Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#51
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gould 0738 wrote:
Given the choice, where do you think the brightest and best qualified medical personell would choose to work? What questions would that raise about the disparity in healthcare between the two? How long until the left starts screaming about the unequal healthcare access for the There is no doubt that somebody would try to make an issue of of the fact that a Public Health Hospital (once common in this country) didn't deliver the same level of customized, boutique medical attention available at "Sky's the Limit Clinic." Probably as good an excuse as any for the hard hearted factions on the right to justify doing *nothing*, (except allowing the private insurance companies they all hold stock in to remain obscenely profitable and charge predatory rates). Doing nothing, in this case, is better than creating a bigger boondoggle, and widening the disparity in health care. I'd rather a doctor get paid 1.5 mill, than some sports "star". I'd rather attract some people to the profession who were interested in the practice of medicine for reasons not associated with being in the top .01% of American wage earners. Many doctors want bigger salaries, in order to pay the exponentially spiraling cost of malpractice insurance. You want to put a lid on medical costs? Then sign on to tort reform. In most communities, you can live in a very fine home, vacation a few times a year, own a boat, a couple of cars, and put away plenty for an early and comfortable retirement on no more than $300-400 thousand a year. Why a guy thinks he needs five times that amount is beyond me.NOT THAT HE SHOULDN"T BE FREE TO EARN IT IF HE CAN- but it shouldn't be considered normal compensation for a 9-5 flu and sniffles pediatrician. I would be curious of the percentage of doctors, who actually MAKE that kind of exhorbinant salary. I'd be willing to bet that it's not that much. Most whom I'm acquainted with, earn 6 figures, but no more. Dave |
#52
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Doing nothing, in this case, is better than creating a bigger
boondoggle, and widening the disparity in health care. How do you widen a disparity when the have-nots are already at "zero"? The statement makes no sense. Many doctors want bigger salaries, in order to pay the exponentially spiraling cost of malpractice insurance. You want to put a lid on medical costs? Then sign on to tort reform. |
#53
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gould 0738 wrote:
Doing nothing, in this case, is better than creating a bigger boondoggle, and widening the disparity in health care. How do you widen a disparity when the have-nots are already at "zero"? Who said they have "zero"? You've already acknowleged, (And it was this revelation which was partially responsible for this splinter thread), that poor people can go to the "ER" for treatment, and that cost is passed on to real paying people. That's what prompted you to propose your "two tiered" approach to healthcare, which would therefore make it glaringly obvious, and actually seem to be promoting, that we have seperate classes of healthcare. The statement makes no sense. It does if you follow your own logic. Dave |
#54
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 20:02:06 +0000, NOYB wrote:
According to Websters: Lie (n): alternate name for that ****in' idiot named thunder. Question: "Where's the lie?" Answer: "Responding to my post with a stupid retort" LOL, didn't work for Clinton either. But it was only half in jest. Even if the statement was technically true, if the American voter decides the President was deceitful or deceptive, the President has a problem. This isn't about perjury, it's about whether the President was honest with his constituents. "thunder" wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 15:54:43 +0000, NOYB wrote: *Pretend* I'm open-minded...then answer my question: "Where's the lie?" It depends on what the meaning of the word "lie" is. |
#55
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"JohnH" wrote in message
... Harry, what did President George Bush do to Texas? Did he ruin the forests by cutting down both trees? Did he befoul the Rio Grande by dumping more mud therein? Houston was a mess long before either of the Bush's got into politics. Now the mess is worse. Part of that is due to the tax dollars being spent on the care and maintenance of illegal immigrants. John, if the state was a mess and the governor personally walks changes in the laws through the legislature, making it easier for certain industries to make MORE smog/sludge/whatever, is that a good thing or a bad thing? |
#56
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Gould 0738" wrote in message ... NOYB wrote: snip remaining paragraphs that failed to show even one "lie" in the speech Juries decide truth vs. lies. Looks like if we were on a jury deciding whether the Bush Adminsitration's SOTU speech contained any lies we'd be voting against one another. ![]() Hung juries equal acquittal. Guess we're looking at 4 more years. |
#57
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hung juries equal acquittal. Guess we're looking at 4 more years.
