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The Medicare Debate

... patients, doing paper work, feeding patients, answering phones, and helping patients when they ask for assistance. The floor I worked on was Oncology (The branch of medicine that deals with tumors, including study of their development, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention). This community service has help me gain insight on the Medicare situation because I have asked multiple amount of people that work at John Muir Medical Center. There is a side to be considered about Medicare and Social Security in the government. The vice president of the ...

Number of words: 1367 | Number of pages: 5

Abortion, The Pope And Peter S

... abortion. Pope John Paul II’s Argument: This argument is very adamantly against abortion. It is also a religiously based argument. He uses exerts from the Bible and other religious documents and quotes many different clergymen and priests to help defend his position. He starts by explaining how you must follow the ten commandments to live a good life and have eternal life. “Jesus replied, ‘If you would enter life, keep the commandments’” (Mt 19:17). The first of these ten commandments is “You shall not kill”. On the contrary, you ...

Number of words: 1571 | Number of pages: 6

Capital Punishment

... row inmates have been given more than one chance to rehabilitate in prison and continue to commit violent crimes. Should the United States justice system continue to let violent criminals back on the streets where they are likely to commit murder again? is one of the oldest forms of punishment in the world. Most societies have considered it a fair punishment for severe crimes. It is even mentioned as an appropriate punishment in the Bible. American colonists used before the United States was a country, and most states use it today. Currently ...

Number of words: 3972 | Number of pages: 15

Euthanasia

... as much as the other one (active). I have chosen to look more closely at the issue of active , and that it should not be considered ethical, by Kantian standards. Those who support active can argue that helping the ill to bring their own deaths, allowing them to determine the how and when, is not only a human act but also allows the person, who is "living to die," to maintain their dignity; this way, they will let them die in peace, rather than suffer to the end. Because if not, they think of themselves as a disgrace, to those they love. Ac ...

Number of words: 1048 | Number of pages: 4

Hemp

... industrial in the United States. The reason that became illegal is because the marijuana tax act illegalized marijuana in 1937, and because industrial is marijuana’s cousin, the two became to be thought as the same thing and became illegal. But these two different plants are far from the same. Industrial contains such a low level of THC, which is the psychoactive substance in marijuana, that it cannot reasonably be considered a drug(3). No matter how much you try to smoke, it is absolutely impossible to get high off of it. The govern ...

Number of words: 1145 | Number of pages: 5

Our Living Shield: The First Amendment

... groupings which were designated as the "Bill of Rights." In this document lay the First Amendment which stated that the people of the Uni ted States had the "freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government..." The First Amendment was drafted by federalist Madison mainly as a political tactic to abolish anti-federalist resistance to the Constitution. After its passage in December of 1791, the First Amendment remained more idealistic than realistic. The First Amendment ...

Number of words: 807 | Number of pages: 3

Nato Hits Chinese Embassy

... people were reported killed, and 21 injured, while one is missing. The Chinese government and people are terribly outraged at NATO's method of expressing its displeasures, calling it a "barbarian act" and that "'the U.S.-led NATO should bear all responsibilities.'" NATO explained that they feel regretful of the mishap, saying the bombing was an unintentional accident. However, non-NATO countries analyze it differently, interpreting the bombing as an evil design of the NATO alliance, purposely assaulting the Chinese who objected to NATO's un ...

Number of words: 249 | Number of pages: 1

Should Cloning Be Permitted?

... that human cloning should be permitted. One thing that shows this, is what human cloning research may bring. Those who opposed to a ban believe that human cloning research could bring substantial benefits, including the development of new treatments for cystic fibrosis, other diseases and the ability to create animal with normal compatible organs for transplant. (1."Should Congress Prohibit All Human Cloning Experimentation",Pg 34). From my opinion, I believe that human cloning is just a huge step towards negativism in human life's, rath ...

Number of words: 2074 | Number of pages: 8

Inside The IRA

... government in 1922. The Irish Republican army is a very big and powerful terrorist group, that believes Northern Ireland should be united with Ireland and free from British rule, and that this can be achieved through political and physical violence against the British through bombings, guerilla warfare, and other violent methods to get the point across. There has always been a tradition of armed resistance to the British military and political occupation in Ireland. This tradition generally only found effective expression when after a period ...

Number of words: 1189 | Number of pages: 5

Medicare In The '96 Elections

... plan of their own. Prior to 1965, payment for a particular medical service was paid for either directly by the recipient of the care or by the recipient's insurance company. Usually to get full coverage or even coverage with a low premium the rates are outrageous. For this reason many poor, elderly and severely disabled Americans were unable to receive proper medical treatment. Then, in 1965, Lyndon B. Johnson proposed one of his Great Society programs, Medicare. Medicare would allow those who were severely disabled, elderly ...

Number of words: 1575 | Number of pages: 6

Rape

... it about our society that makes one of the fastest growing violent crimes in this country? One way we have tried to deal with this problem is through prevention. These techniques are very important in decreasing the vulnerability of individuals, but in order to eliminate the occurrence of from our society, we must first examine its causes more deeply so that we can take collective action. We must understand the sociology of in order to effectively work towards the elimination of it. Despite the necessity for prevention, it must focus on e ...

Number of words: 887 | Number of pages: 4

Ban Smoking In Public Places

... soon noticed that lung cancer was on the increase. The public at large was ignorant to this fact. At first the medical profession were viewed with scepticism. It took many years for their voices to be heard. Medical science has now proved beyond a doubt that SMOKING KILLS. Most smokers will tell you that it is their choice to smoke, that may be the case but what if that smoker is a female and pregnant, what if that smoker sits in a room filled with young children and inflicts her choice on to them. Smoking has become anti social in the ...

Number of words: 583 | Number of pages: 3

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