Ben No.3 Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 I have a question. So you say state funded health care should cover ONLY the most necessary operations. Now, that means you will have to decide which operations are necessary. That then of course means you will get to decide which operations the poorest will be able to afford. So instead of working those extra 0.78 seconds (thanks for that number), you instead spend hours dictating what treatment the poor are allowed to get? Seems both logical and fair. Everybody knows the deal is rotten Old Black Joe's still pickin' cotton For your ribbons and bows And everybody knows
Guard Dog Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 I have a question. So you say state funded health care should cover ONLY the most necessary operations. Now, that means you will have to decide which operations are necessary. That then of course means you will get to decide which operations the poorest will be able to afford. So instead of working those extra 0.78 seconds (thanks for that number), you instead spend hours dictating what treatment the poor are allowed to get? Seems both logical and fair. Ben you are missing over half the conversation. Alum & I were discussion a single benefit offered in the employer provided health insurance for public sector employees in California. It's offered as part of their employment compensation benefits. It is not "State Healthcare" in the way you are thinking. My point was whether it is a waste of tax money (that is obviously needed elsewhere, like the Oroville Dam) to offer what might be considered elective surgery on the public dime. Alum's point was that it wasn't really elective surgery and considering the number of state employees it is a benefit that will be used so infrequently as to not be worth getting in a twist over. What you are talking about here is a whole other subject. "While it is true you learn with age, the down side is what you often learn is what a damn fool you were before" Thomas Sowell
Wrath of Dagon Posted February 22, 2017 Author Posted February 22, 2017 Speaking of healthcare, this will determine the course of the American politics over the next few years more than anything: http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/02/22/morici-republicans-coming-short-obamacare-repeal-replace/ "Moral indignation is a standard strategy for endowing the idiot with dignity." Marshall McLuhan
BruceVC Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 I have a question. So you say state funded health care should cover ONLY the most necessary operations. Now, that means you will have to decide which operations are necessary. That then of course means you will get to decide which operations the poorest will be able to afford. So instead of working those extra 0.78 seconds (thanks for that number), you instead spend hours dictating what treatment the poor are allowed to get? Seems both logical and fair. Ben you are missing over half the conversation. Alum & I were discussion a single benefit offered in the employer provided health insurance for public sector employees in California. It's offered as part of their employment compensation benefits. It is not "State Healthcare" in the way you are thinking. My point was whether it is a waste of tax money (that is obviously needed elsewhere, like the Oroville Dam) to offer what might be considered elective surgery on the public dime. Alum's point was that it wasn't really elective surgery and considering the number of state employees it is a benefit that will be used so infrequently as to not be worth getting in a twist over. What you are talking about here is a whole other subject. GD I haven't been following what you and alum have been saying, I just read the last paragraph or so. I want to share my opinion on this, firstly I can completely understand why you may think that Gender Reassignment Surgery is not a dire medical condition. Many people share you view so you skepticism is not unusual But imagine this, I want to give you one of my famous " BruceVC analogies " When you wake up in the morning and have a shave you look yourself in the mirror. People our age may think "damn I look like my dad more and more " but end of the day what we see in the reflection is ourselves...older....wiser...but there is no confusion on what we see. We see ourselves as men and despite any problems we have experienced we have never questioned our gender But imagine your entire life when you look at that reflection you always feel something is wrong with the image, how can you be a man when you are women? You think you a women, emotionally and mentally yet the mirror lies with what you are So for some cases of Gender Reassignment Surgery the surgery is critical for mental balance, it may not be always life and death like some cancerous growth but the constant mental confusion must be a terrible burden to bear I know this is probably difficult to empathize with but thats the argument for procedures like this being part of any medical aid system and I support that "Abashed the devil stood and felt how awful goodness is and saw Virtue in her shape how lovely: and pined his loss” John Milton "We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing.” - George Bernard Shaw "What counts in life is not the mere fact that we have lived. It is what difference we have made to the lives of others that will determine the significance of the life we lead" - Nelson Mandela
