devnull
Philosopher
It's on Australian TV again, saw it years ago.
How close is it to the truth?
How close is it to the truth?
Extremely close. Michael Moore is one of the most serious, diligent, and impartial documentarians in the past 50 years. You should view his reporting on America as the same as having lived there yourself for many years and gained the knowledge through direct personal experience.It's on Australian TV again, saw it years ago.
How close is it to the truth?
Extremely close. Michael Moore is one of the most serious, diligent, and impartial documentarians in the past 50 years. You should view his reporting on America as the same as having lived there yourself for many years and gained the knowledge through direct personal experience.
So that's one for "complete and utter crap" then
Is it not true people go bankrupt even with medical insurance?
Obvious sarcastic remark above, but I for one would appreciate a factual discussion of Sicko. I currently believe that it is an exaggerated version of reality, but based on very real problems. Convince me otherwise.
AFAIR when i looked at it half a decade ago, some part were definitively based in truth (very low or near zero personal cost of social medicine for sick patient in europe, getting dropped from insurance in the US, or some treatment being refused because the insurance feels you should not get them IIRC more or less half of the docu), some part were theatrical and can be ignored safely (visit in cuba, visit of guatanamo). Eliminate all the cuba part and you got something which is very near the truth.
I remember darkly that there were some critic from people, but most were based on ridiculous conservative prejudice or misinformed points (like extremely long queue in socialized medicine country).
What part of the Cuba bit was nonsense?
I've never stepped over a dying person to go to work. This isn't Mexico or Honduras!This is all so foreign to many us.... foreigners.... though. Of course, we pay a lot more tax, but then we dont have to step over dying people on the way to work.
There are merits to such a system. I prefer to take responsibility for my own care on my own terms.Id rather pay the tax. In fact, I pay 1.5% extra because I refuse to get private health insurance and I earn over a certain cap. Happy to do it.
Then Moore did what he set out to do. The situation was not as bad as he made it out to be. And why shouldn't doctors be as rich as they possibly can be? Don't they provide one of the fundamentally necessary services of a society?Forget the cuba nonsense. What stuck with me was mainly the treatment of 911 first responders, the overpowering sense that americans appear to be missing the empathy gene (why should we pay for someone else?), and the overpowering sense that the expectation in the US is that a doctor should be massively rich, and not just comfortably rich.
America is not unique there.If I had to point at a root cause though, Id point at how the senate works (lobbying etc). The whole structure just seems wrong and rife for abuse.
Well, sorry, perhaps not nonsense but perhaps a little sensationalist. I mean, there's no real way of knowing whether longer term outcomes in cuba would have been any better or worse than under the american system, apart from cost. And perhaps the quality of care in cuba was overplayed just a little.
And why shouldn't doctors be as rich as they possibly can be? Don't they provide one of the fundamentally necessary services of a society?
I've never stepped over a dying person to go to work. This isn't Mexico or Honduras!
There are merits to such a system. I prefer to take responsibility for my own care on my own terms.
Then Moore did what he set out to do. The situation was not as bad as he made it out to be.
And why shouldn't doctors be as rich as they possibly can be? Don't they provide one of the fundamentally necessary services of a society?
America is not unique there.
I just did a quick check on medication. I am recently diagnosed with diabetes and I am on metformin, rosuvastatin for blood pressure and seretide for asthma.
Locally my prescription ( with no discounts) comes to $63.19. The best I could find from discount clubs etc came to $329.85 in the USA. Currency was converted to AUD for consistency.
I'm on metformin, perindipol, arvarostatin and amlodapine. Cost to me - nothing. Bless our NHS.
