> This article has a couple immediately glaring flaws that lead me to not invest the time to deeply analyze it on the whole...
Good to know you didn't read the article before replying.
> That's completely false, Canada has a presupplied quota system set by government forecasting and limited by budgets. If you need treatment you will be treated eventually but you might die or get sicker in the interim.
Every system in the entire world has a predefined quota. There's no unlimited supply of healthcare resources in any country - and America is no exception. The only difference here is whether these resources are centrally provisioned or not - and whether you ration it based on who can spend the most, or who needs it the most. I vote for central provisioning and need-based allocation.
You are ignoring that once again, there are wait times in America too. The reason I sent you this article is proof that in fact your assessment of the relative strengths of the system isn't grounded in fact. It's grounded in propaganda about the American system. The system you are imagining in America simply does not exist.
> Using a COVID-19 based article to discuss the merits of single payer single provider completely ignores the massive cultural mentality differences -- the US focuses on individual freedoms, Canada focuses on collective good.
This is irrelevant to the quality of a healthcare system and its outcomes. And you are ignoring that 40% of Americans are already covered by socialized medicine. Old people in America love Medicare and have no interest in getting rid of it. 75% of people on Medicare are either satisfied or greatly satisfied, while only 6% are dissatisfied or greatly dissatisfied. This is higher than the for-profit sector.
> Edit: and I might add that it appears that Canada is always intentionally undersupplied such that a moderate wait is guaranteed.
That's a cool, unfounded opinion.
And again, you have ignored the clearly measured equivalence of the two systems in terms of outcomes - while the Canadian system delivers it at literally half the per capita cost and covers everyone.
If you actually look at the data, it's clear. The private care available in America is more expensive and outcomes are either the same, or significantly worse. America has the worst maternal mortality rate in the developed world, for instance. This is quantifiable and you are not utilizing that data, one has to suspect, because it does not support your position. [1]
[1] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2801918/