Originally posted by quanchi112
Unlike you I do not lack the drive you admitted. I am a doer you are an excuse maker.
Originally posted by darthgooberYou know it is true you admitted posting to get the last word in is beyond you due to lacking motivation. You lack drive. It is ok. Just stop.
Hey if you need to believe that single minded obsessiveness over getting the last word somehow lends credence to your otherwise flimsy arguments then more power to you. Now go ahead and say something else to get the last word in as a concession to the truth of my statement lol
Originally posted by dadudemon
He's saying you have heart and won't stay down no matter how many times he punches you.He's Ivan Drago. You're Rock Balboa.
Originally posted by darthgoober
Yeah see, I both respect and commend idealism... I really do. But as a leader, at a certain point you have to pragmatically ask yourself "What's the bigger priority?"
There should be no bigger priority than saving tons of American lives through better healthcare programs and reducing the costs of Americans and Business, day to day.
It's literally the most important thing we can do for Americans to save lives and improve our economy. Literally everything else should be secondary to doing this. From a purely objective perspective, of course...assuming healthy productive Americans and saving money are the most objectively important things.
Originally posted by snowdragon
Without some sort of cost-sharing components to assist in funding facilities, we would lose a lot of hospitals and providers.
I'm curious how we can make any assumptions at all about the cost of health care, when so much information is proprietary and transparency is closed to specialists who work at these hospitals. Blogs and articles exists of employees going down the rabbit hole to get solid information on costs, or at least factors
that go into it.. All futile.
If we're taking information from administrators, how do we know they aren't lying? If from regulators, how do we know they aren't captured?