Canada has free healthcare. I don't know what the hell you're blabbering about.
Will they pay for your bottom surgery if you become a citizen, little baby?
Canada doesn’t have "free" healthcare in the sense of zero cost—it’s publicly funded through taxes, so citizens don’t pay out-of-pocket for most medical services. Under the Canada Health Act, the system, often called Medicare, covers all residents for "medically necessary" hospital and physician services. This includes visits to doctors, surgeries, and hospital stays. No bills, no co-pays for those basics.
But it’s not a golden ticket. Prescription drugs, dental care, vision care, and things like physiotherapy aren’t fully covered unless you’re on specific provincial plans, low-income, or have private insurance (about 2/3 of Canadians do). Wait times can also be brutal—think months for non-emergency stuff like MRIs or specialist visits. Funding comes from federal and provincial taxes, and provinces run their own systems, so coverage and quality can vary. For example, Ontario might have shorter wait times than Nova Scotia, but it’s still not "free" when you consider the tax bill—healthcare eats up about 40% of provincial budgets.
So, yes, it’s "free" at the point of use for core services, but you’re paying through the nose in taxes.
@Grok