aluminiumtrioxid Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 I'm glad that your principles are so important to you that you feel personally offended if a fraction of a cent of your tax money goes toward helping people who have been diagnosed by multiple licensed professionals who agree that their symptoms literally can't be alleviated in any other way. I mean, those fancy-ass psychiatrists might consider the treatment to be necessary, but by God, you worked an entire fraction of a second* for that money, you really had to pour your blood and sweat into it, so you definitely know better than those parasites who never worked an honest day in their entire lives! (The intense study required to successfully complete pre-med, followed by four years of med school, followed by three to eight years of residency technically doesn't count as work.) *Based on average annual income data for electrical engineers, assuming two weeks of vacation, it takes 0.78 seconds of work for one to gain a penny. And we're not even talking about an entire penny, just a small fraction of that! I wasn't planning on justifying this nastiness with a response but what the hell. I am feeling combative today. Reading this you make it sound as if I have some problem with gender reassignment as a valid medical treatment. I don't. I couldn't care less either way. If someone thinks this will make them happy and a doctor and psychiatrist agree then by all means go for it. But lets not confuse this with what health insurance is supposed to be about. Health insurance is about keeping people alive and healthy. It is not intended for "elective" things like this, or a nose job, or a boob job. And yes they are all the same kind of thing. I'm not entirely sure what is nasty about pointing out that you're quibbling over a tiny fraction of the money you earn while walking from your cubicle to the water cooler, or that SRS has nothing in common with nose jobs and boob jobs. Unless, of course, boob jobs have become a legitimate and strictly regulated way to treat conditions that pose a danger to one's mental health since the last time I checked. Still? We don't agree. To continue that conversation we're going to have to dive into the particulars of whether or not Gender Reassignment Surgery is a valid treatment or not, which all leads right back to the thing I KNOW we are not going to find common ground on: who gets to pay for it. It's a long, OT conversation and I'm disinclined to dive into it. So let's agree to disagree. You were characterizing my post as "nastiness that shouldn't be justified with a response (but I am feeling combative today)". I'm not calling you to debate the issue, I'm asking you to explain why you feel that challenging your viewpoint via a quick and extremely rough cost-benefit estimate based on the prevailing opinion among mental health professionals should be viewed as "nasty" and "not deserving a response". 2 "Lulz is not the highest aspiration of art and mankind, no matter what the Encyclopedia Dramatica says."
Blarghagh Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 I'm with alum on this. I take it personally sometimes when people think they know better than trained researchers and mental health professionals. I don't know what gender dysporia feels like, but I know that I ended up almost killing myself several times failing to follow futile advices of 'it's all in your head, you just need to think positively and be happy' when the chemical effects of long term depression on my brain had long rendered me completely incapable of doing either. People with healthy brain chemistry usually can't imagine what it's like when there is a massive disconnect between your mental and physical logic and reality (just look at Bruce's futile attempt to describe it). And when they decide they know better than medical professionals when someone's just being weird and need to 'act normal' and don't need to 'choose' specialized treatment, they don't get how harmful that can be.
Meshugger Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 (edited) Ah, the benefits of living in a society where healthcare is payed by everyone and where squabbles like this are moot. On the other hand, the system benefits most if you drink, smoke, do not exercise and die at the age of 55 since then you have payed more into it than what you have gotten out of it. So fellas, light em up, take a drink and tell your fellow trannies to be that "it was my priviledge". Edited February 22, 2017 by Meshugger "Some men see things as they are and say why?""I dream things that never were and say why not?"- George Bernard Shaw"Hope in reality is the worst of all evils because it prolongs the torments of man."- Friedrich Nietzsche "The amount of energy necessary to refute bull**** is an order of magnitude bigger than to produce it." - Some guy
aluminiumtrioxid Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 Ah, the benefits of living in a society where healthcare is payed by everyone and where squabbles like this are moot. On the other hand, the system benefits most if you drink, smoke, do not exercise and die at the age of 55 since then you have payed more into it than what you have gotten out of it. Somehow I have a hard time viewing "death at the ripe old age of 55" as an outcome to strive for "Lulz is not the highest aspiration of art and mankind, no matter what the Encyclopedia Dramatica says."
