What could be more oppressive than a government system?
— synthesis
Corporate power. — Tom Storm
I asked how disabilities fit into your scheme. Your answer was flippant. — Banno
The main reason why I am opposed to the eradication of the health care system which we have is that I think that it may end up being replaced by a far more oppressive one. I think that any new system which could be implemented may give less empowerment to individuals and be more coercive, and restricting of civil liberties and less favourable towards vulnerable minority groups. — Jack Cummins
Truth.
Justice.
Kindness.
Democracy.
Respect for person.
— unenlightened
Good answer. I've known many people who have chosen those values over making money many times over. — Tom Storm
Do you see any problems with this? — tim wood
Yes the current system is broken, well past broken. Letting it die and rebuilding means accepting responsibility for our own health and seeking out skilled practitioners to supplement our own knowledge. Damned few of us would be willing to accept that. I would, my wife would. Sounds like you would too. But we know the system, we lived it, we see the monumental flaws within it. — Book273
The healthcare system works in almost all countries. — god must be atheist
I don't see that you have given the issues here much thought at all. — Banno
My current understanding is that the cost of energy will rise in the near future, having reached peek oil, and this will slow economic growth, but there's no immediate end in sight. — praxis
Dare I ask, What do you think of Medicare? :scream: — jgill
Or maybe you think folks should take care of their own or their family's surgical needs or other medical needs themselves? — tim wood
SO how do those with disabilities fit your scheme? — Banno
If you simply mean that capitalism and the global banking system is unsustainable then yeah, no-shit Sherlock, but if you mean anything more specific it would be interesting to hear. — praxis
Based on my experience of working in England, it is hard to balance the emphasis on quality of patient care and statistics. I think that it fluctuates, but both are seen as important. — Jack Cummins
That's like hoping that the guy who rapes your sister is (at least) good looking. The answer is to get rid of the government and the corporations and give health care back to individuals and very small companies.At the moment, we have government funded healthcare, and I just hope it continues. — Jack Cummins
The government-corporate coalition that controls health care pretty much everywhere is about as authoritarian as it gets. In the U.S., un-affordable medical/hospital bills are the number one cause of personal bankruptcy and has been for many years.Hopefully, my fears of totalitarian authority are not going to come into medicine and the direction will be one of empowering people to make their own decisions about health. — Jack Cummins
I always come to doctors (and most any kind of expert) with all the information I can and what analysis I’ve done of it myself and where I got stuck trying to figure it all out myself (which is why I’m now seeking expert help)... and more often than not come away with an off-the-shelf non-solution that doesn’t account for most of the details of my particular case. — Pfhorrest
If it's good, why is there [not] an outcry against it? If it's bad how did it become a multi-billion dollar franchise? — TheMadFool
The problem is that our youth is spent absorbing knowledge and our dotage is spent gaining experience and so, quite naturally, we're all dead by the time the word "expert" is applicable to us. — TheMadFool
And yet doctors and other medical professionals routinely expect their patients to blindly trust them and obey them. They hate an informed patient. — baker
I thought the 1950s were the years of 'mindless conformity'! — Bitter Crank
What does this all mean? It means we all commonly rely upon the expertise of others, largely to our benefit, and recommending that we rely upon own personal novice opinions for serious matters due to a paranoid fear they're conspiring against you, is irresponsible and irrational. — Hanover
No-one's arguing against self-education in general. We're all for that. We are arguing though against maximalist scepticism of the naive and impractical species you're advocating. It's precisely because I have educated myself on many areas including the way the virus works that I know your position is at best silly and at worst utterly nonsensical. — Baden
It doesn't follow that they're actively trying to harm me. Or that I need to learn their job in order to analyze every bit of advice they give me. Skepticism isn't always justified or helpful and maximalism in the area is likely downright unhealthy if not practically impossible. — Baden
Good point. Right now, I'm researching PES (Pecker Ego Syndrome). An interesting condition that results in unabashed and unjustifiable levels if self-confidence. — Baden
Example. taking responsibility for the health and well-being of a child requires both knowledge and actions based thereon. Lacking those, "taking responsibility" is just an empty phrase which means exactly that responsibility was not taken. — tim wood
I can tell that you've probably not taken a single course in virology and I wouldn't rely upon your knowledge on the subject, regardless of how many hours you spent Googling. — Hanover
I'm a moron when it comes to virology. Did you figure out a cure on your own or maybe you relied on someone else? — Hanover
Next time you go to the emergency room, I hope you get this response. You don't just "figure out" every health issue for yourself. If those in charge get a pandemic wrong by listening to those whose egos considerably outweigh their intellect, the consequence is death and economic destruction on a far greater scale than we have now. — Baden
Meaning? Your point? In your admirable effort to be terse you left those out - or I'm just not getting them. — tim wood