JohnG@lt wrote:
Turquoise wrote:
JohnG@lt wrote:
The high prices charged by American pharmaceutical companies funds their innovation and research.
And yes, just like Canada benefits from our military spending, they benefit tremendously from our R&D as well without paying in a dime for the service. If Mexico were their neighbor instead of the US, Canada would look more like Greece.
Fair enough, but that sounds like a pretty sweet deal. They pay less for care but still reap the benefits of our research. The same goes for military protection.
Point is, their system is unsustainable without the individualist, capitalist, 'unfair', system we have here that you seem to despise so much. Reaping benefits without expending any effort is the cowards way to go through life. It's parasitic. It's also silly because the Western world has built a house of cards entirely dependent on our continued existence. If we collapse, or cave in to the demands of our own left, they're all going down with us.
No, no... I think I understand it now. Basically, as long as you continue to consume as much of the rest of the world's goods as possible and do as much research as possible, the rest of the world benefits. It doesn't really matter in the long run how the average American fares in this -- it only matters that you stay afloat and keep doing your thing. I can relate to that.
The only catch is... that means that things are going to suck for the average American in the long run, as your system essentially just focuses on overall consumption and research without much consideration of cost of living.
Ideally, this means that the average person is best off in a country like Canada, where they can pay less for American advances and thrive off of the consumption of Americans for their businesses. Also, America gets to do the heavy lifting of being the world's police.