Re: BUSH IN ISREAL
- From: Dutch <leechap@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 3 Jun 2008 16:09:54 -0700 (PDT)
On Jun 3, 5:55 am, "Beldin the Sorcerer" <beldin...@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
"Dutch" <n...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in messagenews:AH%0k.327$js6.100@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
"da pickle" <jcpickels@(nospam)hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:esudnRDSjY4Nb97VRVn_vwA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Dutch"
Apparently you have not read it at all.
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/MedicaidEligibility/
"Many groups of people are covered by Medicaid. Even within these
groups, though, certain requirements must be met. These may include your
age, whether you are pregnant, disabled, blind, or aged; your income and
resources (like bank accounts, real property, or other items that can be
sold for cash);"
Who am I to believe, you, or the Medicaid website?
You seem to think (or you are just a complete dolt, of which you provide
evidence every post)
Yea, sure, let's not bother trying to maintain a modicum of respect or
decorum.
Dutch, noone respects you because you're an idiot.
You've been corrected 100 times in this thread.
By people with blinding anti-socialist bias. I have you killfiled at
home, but I'm stuck waiting at the library, so here goes nothing...
that "resources (like bank accounts, real property, or
other items that can be sold for cash" means "anything of value"
What does "anything of value" mean in this context if not "cash value"?
... it does
not ... you can have some "resources" ... if these "resources" are
"meager" enough, you can qualify for medicaid ... if they are not
"meager" enough, then you have enough "resources" to afford medical
insurance so you do NOT qualify for medicaid.
Exactly my point. People who are well off, with solid jobs, are in good
shape. People hovering around or below the poverty line are covered, but a
huge chunk of the population are not.
No, you moron.
Almost anyone can afford health insurance.
"Almost" being the operative word, hence the 47 million uninsured
Americans in 2006 (not in dispute)
Many choose not to buy it.
No doubt, many because rent and food come first, and every one of them
gets sick in their lifetime, meaning many of them end up driven to
poverty and desperation by something that that should be covered by a
social network. The rest of the world GETS this. You should not be
allowed to opt out of a fundamental NEED.
You continue to post nonsense about medical care in the USA so we have
never been able to discuss how to make our system better.
What I have posted are facts supported by legitimate cites. I'm willing to
discuss how to make your system better, but I'm not an expert. I would say
that your system should maintain most of the free-enterprise components it
has now, but in place of the hodge-podge of government sponsored services
there should be one, mandatory universal coverage, with payroll deductions
a proportion of net income. Anyone who wishes alternate insurance should
have the option to purchase it instead and have the deduction apply
towards it.
Why should anyone be forced to buy insurance for something that can't harm
anyone else?
The same reason people are all covered by police and fire protection
paid for out of taxes. Also adults make poor choices for their
children.
You refuse to do anything more than say that Canada has a "better"
system
That's a misquote and an oversimplification. The Canadian system *is*
better, for some, worse for others. What I have said is that it is
philosophically different.
and "other
civilized countries" have an even better system
That is supported by objective studies.
No, it's supported by SUBjective studies.
Every one I've seen, done by international and American organizations.
but the big picture is lost in your glee for skipping all details.
You're the one skipping details. All you want to do is categorize things
in simplistic black vs white terms that make it convenient for you to
attack.
No, convenient to debunk.
Unsuccessfully. Every bit of data supports the case for universal
medical insurance.
If you cannot afford health care insurance, you have too new a car and
too big a house and eat out too much and buy designer clothes and a
host of other things that cost money ... it is called "living beyond
your means" ... it is not that complicated to understand.
That's a possible scenario, but what about people who do none of the
above and still can't afford medical insurance? Why do you assume that
everyone can afford insurance? Or rather why do you assume that anyone
who can't must be a fool and wastrel? Deducting a proportion of
everyone's wages for medical insurance solves that problem. Nobody can
foolishly ignore their health needs.
You keep changing what you say to something new. You use words
foolishly. Your argument is obfuscation.
No I am not. Every time I pose the same dilemma, you skate around it, so I
restate it. The obfuscation is in your perception.
No, Pickel perceives this issue correctly.
You share his myopia
It's a matter of choice, complicated by your total lack of understanding
about what 'afford' means.
Choice? Can Americans choose to smoke pot, take heroine or cocaine?
"Choice" is a smokescreen for anti-socialist throwback dogmatism.
