I used to be able to do that. Maybe my patience and equanimity will return now that that place isn't sapping my will to live. I know one thing, next time I need an injectable, I'll request bags from our only competitor. Yea, "free" market?
As mentioned, I've no way of knowing your own circumstances. If you got screwed in that department, I'd guess you came up heads somewhere else, it tends to balance out. Not completely of course, some people exist in a 'when it rains it pours' existence, others the sun always seems to shine and the grass is greener but for most of us, it tends to break even. Maybe your teeth are just naturally sucky, I don't know. You're an intelligent person in an Age that tends to value that highly, most would consider that a fair trade. Me, I'd rather cut off a finger than lose an IQ point, but I'd rather keep my hand then a single IQ point.
It's a little, no a LOT frustrating because, with the very notable exception of my fiancee, the last two years have been one unbroken crap storm. I finally stopped telling myself the clouds have to break sooner or later even as I kept saying it to others because it was just too depressing; every time I seemed to be back on my feet, everything paid for, bills taken care of for the foreseeable, bank account rising instead of falling, I'd get submarined by something. The past year (ironically given your example) it's been this freaking lemon of a car; it's been out of the shop for 8 whole days this time, yet after I stopped for gas on the way home from work today I had an idiot light come on for my engine. And I've got to sell this piece of crap in less than two months, because I no longer have a job and still owe nearly $4000 on it. And so it goes....
The fact remains there's only so much water on the planet so it can't rain forever. Still, I distinctly remember my uncle saying he feels like the whole family is under active assault by the devil. That was a little over a year ago. Fortunately for all of us, that's not the top of the food chain.
Most objectivists aren't particularly anarchic, and I am not one, as you know, and do not particular subscribe to Dickens-esque " and decrease the surplus population." thinking. Rand actually does not knock charity, she just knocks a mindset that makes it moral duty and major virtue, and she definitely does not knock cooperation. Generally speaking objectivist solutions to poverty tend to be of the 'let's ten of us get together and high Bob to do housework, eleven people profit' variety, not 'let Bob starve in the streets', it doesn't even frown on charity, again, it just rejects the notion that charity is a duty and more is better. And it totally embraces non-financial-profit behavior, it isn't money driven. Yes, certainly many use the ideology as a vehicle to excuse their own failings or greed but that's hardly unique to her philosophy.
Regardless, most of us who are against these sorts of programs aren't objectivists, on top of taxes US citizens voluntarily contribute more money to charitable works than any other country, oops, make that all other countries combined. And its definitely not greed inspiring most conservatives, who statistically give 30% more to charity then libs while also statistically having a smaller average income. Not that libs in the US have much to feel ashamed over, they give 2-3 times as much per capita as the European average, needless to say, since Europe and the US contain slightly over half the world's money between them, nobody else is in a position to have much effect, in case anyone's curious, #1 giver on the list I have was Spain, per capita, at less then half the US per cap donations, followed very closely by Belgium and the UK, the UK of course has a much large number of people, the other two big population areas, France and Germany, do just just over half and roughly a third the per cap of those top 3 respectively. Germans were averaging 1/7th the donations per person of Americans, the study is from earlier in the decade, hopefully that's changed, I don't feel like hunting for anything newer.
