Posts tagged What’s

Whats the name of this song? something about junkies?

Question by liz_: Whats the name of this song? something about junkies?
“i never thought youd be a junkie because heroin is…
and i dont know about depression and emotional pain…”?

Best answer:

Answer by Dj Jennyfey!!
Clueless. Be more descriptive.

Give your answer to this question below!

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what’s the difference between alcoholism and alcohol abuse?

Question by *Living life the way one should*: what’s the difference between alcoholism and alcohol abuse?
Thanks 4 help,advice,comments,etc.

Best answer:

Answer by Falling
i think alcoholism is just the term to describe using alcohol and alcohol abuse is just what it sounds like…you use too much alcohol all the time, its like addiction i guess

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Whats the most painless,quickest way to commit suicide?

Question by : Whats the most painless,quickest way to commit suicide?
I dont rly want to roll around spitting blood for hours like you do if you OD on tylenol. Cutting seems to graphic and painful/long.

and please dont call me a whiner or looking for attention.
Ive been clinically depressed for years now. I grew up mostly w/o parents, when their around i get hit/screamed at alot.
Im 17 and school is no ‘happy time’ either i get abused or ignored constantly by almost everyone. I have no friends left and still dont have a girlfriend. Anyone i get close to ends up fucking me over cause “its funny” I went through therapy for a year and its f*ucking worthless, i tried to self medicate with drugs and alcohol but it just made me an insomniac and sick as hell.
Im only 17 so its not like i can up and move to another state.

I cant believe im saying it but it hurts to live, theres gotta be something better then this afterwards

Best answer:

Answer by Heather
:(

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

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Q&A: What’s the safest and quickest way to look emaciated?

quick heroin
by dbking

Question by crustyrustyaphid: What’s the safest and quickest way to look emaciated?
I want to try to keep my muscles as is but I’d love to look Heroin-addict-skinny. Like Johnny Quid from RocknRolla if anyone has seen it. So what is the best,safest and quickest way to achieve that look?

Best answer:

Answer by Jeus M
probably asking a question like this. if some one asked me that question in the steet i would probably knock him out and kiss his girlfriend

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What’s the greatest evil drug prohibition or drug addiction?

Question by x z: What’s the greatest evil drug prohibition or drug addiction?
Drug prohibition increases the price of illegal drugs which makes traffick very profitable which creates drug related violence which funds terrorism which puts in jail 80% of jail inmates who then learn how to be better dealers and progress in their careers to bigger more violent crimes.

Drug addiction is a personal curse but if drugs were cheap there would be no need to resort to crime to get them and the consequences would be much less extended to society than the consequences of drug prohibition.

Best answer:

Answer by kNOTaLIAwyR
Drug Addiction – Endangerment and Burden to Society

Give your answer to this question below!

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Whats the healthiest fast food place?

Question by Alex B. Ph.D.: Whats the healthiest fast food place?
I’m starving and I know that like BK and Mickie D’s are like crap for yah. Subways too expensive. Is Taco Bell ok? What other cheap quick places are not worse than cigarettes and heroin for the body?

Best answer:

Answer by Tamborine
Taco Bell is pretty high in carb and fat content.

A barbeque chicken sandwhich from Kentucky Fried Chicken is low points on the Weight Watchers Scale.

Most fast food places these days have salad options that aren’t too bad for you.

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HELP!!! What’s a non-alcoholic, quick to make, Pakistani drink?

Question by Ms. Muffin-man: HELP!!! What’s a non-alcoholic, quick to make, Pakistani drink?
So I’m doing a heritage report and if we bring a food that is part of our heritage (ex. your irish you bring corned beef, like that) it will give us extra points. everyone is bringing something sweet and dessert like so I thought it would be fun to bring a drink. the recipe for the drink needs to serve about 30 people(i think actually 27 but im sure my family will want to try some.) and it doesn’t need to be a great big cup of something for anyone just like a little plastic or dixi cup. also if you can’t find a drink that serves about 30 just give me what you have and i can convert the amount later. thanks!

