Could you give your perspective on whether healthcare should be allotted according to the choices a person has made? So that if resources were tight, vaccinated people would be prioritized over non-vaccinated?
Does that sound ethical to you? — frank
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? — Isaac
But let's start somewhere. Let's assume you have perfect knowledge and there are two patients, male, 26-years old, both have COVID, one is vaccinated the other isn't. Both need a vent and there's only one vent. Who gets the vent? Is this an obvious case to you? If not, why not? — Benkei
Is exactly an answer to it — Isaac
So, applying the same logic, I would not demand you lose priority for the vent based upon your bad behavior of vaccine refusal, but I could certainly see insurance refusals, hospital surcharges, or other penalties short of having your medical care altered. — Hanover
On another note, I must say it is a bit disheartening to see grand ideals of healthcare for all be dismissed at the first sign of trouble. — Tzeentch
I think you've misunderstood how discussion works. Either the matter of it's wrongness can be established (or at least furthered) dialectically, in which case you need to answer the points I've raised, or it can't, in which case this is little more than an opinion poll and you've already had your go. — Isaac
You are not forced under threat of violence to go to a restaurant. — Tzeentch
But it's not the same logic because there's nothing barring you to return home and get the shoes. In the examples I give, a decision has to be made. Both patients need care equally. Justice isn't the first consideration in triage but it certainly is one of them. Other things being equal, I think the decision not to get vaccinated and requiring a scarce resource like an IC bed or a vent as a result of that decision and when other people need it just as badly can and should be taken into account.
And while we're at it. In the Netherlands we have universal healthcare and there are serious debates about whether to treat certain patients due to limited resources. The anesthesiologists I mentioned recently took a minority position to treat a 90-year old woman for heart surgery. Everybody else argued not to do it, too old, much too likely to develop complications from the procedure and likely not to fully recover. He argued differently because in her particular case she had never had need for extended care or other operations. — Benkei
ou can frame it any way you like - — Tzeentch
Questionable humor? — jorndoe
Life nor citizenship is something the individual voluntarily participates in — Tzeentch
"If you don't like it go away" makes as little sense when said by a state as it does when said by a child's parents. — Tzeentch
One key difference is that (good) parents will support their child in gaining indepence and eventually will relinquish their authority over it. — Tzeentch
Bull Shit. You can kill yourself or go to Somalia or swim to Cuba or whatever. — James Riley
So you are a child and the state is your parent? — James Riley
That flies in the face of your freedom we honor. — James Riley
Well, if you're going to use that analogy, then, by the time you can pay taxes, leave. We relinquish authority over you. — James Riley
"If you don't like it here just kill yourself" holds even less merit. — Tzeentch
A citizen, just like a child, is put under an inescapable authority involuntarily. — Tzeentch
Indeed it does. — Tzeentch
Except that citizenship isn't simply relinquished, but even then, this would only make sense if states gave individuals an option to opt out - they don't. — Tzeentch
The suicide rate is off the charts. People do it all the time because they don't want to pay the price of life. — James Riley
When a child reaches majority and doesn't want to contribute, they can get the hell out of the house. We raised you up right, you can work and pay taxes. Get to it, or get out. This is a family here and if you don't want to be a part of it, if you don't want to help your little sister, or help pay for her education, leave. — James Riley
States DO give individuals an option to opt out. — James Riley
Regardless, I do liken a pandemic to a war — James Riley
Ah yes. Suicide - a simple matter of weighing the costs against the benefits and making a rational decision based on that. — Tzeentch
Didn't I recall you posting something about caring for others a while back? — Tzeentch
What you describe is failed parenting. Parents who resent their children for not growing up the way they envisioned. They fail to understand that the child never asked to be theirs, and that children shouldn't be had to fulfill the parents hopes and fantasies in the first place. It is their failure. — Tzeentch
They fail to understand that the child never asked to be theirs, and that children shouldn't be had to fulfill the parents hopes and fantasies in the first place — Tzeentch
The idea that a parent can force existence upon their child, and then present them with a list of things they expect of them holds no moral weight. It's nonsense. — Tzeentch
A parent can always reach for the belt, and force compliance - additional confirmation of their failure. — Tzeentch
Yes, and this option is no more tenable than telling a child to run away from home if they don't like their parents. — Tzeentch
Also, you seem to be getting awfully personal. — Tzeentch
Let me assure you I enjoy my time within the state's boundaries just fine for now. — Tzeentch
Healthcare is not where we administer justice. — frank
Doing that would be a path to a horrendous ethical fuckup. — frank
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