Monte wrote:
Talya - we cannot afford *not* to do it. Currently, health care in this country constitutes nearly 20% of our GDP, and it continues to grow. We *need* a public option in this country.
And your current solution will cause the amount spent on health care to rise, and the GDP to shrink. This ain't high school...you don't get an A if the total reaches 90%.
Monte wrote:
Canada has large provinces and we have many smaller states.
We're not discussing irrelevant geographical area. Large vs. Small here talks about population.
Compare:
Canada - 33.5 million people
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Ontario - 13 million
Quebec - 7.8 million
British Columbia - 4.4 million
Alberta - 3.6 million
Manitoba - 1.2 million
Saskatchewan - 1 million
Nova Scotia - 0.9 million
New Brunswick - 0.7 million
Newfoundland - 0.5 million
Prince Edward Island - 0.1 million
Combined Canadian Territories -0.1 million
Now, compare:
United States of America - 304 million
============================
California - 36.8 million (Bigger than all of Canada)
Texas - 24.3 million (nearly twice the population of Ontario)
New York - 19.5 Million (50% more than Ontario)
Florida - 18.3 million (50% more than Ontario)
Illinois - 12.9 million (about even with Ontario)
Pennsylvania - 12.4 million (about even with Ontario)
Ohio - 11.4 million (almost even with Ontario)
There's not much point to continuing...the top 7 states nearly equal to vastly surpass the population of Canada's most populous province. If Provinces were states, Ontario would be 5th, Quebec would be 13th, British Columbia would be 27th, Alberta would be 31st, Manitoba would be 46th, Saskatchewan would be 48th, Nova Scotia would be 50th, Newfoundland would be 59 and P.E.I would be 60. There's no comparison to the size of the states vs. the canadian provinces.