I don't think anybody is under the impression that things like free healthcare are like, actually free.
I would challenge you to take a look at your W2 from last year, Box 12 and the figures marked D and DD. D is how much you paid for health insurance last year. DD is how much your employer paid for your health insurance last year.
What I don't think people understand is, employers already pay a LOT of money towards health insurance for their eligible employees. Between my employer and myself, for a crappy narrow network plan with a tiny network of providers for a 32 year old male and his wife, both nonsmokers, that's ~$29,000 a year going to health insurance. Assuming those rates never go up (lol), that'l be ~1.1 million dollars going just to health insurance for me over the course of my career. Take a look at countries with single payer national healthcare and the taxes associated with it - myself and my employer are paying MORE for a shitty plan than most of said countries.
On the oft-spouted argument of "Rationing healthcare! It takes forever to see someone!"... Emergency cases are dealt with accordingly. Less urgent cases are put in a backlog. Is that worse than me, a solidly middle class married couple that's renting half our house out to make ends meet rationing my own healthcare because I can't afford $9000 a year in health insurance premiums, plus $1500 for my wife to reach her deductible plus $1500 for me to reach my deductible plus everything else I need to pay for after that? I'm actively waiting until next year to do another round of specialist visits to figure out why I'm mildly sick 50% of the time and sick-sick 15% of the time.
But I digress. Minimum wage. I'm personally not a fan of a $15/hour minimum wage. I am however, a huge fan of typing minimum wage to a combination of real-world metrics (inflation, GDP, etc). The politically inconvenient fact there that if we did, chances are it would be close to or above $15/hour
I think back to all these lessons I was taught by fiscal conservatives (who no longer seem to exist) back in the day about marketplace efficiency and how businesses with poor efficiency will fail and be replaced by more efficient businesses and this was a good thing for businesses, the economy as a whole, and workers. First of all, absolutely hilarious in retrospect after spending 14 years in big boy jobs - companies are completely and utterly screwed up, inefficient, and just as political and petty as national politics. McDonalds has been in business for a long, long time. If their ability to pay employees has not kept up with inflation and cost of living - McDonalds is screwing something up. Why are they entitled to stay in business off the backs of workers if their business has not been able to keep up with the world?
Just to give you an idea of just how screwed up things have gotten over the last 30 years - My parents bought their second house when they were my age, having children of 1, 4, and 8 years old. My dad was working full time as a janitorial supply salesman and my mother was working part time as an interior designer. My mother also got her bachelors and masters while I was growing up. The house they bought, with today's price for that exact house and the interest rates, insurance rates, and property taxes they had at the time, would cost $2300 a month. Even with today's interest rates, you'd be looking at ~$1650/month. My dad also went through almost-new cars every 5 years due to his heavy business travel, and they had enough money left over to pay for like 20% of each of their children's college education and for us to take a couple 4 day road trips twice a year.
Granted, they didn't waste much money on things however I'm trying to imagine surviving even without kids, myself getting above industry average for a management position in IT and my wife working two part time jobs, with a house that cost us $2300 a month. We wouldn't even qualify. The only way we could make ends meet just between the two of us would be to continue to rent out half our house, drop everything but internet and our 2GB data plans on our phone, and never buy anything else. And then hope we didn't get sick or you know... have anything in this house that broke that we'd need to replace.
But, whatever. People are stuck to their political lines of thinking and I'm not going to convince anybody of anything. I just feel particularly insulted when people of a much older age category don't acknowledge how they were making comparatively more, with a much lower cost of living when they were starting out in adulthood. I wouldn't take those benefits away from them, I'd just ask they not look at me like I'm crazy or "asking for handouts" or "don't understand the real world" if I suggest that maybe we deserve a similar amount of money adjusted for inflation and cost as living as they did when they were starting out.