I think they’re more suggesting that breaking the system will fundamentally and necessarily break some of the public services that thousands of people depend on, and if you’re serious about breaking/changing the system, answering the fundamental questions of “how do we prevent as many needless deaths due to service interruptions” is important.
I think they’re more suggesting that breaking the system will fundamentally and necessarily break some of the public services that thousands of people depend on, and if you’re serious about breaking/changing the system, answering the fundamental questions of “how do we prevent as many needless deaths due to service interruptions” is important.