Skip to content
  • Thu. Feb 2nd, 2023
    • About
    • Admissions
    • Application Confirmation
    • Costs
    • Courses
    • Instructors
    • Library
    • Lysander Spooner University’s ongoing research among the glaciers of the northern Rockies
    • Products
    • Roger Roots’ $5,000 bet that glaciers will still exist in Glacier National Park in 2030
    • Store

    Lysander Spooner University

    Think Outside The Cage!

    '

    Lysander Spooner University

    Think Outside The Cage!

    Homebenefits of privatizationPrivate-sector innovators create ever-cheaper medical products while government regulation keeps driving healthcare costs higher
    benefits of privatizationGovernment's War on the PoorSlave Plantation Healthcarethe sociology of innovation

    Private-sector innovators create ever-cheaper medical products while government regulation keeps driving healthcare costs higher

    author
    By Lysander
    March 9, 2015March 25, 2015
    0 minutes, 17 seconds Read

    Lysander-Spooner-sepia

    If the power of capitalism and free markets were unleashed on health care, we would immediately see costs go down. The poorest people in society could afford high-quality health care products and services. Witness this story about fifty-cent microscopes. Private sector innovators have developed microscopes that can be sold for less than the price of a candy bar.

    Tags: slave-plantation healthcare
    Previous

    Harvard Economist: Social Security Decreased American GDP by At Least 3 Percent by 1980

    Next

    Journalist Looks Into UN Climate Report, Finds That it was Authored by Students, Activists

    Similar Posts

    Government's War on the Poor

    Millions of Americans skip loan payments as government COVID orders take their toll

    author
    By Lysander
    June 18, 2020June 18, 2020
    Government's War on the Poor

    Another Example of How Government Licensing Rules Harm the Poor and Suppress Innovation

    author
    By Lysander
    March 5, 2015March 5, 2015
    A theme by Gradient Themes ©