nutsmakr, you've taken them seriously enough to argue over the facts of trial lawyer pay for several posts. But, hey, its never too late to affect apathy ("I really don't care what they say man because I don't take their opinions seriously, I'm just trolling them because I got nothing better to do with my time!!!!!")And nothing suggests they don't know what "constitutes a trial lawyer". At most, I am suggesting that they are referring to only the subset of trial lawyers that are involved with litigation most relevant for the context of this discussion (medical malpractice suits is the example that jumps first to my mind). Should they have clarified? Maybe (I think the context of the discussion makes the intent clear). But I don't think you have much room to complain that their language is too imprecise, since you seem to suffer from the same failing. But one thing I've noticed about the wolf web is you should never let anything stop you from insulting someone else. Any luck on digging up that evidence? I honestly have no clue what the typical salary is, so it would be interesting to find out. [Edited on August 24, 2009 at 12:58 PM. Reason : ``]
8/24/2009 12:49:37 PM
8/24/2009 1:29:16 PM
^ it depends huh? you don't say. hehe I guess I never would have thought that wages and salaries might vary from firm to firm or even person to person. It's too bad no one ever thought about using mathematical techniques to divine information from collections of dispersed observations. I guess that means we will never know what a typical trial lawyer makes because we don't have ways of measuring the central tenancy of data on trial lawyer salaries. Wait! That's exactly why we have measures like the mean and the median! We even have ways to measure the dispersion of salaries in the dataset (standard deviation)! If only we had known such things were possible at the outset of this conversation!!!!!!LoL Anyways, nutsmaker I guess you're trying to say you don't want to be bothered with looking up data on mean or median salaries and that you would rather deal in anecdotes. Of course, I'm still confused as to why you would bust hooksaw's balls for doing the exact same thing. *shrug*But its no longer my concern. I have no interest in feeding trolls. Peace out, son! I got work to do.[Edited on August 24, 2009 at 1:47 PM. Reason : ``]
8/24/2009 1:40:30 PM
UNC System will require students to have health insurance
8/24/2009 3:34:44 PM
^^It's a shame you think everyone who is a Trial Lawyer is just weighted down with cash. You try to throw off this air of knowledge, but you fall victim to the same gimmicky nonsense. In North Carolina, a trial lawyer working at their own business will make between 20-100,000 a year. It isn't that hard to figure out they aren't rolling around in cash. Now if you want to start talking about the various firms, that is where the divergence will be. A Partner at a large firm can easily bring in millions a year, but they have massive client lists. A Junior Associate will make more than 100,000, but they are working 80+ a week. For them it isn't the number of hours worked, but the number of billable hours worked. ^I thought that was standard practice already. Sounds like good policy.[Edited on August 24, 2009 at 3:39 PM. Reason : .][Edited on August 24, 2009 at 3:40 PM. Reason : .]
8/24/2009 3:38:36 PM
^ Blah, blah, blah--meaningless. Anecdotes can be evidence, period. And no amount of flapping, flailing, and foaming can change this fact.Yeah, and having a centralized governmental authority make decisions for individuals is always a good idea to half-assed commies like you. Way to sign on to the politburo's edict, comrade--no re-education is necessary in your case.
8/24/2009 3:45:45 PM
Have you been thrown over board a ship lately? NC State has had this requirement for a long time. Why the anger now?Or are you just finding something to foam away about?Also, John Edwards's wealth isn't indicative of all trial lawyers.
8/24/2009 4:28:47 PM
Government. The ultimate cost container.
8/24/2009 6:18:21 PM
I'd love to know what that graph is in reference to... I find it hard to believe that the average federal employee is making 100k+. Unless they take out contractors
8/24/2009 8:56:10 PM
^ it's a fairly meaningless graphIt doesn't make any sense to compare all of private industry to what amounts to the crosssection of federal civilian employees.
8/24/2009 9:01:58 PM
^^^^ You're obviously stupid. NC State does not require students to have health insurance, dummy.
8/24/2009 11:49:29 PM
I was pretty sure State required it and if you didn't have it you would get health insurance from the university for the periods of time you were in school. Either way, it isn't a bad policy. In fact, I defy you to argue that it is a bad policy.
8/25/2009 9:51:11 AM
Owned.
8/25/2009 10:02:07 AM
That's not an owning, hooksaw. An owning is what happened to you in the insurance CEO thread.
