cnn.com — Moore covers a lot of ground. Our team investigated some of the claims put forth in his film. We found that his numbers were mostly right, but his arguments could use a little more context. As we dug deep to uncover the numbers, we found surprisingly few inaccuracies in the film. In fact, most pundits or health-care experts we spoke to spent more t
Jun 30, 2007 View in Crawl 4
rollfizzlebeefJun 30, 2007
"we found surprisingly few inaccuracies in the film"Nice, CNN.
agrabobJun 30, 2007
OK, read this quote:"That's no surprise given the number of U.S. specialists. In U.S. medical schools, students training to become primary-care physicians have dwindled to 10 percent. The overwhelming majority choose far more profitable specialties in the medical field. In other countries, more than one out of three aspiring doctors chooses primary care in part because there's less of an income gap with specialists. In those nations, becoming a specialist means making 30 percent more than a primary-care physician. In the United States, the gap is around 300 percent, according to Keckley."Now, why do you think this is the case in the US and nowhere else? Shouldnt be to hard for most diggers to figure this out.
shavo6Jul 1, 2007
All Americans need to be insured even if they can't afford it. It is unfair for people who can afford it to be insured and people who can't afford not to be insured. America should be equal.