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05-21-2012, 08:27 AM
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#61
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 6, 2010
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 1,528
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Allie_Kat
And when are they going to start taxing churches? It's only fair.
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How about if we make donations to churches not a tax deduction anymore?
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05-21-2012, 08:42 AM
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#62
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 27, 2010
Location: Kansas City MO
Posts: 519
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COG I get that. But now it's LAW. What's next? OUR guns? Oral sex? Or seriously, women's right to vote? You of all people should be pissed that some grand standing pol has reached so far into your family. It's not right dammit and people should be rightly pissed that one group of people now has the special written into law right, just for them, to say that in spite of what your Dr has prescribed, they refuse to help you because of personal beliefs. Fracking Gov can make his points with the religious right somewhere else than our daughter's vagina, and the bastard needs kicked OUT, tarred and feathered, and kicked in the balls by every woman in the State of Kansas.
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05-21-2012, 09:10 AM
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#63
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Account Disabled
Join Date: Jan 24, 2010
Posts: 3,039
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It is to bad....here we are in the 21st Century, and with plenty of other issues to address....and yet as a society we are still hung up with laws regulating or eliminating strip clubs, birth control and gay marriages.
Seems, as a society, we continue to be backwards when it comes to anything sex related issues
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05-21-2012, 11:34 AM
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#64
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You Should Be Kneeling
Join Date: Jan 6, 2010
Location: Kansas
Posts: 1,147
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So to take this "logic" to it's logical conclusion, no one has any responsibilities to the greater society, we are each totally on our own in a libertarian utopia, where only what I individually want or believe matters. So an emergency room doctor ought to be able to refuse to you service, or pain medication, or whatever, if doing so is against his or her own personal beliefs. After all, we wouldn't want the government to make those decisions...
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05-21-2012, 11:35 AM
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#65
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You Should Be Kneeling
Join Date: Jan 6, 2010
Location: Kansas
Posts: 1,147
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05-21-2012, 12:01 PM
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#66
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Valued Poster
Join Date: May 20, 2010
Location: Wichita
Posts: 28,730
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You people come up with so many strawmen. An ER doc would be under contract with the hospital.
This isn't the regulation of birth control. Forcing the pharmacist to sell birth control is the regulation.
And thanks for the vid from MoveOn. George Soros has always been so objective.
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05-21-2012, 01:21 PM
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#67
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jul 3, 2011
Location: Great White North
Posts: 138
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People keep focusing on Birth Control which won't be an issue because from what I have been told by professionals birth control can't cause an abortion. Be more worried about a pregnant woman who discovers she has cancer or another disease where the medicine could cause her to lose the child and see how that plays out. Any doctor who refuses to sell birth control based on this law will end up defending a law suit and would most likely lose.
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05-21-2012, 01:24 PM
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#68
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jul 3, 2011
Location: Great White North
Posts: 138
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The scariest law was one in which they had written in to the law that the doctor could lie to you about your medical condition or that of your child if they thought it could prevent an abortion. When women can no longer trust a doctors advice health care will become seriously fucked. Luckily I think that law got changed in committee or maybe replaced with this law.
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05-21-2012, 10:21 PM
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#69
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You Should Be Kneeling
Join Date: Jan 6, 2010
Location: Kansas
Posts: 1,147
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Strawmen? Please... the crazies who support this kind of right wing fundamentalist christian pandering legislation pose the biggest straw man of them all... that the government can't require a private business to do this or that. Really? The government requires business to do things all the time, from building codes, to health regulations, to ADA compliance, to hiring practices, to environmental standards, to minimum wages and accounting practices, and number of which might be against any individuals personal beliefs. Saying that somehow a requirement to put your personal beliefs in check and provide women with birth control is "different" than any other regulation is a crock. It's simple pandering, grandstanding, playing to the fundamentalist base of the republican right at the expense of women's rights and health.
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05-21-2012, 10:24 PM
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#70
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Pending Age Verification
User ID: 3063
Join Date: Dec 27, 2009
Location: Omaha, Nebraska
Posts: 6,987
My ECCIE Reviews
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Damn Adeptus, this is the most I've seen you post in I don't know how long. lol
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05-21-2012, 11:21 PM
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#71
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Valued Poster
Join Date: May 20, 2010
Location: Wichita
Posts: 28,730
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Ok then. Government can make businesses and people do whatever government wants them to. If that's what you like, go for it. I'm outta here!
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05-22-2012, 02:22 AM
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#72
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jun 12, 2011
Location: Olathe
Posts: 16,815
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Quote:
OATH OF A PHARMACIST
"I promise to devote myself to a lifetime of service to others through the profession of
pharmacy. In fulfilling this vow:
• I will consider the welfare of humanity and relief of suffering my PRIMARY CONCERNS. (emphasis added). My views will define what I feel is the best for my patients since I am the professional.
• I will apply my knowledge, experience, and skills to the best of my ability to assure optimal outcomes for my patients. and I do not think that birth control is for everyone.
• I will respect and protect all personal and health information entrusted to me.
• I will accept the lifelong obligation to improve my professional knowledge and competence.
• I will hold myself and my colleagues to the highest principles of our profession’s moral, ethical and legal conduct.
• I will embrace and advocate changes that improve patient care. Improvement may mean that acknowledging personal responsibility is for the ultimate good of the patient.
• I will utilize my knowledge, skills, experiences, and values to prepare the next generation of pharmacists.
I take these vows voluntarily with the full realization of the responsibility with which I am entrusted by the public.”
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Not necessarily my views but just playing DA that this oath is a little vague in some places.
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05-22-2012, 09:32 AM
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#73
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You Should Be Kneeling
Join Date: Jan 6, 2010
Location: Kansas
Posts: 1,147
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I'm not saying the government can require you to anything they want. All I am doing is pointing out the fallacy of the argument behind this law, which is that the government can't require you to do anything at all.
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05-22-2012, 09:43 AM
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#74
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Account Disabled
Join Date: Sep 25, 2010
Location: KS
Posts: 2,387
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ekim008
I guess a pharmacist doesn't have a oath like a doctor.
Cog and JD you guys would have made great puritans
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Wrong.
Here it is:
Quote:
"I promise to devote myself to a lifetime of service to others through the profession of
pharmacy. In fulfilling this vow:
• I will consider the welfare of humanity and relief of suffering my primary concerns.
• I will apply my knowledge, experience, and skills to the best of my ability to assure optimal
outcomes for my patients.
• I will respect and protect all personal and health information entrusted to me.
• I will accept the lifelong obligation to improve my professional knowledge and competence.
• I will hold myself and my colleagues to the highest principles of our profession’s moral,
ethical and legal conduct.
• I will embrace and advocate changes that improve patient care.
• I will utilize my knowledge, skills, experiences, and values to prepare the next generation of
pharmacists.
I take these vows voluntarily with the full realization of the responsibility with which I am
entrusted by the public.”
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KsJack
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05-22-2012, 09:46 AM
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#75
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Account Disabled
Join Date: Sep 25, 2010
Location: KS
Posts: 2,387
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I always find it fascinating that people always claim they want freedom, in fact demand it, unless, of course, that freedom enables others to do things they don't want other people to do.
People in this thread DEMAND the freedom to have an abortion and then bemoan the fact that the pharmacy should have the right to dispense, or not, medications that might cause an abortion based on their religious principles.
Apparently, one side's freedom is more important than the other.
Does anyone else note the irony in that?
KsJack
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