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Thursday, November 14, 2024
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Canada’s liberal-left gift of socialist healthcare: so hideous it’s making news down south

Readers of New York City’s Newsday newspaper and Newsday.com were greeted by an Associated Press newswire story about Canada’s fantastic health care system.  (Fantastically bad).

It paints an embarrassing portrait—well to most of us anyway, as liberals continue to mendaciously gloat about Canada’s health care system notwithstanding one of the annoying facts that I constantly point out to them (and it drives them batty), which Newsday also graciously points out:  The World Health Organization ranked Canada’s health system 30th in the world.

Go Canada!  Socialism works—it’s just been a bad year for crops!  Vote liberal!

Canadians Face Long Waits for Health Care

TORONTO—A letter from the Moncton Hospital to a New Brunswick heart patient in need of an electrocardiogram said the appointment would be in three months. It added: “If the person named on this computer-generated letter is deceased, please accept our sincere apologies.”

The patient wasn’t dead, according to the doctor who showed the letter to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. But there are many Canadians who claim the long wait for the test and the frigid formality of the letter are indicative of a health system badly in need of emergency care.

Americans who flock to Canada for cheap flu shots often come away impressed at the free and first-class medical care available to Canadians, rich or poor. But tell that to hospital administrators constantly having to cut staff for lack of funds, or to the mother whose teenager was advised she would have to wait up to three years for surgery to repair a torn knee ligament.

“It’s like somebody’s telling you that you can buy this car, and you’ve paid for the car, but you can’t have it right now,” said Jane Pelton. Rather than leave daughter Emily in pain and a knee brace, the Ottawa family opted to pay $3,300 for arthroscopic surgery at a private clinic in Vancouver, with no help from the government.

“Every day we’re paying for health care, yet when we go to access it, it’s just not there,” said Pelton.

The average Canadian family pays about 48 percent of its income in taxes each year, partly to fund the health care system. Rates vary from province to province, but Ontario, the most populous, spends roughly 40 percent of every tax dollar on health care, according to the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

The system is going broke, says the federation, which campaigns for tax reform and private enterprise in health care.

[… Read the rest (1 minute) …]

Joel Johannesen
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