Best answer:

Answer by emily h
http://www.floras-hideout.com/drrecipes/non-alco-Classic.html

This is a great website!

What do you think? Answer below!

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US Healthcare: What’s Wrong With It?

US Healthcare – What’s wrong with it?
By Phil Bate PhD

We spend 2-3 times as much on our healthcare as most of the countries that now have   “socialized medicine”.  Yet, every country with socialized medicine has much better overall health statistics.  As a matter fact, we are hovering around 32nd in the world.  Even some “third world” countries are ahead of us.

How can this be?  The richest country in the world, spending more than any other country, yet the health is one of the worst!  What’s wrong?  How have we come to this state of affairs?

There are a variety of reasons.  Let’s look at some of these, and look at the alternate answer:

    1.  There’s a lot of talk about 40-50 million “uninsured” people in the US.  “Uninsured” doesn’t mean that they aren’t taken care of.  No Emergency Room can turn down anyone who comes for “treatment”.  (Although many hospitals try to shift “poor” people to county or state facilities for profits sake.) 

There’s also Medicaid for the very poor.  But, that still leaves the great majority of “uninsured” swinging in the wind.  They make just a little too much money to qualify for Medicaid, or the state they live in has run out of money and facilities.  (Under the Bush Administration, the cuts in Medicaid have limited this coverage in virtually every state.)  A severe medical problem bankrupts many of these families every year. 

Who pays for Medicare and Emergency visits?  The usual – US taxpayers!  So, like it or not, we already have a “sort of” socialized medicine. 

By the way, when did the phrase “socialized medicine” become a bad phrase?  (Was it another “spin” fostered by “vested interests”?)   How often have you heard “just ask a Canadian about their socialized medicine”?  

Ask 100 persons from any country(s) that has socialized medicine two questions:  “How do you like it?” and “Would you like to get rid of it”. 

The answers to the first question are often a lot of individual complaining.  Yet, the answer to the second question is an overwhelming “Never”.   Could this dichotomy be the reason that so many people in the US “think” that socialized medicine is bad – those “bitching” (and very human) answers.  Most people ask only the first question, NOT the second.  I’ve asked both, and have yet to find a Canadian or a Brit who answers “yes” to the second question, but many, or most, will find something to complain about.

Isn’t it interesting that all the “civilized industrial nations” in Europe and elsewhere have some version of socialized medicine?  Even in almost bankrupt Russia and Georgia, healthcare is free to all.  And, even their health statistics are better than ours.   (FYI, they also subsidize any “bright” student all the way to a “doctorate” if they are smart enough.  College tuition in the US is prohibitively high for mid and low income families – are we wasting a major resource?  You bet!)

    2.   Why is our health care costing so much?  Simple – the insurance companies are running it.  They make huge profits for this “service”.  Cut out the middleman – the insurance companies, and cut the costs by an impartial estimate between a third and a half!   

What other benefits would this have?  Doctors would have more time to talk to patients, and spend less time, and office staff filling out forms to get paid.   When was the last time your MD spent more than 2 minutes with you?

Let’s not overlook the fact that prevention is always better than catastrophe!  All too often, when a poor person winds up in an Emergency Room, the cost of their problem is much more than it would be if that person had had insurance that allowed doctor visits to head off catastrophe with some prevention.  This is a major factor favoring socialized medicine.

There’s still another factor in this equation.  Malpractice insurance (more profits to insurance companies)!  We do need to limit this.  Some formulas have to be developed for how much any doctor can be sued for.  And, medical boards need to oversee MD’s (and their mistakes) much closer.  Doctors do make mistakes!  And, the injured have a right to be compensated for such!  What do the other countries do about this problem?  Has anyone made any study of this?

    3.   There is another often overlooked problem.  We, as a nation, have a terrible diet!  We eat “fast foods” way too often.  We eat too few “healthy foods”, and too many “high carbohydrate” foods.  The statistics show clearly that a poor diet on the part of a mother results in a baby that is not nearly as healthy as it should be.