Guard Dog Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 Grrrrrr!!!! You see what you've done Alum? That was the nastiness I was referring to! You made it sound like I had some issue with treating Gender Dysphoria. I don't. I never said anything of the sort. All I said was that it was an elective procedure. And it is. This went from a discussion of whether it should be paid for by the public funded healthcare plans to a discussion on the merits of the treatment itself. Exactly the conversation I was trying to avoid. And no everyone else, sex change is not the only treatment of the condition. If you want to read some interesting points of view about it check out National Geographic from last month. I read it cover to cover. Just like I do with every other issue: https://shop.nationalgeographic.com/product/magazines/special-issues/national-geographic-gender-revolution-special-issue---u.s.?code=SR50004 "While it is true you learn with age, the down side is what you often learn is what a damn fool you were before" Thomas Sowell
aluminiumtrioxid Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 (edited) And no everyone else, sex change is not the only treatment of the condition. ...Which is exactly why the procedure is heavily restricted and only prescribed as a last resort when everything else fails. Compare and contrast with nose jobs and boob jobs (an equivalence you have drawn yourself). Edited February 22, 2017 by aluminiumtrioxid 2 "Lulz is not the highest aspiration of art and mankind, no matter what the Encyclopedia Dramatica says."
Volourn Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 "So you think his comments about pedophilia are not uncommon, so please give me an example of someone in the public limelight who had been abused by a child molester and made an utterly reprehensible comment like " I am glad I was abused because thats why I am so experienced at sex " ...and I want actual real comments they made similar to this " Check out comments from a certain gay Star Trek star on the Howard Stern radio show... And, that guy is LOVED by the Left. DWARVES IN PROJECT ETERNITY = VOLOURN HAS PLEDGED $250.
Blarghagh Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 Grrrrrr!!!! You see what you've done Alum? That was the nastiness I was referring to! You made it sound like I had some issue with treating Gender Dysphoria. I don't. I never said anything of the sort. All I said was that it was an elective procedure. And it is. This went from a discussion of whether it should be paid for by the public funded healthcare plans to a discussion on the merits of the treatment itself. Exactly the conversation I was trying to avoid. And no everyone else, sex change is not the only treatment of the condition. If you want to read some interesting points of view about it check out National Geographic from last month. I read it cover to cover. Just like I do with every other issue: https://shop.nationalgeographic.com/product/magazines/special-issues/national-geographic-gender-revolution-special-issue---u.s.?code=SR50004 Mastectomy surgery for breast cancer is "elective". So is a live donor transplant surgery. The only thing elective means in surgical terms is not acutely life threatening at this very moment. While the blanket term "elective" does include optional surgery for non-medical reasons, it is not the definition of the term in a medical context. By contrast, you're the one who picked specifically picked only non-medical surgery, such as nose jobs and boob jobs to compare it to - the nasty implications of that may have been unintentional on your part but that doesn't make them alum's fault. Yes, there are other treatment options for trans-people. Again, I don't suffer from it so I can't say how effective they are, but let's assume that this surgery exists and is used (heavily regulated as alum points out) for a reason. Because I can't say from experience how effective those are, I can only draw upon my own experience, which is this: There are also many treatment options for clinical depression. I tried them all and none of them worked, the brain is too complicated for mental health at this point to be an exact science and not every approach works for everyone. Therefore, I ended up opting for elective "electroconvulsive therapy", essentially brain surgery by way of electricity. Without said "elective" surgery, I'd be dead at this point since the other treatment options left me still suicidal (or in the case of some prescribed medications, more suicidal). I'd say more people getting hung up on it being elective because the therapy cost them 0.3% of a penny more in health insurance (a number I pulled out of my ass, but let's be fair, it's nothing) to make sure medical insurance wouldn't cover it would have meant my death, since there was no way I could have afforded said treatment at 18. I'm sure you can understand how I take it a little personally when others try to decide how important mental health related medical care is. 2
