thompsonx
Posts: 23322
Joined: 10/1/2006 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth That's funny. I used to believe as you do however, a few years out of college I realized that outside the practical sciences the balance of the curriculum necessary for my degree was irrelevant to the real world. I also found that most of the professors interjected personal philosophy which skewed the facts far from the reality I faced in the world. The majority of the professors resented a world where they, for the most part, failed; and sought every opportunity to denigrate it, safely within their tenured position. Their goal was to generate more recruits to accept social engineering, citing the only reason for failure, personal and philosophical, was universal blind acceptance. They've succeeded in many cases. You have my deepest sympathy for having that sort of behaviour inflicted upon you. Where I went to school Rule One was question everything. Rule Two was verify everything. Rule Three find the paymaster for the speaker and ascertain that person's agenda. At the time I was going to school this university had the largest number of Nobel prize winners on staff of any university in the world...hardly what might be called "non achievers". The ability to convince people to rationalize surrendering freedoms and rights by means of the "common good" requires time. No this is the stated goal of the United States of America...it is in the preamble. This is why we humans form ourselves into societies instead of living as individuals. This does not mean we surrender all of our freedoms but just enough so that we all drive on the same side of the street going one way or all respond to the meaning of traffic signals in a consistent manner. First you had to wait for the death of a generation of people who fought for the same rights now being surrendered. Ironically, the same generation who paid the tuition. Naah ....the founders fought a war so we could start our own "family" in this "Cosa Nostra" The degree of success is obvious, even as their effort is ongoing. Now we've become selective as to who is entitled to health care based upon a lifestyle choice. No we are talking about something that is being tried in another country as if it were law here...we do not even have a national health care program. Doctors and insurance companies are constantly refusing patients and clients service for real or imagined excuses to improve their bottom line. It has nothing to do with smoking in your house, or your restaurant choice. It has nothing to do with helmets for that matter. However, logic would indicate since you site both as examples of a "common good" goal, that a hospital's triage should first determine if a bike rider was wearing a helmet - a proper 'government approved' up to date model at that - prior to treatment. After all - they didn't listen to the 'nanny'. That was not the criteria that we were talking about? The problem with this type of social engineering is people mistake 'intent' for result. They accept the good intent in the face of the logical consequential result and rationalize as the good professors taught. We are changing horses mid stream here. The only law that applies to me and thee that is under discussion is helmets and by extension seat belts. Not what some loon who happens to have a job teaching says. It requires a little thinking outside the box to appreciate that the applied to all cases the same good intent has terrible consequences. Kinda like rolling through a stop sign at four in the morning with visibility unimpaired and having a cop write you a ticket because the "law is the law" without any consideration of the intent of the law. We will always be blessed with the weak of mind, sometimes they are cops some times they are presidents. I honestly don't know how I managed to go from blind acceptance of what was taught to questioning. I don't understand how in the face of failed social engineering programs so many still believe their good intent justifies continuing them in the face of that failure. I know you are on record as being in favor of social engineering in specific areas so I will not take this to be all inclusive. At the college level they need to continue down that path to justify their existence. Seeing how the answer to the issue raised here - qualifying treatment by mandating behavior - their efforts are working. How else can an advanced educated population rationalize a "universal health program" isn't "universal" for smokers and points the ability of the patient to buy additional coverage if he/she didn't like it? AMAZING! Again we are talking about a medical decision made by a doctor who has to budget his or her time or the insurance (public or private) who make a monetary decision to improve their bottom line. Would you be as incensed at a private insurance company refusing to pay for treatment they claim they are exempt from because of lifestyle or whatever? Wonder if they would allow the smoker to not participate at all, get his/her own coverage and not pay his portion of taxes. The Supreme Court has ruled that we may opt out of social security so it would seem to follow that this would be in the same venue. You support dictating terms of treatment because it comes from your tax dollars? By that logic all children being born to woman who anticipate getting government their funds to raise them should be required to get your approval before they give birth. I have never met anyone with a three digit IQ who held this position, those in the two digit range are usually the ward of some person or entity. To be consistent your approach would be; "Have all the kids you want but do not expect me to pay for raising them?" Most folks do pay to raise their own kids. Those poor unfortunates who cannot, represent such a small portion of the "welfare" that the government dispenses as to be statistically irrelevant. The majority of the government handouts go to corporate America and the middle class, but the poor who get a stipend to starve to death slowly on gets to carry the blame for sucking the system dry. How about to gay men; "Have all the unprotected sex you like, but if you get AIDS don't expect to get treatment". Maybe you don't think consistency should be applied when it comes to practices you don't partake in or don't apply to you? Rest assured, it won't ever matter to me; better to fight all the be selective based upon some text book "good intent" philosophy. I am not sure what you mean here but I am sure you would prefer good intent to bad intent. I would be the first to agree that intent is only a portion of the equation.
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