JEROME DA GNOME
Banned
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2007
- Messages
- 8,837
It's actually $2,600 per person public spending for the US, which is topped up to $6,000 by private spending.

You are still adding parts to the whole which are expressed in the whole.
It's actually $2,600 per person public spending for the US, which is topped up to $6,000 by private spending.

Also, it would have been nice if he'd provided a link to the data instead of shouting "liar" at you.
Does that not give you pause for thought? DOes that not cause you to doubt the ability of the market to provide the best system? Does it not piss you off royally that you, on average, pay $4,000 more per year than I do and you get worse healthcare?
Besides, WE DO NOT HAVE TO WAIT 6 MONTHS FOR HEALTH-CARE!!!
Ohh, you never answered: Why do Canadians come to America and pay out of pocket for health-care that they could get for "free" if American health-care is inferior?
Perhaps you should ask that of a Canadian?
You are still adding parts to the whole which are expressed in the whole.
If you are stating that the National health-care system in Canada provides better care than I shall ask you.
Nothing you are writing here is true.
I am sorry that you are unable to understand, but you are not comparing the same things. You have jumbled all sorts of things together and some times you even add the same thing multiple times.
Besides, WE DO NOT HAVE TO WAIT 6 MONTHS FOR HEALTH-CARE!!!
Ohh, you never answered: Why do Canadians come to America and pay out of pocket for health-care that they could get for "free" if American health-care is inferior?
Does that not give you pause for thought? Does that not cause you to doubt the ability of the market to provide the best system? Does it not piss you off royally that you, on average, pay $4,000 more per year than I do and you get worse healthcare?
So, nobody dies or suffers due to lack of medical attention in the US because they can't afford it?
Correct.
SUMMARY
These estimates of condition-specific excess deaths annually among uninsured adults:
- 1,300-1,400 due to unidentified and undertreated hypertension,
- 360-600 among women with breast cancer, and
- 1,200-1,500 among HIV-infected adults,
are meant to be illustrative. They provide a sense of how the overall mortality risk for uninsured adults, estimated here to be on the order of 18,000 excess deaths among uninsured adults annually, is comprised of elevated mortality rates across many disease categories. All of these excess deaths among uninsured adults occur among relatively young Americans, those under the age of 65.
The report quoted above says otherwise:
That estimates 18,000 excess deaths. Since one excess death would prove your statement wrong, would you care to reconsider?
The report quoted above says otherwise:
That estimates 18,000 excess deaths. Since one excess death would prove your statement wrong, would you care to reconsider?
zooterkin said:So, nobody dies or suffers due to lack of medical attention in the US because they can't afford it?
JEROME DA GNOME said:Correct.
zooterkin said:The report quoted above says otherwise.
That estimates 18,000 excess deaths. Since one excess death would prove your statement wrong, would you care to reconsider?
If government Medicaid is currently allowing people in the system to die, why would we want more governmnet provided health-care for more people?
Population control?
Please evidence that if government provided health-care for all citizens that these people would be alive.

Jerome, you know that one cancer patient who died?
Or, hey, how about this?
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19207050/
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_1394147c9adbaa101d.jpg[/qimg]
Goalpost moving is very intellectually dishonest
... It points to the current system not working. If you want to say it'll persist after reform, go ahead. But ..
So uh.. Jerome is arguing that they'd have died anyway. OK.
http://abcnews.go.com/WN/Health/story?id=3240851&page=1
Here are two cases.