donpablo wrote:People get all sorts of stupid treatments on the NHS, that they seem to think they have some right to! The resources of which should be going to those that are more in need of it but maybe the balance is right its just my opinion is slightly one side of the line. I would be inclined to be less lenient with a lot of people that want cosmetic surgery, fertility treatment or end up there due to their own stupid consumption of too much al-co-mo-hol or even cake!
Which raises a question I've pondered in the past. If people deliberately put themselves at risk, do they deserve what happens to them, or should they be helped?
The example given above was people drinking too much or eating too much.
Personally, I ponder the issue when I see someone on the news being rescued by Mountain Rescue. If a mountaineer gets into difficulty, should the tax payer have to foot the bill for a resource-hungry rescue involving dozens of people (putting the rescuers at risk) and (for instance) helicopters?
How about someone who gets into difficulty at sea? Based on the above logic, they put themselves in harms way, so they deserve everything they get, right?
So. Should we scrap Mountain Rescue and the Coastguard?
Should we tell fat people that they won't be treated for diabetes or have their stomachs stapled at the expense of the tax payer? Should smokers be denied treatment for lung cancer? How about sportsmen who injure themselves pursuing their sport? How about old folk who slip on ice and bust their hip? They should stay indoors in the winter, right? And women out alone at night are simply asking to be raped? They chose to put themselves in harm's way, right?
I'm hoping that nobody agreed with any of the above. Yet they're all examples of people ending up physically or mentally damaged due to decisions that they made.
If you agreed with some of it and disagreed with others... you're being inconsistent.
Discuss.





