Then have a plan that covers certain things and not other things.
I guess all those people that choose to have cancer, lost their jobs, insurance, and went bankrupt getting treatment only have themselves to blame. Getting cancer was their choice, right?
Then have a plan that covers certain things and not other things.
Word. The tips ain't that great.
Are patients ever turned away on account of them not having insurance?
Still no answer.
Save your money for your son.
We'd still have a beast military, they would just be at home, and ready to fight if we ever were to be attacked.
Btw who would attack us? Iran? With what, rocks?
Believe it or not my dad who is a doctor treats many patients w/o insurance. But there are some not sure how many who turn them away. As far as hospitals, not sure. I held a clerk job in the rad department and wasn't involved in all that.
The whole question was based on a guy doing well(ie, making money) and deciding NOT to purchase insurance... yet still wants to be treated. The ??
Depends on your definition of "beast". It should be slightly more than adequate and able.
The man says "rocks"![]()
Shhhhh. You're ruining everyone's feign-dom....
Exactly. Im all for that. Unfortunately no one in politics wants to touch the obesity epidemic in America.
I commend your dadWould you have any percentages for anything you commented on.
I just don't see how our medical community will just turn their backs on people with emergencies, illnesses, etc. If we can nurse some lunatic jackass that killed 14 people on a military base back from a coma then I can not believe that our healthcare is all that "broken". I just can't.
You'd think a man with a "proclaimed" scalpel in hand would've done that in the first place......
"I can not believe that our healthcare is all that "broken". "
It's broken, and broken badly. keeping that shooter alive is a specific, local technical achievement, not a systemic health care measure.
Yes, I did watch the debate. Yeah, he does explain himself but the initial reaction to the "should we just let him die" comment was what was strange.
There is an easy way to kill it; stop letting McDonald's brainwash kids into thinking fries and cokes are fun to ingest and a way to get a free toy.
tbh why wasn't a thread made when the crowd literally cheered the hardest for a mere mention of the death penalty during the Repub debate?
Unfortunately, not even a baseline single-payor plan can be discussed without 'socialism' being thrown around.
If you all watched the YouTube clip, he says "NO!"
so Paul and his rabid killer dog fans diverge on this key life-or-death vote?
"let the church's do it" is typical RP fantasy, right up with WC ivory tower ideology.
This. Free healthcare should be given on a case-by-case basis but some should be denied it. For starters, anyone who smokes should be responsible for all of his/her health costs.
I don't see the problem with Ron Paul's answer because of the specific question. If someone with a well paying job who can get an insurance plan for 200-300 bucks a month decides not to, he should assume the responsibility.
If the goal was to point out how flawed the free market approach to healthcare is (and I think it is a flawed approach), it was a horrible question.
Last edited by DUNCANownsKOBE; 09-13-2011 at 04:31 PM.
Then so should anyone who has ever had a drink, had a Big Mac, eaten candy, or drank a soda, or eaten red meat, doesn't run 3 miles a day, doesn't zumba once a week, isn't on P90, etc. And anyone who is "healthy" and has a heart attack needs to get their ass to the morgue on their own.
looks like someone is a smoker who tries to convince himself smoking isn't that bad
Those are in re ed comparisons. Eating unhealthy food is better than eating no food at all. Smoking cigarettes isn't better than smoking nothing at all.
With that said, being overweight is something I'd also consider a self-inflicted health problem. If someone who's a fat needs bypass surgery, it shouldn't be the taxpayer's expense. People who should get free healthcare are people who have unavoidable health problems.
So how do you prove that their health problems are unavoidable? Even the healthiest of people get diseases or have heart attacks or get clogged arteries. It happens. And not every over weight person dies from self-inflected health problems.
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