tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post1037489955540176001..comments2024-03-20T10:19:56.838+01:00Comments on the beatroot: Medical corruption case stuns Polandbeatroothttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11242716221133886807noreply@blogger.comBlogger61125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-81792630180964010232022-06-13T18:44:56.092+02:002022-06-13T18:44:56.092+02:00explication dolabuy hermes regardez ici maintena... explication <a href="https://www.dolabuy.ru/fr/gg-marmont-c-157_168_169/gucci-replica-474575-gg-marmont-matelass%C3%A9-mini-sac-bleu-clair-p-3756.html" rel="nofollow"><strong>dolabuy hermes</strong></a> regardez ici maintenant <a href="https://www.dolabuy.ru/fr/monogramme-c-157_158_241/r%C3%A9plique-louis-vuitton-peach-petite-malle-souple-monogram-p-2852.html" rel="nofollow"><strong>Valentino Dolabuy</strong></a> allez vers ces gars <a href="https://www.dolabuy.ru/fr/depuis-c-157_158_314/pas-cher-louis-vuitton-loop-blue-femmes-top-quality-m81166-sacs-%C3%A0-main-p-4511.html" rel="nofollow"><strong> répliques de sacs gucci </strong></a>mcsmyleahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00848528475792263294noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-89129010192987763942020-03-09T10:58:52.125+01:002020-03-09T10:58:52.125+01:00Famous love spell caster , Get Quick Solution of y...Famous love spell caster , Get Quick Solution of your all Love related Problems on Call. 100% Secure & Private Quick Solution on Call, 25+ Year Experience, 24x7 Available Call or Email Now.<br />E-mail__templeofanswer@hotmail.co.uk <br />Call___ +2348155425481GeorginAhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17732590316202381315noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-59861471064362624702020-01-11T15:24:09.184+01:002020-01-11T15:24:09.184+01:00Jestem pod wrażeniem. Bardzo dobry artykuł.Jestem pod wrażeniem. Bardzo dobry artykuł.Adrian Moczyńskihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08013149868570027936noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-83347882509294045612013-03-12T17:34:46.389+01:002013-03-12T17:34:46.389+01:00order valium no prescription how long does valium ...<a href="http://cardiffmiller.com/pubs/buyvalium/#91784" rel="nofollow">order valium no prescription</a> how long does valium 10mg last - valium side effects during pregnancyAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-60692380255892200192012-11-30T22:57:33.812+01:002012-11-30T22:57:33.812+01:00jannovak said: "the deeply ingrained mentalit...jannovak said: "the deeply ingrained mentality of giving and accepting bribes is based on how people had to get by when normal society didn’t exist as was the case during the nazis occupation and later the communist period. It will take a long time to reverse this mentality but with a combination of education and a bit of heavy-handed law enforcement it can be minimized." … so until we rollout that perfect blend of reeducation and strong police response and give it some time to set in for…what’s fair? 2-3 years?.. 5yrs?.. how ‘bout 10 years, … yeah.. 10 years should be enough ;) , we should probably cut those guys a break… right? After all they are the victims – it’s all because those nasty commies and the nazis … I like how you bootstrap your case with historical facts of your choice. Unfortunately (for Poland) the culture of bribery is part of Poland’s historical heritage. It contributed to a number of national disasters long before the commies and the Nazis entered the stage. Remember the partitions? Jan, you can’t blame all social problem on the occupation and the communists. I’m not passing a judgment – just trying to recognize that Polish national psyche is as complicated as it gets.Averyrqwwhttp://www.ais-dhaka.net:8088/groups/jessicapearson/wiki/bbacf/ankara_evden_eve_nakliyat.htmlnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-53695335625135435442007-02-25T22:37:00.000+01:002007-02-25T22:37:00.000+01:00I haven't read all the comments about doctors in t...I haven't read all the comments about doctors in the UK, but I think someone should point out that the government bribes the doctors, so we don't have to. It bribes them with high salaries, allowing them to do private work and leaving consultants (senior hospital doctors) completely outside any financial controls. In a any disagreement about the NHS, the doctors always get their way. There is thus no need for them to expect bribes. However for nurses and other health workers who are exploited, it is a wonder they don't take bribes with their low salaries.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-10248525139594945072007-02-23T09:28:00.000+01:002007-02-23T09:28:00.000+01:00Yeah, you are right about teaching them young. Tha...Yeah, you are right about teaching them young. That's what shocked me when I turned up at Warsaaw Uni...cheating...open and unapologetic....resistence to the Soviets blah blah...