8/25/2009 10:48:45 AM
^
8/25/2009 11:01:29 AM
8/25/2009 11:23:42 AM
8/25/2009 1:43:55 PM
If the intent is to prove the efficiency of government spending then that is a completely accurate comparison, even with "private" contractors. When a contractor enters a contract with a government private market forces largely cease to function. The retention of that contract isn't an issue of who is the most efficient, but who is the most politically connected. Thus, the contractor is more accurately described as a temporary extension of the government than a true private actor. The net result is the same, government generally costs more than the private sector.
8/25/2009 1:56:00 PM
unless i'm misunderstanding, this average doesn't include those private contractors, or even for their pay contracted by the gov't.
8/25/2009 2:08:31 PM
The point should still hold then, government is still less cost effective than the market because there is no mechanism for measuring the efficiency of the allocation of resources. Thus, the costs of government run projects, be they internally run or outsourced, will be generally higher than those performed by private entities competing with one another.
8/25/2009 2:18:13 PM
8/25/2009 2:21:28 PM
^^perhaps. but that's not what that number is showing at all.
8/25/2009 2:23:07 PM
I know y'all like data and shit like that.But data or no, I think it's no secret that government generally costs more than private. It's rife with waste. Unfortunately, the most visible government employees tend to take the most shit for this reality, but they're the least guilty. Cops, postal carriers, teachers, garbage men, DMV workers, etc...tend to be hard-working and productive employees. If you want some data-free proof, just take a loot at the footwear: sensible flats if not full-on orthopedic gear. But get back up in those administrative buildings, and you can find people making $100k/year who spend literally half their workdays playing flash games and buying vintage action figures on eBay. And the only time this huge problem ever gets addressed is times like now...cuts are mandated and made, and magically, everything works out just fine...But it's not clear that any of this applies to an argument about healthcare.
8/25/2009 2:49:55 PM
you're kidding right?why can't this be applied to healthcare? last time I checked, the public option would turn healthcare into one more government entity with people...
8/25/2009 3:14:01 PM
but again, that number isn't illuminating much. there is typically a higher barrier to entry in an actual government jobs. the more menial tasks (and even many of the entry level skilled positions) are filled by contract workers who are often paid less (at least when combined with benefits).
8/25/2009 3:41:19 PM
^^Currently, private insurance companies overcharge for a shoddy service and rake in billions in profits.The public option might be run by a lot of action figure enthusiasts who make too much money, but it might still be cheaper since obscene profits won't be the goal.
8/25/2009 4:12:04 PM
lets take obama's on comparison of UPS and FedEx vrs the USPS.So far, UPS and FedEx have managed a 100% accurate delivery since i have moved to my new home. The USPS mail carrier has delivered more then 2 dozen packages/magazines/mail of mine to the my neighbor steve, who, while having the same street number as i do, in fact, lives on a different damn street. This is still a step up from the mail carrier i had while i was in Cary. These are the people you want involved in your medical care. When they screw up my mail i just take steve his and pick mine up. If they screw up the paper work on a medical procedure, even if i get the right stuff done, i'll be stuck in bureaucratic paper filling hell for eternity sorting shit out. Have any of you supporting this ever had to deal with say, the DOR, the IRS, or the SSA because of misfiled paper work. I have, its a nightmare, it takes months, and they assume exactly 0 responsibility for any fuck up that may have occurred on their end, be it loosing what you sendt them, or even entering the information you send them incorrectly. (and god forbid you ask them to change something thats already in the system, you cant change what the system says)And lastly, where, exactly do you plan on getting the money for this. Magic fairys or are we just going to keep raising taxes until there's no incentive to actually work
8/26/2009 12:20:46 PM
^We pay more for health care than any other system that has universal care. A lot of our expense is due to the bureaucracy of maintaining 4 distinct types of payment. We have a system like Britains (the VA), Canada (Medicare), Burma (pay your self), Germany (get it through your employer). The problem with that is there exists many different pricing structures the medical practices have to follow. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/21/AR2009082101778.html
8/26/2009 12:39:42 PM
and adding more regulations, rules, and payment structures is going to make this better? Also, you cant just compare health-care with any of these countries you have massive societal and governmental differences between there and here.if you just look at Germany and the UK. we have 4-5x the population with 1/10th the population density. That alone can have a major impact on medical treatment. Denser populations are just easier to service, and smaller populations have less overhead in management and regulation.
