Highest Rated Comments


blissrunner624 karma

  1. Shifting to healthier food culture/economy? [Make Americans Truly Healthy]

Any plans on improving American preventable chronic diseases (to lessen cost of M4All) such as obesity/diabetes, heart diseases through education/diet?

Any concern about American sugar/cola/fast food industry doing harm to American life expectancy?

[e.g. could we shift/educate people's to food cultures like healthy "whole" fast-food/ 7-11s in Japan; or shift our food economy towards that? Maybe Incentives big supermarket Walmart, 7/11, Costco to adjust like their Japanese counter-parts to Make Americans Truly Healthy--yes MATH pun intended]

blissrunner11 karma

Judging from the 4th debate (CNN), he certainly does after the hardline 3rd debate (ABC)

I believe Yang is better once prepared, he should develop new stump speeches/smart quips to the common political subjects... (and delineate/explain more from Yang2020 policies)

e.g. Health-care: The importance of gov. price control on drugs/procedures (not rambling about enrollment like other candidates), fixing the primary healthcare problem at every chain (nursing/doctor's tuition debt, residency & freedom dividend, proper salary/reimbursement), build a national Electronic Health Record like the UK?).

blissrunner5 karma

Cool thing too. He addressed that he likes communal living culture.

Friends/families or strangers (per head x $1000 multiplier) can afford a communal apartment/housing.. sharing resources such as bulk food, water, living rooms is actually a great way of saving. (at least on Asian countries like Korea it's called "Goshiwon" apartements)..

that thing is great for college students who only pays $200-300/mo. for rent in large cities like Seoul (comparable to New York/L.A.)