I just broke up with my boyfriend of 5 years. I wonder if I made the right decision. Something tells me I made the wrong one and in a couple years, I will really regret making it.
You made exactly the right decision. You've mentioned this relationship several times on the forums; it was clear that your emotions weren't in the right place. It's not necessarily that he's not a good guy, or that you're not a good guy, or that the two of you are incompatible. Rather, you weren't emotionally satisfied and, regardless of whether there are good reasons for it or not, that by itself is a powerful reason to end a relationship.
Okay, as far as the whole healthcare plan is concerned, and the government in general, I'm tired of everyone complaining so much about things that you can't really change. We can't change the minds of the rich bastards who decide what's best for us, the general public. What we can change is ourselves. We can change our clothes, our moods, whatever. Too many people think on the "World scale" and not so much the "Personal scale." Why don't we, instead of spouting back something that someone else told us, come together as one and agree that there's nothing we can do to change any of it?
"Can't make a difference; don't try."
Yeah, I've heard that philosophy before. Best of luck to you with it, but I won't be coming along. I've printed too many business cards to even think about giving up on changing the world. (They say:
Josh Industries: Striving for world peace, or a piece of the world.)
I'm sorry Z, I must have missed the part where you read the House and Senate bills in their entirety, hired a lawyer to explain all of the legalese and BS that goes into any of these legislative bills, rather than viewing some bias-ridden condensed version from whatever left-wing blog you frequent.
I'm not convinced that the "death panels" are real, but I do know that in the last week or so the Senate did a 360 and dropped a major portion of the end of life counseling part of their version of the health care bill. I have no idea what exactly was dropped, because I don't feel like reading the damn thing and trying to translate it.
Maybe you're right, and all they dropped was a funding for X vaccine for elderly people. Or maybe Sarah Palin's right and the Congress wants to kill old people. Like I said, I don't know, and neither do you or George Stephanopoulos.
It is scary how excellent an example you are of the kind of person for whom propaganda was invented. If I had the time, I'd write a whole academic essay dissecting how perfectly you are saying articulating exactly what someone else wants you to believe, despite believing without hesitation that these thoughts come to you on your own. It's all there: the ridiculous emotional hook ("death panels"), the backhanded insinuation (the Senate changed its bill for some reason), the appeal to authority (none of us could possibly know what's up because we're not Senators), the false authority (you say you didn't read the bill, but speak as if your speculation were fact), and the ever-popular red herring (ZeaLitY's full of bias from all those left-wing blogs).
Critical thought is your friend. Say it with me...
That's my frustration for the moment. It's always the sheep who do the most harm in the end, because they allow themselves, through ignorance, to become the enablers of evil. We live in a time when our healthcare industry makes its profits by denying people the coverage for which they dearly pay. It is an industry that literally and directly profits by murdering its own customers. We don't think of it as murder because there are no guns or swords, but it is deliberate, it is knowledgeable, and it is flagrantly defiant. Ordinary Americans know this; they're not getting the care they need, or the coverage they deserve. They're on the phone arguing about claims. They're suffering. Yet the power of propaganda is such that even one of the most obvious truths in our lives today has become completely obscured in just a few months of intense lobbying by the insurance and pharmaceutical industries, and their willing enablers on the right (and to a much lesser extent on the left). So here we are, and instead of talking about actual healthcare reform, we're talking about death panels and rationing and government bureaucrats.
What spectacular weaklings are those who abandon the power of thought, and yet what immense power they wield in their multitudes. What an excellent case against the merits of democracy.
Death panels. Really.
Death panels.
I no longer need to qualify this statement ever again: People will believe anything.