<BR/><BR/>Unfortunatly, western schools are now full of plagiarists...so it's spreading.beatroothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11242716221133886807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-90050855199858806782007-02-22T23:34:00.000+01:002007-02-22T23:34:00.000+01:00Let us go back to "culture." Poland, indeed, has a...Let us go back to "culture." Poland, indeed, has a century long tradition of bribery, corruption, and cheating. Please don't blame everything on the Soviets, Nazi occupation, and the Partition Powers. Everybody who studied Polish history knows how kings were elected in the decades before (!) the partitions - the szlachta voted for the candidate who offered most. Those who don't believe this may find proof (and a lot of details) in the relevant chapter of Norman Davies' "God's Playground" (Boze igrzysko, in Polish). There has also been a whole school of Polish historians who put the major blame for Poland's catastrophe at the end of the 18th century - that lead to the partitions - on the corruptness of her ruling class.<BR/><BR/>Corrupt behavior, however, does not begin in the doctor's office. The young Pole learns it at school. Cheating is so common (sorry, I know it very well, since my wife is a teacher and we have a lot of friends from all kinds of schools, up to universities) that high school students look with an expression of utmost astonishment at someone who tells them that there are universities in the U.S., where a student caught cheating will not only get fired, but also will be reported to the police. Not only the Web is full of cheating aids for students ("sciagi") - it was the reason why my wife learned browsing the Web - you can buy them in printed form (for written tests) in bookstores and newsstands. It is quite common to download one's homework from the Web and to have essays for the matura presentation written by "professionals." Teachers, as a rule, "overlook" their students' cheating. First, they don't want to have discussions with their students, second, they are evaluated according to the grades their students achieve. So the young Pole grews up in a culture where cheating is not only socially acceptable, but where a student who does not cheat is considered an outsider. Add the bad examples of adult family members, e.g. at the doctor's office, and don't be surprised any more.<BR/><BR/>Beatroot, you're right that bribing - and let me add: cheating - should be socially as unacceptable as drink driving. How about trying to begin at the beginning, at school?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-14231105798333110202007-02-20T15:28:00.000+01:002007-02-20T15:28:00.000+01:00guest wrote: "if in the USA the rules of the game...guest wrote: "if in the USA the rules of the game (of the society) are defined by the national idea of the "self made man"<BR/>________________<BR/>Hey guest... the streets here inda goodle us of a are paved with gold, too.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-16931363429349598872007-02-20T15:07:00.000+01:002007-02-20T15:07:00.000+01:00"They don't work because they want to sit in their..."They don't work because they want to sit in their homes, not work, and collect tons of money."<BR/><BR/>penguin,<BR/><BR/>This one is the easiest to resolve. A friend told me that the reason why in Belarus official unemployment's so low is because after you register and stay one month without a job, a state gives you one. Usually the most simple and low paid - like cleaning the streets full time. If you refuse (or start and after some weeks drop it) - you loose the unemployment money. Would work nicely in Poland.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-67549630455472045252007-02-20T14:08:00.000+01:002007-02-20T14:08:00.000+01:00Guest,"45% of population eligible to vote support ...Guest,<BR/><BR/>"45% of population eligible to vote support another 55%, who do not work for a number of reasons."<BR/><BR/>They don't work because they want to sit in their homes, not work, and collect tons of money. Unfortunately, it doesn't work that way. All these people leave Poland and go to England to find a better way of living, but all I see is them sleeping on the streets because they can't get a job due to language barriers. There's plenty of jobs for them back home I'm sure, but they always want more and more.<BR/><BR/>Beat,<BR/><BR/>"Doctors have to be given more respect and then they would not be open to this kind of crap. "<BR/><BR/>I agree wholeheartedly. They makes just as much, if not less, then a regular worker in a factory. That doesn't seem right. And on the flip side, doctors will look to make more money, hence accepting bribes. Pay them more, and I think the problem eases quite a bit.polishpenguinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07681395865790238082noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-57391731194871247262007-02-20T13:48:00.000+01:002007-02-20T13:48:00.000+01:00"Just because I think it is a crime to bribe docto..."Just because I think it is a crime to bribe doctors I get accused of ‘duck-like’ thinking."<BR/><BR/>Beatroot,<BR/><BR/>Misunderstanding. <BR/><BR/>I respect your strong feelings on the subject, I just do not agree with solutions you suggest. Thinking similar to that of the President/PM is appealing to public opinion, but in terms of effectiveness it is, at best, useless. <BR/><BR/>In my opinion, the easiest first political step to end corruption in Poland would be to pass a law in Seim prohibiting those accused by court of any corruption to work for the state in any position (as an official, as a cleaner, as a director of a company where state is a major shareholder, etc. etc.) as well as to recieve benifits from the state (what they call here renta). <BR/>That would be both fair to all the members of the society here and would not inherit any open conflict of interest. What I mean is it would be relatively easy to start as (not nesseserily official) public initiative. That law would collups the chances of leagal employment for officials thus reducing motivation to take bribes.