Bardeaux
Bluelight Crew
^they sure do when they you know.... experience a period of bust
Yep the typical person of the left persuasion does this when you win a discussion with logic. I always post from my little ass iphone4 so igaf there is gonna be some mistakes. LolCorrected:
May he have sacrificed some of his principles in the process?
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So often, I find people with a lack of a real comeback in an argument, that they look past what might be seen, and don't take a chance to build. Instead they just want to tear people down. It is obvious that this is what Droppers meant. Some people seem to confuse, perhaps their attention just dips out on this word, of with have in this way of speaking... Why is Droppers so attacked for such a thing when right and left we have people (on the left often- they're on your side!) who don't even use the proper 'than' instead of then? Quit trying to hang things on "lack of education" (or quality of it) and walk away, as if that somehow lets you claim victory.
Need I remind you of this very educated girl? Harvard Law Student, also a "realist" when it comes to 'race'.
Meet Stephanie Grace, the Harvard Law Student Who Started a Racist Email War
http://gawker.com/5527355/meet-step...rd-law-student-who-started-a-racist-email-war
"go read a textbook".
Indeed, but I'm not so sure (Ron) Paul supported the protectionist ideals that they're looking for exactly
Malpractice claims are a relatively small percentage of healthcare costs, even if you factor in so called defensive medicine trying to prevent being sued. Even in states that have enacted laws trying to limit malpractice lawsuits, it has not been shown to show much if any decrease in overall cost.
Malpractice claims are a relatively small percentage of healthcare costs...
I find that hard to believe...
here are 3 sources for you:
2003 - 1.0% of total healthcare spending (source)
2008 - 2.4% of total healthcare spending (source)
2013 - 0.3% of total healthcare spending (source)
the second source has been quoted often and has become conventional wisdom as far as my google search tells me.
so costs do appear to be a relatively small percentage of costs.
alasdair
We spend $3.8 trillion on health care last year. Those might seem like small percentages but it's ALOT of money.
Laissez-faire doesn't support financial elite it supports everyone. If you read the libertarian manifesto it would do away with the prohibitive costs of licensing to become a barber, taxi driver, ect and make it more reasonable. Why a taxi medallion in NYC is so expensive stifles free market competition and hurts consumers who are forced to pay premiums and keeps new market entrants from competing and driving prices down. Doing away with needless regulations also helps small businesses, corporations have hundreds of legal personell to help them comply with regulations and laws some of which are thousamds of pages like Obamacare. Regulations like these actually keep new market entrants out. Im not for the extreme of no regulations but just less and more sensible ones.
I just finished reading Ben Carsons book and he had excellent ideas on driving health care costs down. The AMA has made it prohibitively hard to become a doctor, obviously we want well-qualified health care professionals but we should be able to teach someone to for instance set a broken bone without 8 years of medical school/residencies, ect. Neurosurgeons like himself probably do need that level of training if not more. Also much of our medical costs are due to fradulent malpractice claims, if we tweak our legal system to where if you file a malpractice lawsuit and lose you pay for the parties your suing legal fees then I think we will find ourselves less sue-happy.
Just some good ideas I've seen thrown out there. Tbh, I'm very sick of the two party dichotomy altogether.