Congradulations Democrats...you got healthcare passed, but who is going to treat you?

Quote from Martinghoul:

Your people are full of it. I grew up in the Soviet Union and lived there until my late teens. Before the collapse of the Soviet infrastructure, provision of healthcare in the Soviet Union was adequate (although varied geographically). Moreover, if you look at what the Soviet authorities inherited from tzarist Russia, they have actually managed quite well. For example, the regular epidemics of anthrax, plague and malaria were stopped in the Soviet Union in the 20s and 30s thanks to the efforts of Narkomzdrav.

and you probably think that without the tender mercies of communism the peasants would never have been taught to read too... LOL
 
It doesn't matter whom you represent, you can either prove it or not...

No money down is not the same as no down payment---and you know it.

Truth in advertising has forced scumbag furniture salesmen in California to make it clear...they say no down payment...not no money down.

Seems you are still going with the use of language that deceives people, the same use of language that landed Dave Del Dotto, Ed Beckley, Carleton Sheets and hosts of other scam artists in trouble with the law...

http://homebuying.about.com/gi/o.ht...=http://www.johntreed.com/Reedgururating.html


Quote from jem:

I represented the seller -- fool.

The buyers had there own agents... we used the agency disclosure forms promulgated by the Ca Assoc of Realtos.

No money down is the same as no down payment when I use the terms. You are making a distinction without a difference. I guess you do not know how real estate deals work.
 
Here's my personal invitation to you. You are hereby invited to come visit part of my play pen. However you will need a valid passport and the ability to scrape together a few shekels. And 25 shares of that POS Rite Aid will not do it. You'll need real money for this.

EDIT: of course you will have to go into escrow for this. I'll let you know...some small amount. No more than 10K.

Quote from OPTIONAL777:

It looks like all virtual play pens...
 
Apparently you feel challenged...even virtually.

Sad...

Quote from Dr. Zhivodka:

Here's my personal invitation to you. You are hereby invited to come visit part of my play pen. However you will need a valid passport and the ability to scrape together a few shekels. And 25 shares of that POS Rite Aid will not do it. You'll need real money for this.
 
Last week, a doctor in Florida posted a sign on his office door that said:

“If you voted for Obama….seek urologic (sic) care elsewhere.

Changes to your healthcare begin right now, not in four years”

Dr. Jack Cassell has since made several comments about his posting – that he was exercising his First Amendment rights, that he was making a “suggestion” to incoming patients, and that he was referring to his discontent with specific elements of healthcare reform he read about online. His wife, Leslie Campione (who’s running for public office), helped to explain her husband’s position by posting the following statement on her Facebook page via a tweet:

Leslie Campione for Lake County County Commissioner District 4 In response to recent news (1/2) Jack does not have a mean bone in his body. Jack would never turn a patient away in need, and Jack would never treat patients differently because of their belief systems. This was a symbolic exercise of his first amendment right to express the negative impact the health care legislation will have on all of his patients.

Dr. Cassell fully demonstrated his lack of understanding about the”negative impact” of healthcare legislation. Apparently Ms. Campione doesn’t understand symbolism, the First Amendment, or what constitutes turning away a patient in need and violating the physician’s oath.

Symbolism is a device in which you substitute the direct object of your thought with a representative object. It’s a way to talk about something without explicitly stating it. There is no symbolism in Dr. Cassell’s sign. He’s talking specifically about Obama, health care, and his patients. The sign is not a symbol of anything; it gives people factual information about who is eligible for care in his office.

The freedom of speech guaranteed under the First Amendment isn’t being exercised in Cassell’s sign, either. The sign contains irritation, arrogance, and no “core political speech”. Cassell is indeed welcome to say anything he wishes about politics, President Obama, the Democratic party, and health care reform. But he doesn’t. His sign gives directions to people who come to his office seeking medical treatment. If you voted for Obama, go elsewhere. That’s not core political speech; that’s discrimination.

A look at the physician’s oath can help determine whether Dr. Cassell has a mean bone in his body and whether he treats patients differently because of their “belief systems”. A modernization of the Hippocratic oath, the physician’s oath is a dedication to humanitarianism in response to the medical atrocities committed in World War II. The oath is eloquent and simple, with one line ringing loudly:

“I will not permit considerations of religion, nationality, race,

party politics or social standing to intervene between my duty and my patient”

So Dr. Cassell has some mean bones, a callous indifference to the people who seek his specialized care, and a profit-motivated rejection of health care reform. I’m not sure what oath Dr. Cassell swore when he began his medical service; it’s clear to me the only oath to which he now subscribes is hypocritic.

http://www.alan.com/2010/04/06/jack-and-the-hypocritic-oath/
 
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