Features of an Ideal Healthcare System in the U.S., Part III: Continuity with Existing System

A universal healthcare system can be established in the U.S. by leveraging existing structures like Medicare, Medicaid, and the insurance industry, using a range of provider and consumer incentives to control costs. The old and disabled would continue to receive Medicare and government support would be available for low-income households.

Here are components of the existing system that would be retained, expanded or tweaked in my proposed universal healthcare system…

Features of an Ideal Healthcare System in the U.S., Part II: Universal Healthcare

Should the U.S. have a universal healthcare system? By all means! No American should be denied necessary care. Besides, according to the latest Pew survey, 66% of Americans want a universal system, the younger the stronger the support. Even Republicans are getting on the universal healthcare bandwagon - 41% in the latest poll, up from 32% in 2021 (Pew Research, 2025). The time has come to get serious about what such a system should look like in the U.S.

Features of an Ideal Healthcare System in the U.S., Part I: Introduction

Per capita healthcare spending in the U.S. was over $15,000 in 2024. That’s around 2,5 times the OECD average for member countries and most of those countries provide universal care. U.S. healthcare spending is projected to grow faster than inflation over the next several years, reaching over $24,00 per capita by 2033, or roughly 20% of GDP. This is an untenable situation, especially if we want universal healthcare, which would require coverage for another 25 million Americans. We obviously need to come up with a less costly healthcare system that performs well and serves all Americans. Here are some ideas on what that system would look like, bare bones version…

Trump and Venezuela: The Debate

My debate club will be hosting a debate next week on the Trump administration’s recent actions in Venezuela. Speakers will argue for and against the capture of President Maduro as well as U.S. plans to “overhaul” the country post-Maduro. Here are some of the arguments for and against the administration’s actions and plans for Venezuela.

On Moral Certainty, Moral Monsters, and Non-Negotiable Moral Imperatives

Over the multi-month exchange, this individual mocked and misrepresented counter-arguments and never budged from her original position. Nothing could penetrate her fortress of moral certainty or widen her perspective beyond a narrow moral reasoning. She repeatedly brushed off considerations such as evidence of culpability and constitutional protections as nothing but a smokescreen used by bad people to hide their bad values.

Memo to Scientists and Science Writers: More Humility, Less Missionary Zeal

“We cannot ask authors to embrace intellectual humility and calibration unless the editors are prepared to follow through—to prefer manuscripts with well-calibrated claims to those that overclaim.…unwarranted bold claims will harm chances of acceptance, and exaggeration will be considered a potential basis for desk rejection. We are looking for excellent research, but we expect even the best research to have flaws, and we want those flaws to be factored into the whole manuscript, including the conclusions drawn.” - Simine Vazire, Editor-in-Chief, Psychological Science

Better Thinking through Practice Tests

Retrieval practice forces ours brains to actively reconstruct knowledge, which boosts understanding and higher-order thinking like problem-solving and metacognitive awareness.

The Future: Grim or Not-So-Grim?

A final question: assuming the not-so-grim future is plausible, what needs to happen between now and then to make it a reality?

Republican Attitudes towards Immigrants and Immigration: Four Charts and a Few Words

Between October 15 and 26, 2025, the Manhattan Institute surveyed 2295 Republicans and/or 2024 Trump voters (aka the “GOP coalition”), plus an additional 500 registered voters. The sample was reached primarily via online panel interviews.

Gallup and Pew Research also conducted 2025 surveys that included questions on immigrants and immigration. This post will compare Republican responses in those surveys with what the Manhattan Institute found for the GOP coalition.

On the Fear of Being Thought a Republican

Now, why would people be afraid of being thought a Republican? Because an awful lot of Democrats and others on the left see Republicans as morons, hysterics, racists, benighted fools, ignorant jerks, self-justifying assholes, callous, immigrant-hating, morally bankrupt, thick…

Aim for a Healthy Lack of Consensus

One would think if people truly cared about achieving a valued social good - say, the elimination of poverty - they would also sweat over the details as to how to achieve this social good without jeopardizing other social goods. Which means they and their shared-values fellows would be having robust and thoughtful arguments on policy, no consensus expected.  

A Few Words about Fascism

I am not quoting Paxton as the ultimate authority on fascism. No scholar is. Historians and political scientists (aka “experts”) differ in their definitions of fascism and opinions of Trump. However, I have noticed that definitions of fascism have morphed over time,  perhaps repurposed to boost present-day relevance and create a tighter fit with current figures or political movements.

Big, Fat, Rich Insurance Companies? A Look at the Numbers

Based on statements submitted by 1,225 health insurers, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) reported the health insurance industry experienced a significant decline in both net income and profit margin in 2024. The net income dropped to $9 billion, a sharp decrease from $25 billion in 2023 and the profit margin fell to 0.8%, down from 2.2%.

Time to Rethink the American Dream, Part IV: Upward Mobility and the Rewards of College

So how bad are we doing? Not so bad…yet. For example, upward mobility is alive and well in America. By that I mean most Americans move up the economic ladder from young adulthood to the peak earning years of late middle age, especially those who have graduated from high school, obtained at least some post-secondary training or education and worked mostly full-time. Take a look…

Five Types of Americans, Part II: Political Affinities

But the fact the some types are strongly Democrat or Republican doesn’t mean that most Democrats or Republicans belong to those types. No type claims the majority of Democrats, Independents or Republicans. For example, less than half the Democrats in the NORC survey were Classical Liberals and less than half the Republicans were Mostly MAGAs.

Five Types of Americans, Part I: Introduction

Grouping people by types also runs the risk of seeing individuals as static, unchanging essences. People and patterns change. Within-group affinities and between-group differences may weaken over time, eventually rendering a whole typology obsolete. But the typologies keep coming, partly because humans love to categorize and partly because new typologies unsettle our certainties and assumptions and help us see the world with fresh eyes. Case in point: the Five Types of Americans, as developed by the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago.