Posted 2016-July-15, 09:44
Free medical? Well, it isn't exactly "free" (in particular, dental and prescription drugs are not covered), but to USAnians it is. That's a holdover from - oh yes, right, the NDP and its first leader, Tommy Douglas. And as I wouldn't be alive without it (or under crippling debt load and possibly not stabilized), I kind of like the idea. As I am a respected(?) TD and a useful IT drone, I believe it is a net win for society, too.
Free college? Well, when I went to University (not 50 years ago, but 30), tuition started at $350/term; when I left, it was $500/term. Oh, and that was the "20% extra rate" because I was in Engineering where students expected to make more money after graduation (Medical studies had yet a higher cost, maybe 10% more?) Now, post-secondary education was and is subsidized more in Canada than the U.S. (again, thanks primarily to the NDP and other left-leaning parties), but what is it now in the US? 50 to 100x (not percent) increase? And wages have increased what - 2 times?
Free roads, policing, a floor to how far you can fall if you are unable to work, whatever environmental protections (like asbestos regs, tobacco, PCBs, dioxins, tailing ponds,...) and structural protections (construction guidelines, work health regs, time and other labour law) haven't been gutted by the Conservatives either by allowing industry capture of the regulators or just starving them for funds so the chance of being audited is effectively zero - I like all of that, too. If you look at the (no longer Progressive, thanks Preston!) Conservative Party of Canada policy ideas (by far the farthest right of mainstream Canadian Politics), you'll find them happily ensconced in the Democratic Party's world (okay, maybe not with "The Harper Government" Harper, and there is as much underground rumblings of the Social Conservatives here as in the U.S., but they won't *act* on their beliefs anymore, and it's still political suicide to *say* them).
As far as my personal politics goes, I don't trust companies. Or rather, I do trust companies to do whatever we don't forbid them to do to exploit their workers, their customers, and the environment. When the conditions that make free-market capitalism effective for all exist, I am happy for it - but I want the government around to make sure that the companies don't have their fingers too hard on the scales - because it's been proved, time and time again, they will try anything and see what they can get away with. And like bridge, if you don't clamp down hard on what is imProper, those that follow the Laws and Proprieties get pushed down. Unlike bridge, they can't just find another game.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)