None of this revolves then around a desire to harm or even ignore poverty. People who are starting to ask "Who is John Galt?" aren't doing it because they resent helping the needy. You don't hear them demanding massive cuts to police, fire, military etc because those groups represent undeniable benefits as collective actions. To you, healthcare represents a different thing, a necessity, and thus should be provided by all for all. Hardly a crazy idea, but to most of us on the right, its no different then getting your car or roof fixed, realistically maintaining either of those in poor condition is more likely to kill you then a lot of health ailments, same as not fencing in your pool is 1000x times more likely to kill your kids then leaving a loaded fire arm lying around the house. My teeth aren't my problem, my car is (its not, just an example) my tires are going bald and I need it to function to get to work and the grocery store. Or the engine needs and expensive tune up, both, thats pretty common for a lot of poorer people and it is, like a neglect of dental checkups, something which costs more money in the long term then the maintenance would have if done properly. All the wasted gas will add up, and the chance of a critical failure, death by lack of sufficient tire tread, is very real. Should we then have collective car maintenance? Done properly, it would certainly save us all money, the Army on most posts provides facilities where you can 'rent' for about $5 an hour usually, a bay in a garage and access to all the tools. Its a pretty effective policy, but you can get away with that better in the tyrannic setup that is the military, because abuse can be dealt with quickly (and arbitrarily), not too compatible with our normal civilian setup, plus virtually everyone in the military has some vehicle mechanic training... however, there is nothing stopping a group of people from collectively getting together and buying a garage and tools and doing the same. Costs overall will often parallel simply taking it to a mechanic though. Regardless, there is not, and never has been anything stopping liberals from getting together and pooling their resources for medical and dental or anything else. Its not like liberals over all are poorer than the national average. There is not and never has been anything preventing our countries socialist leaning sorts from forming groups (heck, lots of religious groups do this) and pooling their resources as they saw fit, a simple contract on entry making release of tax filings and continued dues on penalty of expulsion is quite legal. I have no objection to such a thing, and might even join one - voluntarily - but I'll not have others force me into it. Its perfectly possible to have socialism under capitalism, families tend to run that way, many business and organizations do some of that, but forcing people to contribute against their will? Nope, only when you can show it is beyond reasonable doubt a vastly superior method.
The thing I've always found annoying about Rand and her followers is that she seems to urge, almost command, not just individuality in itself, but the particular form she prefers. Everyone should be free in exactly the way she says they should, and that makes me VERY nervous, because it's the kind of thing Stalin and Mao used to say.
The thing is, I think ensuring necessities are universally acceptable is itself an undeniable benefit to society. It's reminiscent in some ways of the debate over the infamous "Selfish Gene", but, as I said elsewhere, dead workers tend to produce very little, and a starving soldier is a poor defense, which is why we (theoretically) don't allow our soldiers to starve (though as much as some (not you) think all liberals hate America and its military, I don't think service families, particularly with deployed breadwinners, get nearly as much government help as they need. ) Whether it's moral or gives us a warm and fuzzy feeling is really irrelevant to national policy, and I recognize that; love still can't be coerced, and if it's mandatory it's not charity, it's just a tax. We tax to provide government services from which all or most benefit directly or indirectly; if we don't maintain some basic minimal standards the cops won't protect us from looters: They'll JOIN them. That's the primary reason corruption is so rife in underprivileged countries; wave a ham under the nose of a man whose family's starving and he'll often forget his duty very quickly. So there's a passive and active benefit to society individually and collectively. We can debate whether or not something falls into the category of an essential need of this sort that it's in everyones best interest to make accessible, but if/when we establish that something IS an essential need, to my mind we've conceded that interest exists. When someone's always had such access without the need of government aid, however, it can be a lot harder to see. It's not a malicious thing, no (at least not usually) it's a perception thing. I can't relate to Warren Buffets problems either, but my inability to do so isn't going to cost him his life and isn't what's dulling Americas competitive edge (if we even still have one; biggest thing we have going right now is we have so many consumers of high dollar goods other economies can't afford to lose us, but since we're buying from them on credit, that can't continue indefinitely. )
As to comparing per capita charitable donations around the world, I suspect it would be rather like our discussion of the HDI: How do you measure, what do you measure, and how do you normalize it? I don't doubt Americans donate more than say, the Burmese, however you measure it, but not because we're so noble or they're so heartless: We have the money. Even comparing us to Europe is difficult because, outside of foreign aid, a great many things that depend on charitable aid here are financed by taxes there, so even if the income levels are comparable, the need isn't necessarily, and (except for people seeking tax shelters) people don't donate money just for the hell of it: They donate money with the intent to make a positive difference.
