Quote: If a similar accident happened to the great majority of us (at least in America) today, including the insured, we would not get a level of care that even approaches what this gentleman experienced.
Exactly. So we shouldn't take our consciousness for granted. We all don't get second chances.
Quote: I know I'm cynical, but realistically, how about retitling this, "Don't take Priveledge, Money or Access to Medical and Dental Procedures for Granted."
That could definitely apply to him, but seeing as how most Ted Talks discuss ways to improve yourself, your lifestyle, or the community and world in general, I don't think he was speaking to benefit himself(unless he got paid).
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He is bringing to light the level of care that is given versus the level of care that is available. Sure we may not be able to afford cochlear implants for every deaf American or sensory implants for all the lames, but the fact that his IQ was just above what some call mentally challenged when he was discharged is a little appalling. Who knows? If we weren't spending 7 times more on our military budget than China, maybe we could afford it.
It's cool to be cynical. I'm working on being less of a cynic. He may have selfish reasons for doing all this, such as money or selling his book. Maybe he just wants to be pitied, or maybe he is filling some void left by his dead wife. We all have selfish motives for the shit we do; that makes being a cynic "realistic." Just because motives are selfish doesn't mean the outcomes of the decisions made are limited to only benefiting the decision maker.
We are...
We are like that sentence.
We are not finished.