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Topic ClosedDo you support universal healthcare?

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Poll Question: Do you support universal healthcare?
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61 [73.49%]
18 [21.69%]
4 [4.82%]
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ExittheLemming View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 11:33
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Well you all have had a reasonably civil discussion without me, so I'm going to keep out as much as possible. I am going tell my personal story to at least give a reason why I'm such a boor about these things.
 
I'm a primary doctor in a community clinic. We see mostly Medicaid, Some Private Insurance, and uninsured on a sliding fee scale. The uninsured range from small business owners who have elected not to carry coverage to workers for small businesses that don't carry group coverage to part timers and independent contractors who can't afford coverage to homeless. The homeless include substance abusers, mentally ill, and folks just down on their luck. I have plenty of patients who don't work but should be, and I have alot of patients that have no skills and the unskilled jobs simply aren't out there right now.
 
I deal with insurance companies trying to get out of paying every day. I deal with the fact that Medicaid doesn't pay their bills for months on end and many providers will not take patients with Medicaid. I'm left scrambling trying to figure out how to get people care every workday.
 
I have private insurance through my wife, who works as a doctor for a much bigger private system. Our care and coverage is excellent as long as we stay within their system which happens to include a world-class hospital, so we are really lucky.
 
Both my wife and I are children of teachers. When we were young, our families were poor but all the basics were provided for. Now our children have more privelege than they should despite our attempts to keep them grounded. I've been at both ends, and I am no more worthy of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness now than my father was as a beginning teacher working full time plus doing construction to keep us going. Yet the socio-economic difference is staggering.
 
I am the American dream, and it is not fair. I did not earn the differences in privelege I have. I was blessed with a love of science and some idea of how the education system works. The fact that I will get the best care in the world while the guys working in the steel mill get the shaft is not fair. They have a big group plan too, but their union negotiated terrible health benefits in exchange for no pay cut.
 
I frankly don't know what the answer is, but this isn't it.


You are clearly not a boor. But of candour, humility and honesty (Guilty as Hell). Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 12:03
  • 31 percent of young workers report being uninsured, up from 24 percent 10 years ago, and 79 percent of the uninsured say they don’t have coverage because they can’t afford it or their employer does not offer it.
  • Strikingly, one in three young workers are currently living at home with their parents.
  • Only 31 percent say they make enough money to cover their bills and put some money aside—22 percentage points fewer than in 1999—while 24 percent cannot even pay their monthly bills. 
  • A third cannot pay their bills and seven in 10 do not have enough saved to cover two months of living expenses.
  • 37 percent have put off education or professional development because they can’t afford it.
  • When asked who is most responsible for the country’s economic woes, close to 50 percent of young workers place the blame on Wall Street and banks or corporate CEOs. And young workers say greed by corporations and CEOs is the factor most to blame for in the current financial downturn.
  • By a 22-point margin, young workers favor expanding public investment over reducing the budget deficit. Young workers rank conservative economic approaches such as reducing taxes, government spending and regulation on business among the five lowest of 16 long-term priorities for Congress and the president.
  • Thirty-five percent say they voted for the first time in 2008, and nearly three-quarters now keep tabs on government and public affairs, even when there’s not an election going on.
  • The majority of young workers and nearly 70 percent of first-time voters are confident that Obama will take the country in the right direction.
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:13
Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

All I have to say is - I hope none of those 20-year-olds will have to learn they are not God the hard way. You can lead the most careful of lives, and still get sick and die - or have an accident not through your fault, and become disabled. I had a cousin, a very high-ranking judge, who died in under two months, at the age of 52, of a particularly virulent form of cancer. She had had checkups a few months before she died, so she did take care of herself - but that didn't prevent her from getting sick and dying all the same.

As to healthcare not being a right, well... It is easy to say when you are 20. Lose your good health, and then come and tell me. I am sorry if this post implies any negative wishes on my part, but seeing people speak of other people's lives in such terms makes me sick. In the past few years I have seen the fragility of our human condition first hand, and like to believe it taught me a lesson. 


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.

By the way, I hope that my beliefs are not so easily swayed by emotion as to abandon them once bad things start happening around me. If I'm going to do that, I might as well get a lobotomy and forgo critical thought right now. And hey, I wonder if other people will pay to take care of me once I do it, too...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:22
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

All I have to say is - I hope none of those 20-year-olds will have to learn they are not God the hard way. You can lead the most careful of lives, and still get sick and die - or have an accident not through your fault, and become disabled. I had a cousin, a very high-ranking judge, who died in under two months, at the age of 52, of a particularly virulent form of cancer. She had had checkups a few months before she died, so she did take care of herself - but that didn't prevent her from getting sick and dying all the same.

