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Politics : A US National Health Care System?

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To: TimF who wrote (23194)2/20/2012 12:41:56 PM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (1) of 42652
 
Imposing" something requires some degree of force or compulsion, not just refusal to pay for it.

Your statement is contorted. Your "it" and your "something" refer to two different things. What is not being paid for is the Ferrari. The "something" being imposed is the employer's sense of right and wrong. My refusing to allow you the Ferrari that every other employee of every other employer is getting, he is imposing his sense of right and wrong.

Substitute something cheaper than a Ferrari into that so that the money is trivial and it's even more obviously an imposition.

im·pose
2.

to put or set by or as if by authority: to impose one's personal preference on others.
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