TFian
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2010
- Messages
- 1,226
Experience a pleasant sensation.
Are you asking if I think it's a good thing?
Experience a pleasant sensation.
Less well off people, and just suffering in general.
Because most humans have emapthy. It actually hurts people to know that others are suffering, to the point that they are willing to share their resources to reduce that suffering.
Of course, if you want anything done in the Greek public medical system you can always pay extra for it with a well-placed bribe. Maybe a couple of hundred Euros in a fakelaki (envelope) to the general surgeon to put your father at the head of the line for a colectomy. Perhaps some well-placed Euros to the charge nurse to make sure she watches your sister. My mother, who lives in Greece, relates to me that this system of bribery is endemic and almost institutionalized. In a country where doctors who elect to work for the state barely make what a garbageman makes over here, not only are there shortages of trained doctors in the public system but they have very little incentive to make the system work and the fakelaki is necessary and expected.
And things like hemodialysis or Critical Care? Not if you are elderly or poor. You are going to die, just like Darwin intended, because in Greece as in most socialized countries they do not keep the weak and the helpless alive when they become a burden to the state. That’s the secret of socialized medicine. It’s like Logan’s Run. When your life-clock runs out you are done. Finito. Buh-bye. So sorry. Appreciate the taxes and everything but now it’s time to pay the bazouki player.
What’s my point? Nothing really, except you get what you pay for. Providing the high level of medical care that is expected by the American public is not cheap. Attempts to nationalize, socialize, quasi-socialize, or we-swear-we’re-not-going-to-socialize will do nothing to lower costs unless medical care is strictly and severely rationed. Oh sure, you can get yer’ stinking ineffectual primary care provided by a poorly-trained Nurse Practitioner but when your heart starts to give out or you need a new knee, well, you will see the truth to the adage that free health care is great as long as you don’t need it.
Yeah it really is like that, that's why all of us in countries with UHC are clamouring to have it taken away from us.
The Canadians sure are.
So is MEP Daniel Hannan
Yep, you are right. You are so totally not wrong.
Anyway, my point is nations that don't spend money on healthcare will do better than ones that don't, since they don't have to content with the aging population.
When Medicare is finally cut, we'll have a huge relief on healthcare costs here.
You might want to edit that until it makes sense - or as much sense as your other posts, at least.
We won't be bankrupt from aging population costs though.
Europe's not going to look pretty with all those free loading elderly outnumbering the working youth.
No problem, they just plan to make us work till we drop.
The Canadians sure are.
So is MEP Daniel Hannan
Shame. I'd rather let the elderly just die. They had their time.
I'm so glad to be American![]()
What's particularly worrying about this quote is that I suspect you believe it; you are condoning the effective murder of the elderly by witholding medical treatment..
you can't see what's wrong with this, as opposed to be merely tongue in cheek, then you seriously need help. Seriously.
How peculiar.
I'm not sure why that is. We simply have a difference of opinion on how long the benefit of living should be extended at large to the elderly. Why spend 300,000 dollars just so some dementia case can live another 6 months?
Well, I agree our current system sucks, but I really don't want to see a universal health system. That being said, I feel the battle will probably be waged in the states, with some going the way of Alaska, or Vermont. We'll see who wins I suppose.