There's a reason that US Health Care is awesome -- it's expensive and you get what you pay for. Cuba... Hmm. Social health care. Canada? Same thing. Then why is it that it takes you months to get your busted leg fixed in Canada? Why did Fidel Castro get a doctor from outside of Canada? I had a friend in Canada who had to wait a few months to get his broken/busted leg fixed and reset by the doctors because of the waiting list.
You know, you don't need to have experienced those health care systems firsthand in order to know what they're really like, but you
do need to conduct the appropriate research first. I'm talking about reading studies and finding out what the situation really is like in those countries, then comparing them to your own and then determining whether either has benefits. That's research.
You just conclude that you're right based on what a friend told you.
Then again, you don't read the links we provide, you don't listen to the arguments we make, and you say you'd prefer a libertarian president because that means "things would change". It seems that you're an emotional voter, one who has a very shallow understanding of things but will gladly agree with a person who campaigns his views as though they are obviously good. Does being on the side of Ron Paul make you feel better because his following is essentially a minority that acts as though it knows a lot about politics?
You know, I don't even believe you're a minority now. Maybe you posted pictures in the Picture Topic before, I don't know, but it just strikes me as extremely implausible that someone who isn't white could support either Ron Paul or Mike Huckabee. You'd have to be really ignorant of the history of the U.S., the world and your race for that to be true.
EDIT: then again, you also think that Noah's Ark could have existed, so I could be wrong about that.
Ron Paul will bring Libertarian views to the US which would be a change of pace -- a very welcome change, in my opinion.
Would you support an anarchistic president?
Why not? They're quite similar. They're not the same, sure, but on a lot of fronts, they are in agreement. Libertarianism is sort of like "anarchism done right". On which fronts do you disagree with anarchism, and in what way do you think libertarianism solves that disagreement?