Recent comments in /f/Pennsylvania

heili t1_jbb64ya wrote

The list attached to the DL-180R form is newer (revision date is January of this year) than the publication date of PUB195US (July 2018).

FWIW, DL-180R matches the RealID document requirements for supporting documentation of proof of residency: https://www.dot.state.pa.us/Public/DVSPubsForms/BDL/BDL%20Fact%20Sheets/FS-RIDC.pdf

It's likely they just never updated the other publication.

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Squashey t1_jbb4gfn wrote

Don’t assume alignment with a style of governance as alignment with a party or its apparent head, not a Trump supporter here.

But it does sound hypocritical if you are ok with a sexual harasser being in a public position of your party.

I believe politicians forget they are public servants and public servants should be the best of us, sadly a completely unrealistic expectation for either party.

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Jiveturkwy158 t1_jbb4g0o wrote

Exactly! And if the nra was actually a gun owner/rights lobby (not a gun sales lobby) they would take it to the Supreme Court on the first court case possible. Sched 1 for “no medicinal use” and over half the country has legalized medicinal use.

Ridiculous the FDA/DEA and the other powers at be won’t at least revise the status to be on par with reality.

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Kabloosh75 t1_jbb3h3n wrote

The hard truth is these medical services cost money. A lot of money and the family is hoping the hospital would just front the bill.

If the hospital did this for every case they probably go broke and be ran out of business. If the family wants to keep her there then they should find some way to pay for the services.

Doctors, nurses, and facilities aren't free. Buildings need to be maintained. People that work careers need to make a living and pay their bills.

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drxdrg08 t1_jbb1af1 wrote

If a hospital provides free healthcare to non-paying patients, then the paying patients pick up the large bill for all.

A hospital doesn't print money. And what happens when you have too many non-paying patients?

> Hahnemann Hospital, which once served the city’s poorest patients, closed in September 2019. The hospital had been suffering millions of dollars in losses a month

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sixplaysforadollar t1_jbazy5v wrote

The biggest complaint should be the DUI laws. As soon as you get a medical card you’re at risk to get a DUI at literally any point bc it doesn’t matter if the last time you medicated was 6 days ago since it’s still in your blood you still get tagged with the dui.

And then you just basically pay a few thousand dollars.

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