Comment by ChrisMarshallNY
2 years ago
The difference is who the opposition is from.
In the UK, it's from the voters.
In the US, it's from the Healthcare Industry.
2 years ago
The difference is who the opposition is from.
In the UK, it's from the voters.
In the US, it's from the Healthcare Industry.
It's not if one remembers the promise of "If you like your doctor you can keep your doctor" with Hilary's healthcare plan in the 90's.
Companies can’t vote.
Why would they need to? Their lobbyists write the legislation and they finance the politicians who vote on it.
The NHS also does the same things.
Companies are considered a person and legally have rights such as freedom of speech, can own property and enter contracts.
They are allowed to spend as much as they want for votes due to their freedom of speech. Sure they can't directly vote but ever since like 2010 have a lot of human rights and I'm sure would love more. I would not be surprised if one day they could directly vote considering due to their rights. I hope though we can push back before then and change things.
https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/citi...
The NHS also runs public propaganda campaigns.