For that to be plausible, almost none of them would have a CV that includes an introduction to economics as part of a humanities degree and they would also have to be incapable or unwilling of communicating the basic ideas. Also, they'd have to be ignorant of what is in the news almost daily about funding shortfalls being experienced by nearly every public-serving agency (public or private) that we have. How many in BC, for example, are unaware of occasional emergency room closures and intellectually incapable of making the simple connection to under-funding of the "supply chain" of physicians, nurses, various medical assistants, and technicians?