C
Chibibar
I understand. I am saying if the charge was 42$, it is STILL high for people who have little or no money.hold on. that's the cost, not what is charged. as it said, it doesn't include staff fees.
I understand. I am saying if the charge was 42$, it is STILL high for people who have little or no money.hold on. that's the cost, not what is charged. as it said, it doesn't include staff fees.
Also don't forget the most important thing.I would like to point out that the sensitivity of ANY test is imperfect. Basically, if you want to catch all of the cheaters, you have to also accuse a lot of clean people of doing drugs. Or, if you want to be more conservative and not accuse clean folks of drug abuse, you'll miss a lot of drug users who can avoid getting caught very easily. Those are your only two choices with any test. It is like the judicial system. Do you throw someone in jail with weak evidence, possibly throwing lots of innocent people into jail too, or do you make absolutely sure that you catch them, in which case lots of criminals go free. You can reduce the risks of either of these occurring only by improving the sensitivity of the test, but until then the risk is very high.
In an ideal world where you have a good drug test that only catches drug users and nobody else AND also never misses a drug user, there might be a case for implementing some kind of screening system, assuming it is also cheap and easy to administer. The world of drug testing is far from ideal, though. The reality is that it is science fiction right now. The technology for that kind of accuracy does not exist.
Read up on false negatives and false positives here with regards to trying to catch athletes that dope.
Oh really? And the part where I posted this:You didn't cite any studies. You cited your personal opinion, much did I. Krisken however, did cite a study and I will address that in a minute.
That's just personal opinion, is it?A Florida television station, WFTV, reported that of the first 40 applicants tested, only two came up positive, and one of those was appealing. The state stands to save less than $240 a month if it denies benefits to the two applicants, but it had to pay $1,140 to the applicants who tested negative. The state will also have to spend considerably more to defend the policy in court.
In truth, there were probably a lot of false negatives in there if they were getting 98% negatives. That's exactly part of the problem with trying to rely on insensitive tests for this kind of thing.Yeah, isn't this the same testing that amusingly showed that 98% of welfare recipients were clean? I thought that was an awesome win for humanity, and a bold strike against stereotypes. That means that the testing move ended up backfiring, possibly costing more than it was supposed to save.
Link: http://colorlines.com/archives/2011...emented_drug_tests_discrediting_governor.html
Also, knowing the prior would allow us to backtrack to determine the test sensitivity.Could work out an estimation through conditional prob. if I knew the failure rate of the test. This is the posterior, so we could backtrack to the prior.
And that is completely understandable. it's like someone who never left the town i am in thinking there are almost no black people in the world, though. Sometimes our first hand knowledge isn't broad enough to get the whole picture.Hard to think of them as the minority when all you've seen them as is the majority....
Don't worry, Dave. After they get a felony record, they'll permanently lose the ability to vote, so their opinion will no longer matter....they get incarcerated and the prison systems - a cash cow for the states - make money. But I guess again since it's the poor that doesn't matter, right?
If you want to save money on education, hell yeas.To reiterate what charlie already posted, being poor and a drug user doesn't mean you shouldn't be able to get help. The act of using drugs, illegal or otherwise, does not make you a subhuman. Although that is often what is thought.
Can we drug test all the college students receiving government aid for education, too? Or, since they aren't poor, do they not count?
THIS is why I've always against this kind of thing. It inevitably turns out to be some rich asshole trying to get richer by taking advantage of the ignorance of people.No one's mentioned the drug testing company doing the tests is owned by the governor's wife . . .
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/money/gov-rick-scotts-drug-testing-policy-stirs-suspicion-1350922.html
That doesn't just apply in this case, that's basically capitalism.It inevitably turns out to be some rich asshole trying to get richer by taking advantage of the ignorance of people.
In this case it's blatant fraud and utilizing public office for a conflict of interest.That doesn't just apply in this case, that's basically capitalism.
Well, there goes any credibility the program might've had.No one's mentioned the drug testing company doing the tests is owned by the governor's wife . . .