HonkHonk is this poster.Registered User, __BANNED USERSregular
In my defense, they played this recently in season 7 again. And the oblivious secretary was working at a pretty high level of a presidential campaign...
Oh, I haven't been keeping up with comics lately but I was wondering what was going on with the Marvel character Amadeus Cho. He's an Asian-American superhero whose super power is being really good at math. Ethnic cliche lolz but the last I heard of him, he teamed up with Hercules to beat up some gods.
@Mazzyx My personal experience was with Ireland, where they also have a dual model of public providers and private hospitals. The public ones were basically a terrible ghetto option for the poors, and the good care needed to be purchased. Everyone who could afford it carried private health insurance out of their own pocket in addition to the universal public care, because they felt they needed it to actually get healthcare.
Ireland has overhauled their system recently as well. Part of becoming the Irish tiger. I am not describing a socialized hospital system, which exist in the US anyways, but a nationalized health insurance program. I am taking insurance out of the private sector where it has profit motive to limit and reject care to the public sector where its priority is the health of the patient.
The Swiss system is interesting because it doesn't remove private insurance but makes it have minimum requirements and to be sold not for profit.
I was there from '01 - '05, the height of the Celtic Tiger. It was shit healthcare. Doesn't' the system in the Netherlands also have the same private insurance system with minimum care and low-cost plan requirements?
As someone who lives here now, it's pretty still pretty awful.
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surrealitychecklonely, but not unloveddreaming of faulty keys and latchesRegistered Userregular
@Mazzyx My personal experience was with Ireland, where they also have a dual model of public providers and private hospitals. The public ones were basically a terrible ghetto option for the poors, and the good care needed to be purchased. Everyone who could afford it carried private health insurance out of their own pocket in addition to the universal public care, because they felt they needed it to actually get healthcare.
Ireland has overhauled their system recently as well. Part of becoming the Irish tiger. I am not describing a socialized hospital system, which exist in the US anyways, but a nationalized health insurance program. I am taking insurance out of the private sector where it has profit motive to limit and reject care to the public sector where its priority is the health of the patient.
The Swiss system is interesting because it doesn't remove private insurance but makes it have minimum requirements and to be sold not for profit.
I was there from '01 - '05, the height of the Celtic Tiger. It was shit healthcare. Doesn't' the system in the Netherlands also have the same private insurance system with minimum care and low-cost plan requirements?
As someone who lives here now, it's pretty still pretty awful.
moral of the story: don't trust the irish to do anything but dark beer right.
Nice breakdown of some of the insurance systems from News Hour. Including the Netherlands. Netherlands current program sounds very similar to ACA. There is a mandate. But it is hard to keep prices down and not have one due to how insurance pools work. I think that is the biggest part, either everyone pays into one pool(national insurance) or are required to buy insurance thus the healthy subsidize the sick and when they are sick their care is subsidized by those who are now healthy. I think this is an important aspect we forget.
@Mazzyx My personal experience was with Ireland, where they also have a dual model of public providers and private hospitals. The public ones were basically a terrible ghetto option for the poors, and the good care needed to be purchased. Everyone who could afford it carried private health insurance out of their own pocket in addition to the universal public care, because they felt they needed it to actually get healthcare.
Ireland has overhauled their system recently as well. Part of becoming the Irish tiger. I am not describing a socialized hospital system, which exist in the US anyways, but a nationalized health insurance program. I am taking insurance out of the private sector where it has profit motive to limit and reject care to the public sector where its priority is the health of the patient.
The Swiss system is interesting because it doesn't remove private insurance but makes it have minimum requirements and to be sold not for profit.
I was there from '01 - '05, the height of the Celtic Tiger. It was shit healthcare. Doesn't' the system in the Netherlands also have the same private insurance system with minimum care and low-cost plan requirements?
As someone who lives here now, it's pretty still pretty awful.
moral of the story: don't trust the irish to do anything but dark beer right.
we're not awful at whiskey or beating our wives either
@Mazzyx My personal experience was with Ireland, where they also have a dual model of public providers and private hospitals. The public ones were basically a terrible ghetto option for the poors, and the good care needed to be purchased. Everyone who could afford it carried private health insurance out of their own pocket in addition to the universal public care, because they felt they needed it to actually get healthcare.
Ireland has overhauled their system recently as well. Part of becoming the Irish tiger. I am not describing a socialized hospital system, which exist in the US anyways, but a nationalized health insurance program. I am taking insurance out of the private sector where it has profit motive to limit and reject care to the public sector where its priority is the health of the patient.
The Swiss system is interesting because it doesn't remove private insurance but makes it have minimum requirements and to be sold not for profit.
I was there from '01 - '05, the height of the Celtic Tiger. It was shit healthcare. Doesn't' the system in the Netherlands also have the same private insurance system with minimum care and low-cost plan requirements?
As someone who lives here now, it's pretty still pretty awful.
moral of the story: don't trust the irish to do anything but dark beer right.
we're not awful at whiskey or beating our wives either
I don't think I've ever had irish whiskey. I cannot comment.
