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Poll says most Canadians like privately-funded health care

While the liberal-left lies about Canada’s North Korean-style healthcare system and refuses to lead an honest debate in this country in spite of the recent Supreme Court Ruling, and in spite of the fact they are our government, and we’re a democracy, Canadians already know what they want:  private money in their healthcare system.  Yes, just like in the roughly 27 other countries that have universal-access healthcare just like Canada does, and which allow private enterprise to run it or share in running it, and within which at least a half dozen countries have no lineups, and have equal or better healthcare outcomes.  And in which in every single case, it costs the economies of those countries less money—sometimes far, far less. 

The liberal-left in Canada, through its ridiculously inept health minister Ujjal Dosanjh (who sounds very much like a communist to me), repeatedly attempts to redirect the debate into the lie about Canada’s system turning into an “American-style” healthcare system in which only “rich people” will ever get healthcare, Canadians will have to abandon their homes in order to pay for healthcare, and Canadians will have to pay for it with “Visa credit cards”—if any changes are made to the liberal-left’s sacred socialist system.

This is not the first such poll suggesting this theme.  I’ve posted others over the course of the last year and a half. Nonetheless, the liberals refuse to give up on their scandalous system for purely ideological reasons—despite Canadians suffering or even dying. 

Majority would pay for faster health care, poll finds

A majority of Canadians are willing to pay out of their own pockets for medical procedures to avoid long waiting lines, according to a new public opinion poll.

The poll suggests, too, that federal politicians are far behind the public in the health-care debate, fearing even to discuss the possibility of private health insurance or a two-tier system.

[…] Sixty-three per cent of those polled said they would be willing to “pay out of pocket” to gain faster access to medical services for themselves or their family members.  […]

 

Joel Johannesen
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