Moderator: Nicole Marie
Selma, you’re about to hear me praise Europe, a rare thing."Anybody else want to chime in on the malpractice mess?"
”Between 1945 and 1999, two-thirds of the members of the United Nations--126 states out of 189--fought 291 interstate conflicts in which over 22 million people were killed. This series of conflicts was capped by the Kosovo campaign {in 1998} in which nineteen NATO democracies representing 780 million people flagrantly violated the Charter. The international system has come to subsist in a parallel universe of two systems, one de jure, the other de facto. The de jure system consists of illusory rules that would govern the use of force among states in a platonic world of forms, a world that does not exist. The de facto system consists of actual state practice in the real world, a world in which states weigh costs against benefits in regular disregard of the rules solemnly proclaimed in the all-but- ignored de jure system. The decaying de jure catechism is overly schematized and scholastic, disconnected from state behavior, and unrealistic in its aspirations for state conduct”
One of the most telling quotes about the "efficiency" of the US military is, "they also serve who only stand and wait." And wait, and wait, and wait, and eventually are discharged.Originally posted by Nicole Marie:
...Here in the US we often take for granted the efficiency of the military and do not understand that the military for some countries is not a high priority...
Absolutely untrue. In fact many doctor who used to belong are quiting because they disagree with some of the AMA's more radical positions."Nobody can practice medicine in the US (write prescriptions or perform surgery, to name two particular activities) without membership in the AMA.
” Shap, I'm with Haggis on this
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