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@sexykitty544

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Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Please keep interacting with this post because when I come to tumblr to procrastinate, this shows up again in my notifications and guilts me into writing again

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
whenever the ac is set to 69 i'm a little too hot but whenever the ac is set to 68 i'm a little too cold i'm just like goldilocks because i also want to be in a bed with three bears
Blogging this tweet because this explains SO MUCH about the mindset of pretty much all the folks Iāve known whoāre against single-payer, itās not even funnyā¦
Thisā¦.
This never occurred to me. Not once. That Americans are against Health Care because they think it actually costs tens of thousands of dollars for a broken arm, hundreds of thousands for a complicated birth, millions for cancer treatment.
Because theyāve never known anything different. The idea that a broken arm is only a couple hundred bucks; a complicated birth a couple thousand; cancer treatment only tens of thousands; all easily covered by existing tax structures.
This explains a lot. Ā And itās a good example of what I was talking about in my post on scarcity being used to prop up ableism ā always question the idea that a resource is genuinely scarce. Ā Even if it seems obvious that it is, quite often thatās the result of careful manipulation and misconceptions that youāre not even aware of. Ā
And never think youāre too smart to be fooled by that kind of thing, it doesnāt work like that. Ā Similarly, donāt think people who are fooled by something are stupid. Ā Nobody can have all the information about everything, and nobody has the time and energy to investigate and put together conscious conclusions about every piece of information theyāre given. Ā It doesnāt take being stupid, or even just gullible, to believe something like this.
I currently live in a country without free medical care and still, itās enormously cheap compared to the USA. An American expat wrote a piece for our English language paper about how she paid more for parking at the hospital than giving birth to her baby thatās pretty interesting:
https://grapevine.is/mag/articles/2016/01/06/healthcare-in-iceland-vs-the-us-weve-got-it-so-good/
Yesterday I had to go to the hospital cause I injured my eye, Iām frankly dreading what the bill is going to be, but what made me balk was being told in the pharmacy that my insurance was denied for the antibiotic eye drops and itād be over $100 out of pocket. So I didnāt get my eyedrops.
Iāve had these same drops before living in the UK. They cost me seven GBP.
Itās the exact same drug, same steroid, same strain of antibiotic. But somehow the US gets away with charging $100 for a generic non brand version of a drug which is easy to create and widely used. Itās downright robbery, but also a form of eugenics through poverty and class warfare. You keep the poor poor by making sure basic necessities remain unattainable and then you make it seem like the norm so no one fights it.
The rest of the world is not like this.
Eat the rich. Resist.
When I was travelling in Germany once, I seriously hurt my ankle. In a few hours, it had swollen to twice its size, and I went to a little ER in a tiny town. I spoke no German and only one nurse spoke English. They ran an X-ray and an MRI to determine what had happened (turned out I had bruised my peroneus brevis muscle and pulled the tendon), gave me a ton of very regulated meds for the pain and swelling, including some supports so I could walkā¦and my poor little 22-year-old ass was sat there, knowing all of this would cost thousands, if not tens of thousands, back in the US. I was shaking.
Iām in the exam room, post diagnosis and with pill bottles in hand, and in walks the one nurse Iāve been able to speak to the entire time. She pats my hand and tells me (and this is verbatimāI will never forget this conversation as long as I live), āIām so sorry. We had to run those tests, and they are expensive. You donāt have insurance so you will have to cover the full cost.ā
I start crying.
She continues, softly, as if telling me someone has died, āItās going to be three hundred.ā
I start sobbing, certain Iāve misheard, certain that I would be absolutely fucked, broke and going into debt in a foreign country. āThousand?ā I clarify.
Her entire demeanor changed, and she looked at me as if I had sprouted four extra heads. āNo,ā she says, āeuros.ā
That moment radicalised me.
My family got charged several thousand dollars for a late-night trip to the ER when I was a kid after an oops at home resulted in a large cut that needed almost 40 sutures. We lived in the US at the time.
Now we live in Canada. Last year my leg got rolled over by one of the front tires on a pickup truck. I spent 3 weeks in hospital, had 3 surgeries, one of which included skin grafting to cover the half of my leg that was degloved in my accident. I had IV antibiotics 4 times a day, I had physiotherapy daily, I was on a lot of meds for pain and having complex wound dressings changed every day. After all that, I had a home care nurse visit me every 1-2 days for 6 weeks to help with my wound care. The greatest expense to us as a family for the amazing care I received was my parents and husband using the parkade next to the hospital, which was like $13 a day. If weād lived in the US, that injury absolutely could have bankrupted us.
This information needs to be part of the US med school curriculum.
I remember the moment that radicalized me.
I went to the UK for graduate school, and being there for that long meant I had to buy insurance for the duration. 18 months was something like Ā£800 (this was in the early 2010ās). I, being American, figured āoh ok, thatās the premium and if I need serious medical care, Iāll get charged deductibles and all other kinds of fees at the time of care), because thatās how it works here.
Some time in the early part of that winter, I got incredibly sick. Iām immunocompromised, so sometimes that happens. But being a broke ass grad student in a foreign country, and dealing with unrelated financial abuse from family members, I figured I couldnāt afford going to the hospital. I figured Iād go to their version of Walgreenās (Superdrug, and yes that is really that storeās name, load up on cough drops, some OTC meds, and try to ride it out as best I could.
