You know, I find it odd that so many Americans have been willing to step up and donate $10 via text, or buy a tshirt, or send money to the Red Cross, or whatever else they do for Haiti, but have proven completely unwilling to pay a little bit more in taxes to help provide healthcare for themselves, their parents, their children, and their neighbors
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Seeing as how 40 percent of Americans pay no income tax, I have a hard time feeling like I have to do MORE of my part to help them out with their health insurance.
Not to get all conservative on you, but I don't think raising taxes is the answer.
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But regarding your point: personally, for me, it's less about raising taxes than reallocating my income. We pay so much, as a nation, for health insurance. If I could spend the same amount, or even a bit more, and more or less ensure that I - and everyone I know - would have appropriate coverage for the rest of my life, sign me up.
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But generally, I think the government could do a lot better job of budgeting and if they raised my taxes only a little but I knew that it was being used efficiently to provide health coverage, I would be all about that. It's just hard to picture the government doing anything efficiently... ever.
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(As a side note, when I was working at the Science Museum, they got rid of 100% coverage and people pitched a fit. I was like, really, people?? One hundred percent coverage??? That's just insane.)
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