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#331
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![]() On 30-Mar-2005, Scott Weiser wrote: It's "national" in that the rules under which hospitals must operate are promulgated by the federal government, which funds and regulates the system. You are so ignorant. The federal government does not fund the sustem, nor does it regulate it. It provides some funding and defines minimal standards. However, health care is a provincial jurisdiction and most funding comes from provincial governments. Socialized medicine is, by definition, centrally-controlled, even if no "central" list is kept. Canada's must not be socialized, since there's no central control. Any government. All government. You sound very paranoid. I doubt it. It's my guess that once you get assigned a priority, based on the government-mandated priority criteria, you're stuck with it, and no matter where you go, you end up behind others with higher priority. You are making this up as you go along. Too bad you don't care about facts - the discussion would be a lot shorter if you did. There is no priority list! Priorities are set by the doctors and hospitals. You can get a different result by dealing with a different doctor. Not all referring physicians have equal access to all surgeons - they are a good old boy network and some have better access to some than others. Example - Toronto's top ophthalmologist is very hard to see. He specializes in difficult cases. A friend of mine (a doctor) had a problem with his nephew and could not get an appointment with the specialist in a timely manner - his nephew ended up getting treatment with another specialist. My doctor had a concern about me and got me an appointment with the same top ophthalmologist in a week. It all depends on who you know. No government involved. No list involved. However, this is a guess, and I could be wrong. No kidding - you're wrong more often than you're right. That doesn't stop you from posting your bull****. Mike |
#332
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Scott argues:
=============== They're just like any other business. How ever much of a pain med students are, the university has a lot invested in the med school program, as you yourself admit, and the only way to pay for all that infrastructure is to have students in the programs. ============== But surely you don't want to *increase* your investment in this expensive program. Please! Explain to me why it is in a university's best interests to increase the number of seats in med school (from a purely free market perspective -- which is what you insist they're responding to)? If the increased admissions come because of a government (state education department) directive -- by way of the regents -- then, of course it will happen. But please explain the economics of increasing med school admissions to me. How is that good for the university when opening more seats in the executive MBA program will yield so much more in terms of income.? frtzw906 |
#333
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Mike comments to Scott:
============= You're making this up as you go along. ================== It's amazing isn't it. There's plenty wrong with our healthcare system (and as we've also observed, all other healthcare systems), but Scott has yet to identify the real issues. Every time he's confronted by real, everyday, practical questions about how he thinks the system works, he starts making stuff up. TOO FUNNY! frtzw906 |
#334
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Scott asks:
============== On these things, I'm very much a "user pay" advocate (including, if you'll recall and earler thread, agriculture, which you seem to want to support). Why not for health care and schools too? =============== Wow! That's a simple one. Because healthcare and schools are, in my world, fundamental "rights". Further, on the water issue, while I'm in favor of metering and user pay, I would provide some basic amount "free". I'm interested in metering for purposes of reducing waste. Ditto, garbage collection: a basic amount of garbage (for purposes of public health and safety) collected for free, and then a user fee above that amount. Again, I want to charge those being wasteful. frtzw906 |
#335
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Scott informs:
============= Well, down here, water belongs to whomever first diverts it and puts it to beneficial use. =============== That may be the way it is in CO, but that doesn't make it "right". IMHO, water, like air, belongs to the people (the state) and anyone who wants to use it (or abuse it) ought to pay a fee (or a fine). And, IMHO, anyone who "first diverts it" without permission ought to be thrown in jail. Further, what is or isn't beneficial ought to be determined by those who own the water -- the people! That may not be the way it is in CO but, more's the pity! frtzw906 |
#336
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I should know better than to get involved...