As to healthcare not being a right, well... It is easy to say when you are 20. Lose your good health, and then come and tell me. I am sorry if this post implies any negative wishes on my part, but seeing people speak of other people's lives in such terms makes me sick. In the past few years I have seen the fragility of our human condition first hand, and like to believe it taught me a lesson. 


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.

By the way, I hope that my beliefs are not so easily swayed by emotion as to abandon them once bad things start happening around me. If I'm going to do that, I might as well get a lobotomy and forgo critical thought right now. And hey, I wonder if other people will pay to take care of me once I do it, too...


Well, then. I guess you're just 'above' every philosophy out there, huh? Too bad we mere mortals need to delute ourselves with these vices of morality. But you're so much better than us since you renounce it all, right?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:25
Rights.

Heh.

One of the more disturbing debates I know of. Such an artificial system of classifying things. It only mirrors the majority rule in most cases. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:38
Originally posted by LinusW LinusW wrote:

Rights.

Heh.

One of the more disturbing debates I know of. Such an artificial system of classifying things. It only mirrors the majority rule of morality in most cases. 


And it has nothing to do with standing above anything, at least not in my case. I just find it silly that people find some of these "rights" carved in stone while renouncing other "rights".

It's just a matter of history, tradition and majority morality. I consider universal healthcare a right based on those three, and of course due to my own morality as well. But I can't escape the fact that it's influenced by what came before me. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:43
Originally posted by LinusW LinusW wrote:

Originally posted by LinusW LinusW wrote:

Rights.

Heh.

One of the more disturbing debates I know of. Such an artificial system of classifying things. It only mirrors the majority rule of morality in most cases. 


And it has nothing to do with standing above anything, at least not in my case. I just find it silly that people find some of these "rights" carved in stone while renouncing other "rights".

It's just a matter of history, tradition and majority morality. I consider universal healthcare a right based on those three, and of course due to my own morality as well. But I can't escape the fact that it's influenced by what came before me. 


Well naturally, but when a person comes into a debate such as this and begins speaking about commonplace beliefs and outlooks as if they are idiotic and trivial, it gets on my nerves a bit.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:45
What's even worse is opposing universal healthcare purely on the basis that it's not a "right". Other than that, this thread is full of good arguments for both side. And some of more dubious quality as well LOL 

Edited by LinusW - September 04 2009 at 16:46
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:47
Originally posted by LinusW LinusW wrote:

What's even worse is opposing universal healthcare purely on the basis that it's not a right. Other than that, this thread is full of good arguments for both side. And some of more dubious quality as well LOL 


I'm not one of those people who think universal healthcare should be done 'just because', but I do think that common sense and decency does play a part it in at some point. If we didn't want to look out for each other at some point, we wouldn't have half of what we do now, in my opinion.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:49
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by LinusW LinusW wrote:

What's even worse is opposing universal healthcare purely on the basis that it's not a right. Other than that, this thread is full of good arguments for both sides. And some of more dubious quality as well LOL 


I'm not one of those people who think universal healthcare should be done 'just because', but I do think that common sense and decency does play a part it in at some point. If we didn't want to look out for each other at some point, we wouldn't have half of what we do now, in my opinion.


I agree.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 16:59
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.
Jesus Christ!
if you own a sodastream i hate you
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 17:22
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

All I have to say is - I hope none of those 20-year-olds will have to learn they are not God the hard way. You can lead the most careful of lives, and still get sick and die - or have an accident not through your fault, and become disabled. I had a cousin, a very high-ranking judge, who died in under two months, at the age of 52, of a particularly virulent form of cancer. She had had checkups a few months before she died, so she did take care of herself - but that didn't prevent her from getting sick and dying all the same.

As to healthcare not being a right, well... It is easy to say when you are 20. Lose your good health, and then come and tell me. I am sorry if this post implies any negative wishes on my part, but seeing people speak of other people's lives in such terms makes me sick. In the past few years I have seen the fragility of our human condition first hand, and like to believe it taught me a lesson. 


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.

By the way, I hope that my beliefs are not so easily swayed by emotion as to abandon them once bad things start happening around me. If I'm going to do that, I might as well get a lobotomy and forgo critical thought right now. And hey, I wonder if other people will pay to take care of me once I do it, too...


Well, then. I guess you're just 'above' every philosophy out there, huh? Too bad we mere mortals need to delute ourselves with these vices of morality. But you're so much better than us since you renounce it all, right?


You assume a lot in your responses to my posts.

