I don't think you can have it both ways on health care. The goal of privatization is not to make a system more efficient, even in practice is almost always creates more levels of bureaucracy it set out to destroy with the added bonus of unchecked corruption. The movie makes its point very clear; the system doctors, nurses and other officials have to work under is based on money. Not on helping people and definitely not on stats concerning patients, wait times ect...
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SiCKO by Michael Moore
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whats the big issue here, you are better than slovenia, think abut burzum!!!!!!!! :xOriginally posted by TysonThere is no such thing as hoologians there are only football supporters.Originally posted by HeavenSentHello? Ever tried to show a Muslim a picture of Mohammed? I dare anyone to try. You will die.Originally posted by IzorWomen should never be working in the first place.
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Originally posted by Kolar View PostThe goal of privatization is not to make a system more efficient
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Quick Americans, V is attacking your way of life, KILL HIM, KILL HIM NOW!
EDIT: couldn't let this go.
Originally posted by Scoop View PostI am glad all of you non Americans care and "know" so much about our country. It makes me feel special that people like vihta are so obsessed with us. :turned:The only TWO TIME TWLJ All-Star and TWLB All-Star who never played a game.
Originally posted by Richard CreagerAll space detectives come armed with tcp/ip persona blasting pistols, it's required for their line of duty. Silly of both maisoul and goddess to not know this before hand, they get what they deserved, fucking zapped, bitches.
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It's not that he's attacking our way of life, really.
Hi, I'm ConcreteSchlyrd, and I'm going to try and voice a little reality.
Vihta, you know you and I are cool--never been any bad blood between us. But at least part of the reason some of the Americans on this board get a little upset over threads like these is because a lot of non-Americans on this board like to rip headlines directly from Hollywood or E! and apply them as Holy Fact.
While he might be a very effective filmmaker, Michael Moore also presents "facts" as a means to bolster his own argument. Sensationalism doesn't necessarily denote urgency, though.
Sure, the US's domestic medical policy is flawed. I don't think you'll find anyone saying that we have it all figured out. But then again, no one does. Do I find my rising health care costs unsettling? Hell yes. But then again, I also appreciate the high standard of the services I'm getting. There has to be a happy medium somewhere, and we're still looking for it.
So instead of this becoming a "RAH RAH AMERICANS vs. AMERICANS SUK" thread, how about we both realize that we've got some good on both sides, but we both need to pay a little less attention to US Weekly.Music and medicine, I'm living in a place where they overlap.
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Thank you. It's perfectly fine to discuss something as long as you don't treat what you learned from a movie about another country as fact, and then try to sound condescending to said country.My father in law was telling me over Thanksgiving about this amazing bartender at some bar he frequented who could shake a martini and fill it to the rim with no leftovers and he thought it was the coolest thing he'd ever seen. I then proceeded to his home bar and made four martinis in one shaker with unfamiliar glassware and a non standard shaker and did the same thing. From that moment forward I knew he had no compunction about my cock ever being in his daughter's mouth.
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Originally posted by ConcreteSchlyrd View PostSure, the US's domestic medical policy is flawed. I don't think you'll find anyone saying that we have it all figured out. But then again, no one does. Do I find my rising health care costs unsettling? Hell yes. But then again, I also appreciate the high standard of the services I'm getting. There has to be a happy medium somewhere, and we're still looking for it.
So instead of this becoming a "RAH RAH AMERICANS vs. AMERICANS SUK" thread, how about we both realize that we've got some good on both sides, but we both need to pay a little less attention to US Weekly.
So as far as the quality of medical care in both countries, I'll go out on a limb and say that they are about the same. Although I have not personally worked in the US, I know a LOT of doctors who did their training in the US or worked for a long time in the US and are now in Canada, and from everyone I've asked, they said that the quality of care is basically the same. Hell doctors from both countries attend the same conferences anyway and use the same technologies. The biggest differences that are cited when I ask this question is the fact that in the US they always had to turn away people who didn't have insurance, and in the US they had to spend much more time on billing because there were so many different systems.
I think the US is on the cusp of having a public system or at least a mixed public/private system (which is doomed to failure anyway because the public system will never be as well funded as the private system). All of the democratic presidential hopefuls support such a deal, and even if the Republicans somehow manage to win, individual states are already moving in that direction. I think people in the US are finally waking up to the fact that their healthcare system isn't necessarily the best in the world for what they pay for, and maybe this movie much like An Inconvenient Truth will be the final thing that energizes those in power to really force change on this subject.