Guard Dog Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 And no everyone else, sex change is not the only treatment of the condition. ...Which is exactly why the procedure is heavily restricted and only proscribed as a last resort when everything else fails. Compare and contrast with nose jobs and boob jobs (an equivalence you have drawn yourself). The equivalence is they are elective. You don't need to have them. And in the magazine I linked to there is a school of thought in the medical community that the permanence of the surgery complicates the problem rather than relives it. There is also a study from Denmark cited the the leading causes of death in post SRS patients in that country over 20 years are alcohol related illnesses, drug overdose, and suicide. Grrr.... here you do dragging me into it! "While it is true you learn with age, the down side is what you often learn is what a damn fool you were before" Thomas Sowell
Guard Dog Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 (edited) I'm sure you can understand how I take it a little personally when others try to decide how important mental health related medical care is. Which is not what I was doing! This was a discussion about what taxpayers should pay for in one particular place. Edited February 22, 2017 by Guard Dog "While it is true you learn with age, the down side is what you often learn is what a damn fool you were before" Thomas Sowell
Guard Dog Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 Carry on the subject if you wish Gentlemen, I'm out. "While it is true you learn with age, the down side is what you often learn is what a damn fool you were before" Thomas Sowell
Zoraptor Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 And no everyone else, sex change is not the only treatment of the condition. ...Which is exactly why the procedure is heavily restricted and only proscribed as a last resort when everything else fails. You mean prescribed here rather than proscribed- prescribed ~ ordered by a doctor; proscribed ~ banned or very heavily restricted by an order/ law. Wouldn't normally be bothered correcting that since it's an easy mistake to make but using proscribed it means exactly the opposite of what was meant.
Blarghagh Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 And no everyone else, sex change is not the only treatment of the condition. ...Which is exactly why the procedure is heavily restricted and only proscribed as a last resort when everything else fails. Compare and contrast with nose jobs and boob jobs (an equivalence you have drawn yourself). The equivalence is they are elective. You don't need to have them. Again, not the case.
aluminiumtrioxid Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 ...Which is exactly why the procedure is heavily restricted and only proscribed as a last resort when everything else fails. You mean prescribed here rather than proscribed- prescribed ~ ordered by a doctor; proscribed ~ banned or very heavily restricted by an order/ law. Wouldn't normally be bothered correcting that since it's an easy mistake to make but using proscribed it means exactly the opposite of what was meant. Edited, thank you for the correction. "Lulz is not the highest aspiration of art and mankind, no matter what the Encyclopedia Dramatica says."
PK htiw klaw eriF Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 Grrrrrr!!!! You see what you've done Alum? That was the nastiness I was referring to! You made it sound like I had some issue with treating Gender Dysphoria. I don't. I never said anything of the sort. All I said was that it was an elective procedure. And it is. This went from a discussion of whether it should be paid for by the public funded healthcare plans to a discussion on the merits of the treatment itself. Exactly the conversation I was trying to avoid. And no everyone else, sex change is not the only treatment of the condition. If you want to read some interesting points of view about it check out National Geographic from last month. I read it cover to cover. Just like I do with every other issue: https://shop.nationalgeographic.com/product/magazines/special-issues/national-geographic-gender-revolution-special-issue---u.s.?code=SR50004 It's a treatment of last resort for people diagonsed by multiple health professionals. Honestly if it wasn't for muh tranny degeneracy and something like say treating bipolar disorder or whatever then we wouldn't have had 3 pages about it. And to get down to brass tacks, trans are like what, less than 1 percent of the population? So a minority of that percent that is too extreme to treat with the various other treatments and the minoroty of that minoroty who works for the California goverment will have their treatment paid for in their benefits package. As far as **** being done by state governments, I find this much less of an issue than paying for cops to harass people or the payrolls of elected officals to **** hookers have meetings with various corporate interests, both in magnitude and taste. 3 "Akiva Goldsman and Alex Kurtzman run the 21st century version of MK ULTRA." - majestic "you're a damned filthy lying robot and you deserve to die and burn in hell." - Bartimaeus "Without individual thinking you can't notice the plot holes." - InsaneCommander "Just feed off the suffering of gamers." - Malcador "You are calling my taste crap." -Hurlshort "thankfully it seems like the creators like Hungary less this time around." - Sarex "Don't forget the wakame, dumbass" -Keyrock "Are you trolling or just being inadvertently nonsensical?' -Pidesco "we have already been forced to admit you are at least human" - uuuhhii "I refuse to buy from non-woke businesses" - HoonDing "feral camels are now considered a pest" - Gorth "Melkathi is known to be an overly critical grumpy person" - Melkathi "Oddly enough Sanderson was a lot more direct despite being a Mormon" - Zoraptor "I found it greatly disturbing to scroll through my cartoon's halfing selection of genitalias." - Wormerine "I love cheese despite the pain and carnage." - ShadySands
