Daily Thoughts

Pulling Teeth at Home

In preparation for dental implants I had two teeth pulled this morning. My only complaint is that for some reason the dentist does not see fit to provide a pain medication prescription after two rather difficult extractions.23135442.jpg She actually suggested using Ibuprofen. Oh well, it wont last long and if it gets too bad I’ll simply call and demand a prescription. As I’m writing this the local anesthetic is nearing the end of it’s usefulness and I’m realizing that the pain is not as bad as expected but still exceeds the efficacy of a few Advil.

Without having (or wanting) health insurance coverage I simply pay cash for the services as they are rendered. However, having had health insurance in the past I’ve noticed one major difference without it. In my experience doctors tend to literally hand out prescriptions when a patient is insured and are much more reluctant to do so for patients who pay out of pocket. This especially applies to pain medications. If you have experience with this let me in the comments, perhaps I’m in the minority on this one. Someone in the business might be able to enlighten me on this subject.

My other thought on this subject comes from seeing an article on .com a few minutes ago with the headline “Brits resort to pulling own teeth.” Having posted about the health care & socialized medicine debate recently I finds it interesting that as an uninsured U.S. citizen I’m complaining about a little pain while 6% of Brits are pulling their own teeth according to ’s article. While it’s not the only case of people suffering or dying under the socialist medical services it certainly does sound like a painful example. Reminds me of Tom Hanks smashing his tooth out with a rock in the movie Castaway.

The article states the Commission for Patient and Public Involvement in Health, commissioned the survey which finds “that the NHS dental system is letting many patients down very badly.”

What? Does Michael Moore know about this? Someone should let him know so he can release a new version of Sicko.

One respondent in Lancashire, northern England, claimed to have extracted 14 of their own teeth with a pair of pliers. In Liverpool, one of those collecting data for the survey interviewed three people who had pulled out their own teeth in one morning.

“I took most of my teeth out in the shed with pliers. I have one to go,” another respondent wrote.

Others said they had fixed broken crowns using glue to avoid costly dental work.

23135442.jpgValerie Halsworth, 64, told British television’s GMTV she had removed seven of her own teeth using her husband’s pliers when her toothache became unbearable and she was unable to find an NHS dentist willing to treat her.

Halsworth admitted that the first extraction had been “excruciatingly painful.” But she added: “It got that painful that I just had to do something… When you have taken a tooth out… the pain has gone.”

Sharon Grant, chair of the Commission for Patient and Public Involvement in Health, which commissioned the survey, said: “These findings indicate that the NHS dental system is letting many patients down very badly.

“Where NHS dental services are available, people are happy with the quality of treatment provided but many find the NHS fee system confusing and expensive, with some patients taking out loans to pay for treatment or more worryingly taking matters into their own hands.”

So in summery…

artdentistgi.jpgI call the dentist and setup an appointment, walk in and have the work done. With minimal wait and minimal expense - all without insurance. While in Briton the citizens with a socialized system said to be superior to that of the U.S., have to wait long enough for dental care that they start pulling their own teeth with pliers or fixing “broken crowns using glue to avoid costly dental work.” I seem to remember several scenes in Sicko talking about how the British system was free, so how is it costly?

If even one person has had to do this, their system has failed. Imagine cramming hand tools into your mouth and pulling a tooth out.



Hotel Essentials

Hotel Essentials

Hotel Essentials,
originally uploaded by malagent.

There are a few things any travel should have, among them are a GLOCK, an iPod, cell phone, and of course - extra memory cards for your camera (film if your old school.)



Today’s Thoughts on Capitalism…

Walter Williams, an American economist and college professor, stated the following:

Capitalism is relatively new in human history. Prior to capitalism, the way people amassed great wealth was by looting, plundering and enslaving their fellow man. Capitalism made it possible to become wealthy by serving your fellow man.“[1]

Although some still loot, plunder and enslave; I would have to agree with Williams. Can you name one other system that has worked as well? I know or has never worked. So far the best I have seen is capitalism. Although I have failed at times I have also succeeded in business. When I fail I can eventually look back and see where it was I who failed, not that someone else made me fail. As should be expected, most people’s successes and failures are proportional to their work, intelligence, perseverance, and determination. There are exceptions I know.

One important aspect of capitalism is that the government not regulate it. Laissez-faire.

The laissez-faire means that the neoclassical school of economic thought holds a pure or economically liberal market view: that the free market is best left to its own devices, and that it will dispense with inefficiencies in a more deliberate and quick manner than any legislating body could.

Scottish economist Adam Smith in his book ‘Wealth of Nations’ argued that the invisible hand of the market would guide people to act in the public interest by following their own self-interest, since the only way to make money would be through voluntary exchange, and thus the only way to get the people’s money was to give the people what they want. Smith pointed out that one does not get one’s dinner by appealing to the brother-love of the butcher, the farmer or the baker. Rather one appeals to their self interest, and pays them for their labor.[2]

Artificially setting minimum wages and other regulation - the government (and the people who elected them and pushed for the laws) is failing to meet the needs of the people. The free market is restricted by these actions.

Sources for this post

  1. Williams, Walter (1997-08-25). Capitalism and the Common Man.
  2. Smith, Adam (2003-o3-04) The Wealth of Nations ISBN 0553585975



Today’s Thoughts on Memories

“Memory can change the shape of a room; it can change the color of a car. And memories can be distorted. They’re just an interpretation, they’re not a record, and they’re irrelevant if you have the facts.”
“Facts, not memories. That’s how you investigate. I know, it’s what I used to do”