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Michael Moore would be proud...
|
Michael Moore would be proud...
HK wrote:
That's simply not the case. Oh, and if you are really ill, poor, and in need of an expensive anti-cancer regimen, what do yo think happens to you? You die. What pure horse****. Better suit up. The **** slinging is ramping up. -- Charlie |
Michael Moore would be proud...
HK wrote:
I think you and your kind pay lip service to the teachings of Jesus. I'm not a Christian, yet I am much more of a "compassionate Christian" than you and your ilk are. What? A "compasionate Christian" who had sex with a 14 yo girl when he was 13? You're delusional. -- Charlie |
Michael Moore would be proud...
HK wrote:
My ideology requires me to want to alleviate suffering. Really? In the past you've wished death upon more than one poster in this NG who disagreed with you. You might try to be truthful for once and state that you '"want to alleviate suffering" for those who don't **** you off by disagreeing with you.' -- Charlie |
Michael Moore would be proud...
On Jan 4, 8:49*am, "D.Duck" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Jan 3, 2:07 pm, "D.Duck" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jan 3, 10:50 am, wrote: On Jan 3, 10:42 am, wrote: On Jan 3, 10:27 am, BAR wrote: John H. wrote: On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 06:11:48 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Jan 2, 7:01 pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Woman waits in California hospital for a bed to open up here Wednesday, January 02 - 11:30:00 AM Lyle Fisher VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) - A Surrey woman's holiday in California has turned into a healthcare nightmare. The 68-year old needed emergency surgery after her appendix burst, but now she can't come home due to a lack of hospital beds. Arlene Meeks has been in a California hospital since December 17th. Her family has been trying to get her transferred back to the Lower Mainland for 2 weeks now but they haven't had any luck. Stephen Harris with the South Fraser Health Region says the issue is a shortage of ventilated intensive care unit beds, which are highly specialized. He says over the holidays, it's not surprising to see those beds filled up. Harris says as soon as a bed becomes available, Meeks will be transferred to a local hospital. Arlene's daughter Kim says her mom is 'frustrated as hell', and she just wants to come home. NDP Health Critic Adrian Dix says the issue is one that's continued to plague the Lower Mainland and he's blaming Liberal government cuts to acute care beds. "The number of acute care beds in British Columbia was reduced by 1,300 in the first mandate of the government, and some of the new facilities being opened won't be adding to that number." Dix says the Vancouver Coastal and Fraser Health authorities issued reports last fall indicating they are 650 acute care beds short right now. The trouble is, you right wingers only look for the bad things about any system you don't like. Why don't you find the good things, and post them as well, if you want to come off as balanced. Same with global warming! The only good thing about the overtaxed, crappy health system is that it's 'free'. So what? There is nothing good about socialized medicine. And, it is not free. It costs you money, that you conveniently don't see, and it costs lives and livelihoods which end up costing the rest of us more. Pay for what you want and need in all things.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Tell all veterans that who use the V.A. system.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - They already paid with their service....- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Bull****. I wholeheartedly agree that they deserve good care. But there is no tangible amount they "paid". Why does there have to be a "tangible" amount, as you so adeptly put it?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Because he's saying he paid. How much? You do realize it's possible to "pay" with other than "tangible" assets, don't you?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Cool, whatcha got for sale? I have some imaginary, um.....stuff I'll pay you with. |
Michael Moore would be proud...
On Jan 4, 9:25*am, John H. wrote:
On Fri, 4 Jan 2008 05:10:52 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Jan 3, 7:23*pm, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here wrote in ... My brother did not retire, but did spend 11 years active duty. *He gets VA medical care because of Agent Orange exposure. *He paid a lot for that "free" care.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, then, quantify it. How much did he pay? Here are some of the diseases associated with Agent Orange, Loogy. Chloracne Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma Soft tissue sarcoma Hodgkin's Disease Porphyria Cutanea Tarda (PCT) Multiple Myeloma Respiratory cancers (including cancers of the lung, larynx, trachea and bronchus) Prostate cancer Peripheral neuorapthy (acute or subacute) Type 2 Diabetes (Diabetes mellitus) Me, I'm right on the borderline for several of these, although I'm receiving nothing from VA for any of them...yet. I really think the best thing you could do for your attitude is visit a VA hospital and just walk around for an hour. Have a cup of coffee in the cafeteria. I'll buy. You're starting to sound like Harry with this stuff. You sure as hell don't want to sink to that low. -- John H I've been to several VA hospitals over the years. I've known several people using their services. I totally understand that the people who served our country should be taken care of. The facts remain. If you consider it as "pay" to what end? |
Michael Moore would be proud...
