BRUFC Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 20 hours ago, SAFETY FIRST said: I don't follow the European football (soccer), I'm NRL. I just regularly read the millions and millions of dollars these guys earn. There was a wage cap of £20 a week in British Soccer until 1961 and the then English captain, Johnny Haynes, was the first to hit £100 a week, probably a tidy sum back then. This footballer is 77 now so would have been playing after the wage cap was lifted but although Coventry City were a First Division team back in 1967 (no Premiership back then) he wasn't a star name and Shrewsbury Town were minnows. So, the idea that as an ex Pro Footballer he should be 'cashed up' and 'something fishy' is afoot is wrong. He may well be 'cashed up' but if he is it didn't come from his footballing talent. 2
SAFETY FIRST Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 5 minutes ago, BRUFC said: There was a wage cap of £20 a week in British Soccer until 1961 and the then English captain, Johnny Haynes, was the first to hit £100 a week, probably a tidy sum back then. This footballer is 77 now so would have been playing after the wage cap was lifted but although Coventry City were a First Division team back in 1967 (no Premiership back then) he wasn't a star name and Shrewsbury Town were minnows. So, the idea that as an ex Pro Footballer he should be 'cashed up' and 'something fishy' is afoot is wrong. He may well be 'cashed up' but if he is it didn't come from his footballing talent. Sure, isolated cases, 1 or 2. Didn't see anyone talking about George Best and so, so many others, LOADED
BRUFC Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 3 minutes ago, SAFETY FIRST said: Sure, isolated cases, 1 or 2. Didn't see anyone talking about George Best Because it wasn't about George Best, who was possibly the biggest name in British Soccer. Anyhow, here's what google says about him....just compare that with what the star players get now.'At the peak of his career in the late 60s, George was earning around $150 thousand per year which is the same as around $1 million per year from salary and endorsements, after adjusting for inflation'. I reckon George Best and maybe one or two more were the 'isolated cases'. 1 1
DBath Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 5 hours ago, SAFETY FIRST said: No mate, no third type. We'll see a few of the type 2's soon, by the reactions you receive from your disrespectful comment. Too many deadbeats and freeloaders in Thailand now. Go back home and be a burden on your own country. There you go again with your grand assumptions. BTW, I am home - in Spain - where I pay my 3600 euros per year for health insurance. You’re on a roll, keep up the ‘great work’ ???????? 1 1
mania Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 2 hours ago, IvorBiggun2 said: Rubbish. Thais get treatment basically free at government hospitals. No 'barely able to afford hospitalization'. Level up the thinking a bit in my post I said "Lastly I do also have sympathy for Thailand too that has 70 million of its own barely able to afford hospitalization" The nurses & doctors do not work for free on anyone Period! Not here in Thailand on the 30 baht scheme...Not in the USA on Medicare.... Not in the UK on NHS Guess where that pay in Thailand comes from? Taxpayers that can barely afford hospitalization Ultimately not you in Thailand 1
SAFETY FIRST Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 1 hour ago, BRUFC said: Because it wasn't about George Best, who was possibly the biggest name in British Soccer. Anyhow, here's what google says about him....just compare that with what the star players get now.'At the peak of his career in the late 60s, George was earning around $150 thousand per year which is the same as around $1 million per year from salary and endorsements, after adjusting for inflation'. I reckon George Best and maybe one or two more were the 'isolated cases'. At least George would have paid his bill. No deadbeat or freeloader.
Neeranam Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 18 hours ago, IAMHERE said: 9 times out of 10 is the estimate I read on the internet. But self inflicted happens to fat people and those that have unprotected promiscuous sex; I still feel sympathy for their plights. I got it after Covid.
jacko45k Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 21 hours ago, connda said: 77 imho is the span of a good life. He should get his affairs in order and seek to check out as painlessly as possible. Heck, 70 is a good life span. I find my estimation of a good life increases as I age...... 1
Popular Post ThailandRyan Posted October 5, 2022 Popular Post Posted October 5, 2022 2 minutes ago, jacko45k said: I find my estimation of a good life increases as I age...... My goal is to hit at least 85 so that I can collect as many years of my pension as I actually worked and then bleed them for more by staying alive for another decade..... 2 1 1 1
onthedarkside Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 Some trolling and flame comments between two members have been removed. 1
PremiumLane Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 10 hours ago, mania said: Yeah your right I should re-phrase that...Because I do have sympathy for this mans family as now they suffer with his poor choices I do have sympathy for the expats that could eventually be affected by folks like this too because since years ago when it started getting popular to post these pleas for $$ it gets ever closer that Thailand will add mandatory coverage thru long term visa renewals Which will screw those actually self insuring with a real account dedicated to that Lastly I do also have sympathy for Thailand too that has 70 million of its own barely able to afford hospitalization now also burdened by expats "choosing to die" uninsured in Thailand or worse yet laying unconscious & their unfortunate families abroad trying to cope with the mounting bills ultimately leaving Thailand unpaid So people who have insurance but the insurance decides to not cover something, that never happens, right? You know everything about the case, right? 1 1
Popular Post thonglorjimmy Posted October 5, 2022 Popular Post Posted October 5, 2022 I think this poor chaps problems could well be a wake up call for many of us, I certainly wish him well. 2 1
jerrymahoney Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 19 hours ago, Northstar1 said: Thailand is no place for elderly people! Sooner or later the same scenario will haunt everyone! go home while you still have the means, and your family won’t have to deal with this. What family?
