haha. yet another reason to hate poor peopleit's not enough to hate a poor person for being poor.now we hate poor people for having poor health.quit being so goddamn unhealthy, poor people! you're making the rest of us look bad!
9/18/2009 9:58:14 PM
that's not the point, idiot.rather, it's to say that our health stats are skewed by the POOR CHOICES of our poor. no one is saying "fuck the poor.:
9/18/2009 10:11:07 PM
-damnit Vanessa, why did you choose to get breast cancer?-there goes Andy, choosing to get lupus again.-Rhonda, when stuck with decision to be healthy or get sickle-cell, selfishly chose sickle-cell.-Jimmy, you should have thought about how poor you were before you chose to fall down the stairs and break your spine.Fuck. all these poor people making stupid decisions... costing me money.[Edited on September 19, 2009 at 2:10 AM. Reason : ]
9/19/2009 2:02:44 AM
9/19/2009 8:59:33 AM
Bread, water, and beans? There is cheap healthy food, but you won't enjoy eating it. There is also expensive unhealthy food, but it doesn't taste much better than the cheap unhealthy food. As I understand it, that is the only difference between the two food subsets.
9/19/2009 2:20:42 PM
9/19/2009 2:40:55 PM
you can get a 2lb bag of carrots for like 1.50. bananas are frequently less than $1/pound.fruits and vegetables are only expensive if you let them go to waste
9/19/2009 2:57:40 PM
Who needs 2 lbs of carrots though?
9/19/2009 3:27:40 PM
9/19/2009 4:32:05 PM
Even in the very poor, nutrient deficiency diseases are extremely rare in the United States. So is extreme malnourishment. Further, incidence of obesity or Type II diabetes crosses the entire socioeconomic spectrum in this country.The argument that lifestyle choices can reduce the risk of chronic disease has been shown time and again to be sound. One could say that, in this case, the difference between the poor and affluent is that the affluent have the financial ability to use modern health care to live a less healthful lifestyle while still achieving a similar level of overall health.
9/19/2009 5:02:36 PM
9/19/2009 6:45:07 PM
9/19/2009 7:13:18 PM
Why do poor people make that decision then?
9/19/2009 7:20:01 PM
A number of reasons. Most likely reason is that mcdonalds is easier. Eating well, like anything worthwhile in life, takes effort and yes time. But one can not work their way out of being poor if one spends all their money on crappy food. But even still, let us say for the sake of argument that each meal takes a half hour to prepare, at a wage of 8 / hour that means the meal cost $4 to prep. So $5.50 per meal and that's healthier than mcdonalds.Let's also not discount all the wellmeaning but misguided fools running around telling us how expensive eating healthy is. Say something longs enough and people will begin to beleive it even if it isn't the truth.
9/19/2009 7:30:27 PM
Thanks for calling me a fool, jackass. Fuck you, too.I'm having a hard time reconciling the two ideas that (1) enough poor people are making enough poor decisions to have a significant impact on the country's health statistics and (2) these are all conscious decisions (that the more affluent apparently don't make).There's something that compels people to make these decisions. Maybe the fact $5.50 * 3 * 30 = $495/month is a lot of money?
9/19/2009 7:47:27 PM
^x5Your statements 1), 2), & 3) are obviously true. I see that you are trying to argue against statements in this thread which would seem to blame the poor for all of their health problems or blame the health of the poor for our country's health issues. While not stating it specifically, I believe you point toward the logical assertions that poverty is not always by choice and that poverty comes with certain limitations to lifestyle. However, the type of condemnation you refute was not my intention. My first statement was a general counter to the notion in this thread that poverty must equal a lack of proper nutrition, at least in this country. It does not.My second statement seems to have missed you. Yes, money does allow you to buy yourself out of bad health. True, you can't avoid the development of health problems just because you have more money sitting in the bank, but that money can be used to identify and treat symptoms, effectively nullifying the health problem in some cases. What I'm saying is that everyone, rich or poor, has the capacity to make lifestyle choices which impact overall health.For example, take two American men, separated at birth twins even, one rich and one poor, who choose to eat a high fat, high cholesterol diet for many years. (Don't get stuck on "choose to eat..." here. Yes, it is a choice. If you tried hard you could talk about the poor man not being educated enough to make the decision correctly, but this is for the sake of argument) Both men develop hypertension and high cholesterol, risking heart attack, stroke, etc. The rich man has the money to regularly see a competent doctor, purchase the prescribed beta blockers for hypertension and statins for high cholesterol. He does not follow his doctors orders to eat a healthful diet or exercise. The medications lower his blood pressure and cholesterol, and the rich man continues his unhealthy lifestyle. The poor man has not seen a physician in many years. He dies from a heart attack, his chronic conditions never having been diagnosed by a physician.
9/19/2009 8:39:41 PM
9/19/2009 9:17:03 PM
no, b4k4, it's clear that you just hate poor people. you poor people hater, you
9/19/2009 9:34:02 PM
I think it's safe to say that everyone on the planet has made at least a few, "poor lifestyle choices". To use "perfection" as the measuring stick to decide who gets healed when they're sick is crazy, and a sliding scale based on "lifestyle choices" is a witch hunt. Do you really want someone digging through your trash looking for Doritos bags?Most discussion is this regard is just a matter of, "See, this is why I'm so much better than they are." I don't know why, but I'm always suspicious of people that claim to be perfect, or even better than most.
