Mark Cuban Asks If You'd Support Universal Healthcare If It Only Cost $10 A Year - And Every Doctor Got Paid Twice As Much As They Do Now
Key Points:
- Mark Cuban proposed a hypothetical scenario where healthcare in the U.S. costs only $10 per person annually, and every healthcare provider earns double their current salary, asking if taxpayers would support universal healthcare under these conditions.
- Cuban emphasized that doctors are underpaid and overworked, arguing that the real healthcare cost issues stem from inefficiencies and middlemen profiting rather than provider compensation.
- Reactions to Cuban's proposal were mixed, with some questioning the feasibility of doubling wages leading to lower costs, while others appreciated the idea of transparent, scalable pricing that rewards healthcare professionals fairly.
- Cuban's broader critique highlights two problematic healthcare extremes: those unable to afford care and those who pay out of pocket but remain trapped in a flawed system, both resulting in losses











:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/SPR-how-often-to-wash-sheets-in-winter-11868622-hero-cc859b6038124bd09b5643e218794772.jpg)

