01-03-2008, 10:54 PM | #11 | |
Argus Agony
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01-04-2008, 12:47 AM | #12 | |
I have a caffeine addiction.
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But publicly-funded programs can only go so far and do so much because - as the name implies - it's publically funded. Road workers will only work as hard as you pay them, and police will work as hard as they're stressed. That's where private corporations take on the curve to stop the government from spending money and make money at the same time. So essentially there's a big reliance on private corporations to save you because you're a member - NOT A SHAREHOLDER, a member....pffft, yea right.
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01-15-2008, 09:09 AM | #13 | |
An Animal I Have Become
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I'd just like to point out how Canada's health care system follows what you're calling 'socialist/communist', and we get along quite well thank you. In fact, the last study done on healthcare put Canada among the top in the developed world (and the U.S. in the bottom) and noted that had the U.S. followed Canada's model there would have been up to 100 000 fewer deaths in the past year.
Also, the U.S. is the only wealthy industrialized nation without universal health care, and it has one of the lowest life expectancies in the wealthy world. Just throwing that out there.
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Last edited by I_Like_Swordchucks; 01-15-2008 at 09:16 AM. |
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01-15-2008, 10:06 AM | #14 |
Her hands were cold and small.
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This is one of the problems I have with government run health care:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1TEs...eature=related I mean, the US government was designed for two major purposes: 1. Defend the people from external threats/Negotiate treaties with other countries 2. Defend the people from dangerous criminals within our borders. They're doing a bang-up job on number one, and they have to have John Walsh's TV show to help with number two. I'd hate to see what they do with a more complicated task like giving medical treatment to the citizens. Personally, I think they need to remove their hands from all portions of the economy, because without all that red-tape, doctors wouldn't have to spend as much to save more lives. I mean, take rent controls for example. The last time they were wide-spread, the controls held rents at a certain level (WWII), but the quality of housing plumetted because there was no longer a reason for owners to keep up their rentals, since they were guaranteed rent at that rate, and improving wouldn't have gained them anything for the same reason. It's the same thing they did to the first REAL transcontinental railroad.
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-CJ, most likely about non-yaoi porn or something Last edited by Elminster_Amaur; 01-31-2008 at 11:01 PM. |
01-15-2008, 04:55 PM | #15 |
The revolution will be memed!
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Doing what you're saying would hardly be considered socialism by any of todays standards.
Now in Finland everyone who owns a car has to have atleast a minimum car insurance. It comes with the deal when you buy the car. It's been like that for... I don't know how long, but long enough that people don't really complain about it or anything anymore. As for healthcare, we get it free. Well, through taxes, you know the deal. So sadly, I have no educated comments on how you should change your (USA) system. I can however state my opinion on 'forcing' health insurance or anything else on people. A goverment does not have that right. Yes, that's how I'm putting it. They don't have the right to really force anything. Now that's a pretty simplified statement, true. Truth is, they do a lot of things which are basically the same by going around it somehow (like Fifth wrote about adding to taxes something and sending you a 'free' gun for example). Now stuff that really does work out good for EVERYONE is all ok and nice. But like in this case, as I understand it many people can't simply afford a health insurance. So how is forcing them to buy one gonna make it better? They'll buy it and then not buy car insurance because of it? Buy it, but save on clothes, housing, food or whatever? Maybe they wont buy that gun. Or whatever. You get the point. I don't see this course of action solving any more problems than it creates. And a lot of people would still not get health insurance if the whole thing wasn't too closely monitored. The idea of a "nurse" state as we might call it here is something I am not specially fond of. Social welfare state is different thing.
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D is for Dirty Commie! Last edited by Osterbaum; 01-16-2008 at 08:02 AM. |
01-15-2008, 05:41 PM | #16 | |
Oi went ta Orksford, Oi did.
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I think we should have a government insurance policy that costs a certain amount. That way private companies would have to compete with that rather than work among themselves to determine pricing.
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01-15-2008, 07:55 PM | #17 |
Not bad.
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Health care is a double edged sword no matter what. Put the government in charge and the government decides who lives and who dies. Put private corporations in charge and these corporations decide who lives and who dies. Neither are perfect or even that great. Pure capitalism or socialism are a waste of time, they have too many negatives to work on their own. The economy will just collapse either way. I actually approve of the U.K.'s system. They have Universal Healthcare but you can also spend your own money to get stuff like private rooms and whatnot. Not perfect but I am not opposed to it.
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01-15-2008, 08:50 PM | #18 | |||
for all seasons
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Waiting Times For Care? Try Looking At The U.S. - Nurses, Doctors Say It's Time To Debunk The Myths Quote:
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To make one particular point, per the bolded bits above it's worth noting that one meaningful consequence of nationalized healthcare would be accountability. If the healthcare service is awful then citizens have the option to petition their elected representatives to make it better; under our current system you're pretty much at the mercy of companies that have every incentive to deny and restrict access to care. The only people for whom the US system solves the problem of waitlists is those 40 million uninsured people, who don't have to worry about waitlists because they can't afford to be on them.
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01-15-2008, 10:56 PM | #19 | |
Blue Psychic, Programmer
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I just have to say this. Bravo, Fifth. That seriously needed to be said.
Honestly, the only reason Canada gets slapped with the stigma of long waiting times is because they have people who actually have medical access. In the US, a significant portion of people just don't go to the hospital when they get sick. They don't have the money. One more interesting thing between the US and Canada: in a worldwide study, the US ranks as the 25th happiest country in the world. Canada ranks number 10. One of the major things Canadians rated as a contributing factor was their health care system. *clarified*
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01-16-2008, 12:30 AM | #20 | |
I have a caffeine addiction.
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Not to sound Communist, but....is America SO capitalist that it will constantly allow private business to dictate if you can (RATE TO) see the doctor or not? I guess getting an extra $500,000 a year over the next man is rather tempting....
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