Probably "I wish the Humpbacks accepted their cylindrical friend's offer to cleanse the land."
This sounds like an excellent Photoshop/GIF opportunity.
You've said in another thread that you'd never visit another country that didn't have universal health care because those countries are all awful."Medicare for all" = single player health care.
... are you sure that was me? Because I don't remember saying anything like that.You've said in another thread that you'd never visit another country that didn't have universal health care because those countries are all awful.
You said the only countries you'd go to are Canada or in Europe and if you go anywhere else, you should expect bad things to happen to you. Those countries have Universal Health Care.... are you sure that was me? Because I don't remember saying anything like that.
If I did say that, and I'm still not sure I remember doing so, I don't think it was an argument for universal health care, but rather commentary on the stability of non-western civilization. This sounds more like something I'd have said in a thread where somebody went somewhere like Dubai and got into trouble.You said the only countries you'd go to are Canada or in Europe and if you go anywhere else, you should expect bad things to happen to you. Those countries have Universal Health Care.
I'm just saying that every country you deem stable and ok seems to have universal health care. Besides the US I guess.Point is, it sounds like you're twisting a statement and putting it in a false context.
He's taking a quote you made and drawing unsupported inferred conclusions from it, is what he's doing.it sounds like you're twisting a statement and putting it in a false context.
I know an argument I *have* made on numerous occasions is that those other countries have benefited from the medical advances that are spurred by America's capitalist approach. Especially Canada, with its famous waiting times and historically woefully low MRI-to-patient ratio. When they get really overwhelmed, they start sending patients across the lake.I'm just saying that despite it being so bad, there isn't a country gas would deign himself to visit that doesn't have it.
In this particular case, it does. Medicare sets prices and any doctor who takes Medicare has to charge those prices (and fill out a metric shit-ton of paperwork to get paid). So, Medicare-for-all becomes de facto single payer.universal health care die not necessarily mean single payer
They have to also fill out a metric shit-ton of paperwork to get paid by the private insurance companies.In this particular case, it does. Medicare sets prices and any doctor who takes Medicare has to charge those prices (and fill out a metric shit-ton of paperwork to get paid). So, Medicare-for-all becomes de facto single payer.
Fun fact: if you have money, you can just go to a private clinic, be it in Canada or South Ossetia.I know an argument I *have* made on numerous occasions is that those other countries have benefited from the medical advances that are spurred by America's capitalist approach. Especially Canada, with its famous waiting times and historically woefully low MRI-to-patient ratio. When they get really overwhelmed, they start sending patients across the lake.
Sort of how like people like to point out that America spends more on defense than our 10 most powerful allies put together... but what they don't say is that it is BECAUSE we do that our allies can rely on us to defend them (well, pre-trump perhaps) so they have the LUXURY of diverting funds from defense to socialism.
And denying you coverage = more profits.They have to also fill out a metric shit-ton of paperwork to get paid by the private insurance companies.
Not as much. I know this information because I, for years, had to watch my stepmother deal with the paperwork for her private practice with no office staff to help her with it. As an internal medicine specialist, she pretty much had to take medicare (because 90% of patients referred to internal medicine specialists are the elderly), but getting paid by Medicare was 10 times the work for her as getting paid by private insurance.They have to also fill out a metric shit-ton of paperwork to get paid by the private insurance companies.
Nah, see that's impossible in the US, because usaians are actually all mutated wolverines, that just look human, so you can't ask them to do the same things other, regular, humans can...I'm just going to point out - once again - that many European countries have everything on her list. None of these are located on pies in the sky. None are heavenly utopias either, mind.
but getting paid by Medicare was 10 times the work for her as getting paid by private insurance.
If housing and food were already recognized human rights then it wouldn't need to be a platform issue. Why would she put "the right to free speech" on her agenda? That one is covered.Well, I can see why, honestly... the first four are basically anathema. "Medicare for all" = single player health care. Housing is not a human right any more than healthcare, or for that matter, food is. A "federal jobs guarantee" sounds a lot like the wage controls that got us into this mess in the first place. Gun control/AW ban? Non-starter. Throw in "higher education for all," and you've basically got a pie-in-the-sky welfare state socialist. I can see why she won - like Romney said, it's hard to campaign against Santa Claus. But good for her in dethroning a 10-term career politician, all the same. At least she, like her role model Bernie, is straight up and open about what she wants rather than couching it in dog whistles.
It's covered because it actually is a right. My point was not that housing/food/healthcare were rights going unrecognized, but rather that they are not rights. Plus, just because you have a right to something does not mean it requires someone else to PAY for it for you, which is what she means by a right to housing. I have a right to free speech, and a right to keep and bear arms, but that does not mean the government pays to publish my words nor buys me a gun.If housing and food were already recognized human rights then it wouldn't need to be a platform issue. Why would she put "the right to free speech" on her agenda? That one is covered.
I understand your position, but it needn't be an inalienable right. It can be a right guaranteed by the government, set by the lawmakers. I know that goes against your own ideologies but it needn't be inconsistent with the laws of nature or anything.It's covered because it actually is a right. My point was not that housing/food/healthcare were rights going unrecognized, but rather that they are not rights. Plus, just because you have a right to something does not mean it requires someone else to PAY for it for you, which is what she means by a right to housing. I have a right to free speech, and a right to keep and bear arms, but that does not mean the government pays to publish my words nor buys me a gun.