“To really understand the catastrophy of socialized medicine one needs to talk to people in small towns and villaqes of the UK.Has she gone and asked these people? No ,but I did, as I lived partly in the UK village and worked as an MD in the US.The picture is not pretty as the public has no knowledge of modern medicine and blindly accepts what the system tells them”
I presume that you are taking the p*ss? As a person who lives in a ‘small town or village’ in the UK, what you say does not correspond with the reality that I see around me. Indeed, the routine healthcare in many typical rural and small town areas is often better than in the bigger cities and certainly people live longer and healthier lives. The patronising tone of your post is incredible.
Of course highly specialised units are often based in big cities as is the case across the world. The main complaint of GPs these days seems to be that patients come armed with too much information from the internet and have an expectation of what they should be diagnosed and treated with before they even see the doctor. That doesn’t seem to correspond with your claim that these rural troglodytes have no idea that the stethoscope has been invented.
If your claims are true that most British people have no idea what modern healthcare even means and that the NHS provides such a terrible service, how is that British people live longer, have far less chance of dying before retirement age, babies are far less likely to die in infancy etc etc than their US counterparts?





