blid, standard of living as in the number of TV's a family can afford, the number of cars a family can afford, the number of household appliance items a family can afford, salary vs cost of products, services, etc...yes standard of living is higher in America than any European country.
Suddenly? People have been conditioned for dependency now, you can't just create a vacuum. It's called sun-setting, slowly get rid of the program and people will start planning for it.
As in the other thread, why have healthcare costs risen? Could it be government intervention around the world? I posted in another thread about that one, but costs around the world are rising as government takes more and more of the market. The only way to curb costs that way is removing care, reducing quality. The thing about your entire point about bankruptcies is you are comparing a government controlled market to a government monopoly market. I'm arguing for none of the above and you fault me for the government increasing healthcare costs and that in turn sending people through bankruptcy?
Doing some research on your potato famine, not everybody could even own land and you call it capitalism? Catholics couldn't do anything up until just prior to this point in time. As a result of non-capitalist policies 80% of catholics lived in poverty, thus creating the exact result you are talking about. So in summary, you blame capitalism for government creating laws that brought about the situation. Good job blid.
I'm still not sure why you ask if there was any poverty. Here lets do a little research...
"In the late 1950s, the poverty rate for all Americans was 22.4 percent, or 39.5 million individuals. These numbers declined steadily throughout the 1960s, reaching a low of 11.1 percent, or 22.9 million individuals, in 1973. Over the next decade, the poverty rate fluctuated between 11.1 and 12.6 percent, but it began to rise steadily again in 1980. By 1983, the number of poor individuals had risen to 35.3 million individuals, or 15.2 percent.
For the next ten years, the poverty rate remained above 12.8 percent, increasing to 15.1 percent, or 39.3 million individuals, by 1993. The rate declined for the remainder of the decade, to 11.3 percent by 2000. From 2000 to 2004 it rose each year to 12.7 in 2004."
http://www.npc.umich.edu/poverty/#3
So, by the time the war on poverty was in full swing, poverty had already reached the minimum it would be for the next 50 years. It then bottoms as the war on poverty is fully implemented and because it didn't skyrocket again the program was a success? No, if we were getting along not spending 16 trillion dollars and ended with a poverty rate approaching 11.1 and then decided to spend all that money and ended with poverty in the 12's, how could it possibly be viewed as anything other than a failure. Spending 16 trillion to maintain status quo is called unsustainable.