One of my friends in my program came over to check on me and offer help. When she got to my room and saw how sick I was, she asked why I hadnāt gone to hospital. I was near tears and said I couldnāt afford it.
This is when I suspect my friend knew she was dealing with an American who was ignorant of how socialized healthcare actually worked, and realized that I couldnāt really be reasoned with. So she said, āIāll pay for it- letās go.ā
Off we went to hospital, my friend did the talking bc my voice was so shot. The receptionist said, āas you donāt have an appointment, you may need to wait quite a bit.ā I heard that and figured 5+ hours was at least what I was in for.
23 minutes later, my name was called.
My friend went back with me, bc I was pretty out of it. The nurse leading us back apologized for the āhuge waitā because having a sick patient wait ānearly half an hour just for medical careā was unacceptable. I was stunned.
The nurse and doc asked some questions, looked at the medical records I had on my phone (bc I was a foreigner with very little medical history in the country), did a few rapid tests. The whole time, Iām seeing an old-timey calculator ringing up charges and freaking out⦠even though my friend said sheād pay, I was so conditioned to believe this would cost a fortune.
About 30 mins later, the rapid tests confirm I have both bronchitis and pneumonia. Doc writes me a prescription for some serious heavy-duty meds. My American ass is thinking, āok, so now I go home, wait for 4 days for the pharmacy to fill it, then go get it.ā The doc tells me that thereās a pharmacy counter on the way out, and I can stop there to collect the meds before heading home.
Iām skeptical but thank him. My friend gets me to the pharmacy counter. I give my name and hand over the paper, fully expecting to be told that itāll take days to fill. The pharmacist turns around, pulls a bag off the shelf, hands it to me. Because my meds were already filled and waiting.
Me: you had them already?
Pharmacist: of course- thereād be no point in sending you home without medication, thatās why you came here. To get medical help.
Me: thatās so fast? (I am very confused)
Pharmacist: well, we expect people to have these illnesses at a higher rate this time of year, so we do our best to stock up on our end.
Me: thatās so nice? Also, what do I owe you?
Pharm: sorry, love?
Me: what do I owe you? For the medication? And the visit. All of it, how much do I need to pay?
Chat, her whole fact changed. She realized I didnāt just sound funny because I was in respiratory distress. I had an American accent. She reached over and patted my hand.
āLove, thatās what the health insurance is meant to be for. Youāve already paid for this. Weāre not taking extra money off you, we donāt do that here.ā
The entire visit was less than 2 hours, absolutely free, and everyone worked to be as efficient as possible in the goal of providing comprehensive healthcare for me, the patient.
Once I got home with the meds, I did actually recover pretty well (and relatively quickly, as far as Iām concerned). I talked to the friend after, and she admitted that she knew it was going to be free, but that I wouldnāt or couldnāt understand that in the brain fog of serious illness, so she said what she had to in order to get my stubborn (and terrified of bankruptcy) ass to the doctor.
Thatās what healthcare should be. A goal of providing comprehensive and compassionate care to your patients, being well-staffed enough that no one waits for hours, anticipating medication needs, ensuring that patients leave with the medical care they sought- and that theyāre not afraid to seek it, because they know medical care wonāt make them homeless.
I love that friend in the story. Yep. Absolutely. Sheāll pay for it.
@isuggesteatingtherich heyyy i found a little something for you :3
š has a suggestion
I want every American to read all of these stories. I think if more of America understood what āuniversal healthcareā really looked like, thereās not a health insurance office in the country that wouldnāt be on fire.
I started watching āSuitsā the other day. Great show.
Itās about this law firm in New York. Best in the city, best in the world, I mean these people negotiate 9 figure deals in their sleep.
When youāre talking about people who treat millions of dollars the way we treat hundreds, itās not surprising when a major storyline revolves around embezzlement
What IS mind boggling is the REASON, given for the sake of being relatable. The reason given, to normalize the action. The reason that makes anyone say āOh yeah that sounds like a perfectly normal excuse to defraud a billion dollar lawfirmā
What reason did the lawyer have? The head of the firm with his name on the door? The guy who, until the moment he got caught, was the most badass lawyer on the planet?
His. Wifeās. Medical. Bills.
Like Iām sorry yall. Iām now living in Norway and I can finally see how earth shatteringly bullshit that is. Like letās forget the fact that itās fiction. Iām not in the world of āSuitsā. Iām in the writers room.
The question being posed to me is āhow do we make a corrupt lawyer, but then humanize him and make him relatableā
And the answer that fit perfectly is āheās embezzling money for his wifeās medical billsā
And that answer fit SO perfectly that the first FEW times I watched the show it never rang any alarm bells
That is, until I got to Norway and realized THAT SHIT WOULDāVE NEVER HAPPENED HERE
Thatās not relatable AT ALL in any world that makes a scrap of sense. Thereās no WAY youāre stealing money for medical bills. WHAT medical bills???
The American healthcare system makes NO goddamn sense and every āinsurance companyā needs to burn to the fucking ground
Especially their fucking lobbyists
i have a suggestion
im not complaining because i expect you to fix anything im complaining to bond with you. omggggg find your hater spirit
"Comply or die" is a feature of fascism, not a feature of a free society.
What are people not getting?

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Happy to see this in places where I usually find white nationalist stickers.
Near campus a bit ago: