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#466 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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Quote from the Amazon review: "But the most compelling of his eye-opening revisionist stories are among the best-founded: the stories of early American-European contact. To many of those who were there, the earliest encounters felt more like a meeting of equals than one of natural domination. And those who came later and found an emptied landscape that seemed ripe for the taking, Mann argues convincingly, encountered not the natural and unchanging state of the native American, but the evidence of a sudden calamity: the ravages of what was likely the greatest epidemic in human history, the smallpox and other diseases introduced inadvertently by Europeans to a population without immunity, which swept through the Americas faster than the explorers who brought it, and left behind for their discovery a land that held only a shadow of the thriving cultures that it had sustained for centuries before." |
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#467 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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But after "Common Sense" was published (you can get the ebook at Gutenberg) things changed quite swiftly and dramatically, and the 40 percent shifted from "not involved" to "hey, hope you rebel guys win." Not that the 40 percent took up arms themselves, but the sentiments evidently shifted. |
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#468 | ||||
"Assume a can opener..."
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Secondly, did you realise that health-related medicational practices are amazingly more well-developed in the US than in other parts of the world? The amount of pills you consume is amazing. What, 20% of the population takes antidepressants? I wonder how they survived before the advent of modern medicine. The next-largest component of health care spendingin the United States in 2004 was prescription drugs. According to the OECD data, the United States spent roughly twice as much on prescription drugs ($752 per person) as the average OECD country in 2004. Notice: This is not the fault of government, this is entirely because drug companies can influence what doctors prescribe, through "encouraging" doctors to prescribe "new" pills (that still have the highest prices). The study found that brand-name prescription drugs still under patent were most expensive in Japan, with the United States ranked second among the nine countries. Anyway, just because you can describe it doesn't make it true, nor even believable. Again: who the hell is Pournelle?In the other seven countries, on-patent prescription drugprices were 24% to 39% less expensive than in the United States. According to wiki, he's an essayist, journalist and SF Writer. i.e., a twit with no economics background whatever. The only thing I get from your story is that you live with lots of fears about "government" "taking over" Especially because I can think of no supporting evidence whatever in favor of this "necessary consequences" argument. Quote:
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Anyway, let me point something out to you that proves the exact opposite of what you're saying: As shown in Figure 1 and Table 1, U.S. per capita health care spending was well over double the average of OECD countries, which was $2,560 in 2004. Health care made up 15.3% of the U.S. economy in 2004, as measured by Gross Domestic Product (GDP) — up from 5.1% of GDP in 1960. No other OECD country devotes as much of its economy to health care. Whereas in europe most health care systems are public (although there are (partly) private systems as well, notably in Switzerland and holland), and incur less than half the US costs, even though resulting in a higher avg life expectancy. What answer does your dear libertarian Pournelle have to this? "in communism laws are different"?
(consider especially that you're not even helping 30% of the country) As previously discussed, Americans do not lead the world in per capita doctor visits or hospitalizations. When Americans receive health care services, they appear to receive a higher-than-average amount of certain surgical procedures and advanced medical technologies, but generally do not have the highest levels in the OECD. This leaves price as the last remaining factor in the equation to explain the high level of U.S. health care spending. In assessing what drives the difference between U.S. health care spending and the rest of the world, some leading health economists responded this way: “It’s the prices, stupid.” Put more formally, a report from the OECD declared that “there is no doubt that U.S. prices for medical care commodities and services are significantly higher than in other countries and serve as a key determinant of higher overall spending." Spending on health insurance and administration can be broken into three parts. The largest part, at least in the United States, comprises the difference between earned premiums and incurred benefits of private health insurers. (btw, this translates to either "corporations have too much power" or "corporations are inefficient". Which do you prefer?) Last edited by zerospinboson; 04-24-2009 at 03:13 AM. |
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#469 |
Illiterate
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[QUOTE=zerospinboson;437915]First off, who the hell is this pournelle visionary that nobody's heard anything about but you, and why on earth do you see him as an authority?
QUOTE] This doesn't sound like "nobody". |
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#470 | |
Not scared!
