Another drawback to this is
erhaps some of our minorities might be getting preferential treatment ,as in lower scores to get into university..the old repressed,held back arguments.
missile said:Another drawback to this iserhaps some of our minorities might be getting preferential treatment ,as in lower scores to get into university..the old repressed,held back arguments.
Reverend Blair said:There is more than one kind of learning, MMMikey. Even if they don't complete their studies, they have most likely picked up a few useful tidbits. Besides, I've seen more than a fair share of businessmen, lawyers, and other movers and shakers who smoke pot and drink a lot.
Vancouver — Campaigning in Vancouver's Chinatown Sunday, NDP Leader Jack Layton said private clinics are a “fundamental aspect” of the health-care system founded by former Saskatchewan premier Tommy Douglas and not much can be done about them.
Mr. Layton says he wants to stop tax dollars from boosting the bottom lines of big health-care corporations.
“Our focus is to keep public health-care dollars going to public and non-profit facilities,” Mr. Layton told confused reporters. “What happens with people in the privacy of their own relationship financially, that's up to them.”
When pressed on the issue, he said private clinics have been around from the beginning.
Our society would be much better off if we concentrated on people just learning instead of people learning to complete tasks by rote.
Layton softens stand on two-tier medicine
Can't stop growth, NDP leader admits
Parties' differences blurring on private vs. public care
Dec. 5, 2005. 07:59 AM
BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH
IN VANCOUVER
New Democratic Party Leader Jack Layton, who has portrayed himself as the lone champion of public health care in the current election, now admits he can't stop the growth of two-tier medicare in Canada and says he wouldn't shut down private clinics.
The admission takes the wind out of a key issue for the NDP in the campaign and further muddies the distinctions among all the political parties in the debate over private versus public health care.
In a speech to supporters in Vancouver yesterday, Layton vowed that only the NDP would stop the "American-style" privatization of the health system.
But later his position blurred when he said his party would not act to close private clinics already in operation.
What is this all about?? All that talk about 'halting the spread of private health care'? What is Laytons position on this?
He would keep private insurers out.
If private service providers don't feel that they make enough under the fee strcutre established by the public system, then they are free to set up shop further South.
Reverend Blair said:If private service providers don't feel that they make enough under the fee strcutre established by the public system, then they are free to set up shop further South.
It's funny...I don't know much about my doctors, but I do know that my family doctor drives a BMW and my hematologist drives a huge Mercedes. I'm guessing that both of them make a decent income.