Take a look at some “poor” natives of African countries in photographs.  Look especially at the wide mouths full of very strong, very even, teeth.  Compare this to the US “standard” of two very prominent front teeth, a high narrow arch to the roof of the mouth, and crowding of the rest of the teeth.  Dr Von Hilsheimer of Maitland Florida wrote a book years ago detailing the various “abnormalities” and “anomalies” of children of poor diet mothers.  There is a definite correlation between these children and increasing allergy and sensitivity in our children 

Recently I read a very interesting article about a school that changed the diets of the attending students and by this simple change only, the entire attitude and moral outlook of the students was changed.  It was very simple!  They took out all the soda machines, and replaced them with water fountains.  They eliminated hamburgers and fries, and similar poor diet foods, and emphasized fruits and veggies.  Lo, and behold, the school which had previously been shunned by teachers because of unruly students was completely changed!  Students were calm, quiet, and learned more and better than other schools in the area.  Acts of violence or vandalism were eliminated.  There are several other similar studies which school boards do not pay enough attention to.

As a result of our overall “poor” diet, we, as a nation, get sick more often than other countries.  This adds to the cost of healthcare tremendously in this country.

     4.  The American Medical Assn, one of the strongest unions in the world, backed up by the huge drug industry (Big Pharma), and the insurance industry have the power and the money to “buy” enough politicians to prevent any “reasonable” health plan.  Bill and Hilary Clinton found this out in his first year in office.  There’s so much money involved, it may be impossible to even get anything done except a “Band-Aid” on the cancer.

In Europe, many, if not most, MD’s practice homeopathy and alternate medicine, which is much cheaper and much less dangerous than the drugs that US MD’s are “brainwashed” into using.  In Germany alone, well over half of all MD’s are also Homeopaths.   In China, doctors are paid if their patients stay well.  Does this give a “vested interest” in keeping them healthy?  You bet!  In the US, the “hidden vested interest” is to keep the patients sick!  That increases the income of the doctor.  With socialized medicine, the doctor’s primary interest is to “get rid of their patients by getting them healthy”.  Another potent plus for socialized medicine. 

(Unlike most psychologists trained to keep their patients coming back, week after week, I always believed that my job was to find their real problem, and to get rid of them as quickly as possible.  That’s why I switched from “Behavior Therapy” to “Orthomolecular Therapy”.  It works, quickly and inexpensively, and actually solves mental problems.)

What can we, as individuals, do?  Start asking the politicians we elect what their previous votes have been, and what their future votes will be on these questions.  Vote for those who will vote for at least a form of socialized medicine. And throw out the other rascals.  Our votes are powerful, and we need to use them wisely.

  • Share/Bookmark

US Healthcare: What’s Wrong With It?

US Healthcare – What’s wrong with it?
By Phil Bate PhD

We spend 2-3 times as much on our healthcare as most of the countries that now have   “socialized medicine”.  Yet, every country with socialized medicine has much better overall health statistics.  As a matter fact, we are hovering around 32nd in the world.  Even some “third world” countries are ahead of us.

How can this be?  The richest country in the world, spending more than any other country, yet the health is one of the worst!  What’s wrong?  How have we come to this state of affairs?

There are a variety of reasons.  Let’s look at some of these, and look at the alternate answer:

    1.  There’s a lot of talk about 40-50 million “uninsured” people in the US.  “Uninsured” doesn’t mean that they aren’t taken care of.  No Emergency Room can turn down anyone who comes for “treatment”.  (Although many hospitals try to shift “poor” people to county or state facilities for profits sake.) 

There’s also Medicaid for the very poor.  But, that still leaves the great majority of “uninsured” swinging in the wind.  They make just a little too much money to qualify for Medicaid, or the state they live in has run out of money and facilities.  (Under the Bush Administration, the cuts in Medicaid have limited this coverage in virtually every state.)  A severe medical problem bankrupts many of these families every year. 