As to proof, well, again thinking of the HDI discussion, somehow something manifestly true can be difficult to prove. Prove the shortest distance between two points is a straight line. I worry the proof really will be in the pudding and that, for America, it may be very sour. The only thing I know for sure is that since the Democrats Big Tent exploded in Chicago in '68 we've been increasingly returning to the Harding model, and our political, strategic and economic status has been just as increasingly eroding. Maybe liberalism isn't the answer (though it seems to work fine in Western Europe) but what we've been doing all my life isn't working any better than it did in my grandparents' day.
Lest there be confusion about where I stand I'll just reiterate: Obama is no FDR or he wouldn't have spent his First Hundred Days on trickle down programs so unpopular even many Congressional Republicans opposed them. While I'm sure partisanship played it's usual role, I think it says something when the President wants to give banks $700 billion dollars and the GOP bucks him. That's a much bigger lending boost than cutting the prime rate a point, but it was still a horrible idea simply because we gave a kings ransom to people who'd demonstrated they lack both the competence and the integrity to manage money.
There's no denying you're right: I have been neglectful, not in terms of dentist care (if you don't got it, you don't got it; that's not a new situation for me or anyone) but in terms of personal care and personal choices. Of course, if I brushed, flossed and gargled five times a day and took all my food intravenously it would be all the same as far as going to a dentist now; I almost certainly wouldn't have as many dental problems, but whether or not I did I'd be every bit as much on my own.
As mentioned, I've no way of knowing your own circumstances. If you got screwed in that department, I'd guess you came up heads somewhere else, it tends to balance out. Not completely of course, some people exist in a 'when it rains it pours' existence, others the sun always seems to shine and the grass is greener but for most of us, it tends to break even. Maybe your teeth are just naturally sucky, I don't know. You're an intelligent person in an Age that tends to value that highly, most would consider that a fair trade. Me, I'd rather cut off a finger than lose an IQ point, but I'd rather keep my hand then a single IQ point.
It's a little, no a LOT frustrating because, with the very notable exception of my fiancee, the last two years have been one unbroken crap storm. I finally stopped telling myself the clouds have to break sooner or later even as I kept saying it to others because it was just too depressing; every time I seemed to be back on my feet, everything paid for, bills taken care of for the foreseeable, bank account rising instead of falling, I'd get submarined by something. The past year (ironically given your example) it's been this freaking lemon of a car; it's been out of the shop for 8 whole days this time, yet after I stopped for gas on the way home from work today I had an idiot light come on for my engine. And I've got to sell this piece of crap in less than two months, because I no longer have a job and still owe nearly $4000 on it. And so it goes....
The fact remains there's only so much water on the planet so it can't rain forever. Still, I distinctly remember my uncle saying he feels like the whole family is under active assault by the devil. That was a little over a year ago. Fortunately for all of us, that's not the top of the food chain.
I'm about to the point where I wanna say remove all the taxes, shut down the government and let the Ayn Rand groupies live in the world of anarchy they so fervently desire. I have too much integrity to last five seconds in it, but they're too self absorbed to last any longer.
Most objectivists aren't particularly anarchic, and I am not one, as you know, and do not particular subscribe to Dickens-esque " and decrease the surplus population." thinking. Rand actually does not knock charity, she just knocks a mindset that makes it moral duty and major virtue, and she definitely does not knock cooperation. Generally speaking objectivist solutions to poverty tend to be of the 'let's ten of us get together and high Bob to do housework, eleven people profit' variety, not 'let Bob starve in the streets', it doesn't even frown on charity, again, it just rejects the notion that charity is a duty and more is better. And it totally embraces non-financial-profit behavior, it isn't money driven. Yes, certainly many use the ideology as a vehicle to excuse their own failings or greed but that's hardly unique to her philosophy.
