On Thu, 10 Sep 2009 [email protected] wrote: > --- On Thu, 9/10/09, Drsolly <[email protected]> wrote: > > > What's a "birther"? > > 'Cor luv a duck! (my mastery of the language isn't good, excuse me if > this is one of those times when I am supposed to say "Yoicks!")
No, that's exactly the right expression, although it's not used much these days. A more up-to-date phrase would be "Fuck me!". > A Birther is someone who believes that the US president was secretly > born in Kenya (a country that did not exist at the date of his birth), > and that a conspiracy involving his parents, the state of Hawaii and > local Hawaiian newspapers was started before he was born to disguise > that fact. Birthers with lower lead content in their blood claim that > he cannot be President because - like past Republican President Chester > A Arthur - both of his parents were not American citizens at birth. OK, thanks. And I heard somewhere that America, land of equality and opportunity, doesn't allow someone born outside the US to become president. > This is not to be confused with a "Deather", though by and large they > are the same folks. Deathers believe that the effort to reform the US > healthcare system is a veiled effort to euthanize the elderly of Ah, that's the "death panels" thing, OK. > America, reasoning (not to stretch the meaning of the word) that - as > happens in such socialist hell-holes as the UK, Sweden and Canada - once > The Guvernment is given complete and unquestioned control of healthcare > they will choose to deny medicine to old people. I believe the theory > is that this will endear the ruling party with the younger voters who > will then inherit Grandpa's old slippers. Every person dies (so far), and every doctor has to make a decision at some point that the pain and inconvenience inflicted by healthcare is no longer going to make a net benefit to the sufferer. We had an aunt with cancer. She was 93, and the doctors decided that an operation might help the cancer problem, but would leave her with an operation recovery problem, and that anyway she'd probably die from other causes before the cancer killed her. I guess they have to make decisions like that all the time. In addition, every healthcare treatment has a cost, and funds are not infinite, so care has to be allocated somehow (although it you have money, you can pay for it yourself). And it's certainly true that old people are more likely to die than young people. How you must love the current American system whereby everybody gets as much healthcare as they want to buy. _______________________________________________ Fun and Misc security discussion for OT posts. https://linuxbox.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/funsec Note: funsec is a public and open mailing list.