Who pays for Medicare and Emergency visits?  The usual – US taxpayers!  So, like it or not, we already have a “sort of” socialized medicine. 

By the way, when did the phrase “socialized medicine” become a bad phrase?  (Was it another “spin” fostered by “vested interests”?)   How often have you heard “just ask a Canadian about their socialized medicine”?  

Ask 100 persons from any country(s) that has socialized medicine two questions:  “How do you like it?” and “Would you like to get rid of it”. 

The answers to the first question are often a lot of individual complaining.  Yet, the answer to the second question is an overwhelming “Never”.   Could this dichotomy be the reason that so many people in the US “think” that socialized medicine is bad – those “bitching” (and very human) answers.  Most people ask only the first question, NOT the second.  I’ve asked both, and have yet to find a Canadian or a Brit who answers “yes” to the second question, but many, or most, will find something to complain about.

Isn’t it interesting that all the “civilized industrial nations” in Europe and elsewhere have some version of socialized medicine?  Even in almost bankrupt Russia and Georgia, healthcare is free to all.  And, even their health statistics are better than ours.   (FYI, they also subsidize any “bright” student all the way to a “doctorate” if they are smart enough.  College tuition in the US is prohibitively high for mid and low income families – are we wasting a major resource?  You bet!)

    2.   Why is our health care costing so much?  Simple – the insurance companies are running it.  They make huge profits for this “service”.  Cut out the middleman – the insurance companies, and cut the costs by an impartial estimate between a third and a half!   

What other benefits would this have?  Doctors would have more time to talk to patients, and spend less time, and office staff filling out forms to get paid.   When was the last time your MD spent more than 2 minutes with you?

Let’s not overlook the fact that prevention is always better than catastrophe!  All too often, when a poor person winds up in an Emergency Room, the cost of their problem is much more than it would be if that person had had insurance that allowed doctor visits to head off catastrophe with some prevention.  This is a major factor favoring socialized medicine.

There’s still another factor in this equation.  Malpractice insurance (more profits to insurance companies)!  We do need to limit this.  Some formulas have to be developed for how much any doctor can be sued for.  And, medical boards need to oversee MD’s (and their mistakes) much closer.  Doctors do make mistakes!  And, the injured have a right to be compensated for such!  What do the other countries do about this problem?  Has anyone made any study of this?

    3.   There is another often overlooked problem.  We, as a nation, have a terrible diet!  We eat “fast foods” way too often.  We eat too few “healthy foods”, and too many “high carbohydrate” foods.  The statistics show clearly that a poor diet on the part of a mother results in a baby that is not nearly as healthy as it should be.

Take a look at some “poor” natives of African countries in photographs.  Look especially at the wide mouths full of very strong, very even, teeth.  Compare this to the US “standard” of two very prominent front teeth, a high narrow arch to the roof of the mouth, and crowding of the rest of the teeth.  Dr Von Hilsheimer of Maitland Florida wrote a book years ago detailing the various “abnormalities” and “anomalies” of children of poor diet mothers.  There is a definite correlation between these children and increasing allergy and sensitivity in our children 

Recently I read a very interesting article about a school that changed the diets of the attending students and by this simple change only, the entire attitude and moral outlook of the students was changed.  It was very simple!  They took out all the soda machines, and replaced them with water fountains.  They eliminated hamburgers and fries, and similar poor diet foods, and emphasized fruits and veggies.  Lo, and behold, the school which had previously been shunned by teachers because of unruly students was completely changed!  Students were calm, quiet, and learned more and better than other schools in the area.  Acts of violence or vandalism were eliminated.  There are several other similar studies which school boards do not pay enough attention to.

As a result of our overall “poor” diet, we, as a nation, get sick more often than other countries.  This adds to the cost of healthcare tremendously in this country.

