Certainly true, some states do a great job of running their universities.
But these schools are not the best of the best - Princeton, Harvard, Yale, Stanford, MIT, Columbia, CalTech, Duke, Johns Hopkins, Cornell, Carnegie Mellon, Brown.. these are the best schools in the United States, and in most cases, the world, and they are all private. Which isn't to say that the state schools you list aren't good, they just aren't as good as institutions operated in the private sector.
The university system is a great example though of what might become of our healthcare system - a majority of Americans rely on public systems, while the financially or cognitively elite attend the top notch private institutions. Is that an acceptable outcome for healthcare? Would you mind being priced out of the best medical institutions in the country based on your income?
You seem to imply that all private colleges and universities are better than all public universities, and that is just not true. Would you, in general, rather hire a UCLA grad or a Pepperdine grad? Our current university system provides accessibility to many people, including those who want higher education but can't afford private and those who want the experience of a larger school. Everybody's different and the mix offers an amazing amount of CHOICE, and as SWGB pointed out it sure helps to have government-backed student loans that are low cost but very difficult to get rid of without paying them off in full.
On a local level, a year ago we chose our very well-run neighborhood public school over the very pricey and competitive-to-get-into private school we were in, partly after a cost-benefit analysis but mostly because the new school is a better fit for our family. We are thrilled and not at all regretful. Of course, a better socioeconomic status usually will get you better parental involvement and thus, better teachers are attracted to it, which is another issue all together ...
It's really about balance. Government should make programs more accessible and provide a check to unfettered free market capitalism. I firmly believe that health care is a special case. I have never understood why we allow things like for-profit hospital companies with shareholders, for-profit hospice or for-profit health insurance companies. The outside companies that work with health care (big Pharma, etc) and innovate should be private and competition oriented so that the best products are what get to the patient, but inside the health care system it should be entirely nonprofit. I can see that physicians should be able to charge what is appropriate based on a free market ideal (ie the best ones charge more) but hospitals top-heavy with administrators trying to turn a profit for shareholders is, frankly, disgusting.
We are not going to get that this time around, and I'm not sure if we can ever get to that point. Those who do profit so richly will not allow it. There is very little balance to this system and I am all for any way to provide it -- whether it's a "trigger" option or something else.
You just lost your argument. :roll: