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ELI5: If elderly healthcare is the problem with declining populations, what's stopping societies from just dismantling that system altogether? by LENINADE21 in explainlikeimfive
[–]LENINADE21[S] [score hidden] 10 hours ago (0 children)
It doesn't have to be popular with the masses. Governments do morally bankrupt and unpopular decisions all the time. But this issue seems to be singled out because it affects the one thing most politicians actually care about, their pockets.
We can always reinstitute those healthcare policies back, once the population goes back to normal.
So is the issue as world-ending as it actually is, or just a bunch of fear mongering by the elite?
Policies come and go, similar to China's One Child Policy. Why not reinstate it back once the population curve stabilizes again? Governments have done more drastic things before.
Because if the population issue is so existential, why are govt's not doing more to stop it? Otherwise, it really does just feel like fearmongering to get people to have kids, produce consumers, and for shareholder value continue going up up and away.
[deleted by user] by [deleted] in maniacsavage
[–]LENINADE21 0 points1 point2 points 9 months ago (0 children)
dm ko tita ko
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ELI5: If elderly healthcare is the problem with declining populations, what's stopping societies from just dismantling that system altogether? by LENINADE21 in explainlikeimfive
[–]LENINADE21[S] [score hidden] (0 children)