     4.  The American Medical Assn, one of the strongest unions in the world, backed up by the huge drug industry (Big Pharma), and the insurance industry have the power and the money to “buy” enough politicians to prevent any “reasonable” health plan.  Bill and Hilary Clinton found this out in his first year in office.  There’s so much money involved, it may be impossible to even get anything done except a “Band-Aid” on the cancer.

In Europe, many, if not most, MD’s practice homeopathy and alternate medicine, which is much cheaper and much less dangerous than the drugs that US MD’s are “brainwashed” into using.  In Germany alone, well over half of all MD’s are also Homeopaths.   In China, doctors are paid if their patients stay well.  Does this give a “vested interest” in keeping them healthy?  You bet!  In the US, the “hidden vested interest” is to keep the patients sick!  That increases the income of the doctor.  With socialized medicine, the doctor’s primary interest is to “get rid of their patients by getting them healthy”.  Another potent plus for socialized medicine. 

(Unlike most psychologists trained to keep their patients coming back, week after week, I always believed that my job was to find their real problem, and to get rid of them as quickly as possible.  That’s why I switched from “Behavior Therapy” to “Orthomolecular Therapy”.  It works, quickly and inexpensively, and actually solves mental problems.)

What can we, as individuals, do?  Start asking the politicians we elect what their previous votes have been, and what their future votes will be on these questions.  Vote for those who will vote for at least a form of socialized medicine. And throw out the other rascals.  Our votes are powerful, and we need to use them wisely.

  • Share/Bookmark

US Healthcare: What’s Wrong With It?

US Healthcare – What’s wrong with it?
By Phil Bate PhD

We spend 2-3 times as much on our healthcare as most of the countries that now have   “socialized medicine”.  Yet, every country with socialized medicine has much better overall health statistics.  As a matter fact, we are hovering around 32nd in the world.  Even some “third world” countries are ahead of us.

How can this be?  The richest country in the world, spending more than any other country, yet the health is one of the worst!  What’s wrong?  How have we come to this state of affairs?

There are a variety of reasons.  Let’s look at some of these, and look at the alternate answer:

    1.  There’s a lot of talk about 40-50 million “uninsured” people in the US.  “Uninsured” doesn’t mean that they aren’t taken care of.  No Emergency Room can turn down anyone who comes for “treatment”.  (Although many hospitals try to shift “poor” people to county or state facilities for profits sake.) 

There’s also Medicaid for the very poor.  But, that still leaves the great majority of “uninsured” swinging in the wind.  They make just a little too much money to qualify for Medicaid, or the state they live in has run out of money and facilities.  (Under the Bush Administration, the cuts in Medicaid have limited this coverage in virtually every state.)  A severe medical problem bankrupts many of these families every year. 

Who pays for Medicare and Emergency visits?  The usual – US taxpayers!  So, like it or not, we already have a “sort of” socialized medicine. 

By the way, when did the phrase “socialized medicine” become a bad phrase?  (Was it another “spin” fostered by “vested interests”?)   How often have you heard “just ask a Canadian about their socialized medicine”?  

Ask 100 persons from any country(s) that has socialized medicine two questions:  “How do you like it?” and “Would you like to get rid of it”. 

The answers to the first question are often a lot of individual complaining.  Yet, the answer to the second question is an overwhelming “Never”.   Could this dichotomy be the reason that so many people in the US “think” that socialized medicine is bad – those “bitching” (and very human) answers.  Most people ask only the first question, NOT the second.  I’ve asked both, and have yet to find a Canadian or a Brit who answers “yes” to the second question, but many, or most, will find something to complain about.

Isn’t it interesting that all the “civilized industrial nations” in Europe and elsewhere have some version of socialized medicine?  Even in almost bankrupt Russia and Georgia, healthcare is free to all.  And, even their health statistics are better than ours.   (FYI, they also subsidize any “bright” student all the way to a “doctorate” if they are smart enough.  College tuition in the US is prohibitively high for mid and low income families – are we wasting a major resource?  You bet!)