On Jan 4, 8:54*am, wrote:
On Fri, 4 Jan 2008 08:46:13 -0500, "JimH" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jan 4, 8:16 am, wrote: On Jan 3, 5:39 pm, Jim wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Woman waits in California hospital for a bed to open up here Wednesday, January 02 - 11:30:00 AM A friend of mine, here in the good 'ol USA, dislocated his knee a week and a half ago. Had to wait a week for the MRI and has a meeting with the surgeon next Monday. He's in intense pain and can't walk at all. He's a veteran and has a good HMO (Pacific Care). Is our system really that good? Awhile back, I came very close to dying. I have very good insurance. I waited in the emergency room for six hours, then two hours in triage, then another day and a half before a surgical suite would be available for the surgeon to get me in. It was so close at the end that he came and personally checked on me every half hour. So, please tell me where you would have rather been, Cuba, Britian, Iran.??? *Please, we will pitch in for a ticket if you want to be treated somewhere else... ================ Booger has exaggerated his story just a wee bit. * Anyone close to death does not wait 6 hours in any emergency room for care but is rushed right in and attended to, including immediate surgery if needed to save the life. **** you, you pussy little twit. Show me where I exaggerated anything. You a ****ing doctor now, asshole? Let me tell you, I had periotonitis when I went in. I sat there for six hours before seeing ANYONE besides that intake person. Prove me wrong you little ****head. My surgeon even stated that had I got the CT scan earlier that I wouldn't have had emergency surgery because they could have simply inserted a needle and took the node out that way, then when my blood count was back to normal, have elected surgery. But again, you just like being an asshole so **** you. What a big man, you can say that **** hiding behind salt's message but don't have the balls to say a damned thing to me directly. Unless, of course they don't have insurance, in which case they may be transferred to another hospital that is willing to take them, or simply put in a cab and dumped off on a street corner.- Hide quoted text - Sorry Salt, had to reply to that low life scum JimH. He'll probably now start saying nasty untrue things about my wife and kids. That's how he works. Almost makes me wish what I had on him, so he can see what to hell really happened. Hell, we were so frustrated that we've worked on, and got the hospital logs! |
Michael Moore would be proud...
On Jan 4, 9:35*am, John H. wrote:
On Fri, 4 Jan 2008 05:16:12 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Jan 3, 5:39*pm, Jim wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Woman waits in California hospital for a bed to open up here Wednesday, January 02 - 11:30:00 AM A friend of mine, here in the good 'ol USA, dislocated his knee a week and a half ago. *Had to wait a week for the MRI and has a meeting with the surgeon next Monday. *He's in intense pain and can't walk at all. He's a veteran and has a good HMO (Pacific Care). Is our system really that good? Awhile back, I came very close to dying. I have very good insurance. I waited in the emergency room for six hours, then two hours in triage, then another day and a half before a surgical suite would be available for the surgeon to get me in. It was so close at the end that he came and personally checked on me every half hour. I find it hard to believe that Jim's friend didn't receive any pain killers when he went to the emergency room. A week for an MRI and another couple days for an orthopedic surgeon is nothing. A couple months for each would be the story in many places, *if* he was lucky. You were either not close to dying, or you were quickly stabilized in the emergency room. *Or*, which may be possible, you had a potful of illegal immigrants clogging up the whole show. For your information, Dr., I was only a few more hours from dead. My surgeon also told me had I not had to wait that long, I would have avoided emergency surgery and been able to have one elected surgery instead of an emergency surgery then an elected one four months later. I love how you and JimH think you know more about my misfortune than I, or my surgeon does. Now about that quickly stabilized crap. You go into the emergency room, you talk to an intake person, not a doctor, not a nurse, a paper pusher. Then you wait. That intake person can do nothing to you. I was there for better than two hours when someone came to me. It was the financial lady wanting to know about my insurance. I told her I couldn't get up, so she got me a wheelchair. After talking with her, I asked the intake lady to PLEASE hurry, "I think something is seriously wrong". A guy with a swollen foot went before me! Here, AVERAGE wait, almost 4 hours: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15487676/ You guys complain of waits of hours or days. Imagine waits of months and more months, and then flying to another country to get yourself fixed. -- You only use, and show the bad things. |
Michael Moore would be proud...
