So you don't think it's a bad sign that people come out in big numbers for these free health care events?
Name to me a product that a lot of people want that is normally expensive which wont draw a huge crowd if you announce you are giving it away for free.
Couldn't do it? I wonder why.
Except, I think the problem is in the question. Of course expensive
products are goin to draw big crowds, but that's becomes in order for something to qualify has a product it has to have certain features. It also seems, to me, to be part of the problem with our health care system.
By the way, the problem isn't just that so many people show up, it's that many of them show up in terrible condition. It's not as if people aer showing up to wait all day because they have a cold. And to partialy answer your question, and show why it's biased, in other countries with universal health care, you wouldn't "draw a big crowd" if you offered free health care. The people who did show up probably woudln't be in the condition they are here, either. They have "free" health care if they need it
when they first need it. Countries which have events like this are generally called "the third world."
But this isn't a problem?
(by the way, also very noticeably an appeal to ignorance fallacy)