this post was submitted on 09 Aug 2024
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[–] 2ugly2live@lemmy.world 35 points 1 month ago (5 children)

When I graduated from college. I was fed the, "work hard, go to college, live well" spiel. I worked hard, I went to college, graduated with honors.

All I have to show for it is debt.

I work a job that's... Fine, but I also cry most days because of the misery of it. I haven't gone to a doctor in years because I can't afford it. I can barely save (I have, like, $100 in "savings"). I will likely never be a home owner, and I will most likely have to work until I die, which breaks my spirit the more I think about it.

On less personal note, when I got to sit at the "grown up" table in regards to politics, I quickly realized that (most) people in government either don't give a shit or actively work against the peoples interest. I hear of other countries with their free Healthcare and education, workers rights, pensions, and I weep with envy. America is like a third world country in a first world mask.

[–] pyre@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

the healthcare shit in the US still baffles me. there's literally no material reason for it to be that way other than disdain for people. even countries you'd consider "shitholes" have better healthcare (and things that contribute to healthcare like sick days and paid leaves) for the general population.

i always knew it was bad there but i was still baffled when i saw one video where someone breaks their leg (or something i don't remember well) but they were begging people around them not to call an ambulance... i thought wtf why not. then i learned that not only do they charge like some fucking Uber drive but they charge insane amounts.

'richest" country in the world and in history. unbelievable.

[–] foggenbooty@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

The distain for people isn't the reason, it's the side effect. The goal is profit, profit above all else. The problem the US (and most everyone) has is it's very hard to put the cat back in the bag.

After WW2 many countries were decemated and people banded together to help each other. This became the basis for social healthcare. They didn't have huge corporate interests to fight against as so much was already dismantled.

The US however came out on top with healthy industry so there was no "start from scratch" point. Because of this any attempt at socializing healthcare comes at the cost of destroying the profits of all the companies that have been built on the back of the current system. Capitalism is built on investment and investors do NOT like losing profits. Therefore maintaining the status quo so that investments remain stable is priority #1.

The sad truth is that things have to get bad, really bad, before people consider a complete reboot. Up until recently it's only been really bad for the poor, now the shrinking middle class is starting to feel it. Eventually it will become to much to bear, but until then there's still more sweet profit in the next quarter.

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