Regardless, most of us who are against these sorts of programs aren't objectivists, on top of taxes US citizens voluntarily contribute more money to charitable works than any other country, oops, make that all other countries combined. And its definitely not greed inspiring most conservatives, who statistically give 30% more to charity then libs while also statistically having a smaller average income. Not that libs in the US have much to feel ashamed over, they give 2-3 times as much per capita as the European average, needless to say, since Europe and the US contain slightly over half the world's money between them, nobody else is in a position to have much effect, in case anyone's curious, #1 giver on the list I have was Spain, per capita, at less then half the US per cap donations, followed very closely by Belgium and the UK, the UK of course has a much large number of people, the other two big population areas, France and Germany, do just just over half and roughly a third the per cap of those top 3 respectively. Germans were averaging 1/7th the donations per person of Americans, the study is from earlier in the decade, hopefully that's changed, I don't feel like hunting for anything newer.
None of this revolves then around a desire to harm or even ignore poverty. People who are starting to ask "Who is John Galt?" aren't doing it because they resent helping the needy. You don't hear them demanding massive cuts to police, fire, military etc because those groups represent undeniable benefits as collective actions. To you, healthcare represents a different thing, a necessity, and thus should be provided by all for all. Hardly a crazy idea, but to most of us on the right, its no different then getting your car or roof fixed, realistically maintaining either of those in poor condition is more likely to kill you then a lot of health ailments, same as not fencing in your pool is 1000x times more likely to kill your kids then leaving a loaded fire arm lying around the house. My teeth aren't my problem, my car is (its not, just an example) my tires are going bald and I need it to function to get to work and the grocery store. Or the engine needs and expensive tune up, both, thats pretty common for a lot of poorer people and it is, like a neglect of dental checkups, something which costs more money in the long term then the maintenance would have if done properly. All the wasted gas will add up, and the chance of a critical failure, death by lack of sufficient tire tread, is very real. Should we then have collective car maintenance? Done properly, it would certainly save us all money, the Army on most posts provides facilities where you can 'rent' for about $5 an hour usually, a bay in a garage and access to all the tools. Its a pretty effective policy, but you can get away with that better in the tyrannic setup that is the military, because abuse can be dealt with quickly (and arbitrarily), not too compatible with our normal civilian setup, plus virtually everyone in the military has some vehicle mechanic training... however, there is nothing stopping a group of people from collectively getting together and buying a garage and tools and doing the same. Costs overall will often parallel simply taking it to a mechanic though. Regardless, there is not, and never has been anything stopping liberals from getting together and pooling their resources for medical and dental or anything else. Its not like liberals over all are poorer than the national average. There is not and never has been anything preventing our countries socialist leaning sorts from forming groups (heck, lots of religious groups do this) and pooling their resources as they saw fit, a simple contract on entry making release of tax filings and continued dues on penalty of expulsion is quite legal. I have no objection to such a thing, and might even join one - voluntarily - but I'll not have others force me into it. Its perfectly possible to have socialism under capitalism, families tend to run that way, many business and organizations do some of that, but forcing people to contribute against their will? Nope, only when you can show it is beyond reasonable doubt a vastly superior method.
The thing I've always found annoying about Rand and her followers is that she seems to urge, almost command, not just individuality in itself, but the particular form she prefers. Everyone should be free in exactly the way she says they should, and that makes me VERY nervous, because it's the kind of thing Stalin and Mao used to say.
