There are a couple of other areas where a young professional can do really well, but IT & Health are truly the safest ones when it comes to money, people will always need healthcare, and it's like technology is going away any time soon, we're becoming more and more involved with it, and it's becoming a bigger part of any manufacturing process as the years go by. So, yes.
The government of Ontario will pay nurses $35,000 a month plus bonuses, grants, reimbursements for working on remote areas. It's crazy.
Her answer is "shop around"? You can't get more competition in the marketplace while being 1. unable to purchase across state lines 2. Insurance companies bailing because they can't afford Obamacare
I have always been against death penalty, but I understand why people support it.
In my opinion, you shouldn't have to become a murderer in order to bring justice for murder, that makes no sense. I see no difference between a killer and someone who preps(and finally executes) a person to receive the shot, or any of the methods they use.
Obviously, I can't imagine what a father or a mother feel if their kid is murdered, the anger, the injustice. So if it is ever abolished, I will support it, but until it isn't I won't stand on its way, clearly probably more people think unlike me.
The woman who asked the question is serving me this teas
Wait, Clinton nails it right in the head with proportional deductibles, rather than a single payer system
My deductible is 4% every year on my government backed health insurance, regardless of income and I think that's fair.
One of my friends was raped and murdered last year. Would I support the death penalty as a punishment for the guy who did it? Absolutely, because he's a career criminal who doesn't deserve another chance. When I think about situations like that I can't say in good conscience that I unilaterally oppose the death penalty.