more pointedly, can you point to countries that have 2-tier systems where the 'bottom tier' hasn't been compromised by the development/expansion of the 'top tier'?
You automatically assume there will be a top and bottom tier. Why? Why is denying people care outside of a public system a bad thing?
clearly member Montgomery put your word-parsing nonsense in its place. But hey, I'll play; here's my do-over so you can't avoid the question intent:
can you point to countries that have 2-tier systems where the '
public tier' hasn't been compromised by the development/expansion of the '
private tier'?