You think I like not having a firm moral grounding? I hate it, and it gives me no comfort. I'd love for someone to justify to my satisfaction any foundation for morality, but I don't know of one yet. And to me, most other people who say they have a firm moral ground are indeed delusional about it. It will probably fall apart under scrutiny. I'm in the same boat as everyone else, only I recognize that I don't know.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 17:24
Originally posted by Henry Plainview Henry Plainview wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.
Jesus Christ!


I know. I get that a lot, and I do see some resemblance now. Embarrassed
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 17:32
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

All I have to say is - I hope none of those 20-year-olds will have to learn they are not God the hard way. You can lead the most careful of lives, and still get sick and die - or have an accident not through your fault, and become disabled. I had a cousin, a very high-ranking judge, who died in under two months, at the age of 52, of a particularly virulent form of cancer. She had had checkups a few months before she died, so she did take care of herself - but that didn't prevent her from getting sick and dying all the same.

As to healthcare not being a right, well... It is easy to say when you are 20. Lose your good health, and then come and tell me. I am sorry if this post implies any negative wishes on my part, but seeing people speak of other people's lives in such terms makes me sick. In the past few years I have seen the fragility of our human condition first hand, and like to believe it taught me a lesson. 


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.

By the way, I hope that my beliefs are not so easily swayed by emotion as to abandon them once bad things start happening around me. If I'm going to do that, I might as well get a lobotomy and forgo critical thought right now. And hey, I wonder if other people will pay to take care of me once I do it, too...


Well, then. I guess you're just 'above' every philosophy out there, huh? Too bad we mere mortals need to delute ourselves with these vices of morality. But you're so much better than us since you renounce it all, right?


You assume a lot in your responses to my posts.

You think I like not having a firm moral grounding? I hate it, and it gives me no comfort. I'd love for someone to justify to my satisfaction any foundation for morality, but I don't know of one yet. And to me, most other people who say they have a firm moral ground are indeed delusional about it. It will probably fall apart under scrutiny. I'm in the same boat as everyone else, only I recognize that I don't know.


Typical narcissistic response.

"it's not my fault I'm so much more enlightened than everybody else. I just am! I hate being intellectually superior!"

Ermm


Edited by p0mt3 - September 04 2009 at 17:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 17:45
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

All I have to say is - I hope none of those 20-year-olds will have to learn they are not God the hard way. You can lead the most careful of lives, and still get sick and die - or have an accident not through your fault, and become disabled. I had a cousin, a very high-ranking judge, who died in under two months, at the age of 52, of a particularly virulent form of cancer. She had had checkups a few months before she died, so she did take care of herself - but that didn't prevent her from getting sick and dying all the same.

As to healthcare not being a right, well... It is easy to say when you are 20. Lose your good health, and then come and tell me. I am sorry if this post implies any negative wishes on my part, but seeing people speak of other people's lives in such terms makes me sick. In the past few years I have seen the fragility of our human condition first hand, and like to believe it taught me a lesson. 


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.

By the way, I hope that my beliefs are not so easily swayed by emotion as to abandon them once bad things start happening around me. If I'm going to do that, I might as well get a lobotomy and forgo critical thought right now. And hey, I wonder if other people will pay to take care of me once I do it, too...


Well, then. I guess you're just 'above' every philosophy out there, huh? Too bad we mere mortals need to delute ourselves with these vices of morality. But you're so much better than us since you renounce it all, right?


You assume a lot in your responses to my posts.

You think I like not having a firm moral grounding? I hate it, and it gives me no comfort. I'd love for someone to justify to my satisfaction any foundation for morality, but I don't know of one yet. And to me, most other people who say they have a firm moral ground are indeed delusional about it. It will probably fall apart under scrutiny. I'm in the same boat as everyone else, only I recognize that I don't know.


Typical narcissistic response.

"it's not my fault I'm so much more enlightened than everybody else. I just am! I hate being intellectually superior!"

Ermm


I'm sure your thorough study of narcissistic personalities as the professional psychologist you are is a valuable addition to this discussion.

Are you even interested in having a conversation here, or would you continue to misinterpret my words? Lot of people are more enlightened on some things than other people are. You may not like to be inferior at some things, but you are. (Not singling you out). I for example, am less enlightened about math and a lot of science than other people. It's just true. The language may be off-putting, but that doesn't make it less true. I am no expert on morality, but I'm sure that my philosophical interest in it makes me relatively more enlightened on the subject than most people, even though my "knowledge" is very meager. I know enough that I've taken myself off a pedestal of supposed knowledge that many people still are on. I'm not too eager to proclaim I know for sure what is true or right, (because no paradigm of morality makes total sense to me), so I don't jump onto another pedestal of emboldened, shakey knowledge. In most ways, I think I'm humble about the issue, if harshly realistic about the people who don't question their supposed knowledge enough.