"Scott Weiser" wrote: From your analysis, could I, however, walk from one hospital in Toronto to another to improve my position? I doubt it. It's my guess that once you get assigned a priority, based on the government-mandated priority criteria, you're stuck with it, and no matter where you go, you end up behind others with higher priority. That a different facility may not have the same number of people in line before you is irrelevant. Moreover, I have my doubts that you would be allowed, once assigned a priority at a hospital in your local community, to simply "venue shop" in another city, thereby jumping the queue of those above you in your original community. However, this is a guess, and I could be wrong. You are wrong. The number of people in front of you does matter. There is no "government-assigned" priority. Each hospital that you venue shop into rates your priority and serves you as they can, with those they feel are more in need of treatment first. If you leave one hospital after being told your wait will be X hours, and go to another hospital, a nurse or doctor there might think you've got something more serious than the person who triaged you in the first hospital, you'll get a different priority. But even if they give you the same priority, if the second hospital has fewer people lined up in front of you with equal or greater priority, you'll get helped sooner. A relative was driving long distance to a family function last week. He decided to seek treatment for an infection on the way at the hospital in Clearwater BC. He was in and out in under an hour. Arriving at the family function he commented on that, and another relative, who lives in Kamloops BC, a decent sized city about an hour's drive from Clearwater, said that people in Kamloops would often drive to Clearwater to go to the hospital (for minor emergency room treatment), knowing that the two hour round trip dri ve would save them more time than that waiting in the Kamloops emergency room. For certain specialized treatments (available only at certain hospitals), you are closer to being correct. But for minor, routine stuff, you can "venue shop" all you want to try to find the shortest wait time. -Paul |
#337
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A Usenet persona calling itself KMAN wrote:
This has nothing to do with the poor guy paying his rent. If the property is taxed appropriately, the landlord is going to charge the renter and collect the revenues need to pay the property taxes. Once again, the issue is the fairness and equitability of school funding assessments. I'm merely pointing out that in most places in the US, schools are disproportionately funded by landowners, and that there are many "free riders" who get substantial discounts on their "fair share." Yes, but you are incorrect. The landowners pass on the cost to the renters. The only issue of fairness would be if landlords are somehow paying unfairly low property taxes. You still don't get it. If public schools are supposed to be supported by all the people, then all the people ought to pay equally to fund schools. Renters don't pay their fair share, it's as simple as that. The inequity is in how schools are funded. You seem to be deliberately avoiding this aspect of the issue. I'm not surprised at your inconsistent approach to funding medical care and schools, given the fact that it's landowners who get soaked for schools, and socialists don't like landowners because they are mostly "have nots" who are jealous of the "haves" of society and are willing to do anything to bring others down to their own level. That's what socialism is all about. I'm a landowner. I'm not a socialist. I'm also not a selfish jerk. So why the inconsistency in your positions in re health care and school funding? There is no inconsistency. I believe that universal health care and universal education should be core foundations of any society, or at least a goal they are striving to achieve. But while you support income tax based funding for health care, you appear to be supporting the disproportionate burden on landowners. Is that the case, or do you support a change of plan for school funding to make everyone pay their fair share? I'm a landowner. I am not interested in "sticking it to landowners." You don't argue very effectively for not doing so. I don't think landowners are taxed unfairly. And yet they pay more, proportionally, than renters do for schools, so why do you see that as being "fair?" That's precisely the inconsistency I'm talking about. If everybody in the country had ethics, we wouldn't need much by way of law. Let me know when you get some. Advocating vociferously for your own selfish needs is not what I would call ethics. That's because you confuse socialist dogma with ethics. It's hardly unethical to advocate fairness and personal responsibility. Then I'm as ethical as can be. So you DO believe in people paying for their own bad health rather than shoving those costs off on others! and I think Wal-Mart is going to fight you pretty hard to make sure as many goods as possible aren't in your luxury class. Nah. They don't care about the taxes, they don't pay them, the consumer does. LOL. You might want to find out a little more about how taxes affect spending, which affects the bottom line of business. Only when the business is marginal. Wal-Mart doesn't give a damn what the local taxes are because they have a tremendous market dominance and know that the higher the taxes, and the less discretionary funds that a family has available, the MORE LIKELY they are to shop at Wal-Mart. It's a key component of their business model. Get together with all the consumer goods companies and ask them how they would feel about the addition of a consumer goods tax. Heehee. You'll be ridden out of town on a rail! Sure, they like to carp about it because it reduces the total amount of money available for consumer spending on their products, and they are happy to side with consumers in fighting new taxes without making it clear that they are only doing it so the consumer will have more disposable income, but in reality, they don't care much about the tax rates because they know people will buy more stuff at Wal-Mart when they have less disposable income. Remember, we're talking about Wal-Mart here, not the entire consumer goods industry. This is why while elites don't like Wal-Mart, it's exceeding rare for a Wal-Mart store to fail. You see, Wal-Mart's customers are the middle and lower income brackets who *need* to save money on consumer goods and don't have the luxury of being able to spend more on better quality goods. "If you build it, they will come." is the catchphrase of Wal-Mart...because they do. Ehuh. Wow, that's a brilliant catchphrase. Kind of says it all, doesn't it? -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
