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fiskaren on scored.co
1 year ago12 points(+0/-0/+12Score on mirror)3 children
Hospitals are natural monopolies, and as such it's usually better to fund it all via taxes, even if the organization itself are managed like any private company.
What if the fire brigade was privatized? Your house is on fire, you call the fire brigade, to them you're a desperate customer and they're the only fire station in town, they can charge whatever they want.
Or roads, pay the toll or you're not driving anywhere. Nearest bridge is 500 miles away, Schlomos bridge LTD can charge whatever toll they want.
Why would hospitals operate any different when conquered by jews?
Flip the tables then and look into the tax funded system, now the government is the only customer the hospital can sell their service too. If the government isn't happy with the deal because of usury, someone else can take the deal.
The government isn't sick or in desperate need of healthcare, they have the benefit in this negotiation. The hospital on the other hand have staff on the payroll, they have an expensive lease on the buildings, machines, maintenance etc. They need every patient they can get.
And since medical research as well as education is also tax funded, the main cost of operation as well as medicine goes down by a lot. The government wont do usury on themselves, once a medicine is researched and working it's public property which anyone can produce cheaply.
1 year ago14 points(+0/-0/+14Score on mirror)1 child
The problem comes whe you overload the system with imported detritus who don't pay into the system (and often get preferential treatment). It's partly why we're seeing the Candian healthcare system tell patient to just kill themselves to save money (the other reason is they want to cull whites). In a homogeneous society where the government gives a shit about it's citizens, it can be a great system. We don't have that, though.
> The average age of individuals at the time MAID was provided in 2022 was 77.0 years. The underlying medical conditions included cancer (63%), cardiovascular (18.8%), other at 14.9% (can be frailty, diabetes, chronic pain, autoimmune), respiratory (13.2%), and neurological conditions (12.6%). Seventy-seven percent of MAID recipients received palliative care and of the MAID recipients who did not receive palliative care 87.5% had access, a level similar to the three previous years
Since they started back in 2016 there's been 45,000 assisted deaths, making up roughly 4.1% of all deaths in Canada. With the average age being 77 years and 63% of those having cancer it does seem to be working. Cancer treatment is very expensive, heck it's one of the reasons why so many people in the US have gone bankrupt because of medical debt.
Why should a child have to die in cancer because the hospital prioritize to keep a 77 year old person alive for a few more months? Resources are limited, in fact with private healthcare it's even more limited as fewer people can afford treatment.
What if the fire brigade was privatized? Your house is on fire, you call the fire brigade, to them you're a desperate customer and they're the only fire station in town, they can charge whatever they want.
Or roads, pay the toll or you're not driving anywhere. Nearest bridge is 500 miles away, Schlomos bridge LTD can charge whatever toll they want.
Why would hospitals operate any different when conquered by jews?
Flip the tables then and look into the tax funded system, now the government is the only customer the hospital can sell their service too. If the government isn't happy with the deal because of usury, someone else can take the deal.
The government isn't sick or in desperate need of healthcare, they have the benefit in this negotiation. The hospital on the other hand have staff on the payroll, they have an expensive lease on the buildings, machines, maintenance etc. They need every patient they can get.
And since medical research as well as education is also tax funded, the main cost of operation as well as medicine goes down by a lot. The government wont do usury on themselves, once a medicine is researched and working it's public property which anyone can produce cheaply.
Oh you sweet summer child...
Since they started back in 2016 there's been 45,000 assisted deaths, making up roughly 4.1% of all deaths in Canada. With the average age being 77 years and 63% of those having cancer it does seem to be working. Cancer treatment is very expensive, heck it's one of the reasons why so many people in the US have gone bankrupt because of medical debt.
Why should a child have to die in cancer because the hospital prioritize to keep a 77 year old person alive for a few more months? Resources are limited, in fact with private healthcare it's even more limited as fewer people can afford treatment.