User profile: joe
Joined: March 6, 2008
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- Mayor gives Culinary a piece of his mind
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- Gaming Commission OKs Dubai World-MGM partnership
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Blogs
Politics: Ralston's Flash
GOP boss Sue Lowden begs for money, talks of no taxes and mentions Yucca (3 Comments)
Culture and Entertainment
This weekend’s celebrity forecast
Sports: UNLV
Rougeau to take part in Q&A - Submit your questions
Sports: Upon Further Review
UNLV coaches chastised in curriculum story (1 Comment)
High School Sports Scene
4A Regional Championships breakdown
Face To Face: Final Take
Abuse of Power
Now and Then
A few words with Tarzan No. 12
Shark Bytes
Remembering Pete Newell
Calendar
- Boys & Girls Club Fine Arts Program second annual auction at Ghostbar (6 p.m. to 9 p.m.)
- Last show ever at Jillian's Hi-Life with Richard Moreno's School of Rock Showcase (6 p.m. to 10 p.m.)
- Tropic Starr at the Railroad Pass Hotel & Casino (6 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.)
- Patriozeb at Borders Bookstore (7 p.m. to 10 p.m.)
The Sun
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Dr.Dipak Desai or whatever his name may be, typically represents the greed of a gang of Indian doctors who enter the medical profession in their own country paying huge bribes and donations. Most of them enter the U.S. driven by sheer avarice to make big bucks. Dr.Desai's story is just the tip of an iceberg and there may be many more of these scoundrels out there not caught yet. What about American patients rushing to India for cheap medical treatment? They have no way of legal protection against medical crimes in that country where some doctors were recently caught for stealing kidneys for transplanting on medical tourists. The federal government should seriously legislate against the risk of outsourcing medical care to Asian countries where medical ethics is far below human trust.