someone who needs welfare, you should be forced to learn the language and take some job training
with a reasonable timeperiod
if you aren't passable in english after 2 years, then you have to go
Yeah the logistics of throwing people out of the country are basically impossible, so the only good way I can think of is to eliminate incentives. Whatever is incentivised in any society increases. Like with the child welfare system prior to the two child rule. Created an incentive to be a single parent with lots of kids, so we got just that
I saw a stat that 25% of DREAMERS speak no english, and as many will be on food stamps in the next decade, 40 something % can't speak passable english
Thank Christ we have a water-border
I agree, but when I'm discussing this with people who are pro open borders, I throw out things I think we can agree with
Rebuild hadrian's wall tho
Haha yeah, being for open borders is just infantile. Someone believing that is not a serious person, but an absolute baby.
I'd be more open to the idea if we agreed they didn't qualify for any welfare at all, originally we got immigrants who had no expectations from the governemnt, and worked their asses off (my great grandparents were farmers from Italy for example)
my grandpa on my dad's side spoke NO french at home, so my dad speaks no french, because they wanted to assimilate
(french canadian)
but I feel like that isn't how it goes anymore
If borders were removed then there are no national boundaries, so in consequence the existence of nations in the first place vanishes. With no nations you can't have stable systems so every area becomes the same as any other. Where the fuck are so-called dreamers supposed to move to for a better life, then? So let's give everybody a better life by destroying the integrity and stability of the very systems that produce this better life. Whee! Morons.
I'm afraid this globalisation is irreversible.
With open borders you can't have representative governments either, since there is no stable community to represent. No point paying taxes either, for that reason. Globalisation isn't inevitable at all XP
But maybe, if brexit works out.
Maybe...
haha, take back your sovereignty!
it's crazy how much feet dragging their is with brexit, the referendum happened, EU people lost, now follow through
it's funny, leftists really hate democracy, and every tiem it doesn't' work out for them they claim conservatives are the ones breaking it (I use US reference points for left and right, I know they'r edifferent in the UK)
The UK has survived over 1000 years of war and disaster. I think we can handle a grasping EU and Islam. But Brits are very stable and tolerant in general so it takes a lot of getting slapped before there's retaliation. The establishment may be spineless sycophants to horseshit but the public aren't. It isn't over by any means. Its not like we're at the point of killing people while covered in shit in a field somewhere and even then our grandparents and older ancestors didn't believe or act as though the game was over.
If they could hold their ground in the face of seeing their friends blown to pieces I think we'll manage
@pandaxcentric
>*Sees one badly managed state welfare and healthcare system*
> "See this shit is stupid"
I've been reading recently a book about the history of Catholicism in Britain, the back and forth between them and Protestants. People willingly and forthrightly walked to the scaffold to be burned alive for their convictions. A burning could last over 2 hours. It really puts things into perspective, I think it's really important not to let despair take over like things are lost before anything is over. There's still a bloody good life here. When I see videos by Sargon and people who promote the same cluster of principles as him, the massive number of likes compared to dislikes on basically all of them, or the huge outpouring of support for Tommy Robinson when he was imprisoned, it tells me real change is brewing. It happens slowly though, which is actually good, because slow change is sustainable change and when things move fast the potential for disaster increases dramatically.
yeah, eventually change will be forced too...like the US our Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid will be insolvent before 2030 (I think the dates change depending on where you read them) so we'll have to figure something out by then...I think if we hit that date, payments just get scaled back, they don't go away...the US and UK are def some of the best places to be born in the world though, so even with all the bad it is still overwhelmingly good
SERVICE