People try to say they have an idea of what our government is doing but let me ask this, what are they doing?
Cheer up, teacup, here are some things:
The FAA: plane crashes are rare here, thanks to equipment safety tests and massively successful air flight controlling.
Medicaid: private sector insurance companies make money by ditching their customers when they get very sick. Medicaid picks up the castoffs.
Social Security: What if Mr. Bush had succeeded in privatizing SS before the markets crashed? Can you imagine how many old people would be working at WalMart, since their SS would have been cut in half? And did you know that before SS, thousands of older Americans simply starved to death?
SCHIP: Healthcare insurance for children who would not otherwise have it; enormously preventive of school absence, long-term illness, loss of physical and mental development.
The CDC: How do we know that the virulence of H1N1 is less than expected? Who is telling the world that US spinach is safe to eat? How do we know whether an illness is H1N1 or not? It's all the CDC.
School hot lunch programs: For many children, these meals may be their only serious nutrition all day every day. What industry would do it?
The Soil Conservation Service: though bureaucratic, there is no private industry comparable. How vastly different would America be without the wetlands your dad and a thousand like him have created?
Head Start: kids from homes that have seriously dysfunctional emotional and learning environments have benefited enormously
The Department of Motor Vehicles: how many mistakes have you had on your car registrations or titles?
E911 commissions: how long does it take an ambulance or fire truck to reach you if a child who can call 911 can't tell the operator an address? Before this, people just died.
Open meetings laws for city, county, and state government office; there is nothing like it at all in the private sector. But if public officials make decisions without notifying us, they get in big trouble.
Free public libraries: most nations simply don't have them.
Public health services: how many lives have been saved by free or low-cost immunizations? Show me something analogous in the private sector.
The Interstate Highways Commission: we enjoy the best auto and truck transportation system in the world.
The FDIC: how safe is your bank account? Prior to the FDIC, if your bank got greedy and lent more than it could support, you lost your life savings.
The FDA: how do I know that the Adderall is really Adderall, and really the dosage I'm told? Much of the world does not. The FDA constantly catches businesses attempting to cheat.
The Federal Elections Commission: the speed and accuracy with which US elections take place, and the efficiency and safety with which the US changes its administrations is astonishing.
Uniform Building Codes: there are pre-code homes in your town (and probably in every town) that have sewer lines that run under some public park and dump raw sewage into some creek that flows into some trailer court.
NASA: what business has landed on the moon?
PBS, NPR, the National Weather Service, NOAA, the National Park Service... On and on, great services we forget, we take for granted, we'd be very unhappy and less civilized without.
Government is our ally, not our enemy. We need to improve it, not shrivel it into nothingness.
Edited by sthira, 17 November 2012 - 04:14 AM.