213374U Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 (edited) The equivalence is they are elective. You don't need to have them. And in the magazine I linked to there is a school of thought in the medical community that the permanence of the surgery complicates the problem rather than relives it. There is also a study from Denmark cited the the leading causes of death in post SRS patients in that country over 20 years are alcohol related illnesses, drug overdose, and suicide. Grrr.... here you do dragging me into it! That the treatment isn't 100% guaranteed to work and may in some cases make things worse is a valid objection, but not necessarily an argument against it being publicly subsidized, and in no way justifies putting it on the same level as cosmetic surgery. You'd have to dig into medical literature and meta-analyses -provided there are any- to get an accurate picture of the effectiveness of the treatment. I haven't read the NatGeo issue you linked, but from what I've read/watched it's not the kind of publication that deals with topics that way (not a diss, it's just not a scientific journal). People getting chemotherapy end up like **** 100% of the time... provided they survive, which often they don't. Sometimes, it's going to make a cancer patient's last days a living hell. Doesn't mean insurance shouldn't cover it. Edited February 22, 2017 by 213374U 1 - When he is best, he is a little worse than a man, and when he is worst, he is little better than a beast.
ShadySands Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 Did he say insurance shouldn't cover it? I'm only half following these political threads these days so forgive my ignorance Free games updated 3/4/21
Blarghagh Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 (edited) Yeah, I think the point is that "elective" is a misnomer. If I understand correctly, in medical terms elective is simply every surgery that is planned in advance rather than surgery required due to emergency situation. Most country's departments of health consider any surgery that can wait for more than 24 hours to be elective, not sure about the US though. Scheduling a hernia or cataracts surgery, or an angioplasty is life-changing health-related surgery that should be covered. It's also "elective", as in it can be scheduled around the patient's and surgeon's convenience. EDIT: This was in response to numbers up there, got ninja'd. Shady: That's what I understood from his argument, that state subsidies for insurance coverage should not extend to this specific case - gender reassignment surgery - because the taxpayer shouldn't have to pay for elective surgery. His later statement that elective surgery is "surgery you don't need" shed a different light on it for me, namely that his definition of elective in medical terms is simply incorrect, which seems to be the crux of the misunderstanding. Still not sure how that's alum's fault, though. Edited February 22, 2017 by TrueNeutral
aluminiumtrioxid Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 (edited) Did he say insurance shouldn't cover it? I'll let the man's own words answer that question: dammit I don't think taxpayers should have to cover nose jobs, boob jobs or sex changes! In fact, he feels so strongly about the issue, he wouldn't let a single penny go towards that purpose. Even if it literally costs a fraction of a cent to you, as an individual taxpayer? It's the principle. If it costs a penny, I WORKED for that penny. I earned it. Edited February 22, 2017 by aluminiumtrioxid "Lulz is not the highest aspiration of art and mankind, no matter what the Encyclopedia Dramatica says."
213374U Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 Did he say insurance shouldn't cover it? I'm only half following these political threads these days so forgive my ignorance Chemotherapy? No, that was a bare bones analogy I made, based on how both aren't always successful and sometimes even detrimental. Originally we were talking about how the State of Cali shouldn't "subsidize vacations for the poor" and then that got lumped together with SRS being covered as part of employment benefits for public workers in California, and then boob jobs... It's one of those tangents here in WoT. I don't complain, it's either this or nazis/commies. - When he is best, he is a little worse than a man, and when he is worst, he is little better than a beast.
aluminiumtrioxid Posted February 22, 2017 Posted February 22, 2017 I don't complain, it's either this or nazis/commies. you misspelled stalinists 1 "Lulz is not the highest aspiration of art and mankind, no matter what the Encyclopedia Dramatica says."
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