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#471 | ||
curmudgeon
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As for "later changes introduced through congress" being legitimate -- that's certainly true for Amendments to the Constitution. Things that are merely bills passed by the congress, however, have a much lower status. If the Congress (or the people, for that matter) doesn't like some limitation placed on the Federal Government by the Constitution there's a straight forward method laid out for making changes. We've even done so 27 times to date, as recently as 1992. And if those who desire a change can't get said change through the process, that seems like a clear sign that the people of the US do not, in fact, intend for the government to have whatever power the would-be changers were attempting to get. That's happened plenty of times, too. The Constitution is clearly a living document, in the sense that there's a procedure for editing it. My main regret (personally) is that since WWII the courts -- especially the Supreme Court -- have re-interpreted broadly rather than telling the other branches to go get an amendment through if they don't like being shot down by the court. There's a ton of constitutionally dodgy stuff that really should have required amending the constitution -- just start with the "war on drugs" and many of the laws passed to enable same*, then look at... but that's a rant for another day. Xenophon * I note that last time we decided to outlaw a class of substances at the Federal level, we passed a Constitutional Amendment to do so -- and then passed another one when we decided we were wrong. I fail to see what is so different about the various "illegal substances" being fought in the "war on drugs" that they can be outlawed without a similar amendment. But, of course, I am not a lawyer... Last edited by Xenophon; 04-24-2009 at 04:37 PM. Reason: fix a sentence. |
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#472 |
Connoisseur
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[QUOTE=Bilbo1967;438602]I fit sthe same porunelle I kow he is quite a good writer, but also quite ignornat about health care - I jaust have to agree with zerospin ..
But it also makes one of the divides to discuss here quite apparent - there is just an enourmous numbers of americans who are suffering from the super delusion that "not onvented her - BAD. Soory guys the rest of the world, and especially the rest of europa is at least as intelligent as you and sometimes has the better solutions |
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#473 | |
sleepless reader
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#474 | |
curmudgeon
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Xenophon |
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#475 |
sleepless reader
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Agreed. I must have misread that. But i find it alarming that so many people are suffering from it in the days of modern healthcare systems.
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#476 |
Retired & reading more!
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#477 | ||
Illiterate
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#478 | |
Connoisseur
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[QUOTE=Bilbo1967;438602]
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I have normal dealings as a citizien with our goverment officals in Germany and Austria. In most cases these have been quit amical and mostly the service was good to excellent. |
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#479 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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[QUOTE=wodin;438372]
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Pournelle was an intellectual protege of Russell Kirk (Kenneth C. Cole, Pournelle's mentor at the University of Washington, was co-founder with Kirk of Modern Age) and Stefan T. Possony with whom Pournelle wrote numerous publications including The Strategy of Technology, onetime textbook at the United States Military Academy (West Point) and the United States Air Force Academy (Colorado Springs). His work in the aerospace industry includes editing Project 75, a 1964 study of 1975 defense requirements. He worked in operations research at Boeing, The Aerospace Corporation, and North American Rockwell Space Division, and was founding President of the Pepperdine Research Institute. |
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#480 | ||
King of the Bongo Drums
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![]() And that goes for much else that I find you saying... Quote:
What is contained in that now fortunately obsolete volume does not directly answer your question, but from what I read my guess is that the answer lies in politics more than in law, plus a drift in the legal environment about the powers of government, toward greater inherent power, in the last hundred years. Astonishingly (at least to me) there was a serious argument about the validity of the amendment itself, ultimately resolved by the Supreme Court. I think that the situation is explained by a lot of things, including the change in the extent to which we now accept the dominance of the federal government in our lives. But one factor probably had to do with what was being attempted. Prohibition outlawed the importation & sale of liquor at one fell swoop. Drugs, on the other hand, were subjected to creeping regulation - tax them, register them, and gradually force them out of the hands of the public. To accomplish the swoop required Draconian action. But creeping toward the same thing with drugs, incrementally, just required people to accept a series of encroachments over time, to the point where most people conceded the power to the government. Last edited by Harmon; 04-25-2009 at 06:32 PM. |
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