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In this week's episode, Jim sits down with Dr. Ashish Jha — physician, health policy expert, and former White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator — for a candid look at what the pandemic revealed about how America actually works under pressure.
This conversation moves well beyond COVID.
Dr. Jha explains what happens inside government during a crisis, why emergency powers quietly reshape policy across the entire system, and how short-term urgency consistently crowds out long-term planning.
From there, the discussion turns to the deeper structural issue: healthcare.
The U.S. is on track to spend roughly $70 trillion on healthcare over the next decade — a number that sits at the center of federal debt, state budgets, and household finances. But the real problem isn’t how much care we use — it’s what we pay for it.
Jim and Dr. Jha break down:
They also tackle harder questions around personal responsibility, prevention, and whether a system can be both compassionate and financially sustainable.
At the core of the conversation is a broader insight:
There is a reasonable 70% of Americans — not the extremes — who could support real solutions. But they are not the ones driving policy or public discourse.
This episode is about healthcare — but more importantly, it’s about whether a polarized system can still solve complex problems before a crisis forces the issue.
By Jim Baer4.9
3131 ratings
In this week's episode, Jim sits down with Dr. Ashish Jha — physician, health policy expert, and former White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator — for a candid look at what the pandemic revealed about how America actually works under pressure.
This conversation moves well beyond COVID.
Dr. Jha explains what happens inside government during a crisis, why emergency powers quietly reshape policy across the entire system, and how short-term urgency consistently crowds out long-term planning.
From there, the discussion turns to the deeper structural issue: healthcare.
The U.S. is on track to spend roughly $70 trillion on healthcare over the next decade — a number that sits at the center of federal debt, state budgets, and household finances. But the real problem isn’t how much care we use — it’s what we pay for it.
Jim and Dr. Jha break down:
They also tackle harder questions around personal responsibility, prevention, and whether a system can be both compassionate and financially sustainable.
At the core of the conversation is a broader insight:
There is a reasonable 70% of Americans — not the extremes — who could support real solutions. But they are not the ones driving policy or public discourse.
This episode is about healthcare — but more importantly, it’s about whether a polarized system can still solve complex problems before a crisis forces the issue.

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