A socialized health care system requires a control population and impeccable records

In a nationalized health system, you need to know who is who – otherwise the system would not be able to determine who is right. The structure depends on how the system is built and designed, but with a nationalized health system which will be followed by the state where you live and how they move in a way not seen in America. Nationalized health system becomes a vehicle for population control.

If you leave the United States and is no longer a resident of the state, even if you are a citizen and can hold a driver’s license, you must report immediately if you want to avoid the tax on the health of 13%. I can use the number of 13%, as it is in Sweden to illustrate the real tax burden is put on you for nationalized health care.

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Who pays for health care?

The United States spent 17.3% of gross domestic product on health in 2009 (1). If you break down at the individual level, we spent $ 7,129 per person annually on health care … more than any other country in the world (2). With 17 cents of every U.S. dollar spent to keep our country healthy, it’s no wonder the government is determined to reform the system. Although health care is becoming overwhelming in the media, we know very little about where money comes from or how it makes its way into the system (and rightly so … the way you pay for health care is incredibly complex, to say the least). This complicated system is the unfortunate result of a series of programs that try to control spending in layers one above another. What follows is a systematic attempt to peel the layers, helping you become an informed consumer health and incontrovertible debater when it comes to “health reform”.

Who pays the bill?

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