8/26/2009 12:57:27 PM
8/26/2009 1:07:02 PM
8/26/2009 1:10:18 PM
i like that usps will actually deliver to my townhome office place, where ups will leave the note that i have to sign. i have even requested before for them to deliver to the office, but they have yet to actually do that. but i've had problems will all forms of delivery at one point or another. usps is good for shipping things fairly cheaply though.
8/26/2009 1:17:18 PM
8/26/2009 1:40:56 PM
8/26/2009 1:49:39 PM
Even using your numbers, a whopping 40% of the country either doesn't have coverage at all, or is unsatisfied with their current plan. I can't get my wife and I covered on even a shitty insurance plan with massive co-pays for less than $600/mo. We are both young, healthy adults who don't smoke--god forbid we don't come down with cancer or something. That would ruin us financially and we would never be able to purchase insurance again. Whether you believe a public option is the solution or not, there is a crisis when two young, healthy adults can't get reasonable catastrophic coverage for less than a mortgage payment or at all if they were to get a disease in between jobs/coverage.
8/26/2009 1:56:55 PM
What went wrong?It's almost Labor Day. Healthcare reform is struggling, the public option is near dead. Why couldn't Obama deliver?By Thomas Schaller
8/26/2009 2:00:43 PM
8/26/2009 2:08:30 PM
8/26/2009 2:19:30 PM
Final post for now. Part of the reason you're paying so much in private health care? The federal government is under-compensating hospitals for their services:
8/26/2009 2:24:22 PM
8/26/2009 2:40:05 PM
^ Sweet Jesus. Some of you are simply tiring.anecdotal:
8/26/2009 3:11:54 PM
^^ I went through and read that article. He makes some interesting points but fails to cite why any of these countries are more efficient than we are. I find it a bit laughable that he refers to our system as "free enterprise -- private-sector -- for-profit" when government interference in the market makes it hardly such. One of the reasons Germans can pick from over 200 different health care plans is because they don't have to meet the insurance regulatory standards of 50 different states.His argument that cost controls do not stifle inflation also ignore the fact that, in a global market, the costs of development can be passed on to nations where there aren't cost controls. Effectively, then, the US consumer subsidies French health care innovation.Still, there is a lot to be learned from other nation's experiments. It'd be nice if we took the time to do that before throwing legislation out there for the sake of legislating.
8/26/2009 3:45:20 PM
the parts of these bills that are being proposed weren't conceived in the past six months. congressmen and other groups have been working on this issue for decades.
8/26/2009 4:13:31 PM
^^^Personal observation is flawed there are many studies outling this and the witnesses are rarely experts. If you read accident reports for parachuting or aviation in general you can see this. Reports of parachute not opening are common even though they only account for <1% of all incidents. Data is all that matters I've seen people die driving but making a blanket statement that driving is dangerous without context to how many people die driving is moronic. It is traumatic and like I said it presents an emotional case and most people are weak emotional beings. ^^The article is a very brief summary of an entire book. He also was on Fresh Air on NPR 2 days ago (Monday the 24th).[Edited on August 26, 2009 at 4:15 PM. Reason : ^]
8/26/2009 4:15:09 PM
Graduate students working towards a degree in Liberal Studies have regressed latent homosexual tendencies that manifest as agression and anger on the internet. They are also hebephiles and ephebophiles. They also engage in sex games involving dressing up like the Lone Ranger whilst making their girlfriend/fiance/wife dress up like Silver.
8/26/2009 4:34:09 PM
^^ I downloaded that episode, I'll be listening to it later.
8/26/2009 4:58:39 PM
^^^^ really? Then why does it take 1000 pages to iron out what has already been "worked out?" Give me a break
8/26/2009 7:02:52 PM
i didn't say the issues had been worked out. don't use quotations unless you're actually quoting me. i said it had been worked on for decades. i was responding to the implication that congress was rushing the legislation. i was saying that these proposals aren't exactly new. in that many of them have been worked on for decades and they are not new ideas to anyone familiar with the healthcare reform debate (ie hopefully many congressmen or people in their staffs)
8/26/2009 7:09:20 PM
come on. just because people have been "talking about it for decades" doesn't mean that this legislation isn't being rushed.
8/26/2009 7:16:11 PM
ok. i don't agree with you, but that's an honest opinion. but you don't have to misrepresent me. and you still haven't corrected your post. but you don't care about truth in your arguments.[Edited on August 26, 2009 at 7:18 PM. Reason : .]
8/26/2009 7:17:28 PM