#338
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A Usenet persona calling itself Michael Daly wrote:
On 29-Mar-2005, Scott Weiser wrote: But there is a national system of classifying medical conditions by priority is there not? Medical care is a provincial jurisdiction, not a federal one. And you don't think the provincial governments are under the control of the federal government? It is to laugh! Your ignorance continues to show every time you post. Pot, kettle, black. If doctors are free to admit whomever they please whenever they please and do surgery on them, how is the system "socialized?" If things are as you imply, it's a free market economy. Obviously, it's not, because many people are complaining about their inability to get served because the government won't allow them to see a doctor or go to a hospital. Exactly who in the government won't allow them? The reason that folks aren't being served is that the system is overloaded in a specific area for a specific treatment. Yup, precisely. And that occurs because the system is centrally controlled and is not a free market. It is not because the government refuses to treat people. No, they just cut funding so that the services are not available. Same result though. Providing unlimited resources in every area is not efficient. Indeed. Why not let the free market control that? The taxpayers have indicated that they want to see better service in many areas, but the politicians have been dragging their heels on getting improvements in place. Thus, the government IS "refusing to treat people" by denying funding for the necessary improvements. Thanks for proving my thesis! Most of the real problems in Canada's health care system have been the result of right-wing politicians' meddling. Yup. Exactly. The government controls and rations health care in Canada. That's what I've been saying all along. Thanks for confirming it! Folks like Mike Harris and Gordon Campbell have done a lot of damage to a system that used to work much better. Yeah...when it was a free market system... -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
#339
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A Usenet persona calling itself Michael Daly wrote:
On 30-Mar-2005, Scott Weiser wrote: It's "national" in that the rules under which hospitals must operate are promulgated by the federal government, which funds and regulates the system. You are so ignorant. The federal government does not fund the sustem, nor does it regulate it. Sure it does. It provides some funding and defines minimal standards. It defines more than "minimal standards." It defines who get medical care and when. However, health care is a provincial jurisdiction and most funding comes from provincial governments. And provincial governments are controlled by the federal government. Otherwise, provinces could opt out of the national health care system. They can't. Socialized medicine is, by definition, centrally-controlled, even if no "central" list is kept. Canada's must not be socialized, since there's no central control. Sure there is. Any government. All government. You sound very paranoid. Nah, just realistic. I doubt it. It's my guess that once you get assigned a priority, based on the government-mandated priority criteria, you're stuck with it, and no matter where you go, you end up behind others with higher priority. You are making this up as you go along. Too bad you don't care about facts - the discussion would be a lot shorter if you did. Hey, I said it was my guess. You're the one who replied. There is no priority list! Of course there is, and the teenage girl and old guy with bad knees are on the bottom of it. Priorities are set by the doctors and hospitals. You can get a different result by dealing with a different doctor. Not all referring physicians have equal access to all surgeons - they are a good old boy network and some have better access to some than others. Not according to the AP. I believe the AP, not you. Example - Toronto's top ophthalmologist is very hard to see. He specializes in difficult cases. A friend of mine (a doctor) had a problem with his nephew and could not get an appointment with the specialist in a timely manner - his nephew ended up getting treatment with another specialist. My doctor had a concern about me and got me an appointment with the same top ophthalmologist in a week. It all depends on who you know. No government involved. No list involved. Did the nephew require hospitalization and surgery? If not, your anecdote is irrelevant. However, this is a guess, and I could be wrong. No kidding - you're wrong more often than you're right. That doesn't stop you from posting your bull****. Nor does it keep you from eating it up with some fava beans and a nice Chianti. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
#340
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A Usenet persona calling itself BCITORGB wrote:
Scott argues: =============== They're just like any other business. How ever much of a pain med students are, the university has a lot invested in the med school program, as you yourself admit, and the only way to pay for all that infrastructure is to have students in the programs. ============== But surely you don't want to *increase* your investment in this expensive program. Please! Explain to me why it is in a university's best interests to increase the number of seats in med school (from a purely free market perspective -- which is what you insist they're responding to)? The number of seats reflects the demand for doctors. Free market economics, pure and simple. If the increased admissions come because of a government (state education department) directive -- by way of the regents -- then, of course it will happen. But please explain the economics of increasing med school admissions to me. More students, more tuition, more alumni donations. How is that good for the university when opening more seats in the executive MBA program will yield so much more in terms of income.? Not everybody wants to be an MBA. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
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