backhoeboogie":sx8iy04w said:
Don't be sitting on those hands any more. It makes people think you are riding the fence.
Don't get me started, I don't want to be the one who gets this thread locked. Unfortunately the one in Coffee Shop (about the Supremem Court ruling) was locked before I ever got to catching up).
People who want to ride the fence do not want to be on my side of the fence. Or else they cannot make up their minds.
I am very liberal when it comes to making coffee. I put in twice as much coffee grounds as I should.
Sounds good to me, especially 1st thing in the morning. A good strong cup of coffee in the morning is hard to beat!
Other than that............
Okay, I'll add my :2cents: about 1 thing, and I'll try not to get the thread locked in the process. "Poor people" and "the uninsured"
DO have access to quality healthcare. I'm sick and tired of hearing that they don't. At several times in my life I did not have health insuarance, I needed healthcare, I had access and I paid for it. A couple of times it wasn't cheap, I set up a payment plan with the hospital for the ER visit. I set up a payment plan with the dentist when necessary. In fact, after I had health insurance it cost more! A very dear friend of ours was having issues, (long story short) he ended up with one of the better Cardiologists in town, at the time he was not on Medicare nor did he have insurance, nor did he have much money. Diagnosed w/Atrial Fibrillation. He got the care he needed, Dr. charged on a sliding scale, he made payments, it didn't break him. His prescriptions are cheaper if he pays out of pocket than if he signed up for a prescription plan. He has since reached "retirement" age. He also went through 2 bouts with cancer, colon and rectal. He only has regular Medicare, no supplemental, no prescrip. He got treatment right away, applied for a grant (from a privately funded outfit) to help with Chemo cost, he qualified (chemo only) had his radiation, 3 surgeries and is now cancer free. He had access to healthcare. He made payments, reasonable amounts. He is happy.
If healthcare goes Governmental/socialized, there will not be private "foundations" which are funded purely by charitable donations, Doctors will no longer have any control over their billing and therefore not be able to "cut a break" now and then. They will not have the "say" they have now as to treatment options. Treatments will not happen as expiditiously as they do now. People who want "extra" tests, etc who are willing and able to pay for them themselves(out of pocket) will no longer be able to do so.
I do agree that healthcare costs are waaay more costly than they should be, that change can start with Tort reform (as mentioned previously be someone else). My regular general practitioner finally quit and retired early due to the cost of malpractice insurance, I couldn't blame him. A change needs to be made for sure, but not in the form of socialized medicine. We (the U.S.A.) can't afford it. The Gov't cannot afford to run the healthcare system the way it operates now.
Okay, I'm done trying not to rant. Hopefully my ramblings are read the way I meant them to be. <---------(here's a good place to insert a "stirring the pot" smiley)
How's that Boogie?
Katherine