Platt stated April 23rd:

I see by this mornings "Independent" and "Guardian" that England's National
Health Service has got more troubles. Headline from the Independent: "Doctors
report "We no longer have free health care.'" Headline from the Guardian:
"Brown faces biggest NHS strike in 20 years." No need to bore you with the
details.


Ant McWatt comments:

Platt,

As ever, it's like "preparing a thesis" to follow up your unreferenced quotes...

Anyway, at least it's good to see you finally recognising the "Independent" and "Guardian" as relatively reliable news sources if a bit strange to see you inadvertently warning us yet again about relying on privatised medicine as the primary health care provider in a civillised society. To quote Christoph Lees (a consultant obstetrician and maternal-foetal medicine at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge) in the Independent article you refer to:

"While welcoming patients' ability to enhance their care by choosing different parts of a package of care from the NHS and private sectors, we must recognise that this approach may disenfranchise those unable or unwilling to pay for 'top-up care'."

"There is no point pretending ['top- up'] charges don't exist. We would ask the Department of Health to clarify its position regarding the interaction of 'top-up' payments with NHS care."

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/article2474429.ece

Beyond the Talk Radio smokescreen, it appears to me that you don't want the results of your own pet political ideas (i.e. the ideas of those right-wing business gurus who advised Thatcher in the first place to privatise the NHS) re-imported back to the US and who can blame you!

As I also mentioned before, a related reference you should follow up is the "Thirty Days" TV series which has been recently broadcast on FX in the US and Channel 4 in the UK presented by Morgan Spurlock (the guy who ate _only_ McDonald's for a month for the film "Super Size Me" and was fortunate to survive it without permanent damage) . The first program from the TV series was particularly telling as the viewer saw how it was privatised healthcare which ultimately made it impossible for Spurlock and his girlfriend Alex (basically both healthy people) to live on the minimum wage in the US for even a month.

As Morgan Spurlock confirms:

I didn't really realize how difficult it was going to be living off minimum wage or $5.15 or $6.15 or even seven bucks an hour until I was there doing it. It was definitely something I thought we should explore.

Danny Gallagher: What surprised you most about that first episode?

MS: I think it's the impact it has on relationships, the impact it has on a couple. That's why I'm so glad Alex went because it really showed the strains that are put on a relationship when you're struggling through this type of existenceÂ…When I was there and saw how Alex and I were like just exhausted when we were around each other, we were bitter, we were angry with each other at times, and we were just emotionally spent. You just see how hard it would be to keep a family together, to keep a relationship together if you're working two jobs and six or seven days a week. It would just be impossible.

DG: I think the interesting thing with the first episode is you're exploring minimum wage and you stumble upon this other issue with health care because all of a sudden, both of you get sick and you've got a $1,200 health care bill. Did you realize that you could be exploring one issue on the show, stumble onto another one, and show the audience how these issues are connected?

MS: For me, especially when you're there, that was one of the things we never even thought of it until we were there. Suddenly she was sick, and I hurt my arm, and this is something else. This is one of those little things that you never could plan for that just kind of comes up and you're like, this is a good storyline. This is a serious problem that we never connected to this. When we started meeting people who don't have health insurance and who have kids and families, [we learned] that when you don't have health insurance, your primary care provider becomes the hospital. That's a tough proposition when you leave with a $1,200 medical bill.

DG: With Super Size Me, you tried to transform the way people look at junk food. So with 30 Days, do you hope to transform junk TV?

MS: For me, the goal is to try and create a show that, like the movie, makes people think a little bit. I want to entertain you, and I think the show is very entertaining and very funny and really different. But at the same point, it makes you think. It makes you use the grey matter in your head, and, for me, the goal is to try and continue to create some things that inspire people to think, makes us want to examine this world we live in and change the world around us...

Morgan Spurlock in conversation with Danny Gallagher, a freelance writer, reporter and humorist "living in Texas where everything is bigger, badder, better and battered."

http://www.arrivistepress.com/August_05/danny_gallagher_morgan_spurlock_08_05.shtml

Sleep tight,

Anthony



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