Is that what all this angst is about? Relax, your guy is in. You just have a little more scrambling to do to hoodwink the electorate again next year. :-) GWB will survive all this flack. It might even build his character, which could stand some improvement, and we'll all benefit as a result. GWB will survive, and maybe even emerge somewhat stronger, but I'd like to see Cheney impeached for his role in supplying faulty intelligence to the POTUS. Impeached, convicted, and removed. Bush may have only a marginal intellect, but he is manipulated by others who are not only bright, they are arguably evil as well. The most dangerous person in Washington DC isn't GWB, it's Dick Cheney. Followed by Ashcroft. But Cheney is the guy to watch, carefully. He's a heartbeat away from being POTUS. An accident or something else extremely unfortunate could befall Bush and if that should ever happen, "we ain't seen nuthin yet!" My fondest, short term, political wish is for the continuing robust health of George W. Bush...... so see, NOYB? We do have something in common :-) |
#58
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Agreed. That's the only reason this story has any teeth in the first place.
The Dems are trying to give the *appearance* of impropriety...knowing full well that there really is nothing of substance to the story. NOYB, are you old enough to remember when Nixon was on the griddle? All of RMN's supporters, clear up until the very last day when Nixon finally resigned, would lock arms and shout defiantly, "There's no proof President Nixon lied! Show us the proof! It's a Democratic witch hunt! You have no proof!" Finally, Nixon resigned his office and all the supporters switched from "There's no proof" to "Your guys have done worse than this in the past, you're only singling out Nixon because he's a Republican." Apparently when Nixon finally resigned, the issue of "proof" was rather evident. Now we should consider whether every inquiry and investigation requires absolute proof *before* it begins, or whether inquiry and investigation are conducted to develop proof. It's ridiculous to say that inquiry and investigation are inappropriate because there is no irrefutable proof. The sector of the American public outraged over the public manipulation by the Bush administration is hopping mad that there is a substantial amount of evidence that this is probably so..Whether the matter is ever tried before a body to judge whether a "legally defined" deception took place, anybody able to remember back six or eight months in time can clearly remember the speeches and publicly announced events that make up the chain of events cited by the folks who are blowing the whislte on the manipulators. Who ever told you guys that being the majority party would be easy? :-) |
#59
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
JohnH wrote in message . ..
On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 19:00:33 -0400, Harry Krause wrote: JohnH wrote: On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 04:29:52 GMT, "Kathryn Simpson" wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Uh...how about Afghanistan and Iraq, for starters, eh? So you think the Iraqi people are better off with Hussein? Come on, even the liberals aren't spouting that nonsense! Texas is a pretty big place, bigger than the area devastated by a dirty bomb. Under Bush, Texas devolved into an environmental disaster zone. I asked you for an example of where in Texas Bush has created more humanitarian and environmental damage than a dirty bomb would create. The entire state of Texas, where Bush softened or did not enforce environmental standards, especially, but not limited to, Houston. A dirty bomb tends to "dirty" a limited area. Bush sullied an entire state, and a big one at that. Do you have an answer for that or just more rhetoric? See the above. You will find that many of the folks here do nothing more than blow rhetoric. When logic and reason get them backed into a corner, they start a new thread with...more rhetoric. Keep up the good words. Indeed, that is the reich-wing M.O., along with excusing everything horrific Bush does. Harry, what did President George Bush do to Texas? Did he ruin the forests by cutting down both trees? Did he befoul the Rio Grande by dumping more mud therein? Houston was a mess long before Technically more like Pasadena, Channelview, Baytown, Texas City, etc... the pollution-causing industries are located in suburb towns east of Houston rather than Houston itself... either of the Bush's got into politics. Now the mess is worse. Part of that is due to the tax dollars being spent on the care and maintenance of illegal immigrants. Have you hugged your drain plug lately? John On the 'Poco Loco' out of Deale, MD |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|