You ask me how one can forcefully redistribute wealth according to their liking and make people part with what they believe to be theirs without having to resort to violence and my answer is simple: one shouldn't want to. — Tzeentch
How do you propose the government talks to each and every person to reach individually tailored agreements as to what belongs to whom? — Isaac
You won't be wanting to take home that portion of your pay that the government believes to be theirs will you? — Isaac
And what was the outcome of your talk with the government about your disagreement over who owns the taxed portion of your pay? — Isaac
I view governments as inherently problematic — Tzeentch
Governments aren't people. — Tzeentch
I don't have an intention to forcefully take from individuals what they believe to be theirs, no. I reach an agreement with them. — Tzeentch
what was the outcome of your talk with the government about your disagreement over who owns the taxed portion of your pay? — Isaac
It'd be even harder for every person to come to an agreement with every other. This is just fantasist nonsense. — Isaac
Governments aren't people. — Tzeentch
So? — Isaac
what was the outcome of your talk with the government about your disagreement over who owns the taxed portion of your pay? — Isaac
Only with those people I have a dispute with, which aren't very many at all. — Tzeentch
A government isn't a thinking being with an opinion about what it believes to be theirs. — Tzeentch
I didn't have any talks, as they would obviously be fruitless. — Tzeentch
Everyone who is a beneficiary of taxes then is in dispute with you about who owns the taxed portion of you pay, they all think it's them. — Isaac
No, but people can have an opinion about what belongs to the government. — Isaac
Then how can you declare taxation to be theft? — Isaac
You said that the matter of ownership is resolved by agreement, yet you've engaged in no such agreement with the government. So no agreement has been reached as to who owns what. — Isaac
Show me the individual that wants to dispute what I perceive as my personal belongings and I'll happily have a chat with them. — Tzeentch
Then how can you declare taxation to be theft? — Isaac
I never declared that. — Tzeentch
it has simply been imposed upon me without my say. — Tzeentch
Show me the individual that wants to dispute what I perceive as my personal belongings and I'll happily have a chat with them. — Tzeentch
Ridiculous, there are millions of people in your country alone, all of whom have a claim. This idea of managing an entire country by individual agreement is absurd. — Isaac
Not in so many words perhaps, but the taking of property one is not entitled to is theft, so to disown the claim you'd have to either relinquish the property claim or agree the government is within its rights. — Isaac
Why would they ask you, they don't believe it's your property, you've never put any such claim to them, so why on earth would they ask you first? — Isaac
No, I think managing one's disputes through individual agreements is a good way to go about things. — Tzeentch
Maybe it is countries that are absurd if they are unable to act in ways that are good. — Tzeentch
We haven't spoken about entitlements. We have spoken about perceptions, and if those perceptions conflict — Tzeentch
Why would this change the fact that it has been imposed on me without my say? — Tzeentch
The 14 thousand unemployed in your country claim a little of your pay to support them in their unemployment. — Isaac
Theft is the taking of something owned by another, so if you perceive something to be owned by you it follows that you perceive it's removal to be theft, unless you simply don't know what theft means. — Isaac
It changes why you'd be at all surprised about that. — Isaac
And no consideration is given as to why a person didn't get vaccinated
— baker
Maybe, maybe not? What do you think? It's usually easy enough to identify people that require special medical attention. (Maybe ridiculous conspiracy theories are special conditions.) Actually, I think trying to round up medical conditions is standard procedure; maybe frank or someone knows.
somehow, covid vaccines are a stellar exemption
— baker
Keep up. — jorndoe
But, saying "hey, it works, which can't be right" doesn't work. — jorndoe
No, I think managing one's disputes through individual agreements is a good way to go about things. — Tzeentch
In some EU countries, we have a mixture of privatised and universal healthcare. Here, the bottomline is that health insurance only gets you at the end of the waiting line, which is usually quite long. So you have to pay out of your own pocket to get medical treatment in a timely manner, and of better quality (which makes for a bizzare experience: same clinic, same doctor, but different standards of care, depending on whether you pay out of your own pocket or whether insurance pays).It's not a debate about the virtues of capitalism or socialism but a debate between privatised and universal healthcare. Under the first, you're definitely screwed if you have a rare disease. At least universal healthcare is subject to public debate, instead of board room decisions. Moreover, due to the fact universal healthcare includes more people, the risk mutualisation is spread over a greater number of people. In theory it should be more affordable to also cover rarer diseases. In practice this is proved time and again by the fact both coverage is greater and costs are lower in countries with universal healthcare as opposed to the US, while quality of care is, on average, better too. — Benkei
But would you include the consideration as to why the person didn't get vaccinated?It's only relevant if other triage considerations have already been exhausted (such as, acuteness of the care needed, beneficence and maleficence) and if the information is available whether such a person has contributed to the hospitalisation themselves, then I would use that information and I think it would be ethical to do so.
In Slovenia, there has for a long time been an unspoken culture of how to proceed in such cases, and people in general were expected to "make the right decision" on their own. Ie. to not be a burden to others.How about treating a 90-year old woman with heart surgery to provide her a new heart valve? She takes up resources too. Do it or not do it? — Benkei
Despite your cherry-picked press clippings, the group you describe are not one homogeneous legion. Attempts to lump everyone who disagrees with the party line in with the tinfoil hat brigade are just political. There's a convenient bunch of loonies who can be called on to besmirch any view you don't like by association. Should we do the same with climate change? Environmental issues? I could definitely rustle up some seriously dodgy hippies who are all in for those sorts of causes. Shall we make the serious climate scientists look like fools by associating them with a few tree-hugging children of Gaia?
Is this the direction you really want public debate to head? — Isaac
That paper seems to be saying that the risk is greater after vaccination and a positive test for covid than it is with vaccination alone. In other words it seems the subjects were all vaccinated individuals. — Janus
Meanwhile, we still have to deal with the damn pandemic.
The simple part is that more or less everyone wants the damn pandemic to be gone — jorndoe
I don't have a dispute with those people, as far as I am aware. — Tzeentch
Theft concerns a subjective dimension about what rightfully belongs to whom, and that is not relevant to the point I have been making. — Tzeentch
I don't know why you keep wanting to make this about me: what my solutions are, why I am surprised, etc. Those things aren't relevant at all to the point I am making. — Tzeentch
Sure. But do you want to know what (and how) people believe just out of curiosity, or do you have a more urgent and useful reason for it?It's an exercise in finding out what (and how) people believe — Isaac
When it comes to climate change, vaccines, COVID, etc — yes. But overall, the general feeling is that government is bought by special interests. — Xtrix
Some states take on the role of ensuring the property rights of their citizens and mediating the inevitable property disputes. — Srap Tasmaner
How would they make you aware? — Isaac
Then just reiterate your point for me, if you will. — Isaac
So do you have an alternative? — Isaac
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