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2007 Apr 15, 5:24am   39,933 views  399 comments

by Peter P   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

New math and new paradigm. How will they shape our future?

To advance, we must imagine the unthinkable and consider the impossible.

What are such unthinkable or impossible housing events? If we are creative enough, we may be able to analyze them to gain valuable insights.

#housing

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392   astrid   2007 Apr 17, 9:46am  

smarter jukubots, please!

393   astrid   2007 Apr 17, 9:47am  

Surfer-X,

Mazel tov!

394   Huntington Moneyworth III, Esq   2007 Apr 17, 9:49am  

Hey, I'm not a bot! I guess my post does sound very botish though.

Seriously, any Valencia area info would be great.

395   surfer-x   2007 Apr 17, 9:52am  

astrid tanks!

396   Huntington Moneyworth III, Esq   2007 Apr 17, 9:53am  

And just to add to the conversation, yes UnitedHealthcare blows. Kaiser has been great.

397   astrid   2007 Apr 17, 10:08am  

Oh fine...sorry to J. Pake if he or she is a real person. :)

398   astrid   2007 Apr 17, 10:09am  

Or a smarter bot! I should not insult my future robot overlords either.

399   Different Sean   2007 Apr 17, 11:33am  

there ya go...

SAN FRANCISCO / Bill Clinton calls U.S. health care 'uneconomical'

SF
Sunday, April 15, 2007

The dire state of the nation's health care system is threatening the country's well-being, former President Bill Clinton told a receptive crowd in San Francisco on Saturday.

'Our health care system is immoral because it doesn't provide health care to everybody,' said Clinton, the keynote speaker at KCBS Health Etc., a daylong symposium at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. 'It's wildly uneconomical. We pay more than everybody else in the world for less.'

'It is sowing the seeds of its own destruction,' said Clinton, who said health care is one of the top three problems the country faces, along with economic inequality and energy dependence.

Like a patient professor trying to break down a complex issue for his students, Clinton used a plethora of statistics, and a touch of humor, in his indictment of the current state of American health care.

He said the United States spends 16 percent its national income on health care, compared with 11 percent in Canada and Switzerland, the countries with the next highest spending. That gap represents $800 billion a year, he said.

Yet the United States ranks only 37th in the world in overall health care, insures fewer of its citizens, and pays more for its drugs, Clinton said.

Almost a third of U.S. health care spending goes to administrative costs, the highest in the world, he said.

"We're letting the health insurance financing tail wag the health-care dog," he said.

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