Getting A Population Back On Course Starts With Basics
The query remains, "Where is healthcare funding going to come from?" The coffers are almost depleted, and the figures required to keep everything going keep increasing. It is certainly not a dilemma that will have a quick and simple fix, but one that must be handled with all due speed. For the millions who have no insurance protection, medical healthcare funding is a critical part of what the administration is trying to achieve. The trouble, as most often exists in politics, is that everybody involved wants to get some personal benefit on any legislation that passes.
Some factions believe that the only contingent that gains from legislation to aid in hospital costs are the unlawful aliens living in the country. This is a concern for any U.s. citizen who pays taxes, but is the real issue who is going to benefit from legislation and who is not? With an unprecedented transformation in the entire fabric of the society due to inferior lending procedures and wars on distant land, many citizens are unemployed or underemployed. Those who are fortunate enough to maintain a living to pay bills and remain afloat almost appear to be in the minority. Additionally, a sizeable number of the unprotected are people who were once a vital element of the trade backbone of this country.
The foundation of this nation dates back to people who believed that all who would give to the whole were a piece of the whole, and when any portion of the whole had a trouble, the whole had the same. If this country turns its back on individuals in need, then it has abandoned the whole theology that made a unified nation the envy of the rest of the globe. Steadfastness in the face of adversity has long been the American approach, and that appears to be easily forgotten when times are fruitful for an extended time. Now that the easy sailing is difficult to come by, the traditional creed of assisting each other is even more important.
Everybody isn't responsible for the actions that led to the present situation, but assigning blame never solves anything. It's assured that both major political parties have contributed in some way to the state of affairs in this country. It appears that numerous politicians spend more time attempting to show the other party in the wrong than they do trying to fix the crisis. The overall function of this nation and any other is a combination of good and bad judgements made at all tiers of accountability. It's not akin to the cow that started the Chicago fire; no one can go to one instance and declare that is where it all started.
The same thing holds true for fixing the predicament and getting the nation back on the road to profitability. Everybody has to pull together for the whole. A President cannot make the whole thing right again, just attempt to direct the traffic. Every individual has the responsibility to perform a part, and that part is not calling attention to the fleck in someone else's eye.

