Quote:
Originally Posted by theman23
I think you're really overstating this. The majority of bladder cancers are superficial and dealt with just fine by general urologists, , and a city of 250,000 would probably have at least one or two of these. If they need to see a medical oncologist, it's a trivial trip from Orangeville to any of the numerous large health systems in southern ontario. The chemotherapy can always be administered locally, overseen remotely by the specialist. There may not be very many harp teachers (although I suspect there would be at least one), but that's hardly essential.
|
You guys make some good points but none of this makes the current approach sustainable, which is letting hundreds of thousands of people jam into already established areas, with few concrete plans for accommodation and just hoping that the market and the rest of the stuff that is essential to a good Canadian life are able to catch up at some point.