In the United States, Real Flying Cars a Thing But 'Very Serious People' Still Say Medicare for All 'Too Expensive'
While billionaire Google co-founder Larry Page has a team of amazing engineers out in the Nevada cruising around in real life flying cars, back in the real world of the United States it seems that having a healthcare system that actually covers everybody, impoverishes nobody, and treats everyone as equally valuable and worthy of quality care continues to be something that too many powerful people want to remain an unattainable fantasy.
So there’s a disconnect.
Compare this very cool thing:
To this reality, in which—due to the amount of traffic created by people patiently lining up for access to a no-cost healthcare clinic in rural Virginia—a flying car would come in particularly handy:
Last week, outgoing Starbuck’s chairman Howard Schultz was pulling his hair out wanting to know how in the world we’re “going to pay for these things” like universal healthcare—which is strange because nearly every other industrialized country in the world does it with a relative smile on their face.
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