The thing is, I think ensuring necessities are universally acceptable is itself an undeniable benefit to society. It's reminiscent in some ways of the debate over the infamous "Selfish Gene", but, as I said elsewhere, dead workers tend to produce very little, and a starving soldier is a poor defense, which is why we (theoretically) don't allow our soldiers to starve (though as much as some (not you) think all liberals hate America and its military, I don't think service families, particularly with deployed breadwinners, get nearly as much government help as they need. ) Whether it's moral or gives us a warm and fuzzy feeling is really irrelevant to national policy, and I recognize that; love still can't be coerced, and if it's mandatory it's not charity, it's just a tax. We tax to provide government services from which all or most benefit directly or indirectly; if we don't maintain some basic minimal standards the cops won't protect us from looters: They'll JOIN them. That's the primary reason corruption is so rife in underprivileged countries; wave a ham under the nose of a man whose family's starving and he'll often forget his duty very quickly. So there's a passive and active benefit to society individually and collectively. We can debate whether or not something falls into the category of an essential need of this sort that it's in everyones best interest to make accessible, but if/when we establish that something IS an essential need, to my mind we've conceded that interest exists. When someone's always had such access without the need of government aid, however, it can be a lot harder to see. It's not a malicious thing, no (at least not usually) it's a perception thing. I can't relate to Warren Buffets problems either, but my inability to do so isn't going to cost him his life and isn't what's dulling Americas competitive edge (if we even still have one; biggest thing we have going right now is we have so many consumers of high dollar goods other economies can't afford to lose us, but since we're buying from them on credit, that can't continue indefinitely. )
As to comparing per capita charitable donations around the world, I suspect it would be rather like our discussion of the HDI: How do you measure, what do you measure, and how do you normalize it? I don't doubt Americans donate more than say, the Burmese, however you measure it, but not because we're so noble or they're so heartless: We have the money. Even comparing us to Europe is difficult because, outside of foreign aid, a great many things that depend on charitable aid here are financed by taxes there, so even if the income levels are comparable, the need isn't necessarily, and (except for people seeking tax shelters) people don't donate money just for the hell of it: They donate money with the intent to make a positive difference.
As to proof, well, again thinking of the HDI discussion, somehow something manifestly true can be difficult to prove. Prove the shortest distance between two points is a straight line. I worry the proof really will be in the pudding and that, for America, it may be very sour. The only thing I know for sure is that since the Democrats Big Tent exploded in Chicago in '68 we've been increasingly returning to the Harding model, and our political, strategic and economic status has been just as increasingly eroding. Maybe liberalism isn't the answer (though it seems to work fine in Western Europe) but what we've been doing all my life isn't working any better than it did in my grandparents' day.
Lest there be confusion about where I stand I'll just reiterate: Obama is no FDR or he wouldn't have spent his First Hundred Days on trickle down programs so unpopular even many Congressional Republicans opposed them. While I'm sure partisanship played it's usual role, I think it says something when the President wants to give banks $700 billion dollars and the GOP bucks him. That's a much bigger lending boost than cutting the prime rate a point, but it was still a horrible idea simply because we gave a kings ransom to people who'd demonstrated they lack both the competence and the integrity to manage money.
Honorbound and honored to be Bonded to Mahtaliel Sedai
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
This message last edited by Joel on 11/09/2010 at 09:27:20 PM
NSSP: I Live in the Greatest Country on Earth!
09/09/2010 06:12:06 PM
- 1603 Views
17 fillings? Do you ever go to the dentist? *NM*
09/09/2010 06:26:05 PM
- 390 Views
seriously. that's an insane number of fillings to have been putting off.
09/09/2010 06:28:09 PM
- 901 Views
This is the first time in my life I've had dental insurance.
09/09/2010 06:29:44 PM
- 930 Views
So in other words it's your own damn fault.
09/09/2010 07:34:43 PM
- 859 Views
"Not that expensive" is a big phrase.
10/09/2010 05:42:55 AM
- 830 Views
have you tried going to a dental school?
09/09/2010 07:36:15 PM
- 774 Views
Congratulations: You made the first constructive suggestion in the thread.
10/09/2010 05:37:51 AM
- 810 Views
well, I bet it wouldn't have cost you near so much if you hadn't kept putting it off.
09/09/2010 06:29:50 PM
- 892 Views
Yes, I was able to figure that out on my own.
09/09/2010 06:34:58 PM
- 1010 Views
17? Wow... do you use cola as mouthwash? *NM*
09/09/2010 06:46:28 PM
- 482 Views
Dr. Pepper
09/09/2010 06:47:32 PM
- 821 Views
Re: Dr. Pepper
10/09/2010 07:05:06 PM
- 978 Views
A reasonable response; amazing how it doesn't make me foam at the mouth....