Tropposurfer Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 Sorry to hear anyones sick and maybe about to fall pff the perch but ... get your own insurance and stop asking others to take care of your care. 1 1
Pattaya Spotter Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 Everyone's got to go sometime...74 is a pretty good run. Maybe should have heeded all the warnings on those packs of fags ⚠️
Pattaya Spotter Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 Bad timing with the UK being skint right now...I wouldn't expect any help from the nanny state.
Popular Post IvorBiggun2 Posted October 5, 2022 Popular Post Posted October 5, 2022 Folks are saying, on here, if people haven't got the finances to stay here then they should not be here. Does that apply to all who are here using a visa agent cuz they don't have the finances required? 4
473geo Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 1 minute ago, IvorBiggun2 said: Folks are saying, on here, if people haven't got the finances to stay here then they should not be here. Does that apply to all who are here using a visa agent cuz they don't have the finances required? Does it matter? those with enough money giving unsolicited advice to those without, never really worked ???? 1
userabcd Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 14 hours ago, Jonathan Swift said: Yeah, comments sections are populated by such shallow and despicable people. They take pleasure in judging, it makes them feel superior, though they clearly are anything but. Like their counterparts in America whom I sought to escape from when I moved here. Probably shallow despicable comments made by the young or rich, at a time in their lives where they think they are invincible. Until that dreaded time later in life when the younger ones find themselves in a similar position with health problems and sky high unaffordable insurance premiums with many exclusions. 2
IvorBiggun2 Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 18 minutes ago, 473geo said: Does it matter? To me yes it does.
jack71 Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 On 10/4/2022 at 12:58 PM, connda said: If he goes back the the UK, the NHS will put him on an 'end of life pathway.' That is, if he can find a bed in an NHS facility. As a 70 year old all I can say is that he should have thought this out way before this. 77 imho is the span of a good life. He should get his affairs in order and seek to check out as painlessly as possible. Heck, 70 is a good life span. I just want to be relatively comfortable before I go. No asking family in the US to 'save me.' My chosen family is here. I'll die here. But, best of luck to Mr. John. Jesus wept. after reading your post I just want to throw myself off the 17th floor. I imagine you're a dream to live with right now haha 1 1
orchis Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 10 hours ago, moe666 said: As the pain beame to much he says give me the shot he was dead later that day. I doubt your story; it would be very hard to find a Thai doctor to give someone this kind of life-ending shot. 2
Popular Post bobbin Posted October 5, 2022 Popular Post Posted October 5, 2022 The milk of human kindness is in short supply in this thread.. I'm going to attempt to steer the conversation in a different direction.. It's no secret that medical costs in Thailand are not inexpensive. This impacts people's thinking. We have almost on our doorstep a huge country, with less expensive (in some cases much less expensive) medical care. It's hospitals are filled with the same people who are doing the same job in our own countries. With the added benefit that they are mostly fluent in English. Yes, I'm talking about India. Perhaps the idea of sourcing anything more than routine medical care there is an idea that should be higher up in the minds of the older long-term residents. 2 1
Cardano Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 22 hours ago, Thingamabob said: Well said. Me likewise. I've no intention to go, or be taken to, anywhere near a hospital when the time comes. Easy to say when you're health is good, let's see what song you sing if you have a heart attack or get diagnosed with cancer and you are told with treatment you will live but without you will die. 1 1
Cardano Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 9 hours ago, The Fugitive said: Correct! Before that they do that they try everything they can to convince/persuade you and your relatives that you are better off dying in the comfort of your own (or a relatives) home. That way, they only have to provide three fifteen minute visits by a nurse each day. It's all about money and freeing up beds for patients who can be treated. Very difficult to argue against. Absolute Slanderous Rubbish 1
Bday Prang Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 9 hours ago, masterpasser said: In 1961 the maximum player salary was abolished and Johnny Haynes negotiated a 100 pounds a week salary .Keegan would have been on a lot more than 50 pounds a week 10 years later If keegan was on £50 a week what were the rest of people earning, £10 ?
Lacessit Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 10 hours ago, IvorBiggun2 said: Rubbish. Thais get treatment basically free at government hospitals. No 'barely able to afford hospitalization'. True, but in some instances it's not great quality care, quite apart from waiting 5-6 hours to actually see a doctor. Government hospitals give out the cheapest generics they can lay their hands on, and some pharmaceuticals that are available in private hospitals are not prescribed in the government ones. From what I have seen, palliative care in government hospitals seems to consist of sending the patient home with a bottle of tramadol.
Neeranam Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 21 hours ago, Neeranam said: Well worth getting a part-time job as a teacher for a year, then you can be in the system for life, 432 baht a year. Sorry, that should be 432 baht per month but still worth it. I know a guy who did exactly that aged 63 and loved it, teaching adults for 13 hours a week. He stopped aged 68 and died recently aged 83, after using many free health services, including a new hip, knee, and heart surgery. 1
olfu Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 I'm not sorry to say but my long life teach me that poor people should not multiply. 1
Popular Post BritManToo Posted October 5, 2022 Popular Post Posted October 5, 2022 24 minutes ago, olfu said: I'm not sorry to say but my long life teach me that poor people should not multiply. My long life teaches me, that if poor people don't multiply, your country will need to import even poorer immigrants (probably Muslims) from the 3rd world. (applies to all western countries along with Thailand and Japan) @olfu Hows that working out for your home country? 3
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