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apparently the palinistas have plenty of time on their hands.
....i will follow you, follow you wherever you may go....
rof.
nosf41 say:
“I look at the media attacks on “birthers†as a proof that they are onto something. Otherwise, why would the media pay any attention to something that is not an issue?â€
Read the Enquirer, Star, Weekly World News, In Touch, In Style, People, Us… and then tell us how they managed to write entire magazines about something that is not an issue.
They just do.
Of all the questions/statements from my previous post, you found one tangent to lead the discussion in a different direction!?
You know very well that all major TV networks (their NEWS organizations) have ridiculed "birthers" (just few commentators very courageous enough to ask Obama to prove that he is indeed born in the USA).
The same media behaved quite differently during the campaign last year when they raised the issue of McCain's eligibility. What did McCain do when asked for birth certificate? He presented it to Congress for everyone to see. You should be troubled with double standards applied to two major parties in the USA. I would like to see the same (tough) rules applied to all candidates - not just to those who were selected as targets.
"just few commentators very courageous enough to ask Obama to prove that he is indeed born in the USA)."
ROFLOL.....like dobbs and fauxsleaze.
youre being twitted again!!!
...palins calling Uuu...
Don’t know. You realize this bill is still a work in progress, right?Of course I know that. The whole line of discusssion has qualifiers like "if we" and "we will likely see" and "your opinion" and so on. So to rephrase, as the two bills work there way through the House and Senate with the various iterations, do you the eventual product will or should allow all citizens eligability to buy a public option, that no strings will be attached for those who do (I think you answered that), and will (should) the price be the same for all who purchase the public option?
Anyone notice that Kevin hasn't been able to answer my in-depth interrogation? What's he hiding? lol
Well, Kevin. It’s been two hours and you still have no answers for our readers? Don’t you owe us more than that? Oh, yea - that’s right - your loyalty is to the dark side. Us God fearing Christians who are born & bred Americans are deeply offended by you and your liberal, potentially damaging views.
What’s that? You might not be online? A flimsy excuse!
Sorry, I was busy using my socialist book club to organize our "free Khalid" T-shirt design contest.
Didja come up with a cool design that will stick it to The Man? Ok, I forgive you. But I shall never allow my grandchildren to participate in Little League - too risky. They might turn me in for my own leftist leanings.
Kevin saysHaving the stance that the proposals currently on the table are inadequate since they aren't single payer is a legitimate criticism, but you're ignoring the tried and true "public option" insurers like the Swiss system, which prove that an insurance-based model is still viable as long as it is strictly regulated.I am amazed at the absurd claims of what people think will happen if we have a “public optionâ€. Do you people even read what you write? The worst legitimate criticism of the Canadian system (for example) seems to be “long wait timesâ€. Really? We’ve gone from “long wait times†to the end of the Republic?Bullshit Kevin, are you saying it is not legitimate to not want a “PUBLIC OPTION†because it is in fact just another insurance company, just like all of the others. Are you saying I should take the democrats for face value, when they keep saying “We’ll push for cheaper premiums.†Did Obama say or not say in many different ways that this plan will not replace but compete, and the whole administration is weary just exactly how much it competes with the existing insurance industry. This bill is being drafted with kit gloves as not to scratch and booger up the existing system. The Bill is running out of steam for a damn good reason, and that reason is, Americans aren’t half as STUPID as the Democrats reckons them.
procedure, that was nothing more than running me through a machine that was paid for the first five minutes they plugged it into the wall.Now that is a business I wish I could buy a piece of. Profits like that might even turn me against health care reform...
no .. they would be treated … and the doc or pharm will get paid, or not, based on what the customer agrees to pay.Please explain to me how that will work. When I get hit by a car and the ambulance shows up, are we going to negotiate my treatment then? Get real. And for those who don't understand how "the right" can force Democrats to do anything, remember the filibuster. Unless congress agrees to vote using a simple majority, the Democrats DO NOT have enough votes to pass. In the house everything would go through, but they only have 59 senators (really 58 since Byrd isn't around), and another 5 or 6 of them (cough cough Lieberman) are DINOs. So that leaves you with, at best, somewhere between 50 and 52 votes. With a simple majority, it would be enough, but a simple majority isn't allowed here.
I am suggesting this. If you need a doc, you pay for it. If I need a doc, I pay for it. If you feel like paying for someone else, do it.How do I decide that I'm going to pay for it? What you're suggesting is that the doctors can just charge whatever we like, and we have no choice but to pay their prices. You do not get an option to negotiate when you're being rushed to an emergency room. You're presenting yet another pointless, unrealistic, bullshit "solution". You might as well suggest that doctors just work for free and that medical equipment companies operate as non profits.
Just like the computers of 1995, they worked just fine.I'm going to assume here that you know very, very little about technology. You wouldn't say something so stupid if you did.
I would love socialized medicine however. That would allow me to quit my job and do free lance work. By the way, that’s the real reason why corps do not want socialized medicine.Interesting. But I wonder if companies like Boeing would prefer a NHS style medical system. Airbus currently has a cost advantage over Boeing since Airbus does not have to pay healthcare for employees. Of course, taxes for companies like Boeing may be increased to cover the costs of an NHS system.
August 29th, 2009 at 12:31 am | top | quote | email this Yes, we are free to quit practicing medicine. And then you are free to take your chances going under the knife with an underpaid, underqualified physician, once you find that all of the best talent went to another profession where they are paid appropriately for their efforts. Hopefully those excellent doctors from other countries will be able to communicate with you in a language and culture that puts you at ease, and you will somehow be able to confirm their quality of training, previous board actions etc. before you put your life in their hands. If somebody is uncomfortable with a doctor who cannot communicate or if cannot prove his credentials, they are free to choose american doctors…whats the problem. but we atleast give the consumers the FREEDOM OF CHOICE. If you believe that american people are too stupid to make decisions for themselves then you are going down the path of societ union.So the goal is to design a system where we have the freedom to choose good doctors or crappy doctors? This "FREEDOM OF CHOICE" bit seems like a strange angle on the issue. Sure- you can checkout Yelp before you get your brakes changed, but when you get broadsided at high speed in an intersection, and are rushed to the ED, or collapse with a giant heart attack or stroke, or get diagnosed with an unusually aggressive cancer where treatment should be initiated within days, etc. etc. how much time and desire will you have to be start trying to figure out if your care has been entrusted to Dr. Doright or Dr. Numnuts? What will you value most at that point, freedom of choice, or peace of mind?
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