Europeans like to boast about their superior ways; but, in truth, they never had “free” medical care — they had American-funded medical care
Modern Europe has been the softest side of socialism
writes the
Bookworm in the Weekly Standard.
It lets people have their own businesses, but keeps services such
as health care, railways, and heavy industry (coal mining, steel
production), under its control. It also buries its citizens under
regulations. Every single aspect of life in a modern European socialist
country is regulated.
For a long time, Europeans thought they’d found the perfect solution
in this “loving” socialism. Their citizens could run their own
businesses and make money, so they had some economic growth. In
addition, in exchange for extremely high taxes, the citizens got “free”
medical care (which they’d prepaid with their taxes), low-cost train and
bus fares, and good elder care. It all looked so beautiful in the
1960s, 1970s, and 1980s.
What the Europeans conveniently forgot was that, after WWII, it was
American money that rebuilt their infrastructure. This meant that
Europeans didn’t have to repay capital investments.
Europeans also liked to ignore that, during the entirety of the Cold
War with the Soviet Union, America paid Europe’s defense costs. That
free up money for all the free medical care and cheap train fare that
Europeans liked to boast about as a sign of their superiority. None
would admit that they didn’t have “free” medical care — they had
American-funded medical care.
Maggie Thatcher, who was the conservative Prime Minister in England
during the 1980s, famously said “Socialist governments traditionally do
make a financial mess. They always run out of other people’s money.” In
Europe, American money started vanishing when the Cold War ended.