<BR/><BR/><BR/><BR/>As to your suggestion :<BR/>"{It’s about how Poland funds and runs its health service.}...<BR/>The only way out of that is through a high growth economy that was bringing more taxes."<BR/><BR/>I do not agree again. <BR/><BR/>Poland has f**d up structure of the society - 45% of population eligible to vote support another 55%, who do not work for a number of reasons. Out of those 45%: 40% - working class and 5% entrepreneurs - the real engine of the oconomy (responsible for paying 80% of all taxes). In other words, it is in the interest of 55% of population to exploit (tax) at maximum the 45% of those working. <BR/>And this is what polititians (representing the interests of those "parasites of the society") here are doing and will continue to do in the nearest future.<BR/>With the social structure like that any economy growth will not translate to more clever public spending.<BR/><BR/>Again, in my opinion, what Poland needs is a good and healthy economic crisis, which will crash its public finances and change local culture in a way that working will start to be considered GOOD and not working - BAD. (Highly unlikely, as in case of trouble they can milk the EU.)<BR/><BR/><BR/>Think about this: if in the USA the rules of the game (of the society) are defined by the national idea of the "self made man", then in Poland by "załatwimy, dostaniemy odszkodowanie". <BR/><BR/><BR/>As to my "perpectual state of denial" - thats because I have a lot of personal problems ;)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-4101396016356278372007-02-20T11:05:00.000+01:002007-02-20T11:05:00.000+01:00PP wrote: "And what action that is, I have no ide...PP wrote: "And what action that is, I have no idea."<BR/><BR/>--> How about voting and even working for the election politicians who aren't complete and utter turds? Yes, they all have a certain stench, but some stenches are much, much worse than others.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-33840835472900098592007-02-19T19:45:00.000+01:002007-02-19T19:45:00.000+01:00Doctors have to be given more respect and then the...Doctors have to be given more respect and then they would not be open to this kind of crap. <BR/><BR/>It’s about how Poland funds and runs its health service. They have got to increase funds into it (and pay doctors a wage that reflects expertise) and at the same time trying to reduce taxation (which all parties want to). <BR/><BR/>The only way out of that is through a high growth economy that was bringing more taxes. <BR/><BR/>Those kind of issues are only going to be solved by political means.<BR/><BR/>And of course there has to be a nationwide attempt to make bribing doctors socially unacceptable, in the same way as drink/driving is becoming here. <BR/><BR/>That way we protect the weakest (those who can't afford to bribe) and give them equal chance of health care.beatroothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11242716221133886807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-69041978091899774182007-02-19T18:03:00.000+01:002007-02-19T18:03:00.000+01:00Beat,"I think we should be spending much more time...Beat,<BR/><BR/>"I think we should be spending much more time looking for political solutions to this"<BR/><BR/><BR/>I honestly don't think political solutions would work, when the government itself in Poland has scandals and whatnot. The only time bribing is going to stop is when the people of the country take action. And what action that is, I have no idea.polishpenguinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07681395865790238082noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-69576632514381116802007-02-19T15:53:00.000+01:002007-02-19T15:53:00.000+01:00GuestI really think you have a problem. Just becau...Guest<BR/>I really think you have a problem. Just because I think it is a crime to bribe doctors (because it harms poorer and more honest members of society, I get accused of ‘duck-like’ thinking. <BR/><BR/>Bullshit. <BR/><BR/>Instead of your perpectual state of denial (I wonder why?) I think we should be spending much more time looking for political solutions to this. In the mean time, CHOP OFF BRIBERS BOLLOCKS!beatroothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11242716221133886807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-87096843785792628922007-02-19T12:32:00.000+01:002007-02-19T12:32:00.000+01:00" opamp said... Well, did it ever occur to you tha..." opamp said... <BR/>Well, did it ever occur to you that the cop would pull you over for speeding (when you weren't) and demand a bribe? Because it did happen to me (not in Poland though). And this is what your "opportunity" leads to."<BR/><BR/>Opamp, <BR/>if you yet reading this, -never happened to me in Poland. <BR/>However, two times similar thing happend. Once - in the middle of Warsaw, I turned right with a green arrow on and cops pulled me and demanded to pay penalty (not bribe!), saying I turned on a red light. Guess what? Simply denying to do that worked well. If you are sure that you did right, and policemen know it, they will not usually insist on you paying them. I guess, if you do not admit breaking the law, the case has to go court - and there its their word (lie) against your word (truth).