Gullible Jones wrote:IMO you don't have to be able to name a better system to point out brokenness in the current one.
Hope that makes sense.
SciFiFisher wrote:Gullible Jones wrote:IMO you don't have to be able to name a better system to point out brokenness in the current one.
Hope that makes sense.
I agree. It's perfectly ok for TSC to point out that the current system is broken. I was just pointing out that as a winner of the birth place lottery I am all for keeping the current system until a better one comes along.
Gullible Jones wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:When we finally have a true world wide system that is based entirely on need and all world wide citizens being equally truly equally then we can agree that it should not be that way.
Not sure but I think this is is/ought fallacy.
The Supreme Canuck wrote:And you're not telling us how things should be?
Edit: The way the Is-Ought Problem works is to say "X is the way things are, therefore X is the way things should be." That doesn't necessarily follow. I don't see either you (FZ) or us (GJ and I) falling prey to that - we're all providing reasons why we think what we think. So there's no fallacy there. Saying "You're telling us how thing should be, and are therefore committing a fallacy" is incorrect. Also, the Is-Ought Problem isn't strictly a fallacy; it's a problem. It has to do with how we can derive ethics from metaphysics. So I don't think it's terribly applicable, here.
(Yes, I took too much philosophy. Sue me. )
The Supreme Canuck wrote:Honestly, my problem is that it seems terribly unfair that US aid workers get to be flown out of Africa and to Atlanta to receive first-world care, while hundreds of Africans don't. That's not me saying that these Americans shouldn't receive that care, just that the overall situation is absolutely terrible.
Swift wrote:I really don't understand why people are so bent about bringing these people home for medical treatment. I'd like to ask everyone of them who says not to bring them home if they'd feel the same if it was their son and their daughter who were the patients.
Gullible Jones wrote:Swift wrote:I really don't understand why people are so bent about bringing these people home for medical treatment. I'd like to ask everyone of them who says not to bring them home if they'd feel the same if it was their son and their daughter who were the patients.
This is actually my primary beef with systems of privilege: if they're not your son or daughter, they're someone else's. I realize that in practice you can't save everyone; but yeah, at risk of sounding cliche, every life is priceless.
Gullible Jones wrote:Swift wrote:I really don't understand why people are so bent about bringing these people home for medical treatment. I'd like to ask everyone of them who says not to bring them home if they'd feel the same if it was their son and their daughter who were the patients.
This is actually my primary beef with systems of privilege: if they're not your son or daughter, they're someone else's. I realize that in practice you can't save everyone; but yeah, at risk of sounding cliche, every life is priceless.
The Supreme Canuck wrote:I never said I wanted those things. I said it's unfair that Africa has inadequate healthcare systems while we do not.
FZR1KG wrote:The Supreme Canuck wrote:I never said I wanted those things. I said it's unfair that Africa has inadequate healthcare systems while we do not.
You missed the part about me saying the USA has third world health care and Canada and Australia don't.
My guess my humour might need tweaking.
The Supreme Canuck wrote:It's not funny if it's true, FZ.
The Supreme Canuck wrote:When the mortality rate is ~90% and when you give the patient the opportunity to refuse, there's no ethical conundrum, as far as I'm concerned.
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