    2.   Why is our health care costing so much?  Simple – the insurance companies are running it.  They make huge profits for this “service”.  Cut out the middleman – the insurance companies, and cut the costs by an impartial estimate between a third and a half!   

What other benefits would this have?  Doctors would have more time to talk to patients, and spend less time, and office staff filling out forms to get paid.   When was the last time your MD spent more than 2 minutes with you?

Let’s not overlook the fact that prevention is always better than catastrophe!  All too often, when a poor person winds up in an Emergency Room, the cost of their problem is much more than it would be if that person had had insurance that allowed doctor visits to head off catastrophe with some prevention.  This is a major factor favoring socialized medicine.

There’s still another factor in this equation.  Malpractice insurance (more profits to insurance companies)!  We do need to limit this.  Some formulas have to be developed for how much any doctor can be sued for.  And, medical boards need to oversee MD’s (and their mistakes) much closer.  Doctors do make mistakes!  And, the injured have a right to be compensated for such!  What do the other countries do about this problem?  Has anyone made any study of this?

    3.   There is another often overlooked problem.  We, as a nation, have a terrible diet!  We eat “fast foods” way too often.  We eat too few “healthy foods”, and too many “high carbohydrate” foods.  The statistics show clearly that a poor diet on the part of a mother results in a baby that is not nearly as healthy as it should be.

Take a look at some “poor” natives of African countries in photographs.  Look especially at the wide mouths full of very strong, very even, teeth.  Compare this to the US “standard” of two very prominent front teeth, a high narrow arch to the roof of the mouth, and crowding of the rest of the teeth.  Dr Von Hilsheimer of Maitland Florida wrote a book years ago detailing the various “abnormalities” and “anomalies” of children of poor diet mothers.  There is a definite correlation between these children and increasing allergy and sensitivity in our children 

Recently I read a very interesting article about a school that changed the diets of the attending students and by this simple change only, the entire attitude and moral outlook of the students was changed.  It was very simple!  They took out all the soda machines, and replaced them with water fountains.  They eliminated hamburgers and fries, and similar poor diet foods, and emphasized fruits and veggies.  Lo, and behold, the school which had previously been shunned by teachers because of unruly students was completely changed!  Students were calm, quiet, and learned more and better than other schools in the area.  Acts of violence or vandalism were eliminated.  There are several other similar studies which school boards do not pay enough attention to.

As a result of our overall “poor” diet, we, as a nation, get sick more often than other countries.  This adds to the cost of healthcare tremendously in this country.

     4.  The American Medical Assn, one of the strongest unions in the world, backed up by the huge drug industry (Big Pharma), and the insurance industry have the power and the money to “buy” enough politicians to prevent any “reasonable” health plan.  Bill and Hilary Clinton found this out in his first year in office.  There’s so much money involved, it may be impossible to even get anything done except a “Band-Aid” on the cancer.

In Europe, many, if not most, MD’s practice homeopathy and alternate medicine, which is much cheaper and much less dangerous than the drugs that US MD’s are “brainwashed” into using.  In Germany alone, well over half of all MD’s are also Homeopaths.   In China, doctors are paid if their patients stay well.  Does this give a “vested interest” in keeping them healthy?  You bet!  In the US, the “hidden vested interest” is to keep the patients sick!  That increases the income of the doctor.  With socialized medicine, the doctor’s primary interest is to “get rid of their patients by getting them healthy”.  Another potent plus for socialized medicine. 

(Unlike most psychologists trained to keep their patients coming back, week after week, I always believed that my job was to find their real problem, and to get rid of them as quickly as possible.  That’s why I switched from “Behavior Therapy” to “Orthomolecular Therapy”.  It works, quickly and inexpensively, and actually solves mental problems.)

What can we, as individuals, do?  Start asking the politicians we elect what their previous votes have been, and what their future votes will be on these questions.  Vote for those who will vote for at least a form of socialized medicine. And throw out the other rascals.  Our votes are powerful, and we need to use them wisely.

  • Share/Bookmark