<BR/>Another time - last year and also in Warsaw they pulled me in the middle of the night - I was on foreign registration and one of my back stop lights was off. I said I did not know it was off (which was not true, but they couldn't prove it), they said openly I should bribe them or they have to detain me (trying to bullshit me being foreigner). And guess what? Talking to them for 10 minuted does the thing: you want to detain me for something that small? - be my guest; you say I can not drive like that? - ok, I stay right here and sleep in the car; and so on. <BR/><BR/>I find always the same result - if you are right and you know it, the police in Poland (at least regular one) will not insist on a bribe. And here, being foreigner actually helps - as for corrupting them (you are very unlikely first provoke them and then complain) as for avoiding bullshit (usually they do not want to have any of the unnessesary mess after with the court and possibly your embassy). <BR/><BR/>Actually the powerlessness of the regular police in Poland is a separate subject in itself.<BR/><BR/><BR/>"But I think it’s pretty sad that you should think that going after anti-social criminals who give and take medical bribes is a sign of ‘duckism’…its not. Bribery in the medical services kills! Literally. Sling them all in jail (or hang them from lamp posts with jannovank’s environmentally friendly hemp rope!)"<BR/><BR/>Beatroot,<BR/>If you really mean what you wright - go live to Belarus - I recommend Brest - nice town only 190 km. from Warsaw. <BR/>There - the penalties are much higher and sentences are much longer for corruption. As well as regular officials are much more reluctant to accept a bribe. <BR/><BR/>It is in exactly this attitude, that you have a duck-like thinking: "if they are antisocial (antiLaw or antiJustice) - kill them!" <BR/>The corruption in public healthcare system of Poland is the direct result of poverty of the society. (Re-read the post of Michael Farris on three healthcare systems in Poland - he laid it out very well there.) And this is the problem you should be tackling first to fight corrution, which, in this case, is a direct consequence of the poverty. <BR/><BR/>By locking in jail those few doctors who yet work for public healthcare here you will deprive regular poles of any chance to get any decent (and cheap - I've heard from the my colleague that in the villages they bribe in nature - checkens, ducks) healthcare service. In that your original article, the guy who made transplant is one of how many (100? 10? for 40.000.000 population!) doctors able to do that in Poland? And did he do that for a bribe? Now they are saying he took all of 10.000 (yes, ten thousand) zlots in bribes for 10 heart replacements he's done. <BR/>I really think what these guys - all this poultry farm - should do is to let him free and raise his official salary 10 times at least (how much Lech increased his secretariat spending this year - it wouldn't be enough?). All he is at the moment - an example of Polish National Shame.<BR/><BR/>And one last thing, you are from GB, the "first world" rigth? So, for you nothing would change if, as a result of war on corruption of the rulling caolition and professional immigration, there became less public helthcare options for regular Poles? As you can probably live here better than average even for the UK unemployment money (pure speculation on my side here, sorry if I am wrong)... And, besides, where the doctors from here emigrate to? Ah, to the UK... What a surprise! <BR/><BR/>That explains the point of view.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-11708838489617107702007-02-18T23:12:00.000+01:002007-02-18T23:12:00.000+01:00suitably chastised.... being of scottish culture i...suitably chastised.... being of scottish culture i find it hard to tip never mind bribe!! <BR/>regardsUnknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00328400588655877541noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-86061339875947703042007-02-18T12:43:00.000+01:002007-02-18T12:43:00.000+01:00Malcolm I don’t think you understand something. if...Malcolm I don’t think you understand something. <BR/><BR/><I>if a member of my family was ill and i could speed up treatment by paying for it , sorry yes i would.</I><BR/><BR/>If that was victimless crime (and if you did offer a bribe to a doctor in Poland you would be breaking the law) then I could understand it – but if you pay for a member of your family to jump the queue then you are depriving someone else who needs treatment as much as your family member. So by bribing you are doing harm to someone else. It is not a victimless crime. <BR/><BR/>My girlfriend got cancer three years ago – a lot of treatment, as I am sure you can imagine, and a very traumatic time. But you know what? She didn’t bribe anyone once, nor was she asked to. <BR/><BR/>So do not even be tempted to bribe doctors, Malcolm – you simply do not need to. Leave the bribing to the anti-social shitbags.beatroothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11242716221133886807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-80216879455556351642007-02-18T12:41:00.000+01:002007-02-18T12:41:00.000+01:00This comment has been removed by the author.beatroothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11242716221133886807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-46419482724758039292007-02-18T08:19:00.000+01:002007-02-18T08:19:00.000+01:00as a uk citizen living in poland i certainly haven...as a uk citizen living in poland i certainly havent been pushed ahead