11/09/2010 04:02:10 PM
- 949 Views
(shrugs) I don't mix personal and politics
11/09/2010 07:21:36 PM
- 1183 Views
As it should be.
11/09/2010 09:17:56 PM
- 927 Views
would it save you money if they just ripped them all out and put in dentures instead? *NM*
09/09/2010 09:32:41 PM
- 496 Views
I feel so sorry for people who have to live in uncivilised countries.
10/09/2010 12:18:11 AM
- 870 Views
yes he will be moving to the land known for great dental care *NM*
10/09/2010 01:01:37 AM
- 453 Views
I think I must have been channeling a drunken poet when I wrote that insult
10/09/2010 01:23:45 AM
- 981 Views
LOL A British person lecturing us about anything involving dental care.
10/09/2010 02:02:33 AM
- 955 Views
I love how I'm not the only one to remember very old Simpson episodes!
10/09/2010 03:58:41 AM
- 874 Views
When I posted regularly and prolifically that was kinda my thing.
10/09/2010 06:17:03 AM
- 818 Views
Where does that stereotype come from?
11/09/2010 04:52:41 PM
- 1139 Views
Yeah, about that...
11/09/2010 09:31:11 PM
- 1201 Views
America is fine. You just suck at it. *NM*
10/09/2010 12:29:48 AM
- 514 Views
Sorry for the national debt nearly as large as our GDP, falling standard of living and Iraq War.
10/09/2010 05:57:34 AM
- 811 Views
~shrugs~
10/09/2010 01:48:24 AM
- 822 Views
In this case I did without so I could get to work every day, and put my arm back in its socket.
10/09/2010 06:19:11 AM
- 814 Views
Your travel money would certainly have paid for a lot of dentistry. *NM*
10/09/2010 02:00:09 AM
- 465 Views
LITERATEDOG!!
10/09/2010 02:02:57 AM
- 924 Views
I was trying to go the Facebook route, but no one wants to debate anything there. *NM*
10/09/2010 02:04:48 AM
- 479 Views
The only people that reply to you on Facebook are people who already like you and agree with you. *NM*
10/09/2010 03:07:22 AM
- 462 Views
Not really.
10/09/2010 06:21:55 AM
- 918 Views
Oh, honey, I don't blame you for the Norway travel.
10/09/2010 06:35:10 AM
- 796 Views
Funny thing is I once would've agreed.
10/09/2010 08:47:34 AM
- 908 Views
Boohoo. You made your choices. You prioritized luxuries before dental care. Live with it.
10/09/2010 04:40:05 PM
- 953 Views
Joel opened himself up to this
10/09/2010 05:22:45 PM
- 846 Views
But it's all about his personal choices.
10/09/2010 05:33:42 PM
- 943 Views
A rather tangential point, but since you keep talking about what "you as a nation" pay for...
10/09/2010 06:07:10 PM
- 822 Views
I couldn't care less what his actual income is.
10/09/2010 06:16:41 PM
- 821 Views
IIRC, you think there's a huge pile of misspent money that should be returned to its owners.
11/09/2010 04:12:57 PM
- 901 Views
Yes.
10/09/2010 06:33:22 PM
- 951 Views
Whatever. Completely ignore my points because you want to hide behind the label "personal choice".
10/09/2010 11:13:02 PM
- 776 Views
"if you really work as much as you claim, then you must piss money away at an astounding rate" eh?
11/09/2010 03:49:58 PM
- 1033 Views
And your comparison of a celebratory party to the basic right to marry itself is ludicrous.
10/09/2010 06:55:18 AM
- 1110 Views
That's an unfortunate situation...
10/09/2010 05:10:01 PM
- 990 Views
*hugs* I'm glad you got it taken care of though, and glad to hear from you; been a little worried.
11/09/2010 04:34:31 PM
- 909 Views