I should add, though, that from amateur tests it does appear I am at least somewhat narcissistic. Tons of people are, and tons of people have varying degrees of personality impurities. I just don't think what I said warranted being deemed narcissistic. As if everyone else here is selfless, anyway...


Edited by stonebeard - September 04 2009 at 17:53
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 17:51
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

All I have to say is - I hope none of those 20-year-olds will have to learn they are not God the hard way. You can lead the most careful of lives, and still get sick and die - or have an accident not through your fault, and become disabled. I had a cousin, a very high-ranking judge, who died in under two months, at the age of 52, of a particularly virulent form of cancer. She had had checkups a few months before she died, so she did take care of herself - but that didn't prevent her from getting sick and dying all the same.

As to healthcare not being a right, well... It is easy to say when you are 20. Lose your good health, and then come and tell me. I am sorry if this post implies any negative wishes on my part, but seeing people speak of other people's lives in such terms makes me sick. In the past few years I have seen the fragility of our human condition first hand, and like to believe it taught me a lesson. 


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.

By the way, I hope that my beliefs are not so easily swayed by emotion as to abandon them once bad things start happening around me. If I'm going to do that, I might as well get a lobotomy and forgo critical thought right now. And hey, I wonder if other people will pay to take care of me once I do it, too...


Well, then. I guess you're just 'above' every philosophy out there, huh? Too bad we mere mortals need to delute ourselves with these vices of morality. But you're so much better than us since you renounce it all, right?


You assume a lot in your responses to my posts.

You think I like not having a firm moral grounding? I hate it, and it gives me no comfort. I'd love for someone to justify to my satisfaction any foundation for morality, but I don't know of one yet. And to me, most other people who say they have a firm moral ground are indeed delusional about it. It will probably fall apart under scrutiny. I'm in the same boat as everyone else, only I recognize that I don't know.


Typical narcissistic response.

"it's not my fault I'm so much more enlightened than everybody else. I just am! I hate being intellectually superior!"

Ermm


I'm sure your thorough study of narcissistic personalities as the professional psychologist you are is a valuable addition to this discussion.

Are you even interested in having a conversation here, or would you continue to misinterpret my words? Lot of people are more enlightened on some things than other people are. You may not like to be inferior at some things, but you are. (Not singling you out). I for example, am less enlightened about math and a lot of science than other people. It's just true. The language may be off-putting, but that doesn't make it less true. I am no expert on morality, but I'm sure that my philosophical interest in it makes me relatively more enlightened on the subject than most people, even though my "knowledge" is very meager. I know enough that I've taken myself off a pedestal of supposed knowledge that many people still are on. I'm not too eager to proclaim I know for sure what is true or right, (because no paradigm of morality makes total sense to me), so I don't jump onto another pedestal of emboldened, shakey knowledge. In most ways, I think I'm humble about the issue, if harshly realistic about the people who don't question their supposed knowledge enough.



I have never claimed to be superior to anything, so you calling me inferior to some things is not news to me.
What amuses me, however, is how people like yourself can claim superiority on the basis of NOT knowing something. You said it yourself: you admit that you don't know. But you flaunt that as if it's something to hang on your wall. As if somehow not knowing a damn thing is better than claiming to know something.

Yes, you are claiming to be humble, but you do so in a very un-humble fashion. Not only to you admit that you yourself don't believe in morality, but you go out of your way to debunk others for believing such a thing exists. If you were truly just stating your own stance and nothing more, why would you attempt to make others' opinions seem obsolete in the wake of your own armchair philosophy?

Now if you're going by the Socratic method, I agree with you completely; we need to admit what we don't know before we can grow. However, claiming that other people are somehow delusional or 'quaint' is not admitting to anything about yourself other than you're cynical.

Look, I'm sure that I have simply misinterpreted where you are coming from just like you said, and I'm not trying to come off as a dick (although I hear that's how I appear to people a lot of the time), so we can keep this civil I think without it getting too out of hand. I'm just being honest. If I'm wrong, then explain to me why I am, but let's not try and get too personal with the attacks, or anything, because that isn't going to help anybody.

According to your profile on here, you aren't even a full year older than I am, yet you have this attitude about you that you already have this planet figured out by simply admitting that you DON'T know. I don't think people at our age are supposed to 'know' for sure about anything, that's the beauty of life and discovery, but I can have a gut feeling about something or an opinion based on my experiences that I can go by, and I'm not afraid of basing my opinions of morality on those said opinions.

