What made america great

What made America so special is in the early days of the country it was actually a free country. If you had a product people would buy you could sell it. There wasnt a bunch of regulations and hoops to jump through to start a business. If you wanted medicine you went to the drug store there was no prescriptions needed. If you wanted to challenge your coworker to a fight and he agreed the government stayed out of it, even if you challenged him to a shoot out. There was no income tax. No nanny state government to tell you what to do all the time. You were on your own but you had freedom.

Obviously there was bad things too no country is perfect. Slavery is a huge black eye on the countries past. But I still think what made the USA special was the liberty you had. It started with prohibition but the country really started to fall after WW2 when the government tried to be like Europe. The USA is too big to be like Europe and I think it has failed in trying to be miserably. Almost every issue we have today like healthcare, student loans, manufacturing leaving was all caused by the government. But now its too late to go back without hurting alot of people. The country was destroyed by the government.

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Comments ( 2 )
  • euronymous

    capitalism according to many

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  • Boojum

    It's amusing that you believe the lack of regulation of medicines in the 18th and 19th centuries was a wonderful thing. In fact, most of the "medicine" sold back then worked - as much as it did - because of either the placebo effect or the fact that a lot of illnesses are self-limiting: the body either marshals it's powers of recovery and you get better, or you die.

    But some medicine definitely had an effect. You could buy opium and later morphine over the counter with no questions asked, so there was that. You could also get medications containing arsenic and strychnine, although you just had to hope that the people making up the formulation in a shed somewhere were on the ball when following their recipe. No class-action lawsuits back in those good old days, and if a patent-medicine got the reputation of killing a lot of people, they just changed the label.

    And then there was the very widely used and innocuous-sounding calomel. Amongst many other ailments, this was used to treat melancholy (depression), constipation, syphilis, influenza, parasites and teething pain in babies. These days, calomel is known by its chemical name: mercurous chloride. Just in case your knowledge of chemical nomenclature is a little rusty, that means it's a salt of mercury. While pure mercury metal pretty much just passes straight through the digestive system and makes some interesting looking shit, mercury salts are absorbed by the body.

    One of the immediate effects of taking calomel was an explosive emptying of the bowels (which, like losing some blood, doctors thought was a good thing back then). If a patient continued to take it, they first began to drool copiously (as in pints of saliva), and then they started suffering all the weird, nasty symptoms of heavy metal poisoning.

    Unfortunately, the communistic, nosey, tax-money-wasting FDA does its best to stop people from selling these wonderful drugs as cure-alls these days.

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