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Miss USA: Health care 'a privilege,' not a right

Alvaro Accardo

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Some of the major policy and social debates that have marked the beginning of Donald Trump's presidency took center stage when the newly crowned Miss USA argued that health care is "a privilege" for working people and that she rejected "die-hard" views of feminism.

Kara McCullough, a physical scientist at the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, was asked Sunday during the Las Vegas pageant's question-and-answer section if "affordable health care for all US citizens is a right or a privilege."

"I'm definitely going to say it's a privilege," the 25-year-old said. "As a government employee, I am granted health care and I see first-hand that for one to have health care, you have to have jobs.


"So therefore, we need to continue to cultivate this environment that we're given the opportunity to have health care as well as jobs to all American citizens worldwide," she added.
McCullough, who represented Washington, DC, in the pageant, attracted quite a bit of social media pushback from those who believe that health care is a right that should be granted to all American citizens.

The US Senate is currently negotiating plans to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act after the House passed its own version of legislation.

The Trump administration said last week that it is open to letting states impose work requirements, premiums and co-pays on some low-income adults receiving Medicaid, the government program that provides health insurance to poorer Americans.

Trump owned the Miss Universe Organization, which included the Miss USA Pageant, until September 2015, when he sold it to talent agency and marketing firm WME-IMG.
McCullough also raised some eyebrows when asked what she considers "feminism to be" and if she considers herself a feminist.

"So as a woman scientist in the government, I'd like to lately transpose the word 'feminism' to 'equalism,'" the pageant winner said. "I don't really want to consider myself -- try not to consider myself like this die-hard, you know, like, 'Oh, I don't really care about men.' But one thing I'm going to say, though, is women, we are just as equal as men when it comes to opportunity in the workplace."

McCullough went on to say that seeing women in leadership roles in science and the workplace has had a significant impact on her views of gender and career. She runs a community outreach program that provides math and science tutoring for students.

"So as Miss USA, I would hope to promote that type of leadership responsibility globally to so many women worldwide," she said.

Miss USA: Health care 'a privilege,' not a right - CNNPolitics.com

Then Twitter goes all nuclear.

Twitter



Miss DC USA just said healthcare is a privilege. Not a right!?!? Ma'am!!! What?

Twitter

Miss USA is a nuclear chemist that works for the USNRC, but is somehow "uneducated" because y'all didn't like her answers.
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#MissUSA

Twitter
 
It shouldnt be a privilege for people who cant afford it far too many people in the States dont seek medical help because the just dont have the money. But the wealthy should pay their own way.
 
It's a necessity for many poor people and agree with Thomas. The rich can get their own personal doctors or they can even buy one :wink2:
 
I rate her 9.6/10 for her looks. Will not bother debating her Oscar performance.
 
Lauren Howe is more than just a pretty face.
The 24-year-old is also a University of Toronto industrial engineering grad and budding entrepreneur who over the weekend beat out 64 other contestants from around the country to become the new Miss Universe Canada 2017.
“This was my second try at Miss Universe Canada and it worked out,” said the Torontonian, who was second runner-up in the 2014 edition and competed in two other pageants previously.
“It ended up being a really good time for me to give this another go and not ever look back and have regrets.”
We caught up with Howe for an exclusive interview on Sunday. The only child of a single mom (Lorrie), she was running on very little sleep and still wearing her Miss Universe Canada 2017 crown, sash, evening dress and high heels at her hotel lobby. She makes the media rounds on Tuesday.
•Do you have a day job?
— After university, I started working in sale strategy with Adidas which led to a role in technology consulting and I recently left that to pursue my own entrepreneurial ventures [in the financial technology sector].
•Are you looking forward to representing Canada at the Miss Universe pageant on Nov. 26 in Las Vegas?
— I am. This is a unique year where it’s a much shorter time frame to get ready but I think that’s actually a benefit since we hit the ground running.
•Is there anything you’d like to do when you get to Las Vegas to honour the victims of the recent mass shooting?
— Now that I officially have a title I want to start connecting with not only the organization itself but the other representatives of other countries to know if we do something as a group.
•Beauty pageants get a bad rap. Have they improved?
— They absolutely have. Pageants are what you make of it. That’s the main difference. The quality of girls who enter this and what they’re looking for is different than what it used to be. Rather than ... entering a pageant with the goals of “I want to be an international model,” the goals are now “I want to change lives.”
•And how will you?
— There’s no denying there are still the superficial aspects to [pageants] and that’s a lot of what I’d like to address in my now year as Miss Universe Canada for young women who look at me and might be watching [me]. This is work. This is a team of hair and makeup and stylist and I certainly do not wake up like this. And I really want to encourage young women to listen to the messages that people are saying rather than simply what they look like.
•You were previously a Toronto Maple Leafs in-arena host. What do you think of the team’s chances this year?
The Leafs are on an incredible roll. I was a part of the team right before they drafted Auston Matthews and it’s just been so special to watch how quick of a turn around they’ve had from then until now. I know better than to say anything out loud. I’m not a jinxer.

 
I think I might actually know Lauren Howe. Small world out there.

Anyways on topic: Miss USA obviously have shit for brains for thinking that clean food, clean water, and being free of diseases are something that only the rich and privileged should have access to.

Hot? No. Being a conservative Trump ass kisser turns me off more than a cold shower would.
 
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