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HonkHonk is this poster.Registered User, __BANNED USERSregular
If there is one thing the West Wing plays to often it is when POTUS calls and an oblivious secretary goes "It's for you, someone named POTUS?".
Who doesn't know who POTUS is at this day and age.
isn't this how the first episode starts and then it never happens again?
Nope. First episode, s7e10 or thereabout. And at least two times in between.
huh, I must have just ignored it or something. that is strange. I think it makes sense at the start of the show but after that I'm not sure what they're going for.
oh right I only watched the first 4 seasons. derrrr.
"Hey, if it was free, I'd wait 4 months for a hip replacement, too"
"but the thing is, it isn’t free, you’ll be paying for your hip replacement through your taxes. Heck, you’ll be helping to pay for someone else’s hip replacement too!"
is it wrong for me to want to make soup of the last guy's bones and use it to feed the poor
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HonkHonk is this poster.Registered User, __BANNED USERSregular
edited March 2012
There are a couple of semi-tame foxes in the neighborhood too.
You can get within about 20 meters of them before they start to wander off.
"Hey, if it was free, I'd wait 4 months for a hip replacement, too"
"but the thing is, it isn’t free, you’ll be paying for your hip replacement through your taxes. Heck, you’ll be helping to pay for someone else’s hip replacement too!"
is it wrong for me to want to make soup of the last guy's bones and use it to feed the poor
Well if it is part of your taxes he is right. He is forgetting that when he needs help the person who needed the hip replacement is paying for his medical care. Because that is how insurance works. You pay in to subsidize those using it when you are sick, and they do the same for you.
Hell that is what they do in the states, there just is a 30% cut off the top and a lot less access.
Posts
STILL GOT IT!
and the gengars who are guiding me" -- W.S. Merwin
Actually, I'm worried enough that I'm not sure I can bring myself to do it.
Ah, that's a good band.
Check out my site, the Bismuth Heart | My Twitter
Couple of people are talking to each other on facebook status update comments.
More than a little heartbreaking to read about how they're struggling with moving on.
But they're going back, atleast.
I PICKED A SUPER HARD ONE
Who doesn't know who POTUS is at this day and age.
I don't
i don't know who this Potus guy is.
Check out my site, the Bismuth Heart | My Twitter
Pish posh
Instead of worrying, just look at these pictures of Audrey Hepburn with her baby deer: http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-O3JocyJair0/T0yzF1756VI/AAAAAAAAI_M/R-lYxYYAuoM/s1600/162999.jpg
Don't you feel better?
*drool* 55inch LG OLED TV
EDIT its edge is 4mm thick!
the "no true scotch man" fallacy.
In your defense you are not US.
i am up for the year!!!!
i missed big though on one trade
like, i missed on 300% of upside by making my trade too early
3
hun
dred
FUUUUUUUUUUUU
Arch,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_goGR39m2k
I share Louis CK's opinion on deer.
No I've never seen a deer.
As someone who lives here now, it's pretty still pretty awful.
Wait what, never?
moral of the story: don't trust the irish to do anything but dark beer right.
Nice breakdown of some of the insurance systems from News Hour. Including the Netherlands. Netherlands current program sounds very similar to ACA. There is a mandate. But it is hard to keep prices down and not have one due to how insurance pools work. I think that is the biggest part, either everyone pays into one pool(national insurance) or are required to buy insurance thus the healthy subsidize the sick and when they are sick their care is subsidized by those who are now healthy. I think this is an important aspect we forget.
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/globalhealth/july-dec09/insurance_1006.html
And I was like "u lucky I nice guy and not hunter" and then it bolted away.
we're not awful at whiskey or beating our wives either
I let out a really tiny squeal.
isn't this how the first episode starts and then it never happens again?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETMhq9RSXzY
I don't think I've ever had irish whiskey. I cannot comment.
Nope. First episode, s7e10 or thereabout. And at least two times in between.
This is one way to do it
just like
nudge nudge wink wink
huh, I must have just ignored it or something. that is strange. I think it makes sense at the start of the show but after that I'm not sure what they're going for.
oh right I only watched the first 4 seasons. derrrr.
"Hey, if it was free, I'd wait 4 months for a hip replacement, too"
"but the thing is, it isn’t free, you’ll be paying for your hip replacement through your taxes. Heck, you’ll be helping to pay for someone else’s hip replacement too!"
is it wrong for me to want to make soup of the last guy's bones and use it to feed the poor
You can get within about 20 meters of them before they start to wander off.
I would say the Netherlands and Swiss have a better chance in the US. Or developing medicare for all ages which would be closer to your system.
Never. Along with snow, oaks and other things you find in the north.
What's medicare? Just free health care or?
Well if it is part of your taxes he is right. He is forgetting that when he needs help the person who needed the hip replacement is paying for his medical care. Because that is how insurance works. You pay in to subsidize those using it when you are sick, and they do the same for you.
Hell that is what they do in the states, there just is a 30% cut off the top and a lot less access.
you've never seen snow?!