OT: Hurricanes Lounge XLVI: Really, It's All About Beer and Bojangles

Boom Boom Apathy

I am the Professor. Deal with it!
Sep 6, 2006
49,511
102,882
This is one of the fundamental problems with rationing any scarce resource. The problem is not the rationing, but the motivations and the mechanisms.

Does everyone remember the "death panels"? It was a very compelling political point, because it had a kernel of truth. In any collectivized healthcare system with finite resources, someone has to decide who gets care and who doesn't.
Exactly this. I go back to when my mother passed away in 2000. She was visiting and started having problems that we thought was a stroke, but when they brought her in, they found she had a very advanced, aggressive brain tumor. They told us she has 6 months to live. The fighter that she was, she said she was going to do everything in her power to see her grandchildren grow older, so she started the treatments. Chemo, radiation and a whole host of other specialized treatments.

6 months later, she passed away. She was never a smoker, never a drinker, walked 5-6 miles a day, played golf, and ate a very healthy diet (because of my Dad's heart attack). Just unlucky.

I'm sure if someone in charge of rationing had told us that it was a lost cause and they wouldn't provide treatment, we'd have been very upset, but in hindsight, it was not money well spent as callous as that is to say.

The current problem is that the death panels are now in the hands of a private industry with perverse incentives.
Amen.
 
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cptjeff

Reprehensible User
Sep 18, 2008
22,039
39,902
Washington, DC.
This is one of the fundamental problems with rationing any scarce resource. The problem is not the rationing, but the motivations and the mechanisms.

Does everyone remember the "death panels"? It was a very compelling political point, because it had a kernel of truth. In any collectivized healthcare system with finite resources, someone has to decide who gets care and who doesn't.

The current problem is that the death panels are now in the hands of a private industry with perverse incentives.
That's not what the death panels were. The "death panels" in the ACA were, in fact, an expert panel to create a reimbursement model for doctors discussing end of life care with patients and their families. DNRs, whether to take brain dead grandma off a ventilator, aggressive and painful cancer treatment that might only extend your life for a few months versus palliative care that will make you feel comfortable during your final months, etc.

Those are lengthy and difficult conversations and doctors are entirely unreimbursed for them. There was no rationing of care at all, it was just a way to pay doctors for spending hours of their time helping patients make those decisions. And thanks to the 'death panels' horseshit, that got taken out of the bill and they're still not reimbursed for that.
 

Navin R Slavin

Fifth line center
Jan 1, 2011
16,379
64,878
Durrm NC
That's not what the death panels were. The "death panels" in the ACA were, in fact, an expert panel to create a reimbursement model for doctors discussing end of life care with patients and their families. DNRs, whether to take brain dead grandma off a ventilator, aggressive and painful cancer treatment that might only extend your life for a few months versus palliative care that will make you feel comfortable during your final months, etc.

Those are lengthy and difficult conversations and doctors are entirely unreimbursed for them. There was no rationing of care at all, it was just a way to pay doctors for spending hours of their time helping patients make those decisions. And thanks to the 'death panels' horseshit, that got taken out of the bill and they're still not reimbursed for that.
Ahhh, interesting! I don't think I ever knew that.

But if anything, the complicated truth serves to reinforce the simple point. Sticky ideas like "a panel that decides who lives and who dies" are scary when the government runs them, even with oversight, and ignored as business as usual when corporations run them, entirely without oversight.
 

hblueridgegal

We'll bounce back
Sep 13, 2019
8,500
29,926
Old North State

Yuck. I just can't see this delivering a natty...

Who knew?

fbunc.jpg
 

MrazeksVengeance

VENGEANCE
Feb 27, 2018
7,597
28,576
I hate to break it to you, but furries have been around long before Animal Crossing. Even long before the original Animal Crossing on the GameCube. You can blame Disney for that, for the most part.
Look at medieval tapestries. Look at Greek Mythos.

Disney merely cultivated seeds that WERE ALREADY PRESENT.
 

MrazeksVengeance

VENGEANCE
Feb 27, 2018
7,597
28,576
That's not what the death panels were. The "death panels" in the ACA were, in fact, an expert panel to create a reimbursement model for doctors discussing end of life care with patients and their families. DNRs, whether to take brain dead grandma off a ventilator, aggressive and painful cancer treatment that might only extend your life for a few months versus palliative care that will make you feel comfortable during your final months, etc.

Those are lengthy and difficult conversations and doctors are entirely unreimbursed for them. There was no rationing of care at all, it was just a way to pay doctors for spending hours of their time helping patients make those decisions. And thanks to the 'death panels' horseshit, that got taken out of the bill and they're still not reimbursed for that.
This makes me… just… sad.

Delivering this kind of news, guiding the patient through it… guiding their family.

This ain’t fun and games.

Sometimes you spend a work week and your idea of win is fixing a terminally ill patient enough so they can die home surrounded by family and without pain, shortness of breath etc.
 

Blueline Bomber

AI Generated Minnesota Wild
Sponsor
Oct 31, 2007
41,019
48,530
Look at medieval tapestries. Look at Greek Mythos.

Disney merely cultivated seeds that WERE ALREADY PRESENT.

See, that’s an interesting debate.

1733971890550.jpeg


This is a statue of a lion-man, carbon-dated to be around 35,000 - 40,000 years old. So clearly, representing animal as man (or man as animal) has been around for a while. And as you said, mythology contains a multitude of examples, whether it’s Greek, Egyptian, Japanese, Hawaiian, etc. It could be argued that a lot of these mythological stories fall under the concept of “furry fan fiction.”

I brought up Disney because I imagine any number of their films were the “furry awakening” for many people who fall under that umbrella, and Disney certainly seems like they go out of their way to fan those flames.
 

MrazeksVengeance

VENGEANCE
Feb 27, 2018
7,597
28,576
See, that’s an interesting debate.

View attachment 943893

This is a statue of a lion-man, carbon-dated to be around 35,000 - 40,000 years old. So clearly, representing animal as man (or man as animal) has been around for a while. And as you said, mythology contains a multitude of examples, whether it’s Greek, Egyptian, Japanese, Hawaiian, etc. It could be argued that a lot of these mythological stories fall under the concept of “furry fan fiction.”

I brought up Disney because I imagine any number of their films were the “furry awakening” for many people who fall under that umbrella, and Disney certainly seems like they go out of their way to fan those flames.
It should BE NO SURPRISE, POP CULTURE INFLUENCES FETISHES.

Be it TARANTINO, DISNEY, VAMPIRE MOVIES, MEN IN BLACK, 21ST CENTURY CARTOONS FOR TEENAGERS OR STAR TREK.
 
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