of any queue , i was shocked when my wife took a jar of coffee once for the doctor , GP's in uk are free you get 5mins of their time and even if you have appointment expect to wait. GP's are exactly that 'general' i like the fact here you can go to the doc who only does backs , another throats , being british it freaks me out not having to make an appointment .... but thats me. i spoke to wife about this posting and her reply 'thats nothing' where a society has massive divide in fortunes , will always breed corruption of one way or another. try going to indonesia or any of those countries its 10 times worse. <BR/><BR/>sorry digressed yes it is shocking about bribery , at least i know as soon as i open my mouth i will get charged double , if a member of my family was ill and i could speed up treatment by paying for it , sorry yes i would. if i had a choice of a polish hospital or uk , not a 2nd thought i'd be on 1st flight.<BR/><BR/>if someone kills another through greed , like the switching off of the life support , then thats murder.<BR/>you cant judge someone willing to bribe in the same context as someone who takes/expects a bribe.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00328400588655877541noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-54952518325454377102007-02-17T16:21:00.000+01:002007-02-17T16:21:00.000+01:00"On the other hand, a citizen of the US or UK (or ...<I>"On the other hand, a citizen of the US or UK (or any rich western country) who shows up in a Polish public healthcare institution is liable to be pushed to the head of the line and get better care than the lumpen proletariat.</I><BR/><BR/>Ah, I see. I didn't know that. Not the same at my doctirs, alas. But the next time I go I will quote you and demand my rightful place at the head of the queue...beatroothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11242716221133886807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-73162870537576920562007-02-17T14:34:00.000+01:002007-02-17T14:34:00.000+01:00"A very odd comment, Mike."My apologies, I thought..."A very odd comment, Mike."<BR/><BR/>My apologies, I thought it was clear in context, let's try again:<BR/><BR/>"On the other hand, a citizen of the US or UK (or any rich western country) who shows up in a Polish public healthcare institution is liable to be pushed to the head of the line and get better care than the lumpen proletariat.<BR/>Is that corruption? Do you drill your Polish public healthcare physician to make sure you haven't been taken ahead of people who've been waiting longer?"michael farrishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10232229721381140090noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-84204916769016655822007-02-17T14:04:00.000+01:002007-02-17T14:04:00.000+01:00Michael, I found this interesting but will appreci...Michael, I found this interesting but will appreciate it if you could expound on it a bit more:<BR/><BR/>"In the middle of this turbulent sea of all against all, two beacons shine out by which people are supposed to navigate, the church and the party which becomes the arbiter for as many social interactions as possible." <BR/><BR/>Specifically about the conjunture vis-a-vis the Church and the PiS.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13112593.post-28415205089545740532007-02-17T14:01:00.000+01:002007-02-17T14:01:00.000+01:00BR: If British kids had a chance to look at condit...BR: If British kids had a chance to look at conditions for kids in many parts of Poland they would cheer up about their own situation rather quickly. <BR/>___<BR/><BR/>Maybe, vice-versa, too.<BR/><BR/>How the pluck can you compare kids from different classes?<BR/><BR/>And there's big rural-urban differentiation, even more so pronounced in Poland.<BR/><BR/>Then, too: "If you don't eat yer meat, you can't have any pudding. How can you 'ave any pudding if you don't eat yer meat?"<BR/><BR/>Never figured I'd like being a kid in unjolly ol' England after hearing those Brick in the Wall lyrics.<BR/><BR/>But lastly, do I hear Poles complaining about "welfare mothers?" in the refrain: "I know and the policeman knows that when I pay the penalty the money is spent by fat polititians for f***g single mothers desperate for job." But giving money to a hardworking (yea, sure) policeman is alright coz it goes to his family. <BR/><BR/>Looks like another sickness of Polish society (individuals, too) to me.<BR/><BR/>Welfare Mothers Lyrics<BR/>by Neil Young<BR/><BR/>People, pick up<BR/>on what I'm puttin' down now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>Down at every<BR/>Laundromat in town now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>While they're washin'<BR/>you can hear this sound now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>Divorcee!<BR/><BR/>Hard to believe<BR/>that love is free now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>Out on the street<BR/>with the whole family now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>Hard to believe<BR/>that love is free now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>Divorcee!<BR/><BR/>People, pick up<BR/>on what I'm puttin' down now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>Down in every<BR/>Laundromat in town now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>While they're washin'<BR/>you can hear this sound now<BR/><BR/>Welfare mothers<BR/>make better lovers<BR/><BR/>Divorcee!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com