Republicans are starting to give up the game more and more.
“Give up” like ”reveal?” Or like “abandon?”Republicans are starting to give up the game more and more.
Giving up the game in this context means showing your hand before you play it, so "Reveal". Quitting the game would be "abandon".“Give up” like ”reveal?” Or like “abandon?”
Rats, I was hoping maybe you were saying that it's a sign they're finally losing confidence in their chances of winning the election.Giving up the game in this context means showing your hand before you play it, so "Reveal". Quitting the game would be "abandon".
They ARE losing confidence. Why do you think they stopped the stimulus talks to ram through the SC nomination? Why do you think Trump is stuffing letters about how great he is doing into aid boxes? Why do you think all of them keep bringing up the validity of mail in voting? Best case for them they create enough division that the SC gets involved in the election.Rats, I was hoping maybe you were saying that they're losing confidence in their chances of winning the election.
Oh, I know they’re losing confidence. I was just hoping they were being forced to admit it.They ARE losing confidence.
That's unfair. Papa Nurgle actually cares about people.He's a fucking creature of Nurgle. A literal plaguebearer if not a Great Unclean One. It should be a CRIME for him to be in a room with other people right now.
One of my coworkers just told me that he has decided NOT to vote this year, because ”...the country right now is just a big, festering wound, and covering it with a salve right now isn’t going to change the fact that it’s just going to need to be amputated later. I voted third-party last election, and if someone put a gun to my head right now and told me to choose between Trump or Biden, my answer would be, ‘I am coming, Harambe!’”My son - who has absolutely 0 interest in politics and has not voted in his 29 years on the planet - is going to vote Biden. He hates Trump so much and the things the republicans are doing, he's going to vote. I can't stress enough how big this is. If they can motivate MY SON they can motivate anyone.
Papa cares, but them plaguebearers are whining, moaning pieces of shit.That's unfair. Papa Nurgle actually cares about people.
Most people, even doctors, care more about their job then their oaths. Look what happens with cops too.Something something Hippocratic Oath?
Removing health care from the employers responsibility is the biggest step in this direction. Which is why republicans are so against it. Government provided healthcare means people don’t have to fear dying, or their family dying, because they lost their job.We need to put less pressure on the job, the need for one just to survive, or nothing is going to change.
Then it will need to be structured such that it cannot be denied to any citizen for any reason, which is honestly how it should be in the first place. There's no reason the right to healthcare can't be another one of those things that "...shall not be infringed."Maybe the quickest short-term fix is government-run single-payer, but that's going to open up another can of worms when the winds of governmental power change and the wrong people are in charge.
As we've learned, there is nothing that cannot be denied if nobody is willing (or able) to hold those in power to account.Then it will need to be structured such that it cannot be denied to any citizen for any reason, which is honestly how it should be in the first place. There's no reason the right to healthcare can't be another one of those things that "...shall not be infringed."
--Patrick
The free market was subverted and circumvented. Collusion is anathema to competition, and competition is what make free market solutions work - and is why collusion is usually made illegal in some way, shape, or form in most capitalist endeavors. That was the second true failing of health care in this country (the first was the WW2 Government freezing wages, which led to the creation of employer-provided "health insurance" as an alternate form of compensation, which is REALLY how we got into this mess in the first place).The free market failed in healthcare. There is no way to fix it without the government either providing their option, or the government regulating the hell out of the insurance companies, the providers, the pharmaceutical companies, and cracking down on frivolous lawsuits.
Both options can be manipulated by whatever administration is in power.
Except that a private company representing even a few hundred thousand people can't compete with the negotiating power of the US government, in regards to drug and service pricing. That's the entire reason the US government is forbidden by law from negotiating prescription drug prices for Medicare and Medicaid; if they could, suddenly drug companies lose billions of dollars. Mind you, this is abnormal: most countries with social healthcare programs DO negotiate and they pay pennies on what we pay.Wouldn’t allowing everyone to use Medicaid if they chose it provide some competition to health insurance companies, ideally causing them to improve their services or lower prices? Instead of forcing everyone to use single payer, or leaving everyone to navigate the current market, people would have a choice. And hopefully that choice would make companies strive to be a better alternative that would attract customers.
I don’t necessarily disagree. I just don’t see any other way this could get better without it. Honestly, we need to change not only the drug pricing and insurance side of things, but also how we treat people.The free market was subverted and circumvented. Collusion is anathema to competition, and competition is what make free market solutions work - and is why collusion is usually made illegal in some way, shape, or form in most capitalist endeavors. That was the second true failing of health care in this country (the first was the WW2 Government freezing wages, which led to the creation of employer-provided "health insurance" as an alternate form of compensation, which is REALLY how we got into this mess in the first place).
I'm not dumb, I can see the writing on the wall that everyone's clamoring for socialized medicine, and it's inevitable at this point - just a question of when. But because I am who I am, I feel it important to point out that putting a single entity in charge of all of it, when it's so essential to your well being, just makes you a slave to whoever runs the government, instead of being a slave to your employer. We're quite potentially just trading one tyrant for another, in the right circumstances - and one much harder and more dangerous to dislodge.
I haven’t listened to this yet, but I’m hoping it also discusses the stunning (to some) revelation that “healthcare” is not something that should remain dormant until after a patient gets sick, it should also apply to available processes/procedures which postpone/prevent illness(es) in the first place. Even down to such basic things as nutrition, exercise, and environment. Yes, that means some level of your gym membership should be considered as part of healthcare.Here is an interesting take on changing the thought process from treating an illness in a patient, to actually treating the patient.
It does, and to do that it talks about changing doctors from a fee per visit to a service basically. That way you aren’t incentivizing people to not see the doctor when they should, which reduces more expensive issues later on, and reduces the push for doctors to do more costly procedures either to bring in more money, or because they don’t know their patients well enough to know what they should/shouldn’t need.I haven’t listened to this yet, but I’m hoping it also discusses the stunning (to some) revelation that “healthcare” is not something that should remain dormant until after a patient gets sick, it should also apply to available processes/procedures which postpone/prevent illness(es) in the first place. Even down to such basic things as nutrition, exercise, and environment. Yes, that means some level of your gym membership should be considered as part of healthcare.
—Patrick