Absolutely ridiculous. Order, you've resorted to using expletive insults in an intellectual discussion. You should know that this made you lose any respect you might have had from anyone in regards to your merit and sense. Thank you for serving. Now, kindly let it go, or get your vulgarity out of my thread.
@Sasquatch
The words: "for free" aren't anywhere in there. You know why? Because the argument sounds good when it has a loophole. You're right, if someone goes into the ER after a car accident, that person is taken care of [almost] immediately. That's great, but no one really talks about the bill they get in the mail later, do they? No. The system itself is broken beyond repair, and no I don't just mean the healthcare system. Unfortunately, even the great idea of medicine is political. Consequently, that means it's corrupt.The other choice would be what we're doing now. Everybody gets their necessary healthcare. If you need something to save your life, you will get it.
I do agree with you on the idea that "the answer is always money." However, (and maybe I should have reworded the title of this topic a bit better, but I digress,) I do not believe that money was the initial reason behind the idea of "medicine" and the beginning of scientific research in regards to it. There's a school of thought that human beings aren't born selfish, and selfishness is taught; I agree.
I would also like to add as a side note that I know a lot of people who are in the medical field (myself included) that are in it because they would like to help others.
@Heartless Angel
Since this ties into what I just stated above:
And.The word deserve invokes all sorts of sub-arguments, mostly rooted in foolish human ideas of morality.
You're right, not anymore at least. The reason I put these two quotes together is because I'd like to take a look at that "foolish human idea of morality" for a moment. The root of most, if not all ethical or moral issues is happiness. What defines that happiness is where the arguments differ. Therefore, you just argued in a moral way, but it would seem that our idea of morality is different. A few examples of what can happen when two (or more) humans disagree have already been provided in this thread, and on this site's forums alone. I see no need to show anymore (they're seen everywhere).We all look out for number one. Sometimes looking out for number one can involve helping others, but nobody is truly selfless in this world. All things have value, and consciously or not, we all calculate these values into our decisions making process.
@Martin
Thank you for sharing that information. I learned something new, which was an objective I had when I created this topic. I was certainly more ignorant to the UK healthcare system than I am now.
I know it seems that I've slightly contradicted myself in what I've previously stated, but allow me to elaborate. First, I agree with you. I also agree the essential root of most ethics/morality is the "pursuit of happiness". However, I believe that the "pursuit of happiness" is not always self-serving.Not all human nature is inherently self serving -
This is why, self-serving by definition is:
Pardon my tangent on morality, but this an ethical issue, is it not?self-serv·ing (slfsûrvng)
adj.
1. Serving one's own interests, especially without concern for the needs or interests of others.
2. Exhibiting concern solely for one's own interests
@Rowan
Thanks again for your information as well. I wasn't well acquainted with Australia's healthcare system either, and I was hoping to hear from someone from over yonder.
I felt the need to comment. Unfortunately that is a valid point, but that's a bigger can of worms I really don't care to discuss presently; world peace.If America stopped wasting their tax dollars on war then maybe they wouldn't be in this mess...
@Everyone
First, I'd like to share this as I found it ironic with all this talk of leeches:
"Commercial Leech Farming Today"
by Thomas Lux
Although it never rivaled wheat, soybean,
cattle and so on farming
there was a living
in leeches
and after a period of decline
there is again
a living to be made
from this endeavor: they’re used to reduce
the blood in tissues
after plastic surgery – eyelifts, tucks,
wrinkle erad, or in certain
microsurgeries – reattaching a finger, penis.
I love the capitalist
spirit. As in most businesses
the technology has improved: instead
of driving an elderly horse
into a leech pond, letting him die
by exsanguination,
and hauling him out
to pick the bloated blossoms
from his hide, it’s now done at Biopharm
(the showcase operation in Swansea,
Wales) – temp control, tanks, aerator
pumps, several species,
each for a specific job. Once, 19th century,
they were applied to the temple
as a treatment for mental
illness. Today we know
their exact chemistry: hirudin,
a blood thinner in their saliva,
also an anesthesia
and dilators for the wound area.
Don’t you love
the image: the Dr. lays a leech along
the tiny stitches of an eyelift.
Where they go after their work is done
I don’t know
but I’ve heard no complaints
from Animal Rights
so perhaps they’re retired
to a lake or adopted
as pets, maybe the best looking
kept to breed. I don’t know. I like the story,
I like the going backwards
to ignorance
to come forward to vanity. I like
the small role they can play
in beauty
or the reattachment of a part,
I like the story because it’s true.
Back to the healthcare discussion. I'd also like to ask what the point of "universal healthcare" is if doctor's offices won't be taking every kind of insurance? Or does the idea of "universal healthcare" incorporate that somewhere? To me that seems like just another loophole.
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