Is that misspelling in the title intentional?
$11,452,560 is all its made. Moore being officially shuned is bound to cause him a heart attack
My inlaws went to see that piece of crap movie yesterday. I gave them the link to therealcuba.com just to make sure they didn’t completely lose their sanity.
Being a german citizen, I know that soc medical care is not free; while there for many years, the deduction of my paycheck was 37 percent, to cover for the so-called universal healthcare. These fact are not being told to the citizens here, and I hope that people will revolt the same way as they did regarding the shamnesty bill. 37% deduction of pay was unbearable, I was there, I know.
Powerful people in the Hollywood industry were lining up to offer him deals. He no longer had to scrounge for funding his projects. If the Roger & Me movie had failed, he probably would have went back to writing for Newsletters that nobody reads, earning mere pennies if that. But Roger & Me was a wake up call to him. He could make documentaries that would appeal to those left of center. Didnt matter if these documentaries were filled with lies, he gets millions of bucks in return, be a celebrity, and a hero to his fellow leftists.
For him to stop telling lies, and start telling the truth means that he would have to go back to a near poverty existence as well as anonymity. And there's no way he's voluntarilly going back to that.
I knew this was going to disappoint at the box office...it’s not a lurid subject matter such as Columbine or 9/11. Few will want to see a documentary about healthcare...its just sounds boring in concept.
If Moore really wanted to take on what’s wrong with health care, and what drives up the costs, he might want to drop in on a courthouse where a doctor, hospital or pharmaceutical company is being sued for $40 million by a lawyer who can’t wait to take half the “winnings.” I’m sure John Edwards would make himself available for an on-camera interview.
Perhaps he’d like to see the malpractice insurance premium for an anesthesiologist or OB/GYN. Then check out the malpractice insurance premium for the trial lawyer who sued him.
Not to mention the amount of money that the doctor spent on his education, AFTER college - let’s see, four years of medical school and (depending on the specialty) YEARS of internship and residency.
And if health care costs go up, then its a fact that the premiums to insure those costs go up. Maybe Fata$$ should train his cameras on the real causes of high insurance rates and premiums. I’m not saying all trial lawyers are sharks and all doctors are saints, but there’s just too great a proporation of the former over the latter.
I don’t know if anyone has the answer to this - but in the countries where they have socialized medicine - does the patient have a right to damages in the event of malpractice?