**I'm getting my facts from Paul Krugman of the New York Times, who is also one of the most respected economists in the US and professor of economics at Princeton University.Last edited by Epinephrine; 06-24-2007, 12:41 PM.Epinephrine's History of Trench Wars:
www.geocities.com/epinephrine.rm
My anime blog:
www.animeslice.com
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Originally posted by Epinephrine View PostI think the US is on the cusp of having a public system or at least a mixed public/private system (which is doomed to failure anyway because the public system will never be as well funded as the private system). All of the democratic presidential hopefuls support such a deal, and even if the Republicans somehow manage to win, individual states are already moving in that direction. I think people in the US are finally waking up to the fact that their healthcare system isn't necessarily the best in the world for what they pay for, and maybe this movie much like An Inconvenient Truth will be the final thing that energizes those in power to really force change on this subject.
The problem with this, is that using a pure documentary format (which, from what I hear from some filmmakers that I know, isn't as easy as it sounds) doesn't make for "good film." Hollywood has figured out that people love a good ol'-fashioned witch hunt--the Mob vs. whomever. In other words, sensationalism makes for better sales. Go figure: in the end, it's just about making money.
Don't get me wrong, I think that raising awareness about a subject is a great thing. People (as a whole, across all ethnographic boundaries) are generally not willing to accept their own failures, but instead turn blame outwards. But if you're telling me that these films are going to cause a major paradigm shift, I respectfully disagree.Music and medicine, I'm living in a place where they overlap.
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Originally posted by Vihta View PostI didn't claim to know anything beyond watching the film by Moore. Since you insinuate I somehow "got it wrong" feel free to educate me which parts of Sicko are false/wrong.
Yep, you are a special kid.4:DEEZ NUTS> geio hopefully u smoke ur last cig right now
4:Geio> yo wont ever happen again
4:Geio> DEEZ?
4:Geio> LOLOL
4:DEEZ NUTS> LOL
4:scoop> cant tell if deez was trying to be a good influence or telling him to die LOL
4:spirit> LOL
4:Geio> LOLOL THINK HE TOLD ME TO DIE
4:Geio> FUCKING DICKHEAD
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Originally posted by ConcreteSchlyrd View Post(Holy shit, guys! I read that TomKat are having marital issues! What is wrong with the state of matrimony in the US these days?!)gravy_: They should do great gran tourismo
gravy_: Electric granny chariots
gravy_: round the nurburgring
XBL: VodkaSurprise
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Moore got sued over a couple of his past movies for mis representing facts.The only TWO TIME TWLJ All-Star and TWLB All-Star who never played a game.
Originally posted by Richard CreagerAll space detectives come armed with tcp/ip persona blasting pistols, it's required for their line of duty. Silly of both maisoul and goddess to not know this before hand, they get what they deserved, fucking zapped, bitches.
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Originally posted by Epinephrine View PostWell on average Americans pay about twice as much as Canadians do on health care (our taxes vs your insurance costs from your own pocket and from your company's, which basically means you make less in wages).** As far as the systems are, they are basically exactly the same. Sure in the very few centers like the Mayo clinic Americans may get the 'best of the best' treatment, but how many people can actually afford to go to places like that? Almost 99% of people's insurance will not pay for stuff like that anyway, so it's a moot point (as other people from other countries can also just pay and go to your hospitals as well).
So as far as the quality of medical care in both countries, I'll go out on a limb and say that they are about the same. Although I have not personally worked in the US, I know a LOT of doctors who did their training in the US or worked for a long time in the US and are now in Canada, and from everyone I've asked, they said that the quality of care is basically the same. Hell doctors from both countries attend the same conferences anyway and use the same technologies. The biggest differences that are cited when I ask this question is the fact that in the US they always had to turn away people who didn't have insurance, and in the US they had to spend much more time on billing because there were so many different systems.
I think the US is on the cusp of having a public system or at least a mixed public/private system (which is doomed to failure anyway because the public system will never be as well funded as the private system). All of the democratic presidential hopefuls support such a deal, and even if the Republicans somehow manage to win, individual states are already moving in that direction. I think people in the US are finally waking up to the fact that their healthcare system isn't necessarily the best in the world for what they pay for, and maybe this movie much like An Inconvenient Truth will be the final thing that energizes those in power to really force change on this subject.
**I'm getting my facts from Paul Krugman of the New York Times, who is also one of the most respected economists in the US and professor of economics at Princeton University.
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