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Do we know it works everywhere else? I don't know what the litigation environment in other countries is like, but expecting we should all accept that "everyone else does it differently" means "everyone else does it better" is a stretch. Do you think perhaps people in those countries might have opinions about how well their system works that are not universally positive?
Also, it's easy to see how an argument like "everyone else does it differently and it works better" would be rejected for issues like health care and gun control, so why shouldn't we assume that the U.S. is sufficiently different with regard to this issue as well?
These are not the same things.
Gun politics: Many people outside US love guns, fight for more expansive gun rights and dream about American style gun freedoms.
The other: No one outside US advocates for American style health care or American style legal system in their country. No one.
But that’s not really a fair comparison. Our legal system isn’t about improving the legal system necessarily but trying to improve transacting or liability. Yes, lawsuits might be expensive but that doesn’t mean the legal system has failed.
So looking at just the input cost (the direct cost of a legal system) doesn’t mean the output (what Bastiat might call the unseen) isn’t worth it.
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I've read Canadian mainstream newspapers favorably comparing the American system (pre-Obamacare) to the Canadian.
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