Results 31 to 40 of 68
-
10-11-2011, 01:16 AM #31BANNED

Yes or no, its that simple if your too afraid to answer it then I understand.
-
-
10-11-2011, 01:30 AM #32
Your question is illogical. I have attempted to explain this to you. It would be like asking me if I believe the men on Mars are green. I could give you a yes or no answer, but that would mean that I believe there are men on Mars, which I don't.
Is it that you don't understand that your question is illogical, or are you simply choosing to ignore that fact? I could give you a yes or no answer, but that would mean that I accept your premise, which doesn't make any sense.
-
10-11-2011, 01:50 AM #33BANNED

You just refuse to answer and are making it look like its my fault you refuse to answer a simple yes or no question. You have an ill spouse or child, to keep them alive will require a million $'ers. Yes or no do you think its worth the cost to keep them alive knowing the strain it would be YES OR NO. Know whats hard to comprehend about that.
-
-
10-11-2011, 10:01 AM #34
Yes. Don't know where I would get the money, but it would be worth the cost.
-
10-11-2011, 09:21 PM #35

That is the main problem in the health care debate. The right to live is not the right to health insurance.
-
-
10-12-2011, 08:28 AM #36
+1
Thank you. Finally somebody said it.
A right to life and a right to health care are two entirely different things. Up until the last 5 or 10 years it was always accepted that health care was something that the working class and wealthy had. Everyone else either got state funded health care, went to a free clinic or just dealt with it. Now suddenly it has become the "right" of the unemployed and career welfare recipients to have equal health care.
-
10-12-2011, 02:28 PM #37BANNED

So what makes the government think they have the right to discount a soldiers premiums and make everyone else pay these crazy premiums. It needs to be fair across the board. Lets see them shell out $500 a month in premiums or have us shell out $500 a year for our families.
-
-
10-12-2011, 02:43 PM #38
Maybe because they put their life on the line for this country and all of us? I'd pay a portion of their healthcare as a thank you personally.....They are probably the only people that one could claim deserve the right to healthcare. If you want free healthcare, join the service. Could be a plan.
-
10-12-2011, 03:02 PM #39
@The OneDrew - I am in the service and I am happy to have some extra benefits for doing the job that a lot of Americans either do not want to do it or are too scared to do it. I really don;t care since I do this because I want to and I like it.. If you look at our pay table we do not make a lot of money. So even thought I get free health care I still have to manage. I can't spend a lot of money on cards, cars, hobbies. Family and bills comes first. You need to be grateful that you can sit and relax in your house without the worry of going to war because people like me will take care of that. Also, you said that we need to be here with our families. You are right on that one but when I decided to join nobody told me that I was going to spend my 20+ years career in the States. We know what we were signing for because people like you do not want to serve your country. It just makes me sick when people start taking shots at the military when there are other stuff they need to be worried about.
-
10-12-2011, 03:09 PM #40
I like your thinking...
-