wrote in message ... On Jan 3, 7:23 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here wrote in ... D.Duck wrote: wrote in message ... On Jan 3, 10:50 am, wrote: On Jan 3, 10:42 am, wrote: On Jan 3, 10:27 am, BAR wrote: John H. wrote: On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 06:11:48 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Jan 2, 7:01 pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Woman waits in California hospital for a bed to open up here Wednesday, January 02 - 11:30:00 AM Lyle Fisher VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) - A Surrey woman's holiday in California has turned into a healthcare nightmare. The 68-year old needed emergency surgery after her appendix burst, but now she can't come home due to a lack of hospital beds. Arlene Meeks has been in a California hospital since December 17th. Her family has been trying to get her transferred back to the Lower Mainland for 2 weeks now but they haven't had any luck. Stephen Harris with the South Fraser Health Region says the issue is a shortage of ventilated intensive care unit beds, which are highly specialized. He says over the holidays, it's not surprising to see those beds filled up. Harris says as soon as a bed becomes available, Meeks will be transferred to a local hospital. Arlene's daughter Kim says her mom is 'frustrated as hell', and she just wants to come home. NDP Health Critic Adrian Dix says the issue is one that's continued to plague the Lower Mainland and he's blaming Liberal government cuts to acute care beds. "The number of acute care beds in British Columbia was reduced by 1,300 in the first mandate of the government, and some of the new facilities being opened won't be adding to that number." Dix says the Vancouver Coastal and Fraser Health authorities issued reports last fall indicating they are 650 acute care beds short right now. The trouble is, you right wingers only look for the bad things about any system you don't like. Why don't you find the good things, and post them as well, if you want to come off as balanced. Same with global warming! The only good thing about the overtaxed, crappy health system is that it's 'free'. So what? There is nothing good about socialized medicine. And, it is not free. It costs you money, that you conveniently don't see, and it costs lives and livelihoods which end up costing the rest of us more. Pay for what you want and need in all things.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Tell all veterans that who use the V.A. system.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - They already paid with their service....- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Bull****. I wholeheartedly agree that they deserve good care. But there is no tangible amount they "paid". Why does there have to be a "tangible" amount, as you so adeptly put it? If I am not mistaken, the VA healthcare plan in some manner, is included in their compensation package. The same way most large companies include a healthcare plan as part of their compensation package. I really don't know the details of the military plan, but if you retired from the military, you really do expect them to honor the compensation package everyone agreed to. The tangible part is the salary you deferred to cover the cost of your healthcare. My brother did not retire, but did spend 11 years active duty. He gets VA medical care because of Agent Orange exposure. He paid a lot for that "free" care.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, then, quantify it. How much did he pay? A lot of his health. How much do you pay for your health care? Some greenbacks? How about Prostrate problems, shaky hands, major possibility of cancer. Memories of rocket attacks killing and maiming your coworkers. A hell of a lot more than you loogie. You and HK seem to fit together. No real care for the rest of the people. |
Michael Moore would be proud...
wrote in message ... On Jan 4, 8:49 am, "D.Duck" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jan 3, 2:07 pm, "D.Duck" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jan 3, 10:50 am, wrote: On Jan 3, 10:42 am, wrote: On Jan 3, 10:27 am, BAR wrote: John H. wrote: On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 06:11:48 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Jan 2, 7:01 pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Woman waits in California hospital for a bed to open up here Wednesday, January 02 - 11:30:00 AM Lyle Fisher VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) - A Surrey woman's holiday in California has turned into a healthcare nightmare. The 68-year old needed emergency surgery after her appendix burst, but now she can't come home due to a lack of hospital beds. Arlene Meeks has been in a California hospital since December 17th. Her family has been trying to get her transferred back to the Lower Mainland for 2 weeks now but they haven't had any luck. Stephen Harris with the South Fraser Health Region says the issue is a shortage of ventilated intensive care unit beds, which are highly specialized. He says over the holidays, it's not surprising to see those beds filled up. Harris says as soon as a bed becomes available, Meeks will be transferred to a local hospital. Arlene's daughter Kim says her mom is 'frustrated as hell', and she just wants to come home. NDP Health Critic Adrian Dix says the issue is one that's continued to plague the Lower Mainland and he's blaming Liberal government cuts to acute care beds. "The number of acute care beds in British Columbia was reduced by 1,300 in the first mandate of the government, and some of the new facilities being opened won't be adding to that number." Dix says the Vancouver Coastal and Fraser Health authorities issued reports last fall indicating they are 650 acute care beds short right now. The trouble is, you right wingers only look for the bad things about any system you don't like. Why don't you find the good things, and post them as well, if you want to come off as balanced. Same with global warming! The only good thing about the overtaxed, crappy health system is that it's 'free'. So what? There is nothing good about socialized medicine. And, it is not free. It costs you money, that you conveniently don't see, and it costs lives and livelihoods which end up costing the rest of us more. Pay for what you want and need in all things.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Tell all veterans that who use the V.A. system.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - They already paid with their service....- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Bull****. I wholeheartedly agree that they deserve good care. But there is no tangible amount they "paid". Why does there have to be a "tangible" amount, as you so adeptly put it?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Because he's saying he paid. How much? You do realize it's possible to "pay" with other than "tangible" assets, don't you?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Cool, whatcha got for sale? I have some imaginary, um.....stuff I'll pay you with. How about a service person who pays with the the loss of his/her limb? |
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