Thursday, January 26, 2012

Is there a limit to how far legislation can go towards fixing the problems of life? If so, what is it?

If not, what problems still need to be fixed?Is there a limit to how far legislation can go towards fixing the problems of life? If so, what is it?There is a limit to how far legislation can go towards fixing the problems of life. You can't fix racism, or disease or death with legislation. You can try but in the end you can't force people to love one another or treat each other fairly.



You can legislate that one disease get more money than another but you can't fund them all and one or two are going to fall through the cracks. Epilepsy for example is almost completely ignored for funding or legislation in favor of other diseases such as Multiple sclerosis or AIDS even though more people have epilepsy than have MS or AIDS. There is a limit to how much money will be "wasted" on any certain problem. Maybe if you have some big time actor running a telethon for your cause or if you are a group that screams the loudest then you get more funding.



CDC estimates that about 2.0 million people in the United States have epilepsy and nearly 140,000 Americans develop the condition each year

No one knows exactly how many people have MS. It is believed that there are currently about 250,000 to 350,000 people in the United States who have been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. This estimate suggests that approximately 200 new cases are diagnosed each week.

More than one million people are living with HIV and AIDS in the United States today.



They can legislate that no child is left behind and blame everything on teachers when milestones are not met but you can't force a mentally handicapped child to make milestones no matter how much you legislate that their teacher will do it. Who ever put this piece of legislation into practice hadn't thought how much damage it would do to these children or to the teachers or the schools where these kids are attending. The schools each year go to great lengths to make it look like these kids are reaching milestones. The teachers spend hours creating individual tests for each handicapped child thus taking the teacher out of the class room and paying for subs, paying for paper work, paying for all sorts of stuff to make it look like the children are passing their tests. Millions are spent on it. In the mean time the child misses valuable learning time with their teacher who is bogged down in paperwork, meetings with administration and just time making the tests up. It's basically a lie and a glorious waste of time and every Special Education teacher knows it.



So anyway that's my answer in part. Only a couple of issues. Not an easy question to answer.Is there a limit to how far legislation can go towards fixing the problems of life? If so, what is it?I there has never been a piece of legislation that has fixed anything.

But if you're looking for a piece of paper that limits the scope of legislation, I would say the constitution. But nobody in power pays attention to that.Is there a limit to how far legislation can go towards fixing the problems of life? If so, what is it?what would you like, besides learning how to ask a question? would you like a g/f-b/f, but you have no social skills? would you like a six figure job, but you don't have the education to get one?Is there a limit to how far legislation can go towards fixing the problems of life? If so, what is it?
when they start living the peoples lives 24 hours a day,like now

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