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Post by ArArArchStanton on Jun 3, 2017 5:41:28 GMT
I never stated it was bad but you said the US had the best. They havent according to that research. I was actually surprised to see the US not making it in the top 16 (fyi this was the complete list I found online) . I meant the best in terms of this is pretty much as good as it gets. On the scale of medical care where you have poverty nations with virtually no care, to major industrial nations with the highest technology, the US is at the top of that scale. I didn't mean absolutely number 1 by all measurable factors.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 3, 2017 5:43:12 GMT
I never stated it was bad but you said the US had the best. They havent according to that research. I was actually surprised to see the US not making it in the top 16 (fyi this was the complete list I found online) . I meant the best in terms of this is pretty much as good as it gets. On the scale of medical care where you have poverty nations with virtually no care, to major industrial nations with the highest technology, the US is at the top of that scale. I didn't mean absolutely number 1 by all measurable factors.
Than I misunderstood you. My apologies.
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Post by ArArArchStanton on Jun 3, 2017 5:51:55 GMT
Than I misunderstood you. My apologies. No it's all good. I owed a clarification on that one. I recognize that there are plenty of other fully industrialized nations.
I might also add that having a better healthcare system, while good for healthcare, may well be bad for other factors of a nation. We could finance better healthcare and be at the top of that board, but what are we giving up to do it, and is it more important? That I don't pretend to have the answer to, but simply having better healthcare doesn't necessarily make for a better overall living condition.
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