9/20/2009 10:00:35 AM
9/20/2009 10:38:04 AM
9/20/2009 1:00:57 PM
9/20/2009 1:52:30 PM
Thousands of surgeries may be cut in Metro Vancouver due to government underfunding, leaked paper
9/21/2009 10:18:38 PM
Why do conservatives even pay for private insurance at all? Isn't private insurance just like socialism? You're all contributing into one large pot, and whoever gets injured the most gets all that money, and if you don't get injured you don't get that money back. Isn't that socialism? Why don't you just drop your private insurance and save your own money up?
9/21/2009 11:12:09 PM
nope, it's not socialism. because the insurance company isn't run by the gov't and the people are free to buy or not buy the insurance. durrrrrr, basic dictionary definition.
9/22/2009 4:35:58 AM
9/22/2009 7:51:59 AM
To the ones arguing about poor people not being able to afford healthy food, you have to first ask why is healthy food expensive? Corn and soy subsidies are the answer, we've turned into a culture feeding off Soylent Green and we do it willfully and cheerfully. If we had a decent and proud food culture you fuckers would all know how to make things from scratch on the cheap. Instead, you just live off Little Debbie and McDonalds.
9/22/2009 11:04:16 AM
HHS investigates Humana for Medicare mailer warning seniors on health overhaulSeptember 21, 2009
9/22/2009 1:31:50 PM
Back to a discussion healthcare reform, the Republicans seem to have picked up a lesson from Sun Tzu :
9/22/2009 1:41:36 PM
^
9/22/2009 1:48:06 PM
good thing we passed the HMO act in 65 to keep costs down. Worked well, as do most govt options.
9/22/2009 1:58:28 PM
^^^that seems to be the case. saying you "don't support health reform" is as politically toxic as saying "you support socialism." yet, there are no alternatives to provide affordable health coverage. i'm sure some in here will come in and say that the republican party has provided numerous alternatives and that the wicked liberal media isn't covering it but the simple matter is that these alternatives do not provide affordable coverage to those in need.so instead, they just stomp their feet and say, "i support health reform, just NOT THIS ONE," often peppering in the words "socialism" "free market" and "pelosi" for variety.[Edited on September 22, 2009 at 2:00 PM. Reason : ]
9/22/2009 1:59:52 PM
Outlaw low deductable health insurance. That should help.
9/22/2009 3:02:11 PM
9/22/2009 3:34:53 PM
9/22/2009 3:43:34 PM
Back in the day, Railroad companies often had the ability to choose whether it was the state or the federal government that regulated them. This would be a good idea for today. The Federal Government should leave state rules and regulations in place for locally chartered insurers, but allow insurance companies to seek federal charters. Companies with a federal charter would be federally regulated and immune to state regulation. This would introduce regulatory competition between the two levels of government, as regulators love regulating, but if the regulated have a choice between regulators, then regulators will have an incentive to attract the regulated. They would only have one method at their disposal, that being fair and reasonable regulation. Similarly, customers would be able to choose which regulatory regime they want to buy a policy under.
9/23/2009 1:40:30 AM
Thanks for the video. Amazing the stupidity, yet power that hollywood has over some people.I guess Will Ferrell took a break from making profits on his new movie, "Old Man Yelling" thanks for the correct date on the HMO act bobo. 65 was the social security act, which gave us medicare and medicaid. HMO act was trying to keep down the exploding costs. haha. No doubt govt is the answer THIS time around too. [Edited on September 23, 2009 at 8:39 AM. Reason : .]
9/23/2009 8:37:18 AM
is no government the answer?
9/23/2009 8:43:23 AM
That government is best which governs least.
9/23/2009 8:49:21 AM
so be that description the best government would be no government at all.it would be the leastest governing government ever!
9/23/2009 8:54:01 AM
Er, eyedrb, maybe you missed the part about the HMO act being an attempt at free-market cost controls, passed by a Republican administration.
9/23/2009 9:33:43 AM
9/23/2009 9:42:49 AM
9/23/2009 10:22:24 AM
The complete and total disconnect between what the bills actually say and what people are saying will happen is absolutely amazing to me. Let me post this picture again.Show me the part where the government takes over the health care industry. Show me the part where private health insurance companies are being forced out of business. Show me the part where unhealthy poor people and illegal aliens get free health care. It just isn't there.
9/23/2009 10:31:07 AM
The part where it prevents health insurers from denying applicants combined with the insurance mandate.
9/23/2009 11:39:10 AM
denying patients?i thought the health care bill was going to kill old people?
9/23/2009 11:47:50 AM
Only if Herr Obama, head of the Reichstadt Panel of the Dead, decides so.
9/23/2009 12:36:19 PM
I'm glad that we have the ability to sum up several hundred pages on unwritten legislation into a one page flow chart.
9/23/2009 1:12:26 PM
9/23/2009 1:14:01 PM
9/23/2009 1:20:08 PM