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Anonymous C joined in and replied with this 3 hours ago, 26 minutes later, 54 minutes after the original post[^][v]#1,428,032
When the old and the disabled die off from losing healthcare we'll see a bump in productivity. These people weigh heavily on society, and not just from medical care, but by eating up the time and energy of the people around them.
> When the old and the disabled die off from losing healthcare we'll see a bump in productivity. These people weigh heavily on society, and not just from medical care, but by eating up the time and energy of the people around them.
A sudden flu that killed everyone over 70 would save Medicare, Social Security, lower healthcare costs, and result in a huge intergenerational wealth transfer. I’m not saying this is a good thing or that I want this, but it’s the truth.
Although I’m sure the debtor in chief would pile any extra money into his family trust, I mean the American Sovereign Wealth fund.
You forgot that hospitals were overwhelmed with obese, middle aged men. Taxpayers. So overwhelmed that they didn't have room for normal medical events.