YOU started the discussion about not being able to pay your monthly
bills. Now you want to say the person you are talking about has "none of
the above" ... do you mean that the person has no mortgage and no car and
"can't afford" these things? There are many people that might fit that
description. We have many people drawing food stamps, living in
subsidized housing, working a little on the side for cigarettes, getting
"free" medical care ... do you see a disincentive for those folks to
start working on their own?
I'm NOT TALKING about people on food stamps, that is and has been all
along a diversion that you have introduced. I realize that they are
covered, although the issue of how well thy are covered is another
discussion. I'm talking about working people, families whose jobs and
budgets are inadequate to afford medical insurance. And yes there will be
some who simply don't bother out of foolishness.
As for "foolish" people ... ignoring their health needs is not the only
thing they are foolish about. Why do you only pick that one? (I know
you don't really want to stop there ... you are more than willing to let
the government prevent people from being foolish with their time and
talent and treasure.)
That's the philosphical point I have been trying to get across. As
Canadians, British, French, Germans, etc.. we simply are not willing to
stand by and watch people go without medical care, just as you do not let
people opt out of paying taxes and decline police and fire protection. We
see medical care as part of shared social responsibility.
It isn't the same at all.
A different kind of risk, with far different likelihoods and liabilities to
the rest of the area.
It is perceived by the rest of the civilized world as part of that
group. I may be a minority opinion on this newsgroup, but not in the
rest of the world, maybe not even in America any more.
Labels are meaningless, compartmentalizing others makes it easier for
you, but it does not elucidate anything. In the context of Canadian
thinking on health insurance I am considered ANTI-socialist.
By whom, the communists?
That shows how little you understand of how Canadians view health care
insurance. The vast majority, from all sides of the spectrum, are of the
view that is is inherently wrong for anyone to receive superior health
care as a result of being financially better off than another person. It
is seen as similar to a wealthy person receiving better police protection.
To put it another way, health care is seen as a fundamental right.
Dutch, you're a shithead.
Rich people DO receive better police protection.
If they do, it is due to a flawed police force. In principle, every
citizen should get the same.
What do people who pay for "private alternatives" get that is not
already provided by the government?
They get quicker access instead of going on a waiting list. There are
clinics with MRIs, and those that do hip replacements, etc. I think this
helps the system, by shortening the waiting lists.
That's it, huh ... just the waiting list for MRIs and hip replacements
... and the "etc."
Here's the website for the new one in our area
http://www.nationalsurgery.com/FCSC/index.phpI hadn't looked at it
before. They offer quite a range of procedures. This a new concept in
Canada, still very controversial.
I thought you had "universal health care?" I must have misunderstood.
I've told you repeatedly that you are misconstruing the meaning of
universal health care, but you think you know everything. It means that
everyone is covered by one medical insurance plan, and that plan covers
all medically necessary services, and the amount each person pays is
proportionate to his income, up to a maximum.
Everyone is "covered" but being covered does not mean that "all medically
necessary services" are available "universally" ... as a matter of fact,
those that live in some places have more "services" available to them ....
but even they might be covered but unable to avail themselves of the
services at the time they need it.
No insurance plan can change physical reality, some large hospitals have
more facilities or better doctors, or whatever. That's true everywhere.
Yes, but in the US, our for-profit health care has more services available
BY FAR.
I wouldn't throw out existing service levels, the system just needs to
be applied more broadly, so everyone gets basic comprehensive care,
paid for by income-based taxation. The result would be a great system,
easier to manage the government portion, cheaper overall, with gold
standard care available to those who want it, and nobody would be left
out. As it stands the government in the US is already the largest
single provider of health insurance, and it still leaves millions of
people out.
.
To address a silly objection you have raised before, every participant
in the plan is entitled to equal access to care, within reason.
Obviously if there is a top heart specialist 4000 miles away, you will
not be flown across the country to see him unless there is a very good
reason, you will see someone qualified in your own geographic region.
I don't think you've ever explained what you think "universal health
care" means.
I think the term "universal health care" is a political term used to fool
people into thinking that the government knows best what you need and
want and should have when you think you are sick.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_health_care
Universal health care, or universal healthcare, is health care coverage
which is extended to all citizens, and sometimes permanent residents, of a
governmental region. Universal health care programs vary widely in their
structure and funding mechanisms, particularly the degree to which they
are publicly funded. Typically, most health care costs are met by the
population via compulsory health insurance or taxation, or a combination
of both.
You seem to think that the terms "very good reason" and "qualified" are
not words of art. They are rationing words like "waiting list" and
"underfunded" and "better equipment not available" ... and many others
that you seem
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