You can't explain away human nature. We'll never 'know' for certain why we feel and think the way we do about things. That doesn't make it any less prevalent or meaningful to consider universal healthcare a 'right' under this country's definition of the term.



Edited by p0mt3 - September 04 2009 at 18:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 18:18
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:


Acknowledging that rights exist requires a firm basis of morality. I don't have one, besides common sense, because I don't know where it would come from. I may have feelings about some things--killing my mother would upset me in tons of ways, but I don't actually know on what basis I could condemn anyone for it on moral grounds. God is a convenient falsehood, paradigms of philosophers are arbitrary, and moral relativism is unenforceable. I don't know--hence, uncertainty.

By the way, I hope that my beliefs are not so easily swayed by emotion as to abandon them once bad things start happening around me. If I'm going to do that, I might as well get a lobotomy and forgo critical thought right now. And hey, I wonder if other people will pay to take care of me once I do it, too...
 
Man, I don't think you're narcissistic (maybe you show some traits, I do too... I'm studying the subject) but what you do is give such a superior place in philosophy above anything else, you really think philosophy can explain anything.... Philosophers were just that, thinkers, they haven't resolved many of the real issues in the world... and the worst part starts when you start to try to give a deep, philosophical reason to everything you do in life... You have probably a constant voice in your head analyzing everything you do... You are the subject... you... you.... That one is the trait I see...
 
Actually, some emotion would actually help understand why other people say and think some things, including this universal healthcare thing.... You can't explain this based on what some guy said about how he thinks life works.... Once you feel and live the real live, once you experience any suffering, then you'll maybe be actually wiser than right now and not because you've digested every philosophical book and theory there is to know... You haven't explained the universe... You just know what a few guys said....
 
You're not original man... not special.... neither am I or anybody here. We don't have to find the superior reason to think that healthcare should be availablke for every human being the same as property or liberty. We born into this society, we signed the theoretical social pact.... Centuries ago civilization was not ready to do this... Now we are... Now we CAN. So why not do it? why not finally accept that this is a right as basic as the classical ones?
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 18:27
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:




I have never claimed to be superior to anything, so you calling me inferior to some things is not news to me.
What amuses me, however, is how people like yourself can claim superiority on the basis of NOT knowing something. You said it yourself: you admit that you don't know. But you flaunt that as if it's something to hang on your wall. As if somehow not knowing a damn thing is better than claiming to know something.


No, knowing is great, I'd agree! I'd disagree if you said most people know a lot about morality, and whether their beliefs are justified. Is it better to recognize that supposed values don't have firm ground to stand on, or to continue believing them?


Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:


Yes, you are claiming to be humble, but you do so in a very un-humble fashion. Not only to you admit that you yourself don't believe in morality, but you go out of your way to debunk others for believing such a thing exists. If you were truly just stating your own stance and nothing more, why would you attempt to make others' opinions seem obsolete in the wake of your own armchair philosophy?


"Armchair philosophy?" Is there any other kind? LOL

I don't think being humble necessitates not trying to convince people they might be wrong, or at least instill some doubt in the matter. I don't want to give the impression that I'm better than anyone as far as morality goes, because it wouldn't make sense for my beliefs to do so. In fact I haven't really tried to justify my beliefs, only even more clearly explain what I mean. I should have known it was going to cause confusion. "Rights" discussion with my viewpoint would inevitably do that.

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:


Now if you're going by the Socratic method, I agree with you completely; we need to admit what we don't know before we can grow. However, claiming that other people are somehow delusional or 'quaint' is not admitting to anything about yourself other than you're cynical.


I disagree. If someone has a belief that is really obviously unjustified (think of a hypothetical one, it's easy) it's fine to call them delusional.

"Unicorns ram potential candidates and the ones who survive the impaling are elected!"

"You're delusional."

Seems reasonable to me. All ideas have to be filtered for nonsense, and if there's a really sensible and reasonable basis for morality, I haven't found it. But if someone would let me know of one, with justification, then I'd thank the hell out of them (and probably wonder why I didn't think of it first)



Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:


But seriously, let's get back to what this topic is about . . . healthcare!


Good idea, but I'll be stunned if nothing that's gone on here doesn't get challenged and irk me into responding. Here's to that not happening, though! Unless it's to clear my (probably smudged by now) name.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 18:29
ANYWAY, heath care.

I hear people are keen on it 'n' stuff.



(seriously don't respond to any of the stuff I said. off topic 'n' all)



Edited by stonebeard - September 04 2009 at 18:30
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 04 2009 at 18:30
To gently attempt to back up Stoney...

Arguing about whether the provision of health care is a "right" by a classical definition or other metric does not imply that you think said provision to every citizen of a state is wrong.
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