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A Usenet persona calling itself BCITORGB wrote:
According to Scott: "The free market is always the most efficient way for such things to be 'regulated.' " Assuming efficiency is your prime objective, then there might be a modicum of truth therein. But suppose you had other objectives? Is the free market necessarily the "best" (determined by whatever your ojectives are) way to regulate? Usually. Almost always when it comes to government intervention in private commerce. Universally when it comes to forcing people to pay for other people's bad health. -- 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 |
Scott Weiser wrote: Anyway, I thought I'd update the socialist dogma thread since there's some important news just out: Vincent Carrol of the Rocky Mountain News reports that Canada's Supreme Court has struck down Quebec's ban on private health insurance. Carroll says, "The court grandly announced, for example, that the prohibition on private health care has resulted in 'physical and psychological suffering,' including occasional deaths (which is certainly true), and concluded that this violates Quebec's charter of rights." He goes on to say, "The Canadian medical system amounts to moronic policy and has become a liability to health." Right on Vincent! Yet more proof that socialized medicine is a very bad thing. -- It proves the American healthcare-pharmaceutical-insurance industrial complex is not in crisis. Only patients are.... |
"donquijote1954" wrote in message oups.com... Scott Weiser wrote: Anyway, I thought I'd update the socialist dogma thread since there's some important news just out: Vincent Carrol of the Rocky Mountain News reports that Canada's Supreme Court has struck down Quebec's ban on private health insurance. Carroll says, "The court grandly announced, for example, that the prohibition on private health care has resulted in 'physical and psychological suffering,' including occasional deaths (which is certainly true), and concluded that this violates Quebec's charter of rights." He goes on to say, "The Canadian medical system amounts to moronic policy and has become a liability to health." Right on Vincent! Yet more proof that socialized medicine is a very bad thing. -- It proves the American healthcare-pharmaceutical-insurance industrial complex is not in crisis. Only patients are.... Patients do NOT count in the American system. PROVIDERS are happy so the rest of the world can just go to hell. |
george conklin wrote: It proves the American healthcare-pharmaceutical-insurance industrial complex is not in crisis. Only patients are.... Patients do NOT count in the American system. PROVIDERS are happy so the rest of the world can just go to hell. They only count as customers, rather shortchanged though. |
"donquijote1954" wrote in message oups.com... george conklin wrote: It proves the American healthcare-pharmaceutical-insurance industrial complex is not in crisis. Only patients are.... Patients do NOT count in the American system. PROVIDERS are happy so the rest of the world can just go to hell. They only count as customers, rather shortchanged though. Medicine is the only business where customers are kept waiting for hours so the providers can run their offices any way they choose and you cannot say anything about it or you are being 'rude.' You are supposed to sit there for 1-2 hours and SMILE during your 3-minute quickie visit. |
george conklin wrote: "donquijote1954" wrote in message oups.com... george conklin wrote: It proves the American healthcare-pharmaceutical-insurance industrial complex is not in crisis. Only patients are.... Patients do NOT count in the American system. PROVIDERS are happy so the rest of the world can just go to hell. They only count as customers, rather shortchanged though. Medicine is the only business where customers are kept waiting for hours so the providers can run their offices any way they choose and you cannot say anything about it or you are being 'rude.' You are supposed to sit there for 1-2 hours and SMILE during your 3-minute quickie visit. On the bright side they provide you with fancy magazines. Nobody will questions a thief with such great attention to detail. |
A Usenet persona calling itself Franklin wrote:
Universally when it comes to forcing people to pay for other people's bad health. Your sense of humanity is touching. You'd probably stand there and watch a guy drown on the river rather than trying to save him, too. Whether I would try to save him depends on a number of factors, including whether I'm capable of doing so without losing my own life. That's a judgment I get to make, and not a decision that you can compel me to make. Something you learn as an EMT is that you're not responsible for the trouble other people get themselves into. You try to do the best you can to help them, but sometimes people die. If you take on the guilt of other people's bad judgment or ill luck, you won't last long in emergency services. And there's little sense in two people dying because a rescuer tried to do the impossible...or merely something he's not capable of doing. Demanding that a non-swimmer to dive into a raging rapid to save a kayaker who is trapped underwater is stupid. Besides the obvious futility involved, the kayaker took on the risk with full knowledge of the potential for death, so it's unreasonable for him to expect others to risk their lives to save him. Now, if a person WANTS to try to save someone, that's completely different. But, the whole point of my statement in re health care is that it's wron to COMPEL someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad genetics or bad luck. If you want to ASK them to help, that's perfectly fine, so long as you don't gripe if they decline. -- 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 |
Query to Scott, who claims:
============ the whole point of my statement in re health care is that it's wron to COMPEL someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad genetics or bad luck. =========== Scott, why is it NOT wrong to COMPEL someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad genetics or bad luck in areas other than heathcare? If it is not wrong to do so in areas other than healthcare, what might those areas be? Further, how/why do you make the distinction? |
A Usenet persona calling itself BCITORGB wrote:
Query to Scott, who claims: ============ the whole point of my statement in re health care is that it's wron to COMPEL someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad genetics or bad luck. =========== Scott, why is it NOT wrong to COMPEL someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad genetics or bad luck in areas other than heathcare? If it is not wrong to do so in areas other than healthcare, what might those areas be? Further, how/why do you make the distinction? Well, first, I said it IS wrong to compel someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad genetics or bad luck in re health care. This does not imply that it is otherwise acceptable to compel someone in other areas. This is the logical fallacy of the extended analogy and is a red herring argument. It may well be wrong to compel someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad genetics or bad luck in other areas...or not. However, what we are discussing at the moment is health care. I note that you don't dispute my statement. Do I therefore take it that you agree with me? -- 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 |
Scott Weiser wrote:
: A Usenet persona calling itself BCITORGB wrote: : Query to Scott, who claims: : ============ : the whole point of my statement in re health care is that it's wron to : COMPEL someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad genetics or bad : luck. : =========== : : Scott, why is it NOT wrong to COMPEL someone to pay for another's bad : habits, bad genetics or bad luck in areas other than heathcare? If it : is not wrong to do so in areas other than healthcare, what might those : areas be? Further, how/why do you make the distinction? : : Well, first, I said it IS wrong to compel someone to pay for another's bad : habits, bad genetics or bad luck in re health care. This does not imply that : it is otherwise acceptable to compel someone in other areas. This is the : logical fallacy of the extended analogy and is a red herring argument. Scotty; First, I'm guessing "wron" is "wrong"... right? The concept behind all insurance is some people are paying for someone elses claim... otherwise, we'd all be paying cash every time we visit the doc for anything... surgery too... same with car insurance, homeowners insurance... life insurance... You, your company (or your trust fund) pay $'s hoping that you will pay in less than you use in services... We the taxpayers also help fund this because Uncle Sam makes it a tax deduction for companies that are paying for all or part of a employee's health insurance costs... It's the same with taxes... when it comes to road taxes, smaller trucks subsidize larger trucks, smaller cars subsidize larger cars like your hummer (if you still have it) when it comes to paying for our nations roads. It's the American way to expect someone else to foot at least part of your bill... : It may well be wrong to compel someone to pay for another's bad habits, bad : genetics or bad luck in other areas...or not. However, what we are : discussing at the moment is health care. : I note that you don't dispute my statement. Do I therefore take it that you : agree with me? I would never agree with you... isn't there someplace else you'd rather be than R.B.P.? -- John Nelson ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chicago Area Paddling/Fishing Page http://www.chicagopaddling.org http://www.chicagofishing.org (A Non-Commercial Web Site: No Sponsors, No Paid Ads and Nothing to Sell) |
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