Let’s assume we want all people to have health care. What are the steps / methods most likely to get us there?

In the U.S. seems like we’re a long way from that goal. I’m curious about chunking down the big goal into smaller steps. Interested to hear perspectives from other countries too.

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    It’s cheaper to have free health care than it is to have our current system and more productive for our country, so it’s really just a matter of following through on any of the public health care referendums.

    • LesserAbe@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      What referendums are you referring to? In my state at least we don’t have the ballot initiative.

        • LesserAbe@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Ah, so a referendum is a direct vote by the population on a given issue - for example a lot of states have passed recreational marijuana referendums, in my opinion at least because a lot of lawmakers didn’t want to to be seen as supporting it, but you can’t get blamed if the public approved it directly.

          I’m not aware of any state level referendums on universal healthcare (which doesn’t mean that there haven’t been any) and there isn’t a national level referendum. (Although in googling this to confirm that I found an interesting article about implementing a national referendum)

          With the Medicare for All Act it’s been introduced as a bill, but as I understand the process it first needs to be reviewed by a committee and voted out of that committee before the senate or house can consider it to possibly hold a vote. Then it needs to do the same thing in the other chamber of congress. So you can imagine that’s a lot more convoluted process than a referendum, and while voters may ask their representative to pass it, plenty of opportunities for legislators to say, “oops, some technicality or person who’s not me has stalled the process.”

          • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Oh I understand the confusion. That’s my bad, yes, the bills I’m referring to are not actually public referendums, I was using that word loosely.

            Boy, I would prefer referendums on a lot of our public issues though.

            You know I just found out today the Louisiana actually basically has referendum based elections?

            In Louisiana, all the government candidates appear on the same ballot and if they win 50% plus one vote, then they win.

            There’s a short majority runoff if it ties or if nobody gets 50%.