here's a thought let's just put all the healthcare discussion and such all in one place? new policy? post it here! new idea? post it here! new gripe? post it here!(i'll start another thread in a bit about education, same idea)I'll kick it off with my overly simplistic view of how healthcare can't really be run by the government effectively.the first and biggest reason why healthcare can't be run by the government (single payer, government provided healthcare etc (like canada/UK etc)) is that when and if you do that, you effectively stifle innovation, motivation and incentives for: new (expensive) cutting edge research, and the best and the brightest that want to go to med school for the dr's life/perks won't be going into that profession as there will be a sharp sharp drop in the income (which bleeding hearts say won't matter but ultimately it does).secondary reasons which ultimately render the governments involvement mute is that the government won't be efficient with it. medicare is actually run rather well but it's still small by comparison to what is planned. on another note they apparently are cutting the medicare payout for heart echo's, this will result in not cheaper echos but rather a sharp reduction in the availability of echo's as they are no longer worth the expense to the doctor (equipment, tech pay etc). techs will be out of a job. i'll add some other thoughts later....any one else?[Edited on July 10, 2009 at 2:42 PM. Reason : h]
7/10/2009 2:39:01 PM
hey, let's make another thread about healthcare!
7/10/2009 2:41:43 PM
the idea here is to try to consolidate them
7/10/2009 2:43:44 PM
fail
7/10/2009 2:44:11 PM
says the guy making specific threads
7/10/2009 2:48:11 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/07/08/biden.health.care/index.html[Quote]"Biden cheers deal with hospitals on health care reform(CNN) -- Vice President Joe Biden announced Wednesday that a deal has been reached with hospitals to help fund health care reform."We're here today to make our health care system healthy again," Biden said in announcing the agreement.Biden said the hospital industry has pledged to contribute $155 billion in Medicare and Medicaid savings in the next decade."Hospitals have acknowledged that significant health care savings can be achieved by improving efficiencies, realigning incentives to emphasize quality care instead of quantity of procedures," Biden said."In the last several weeks, they've been working with [Senate Finance Committee] Chairman [Max] Baucus and are coming forward with a proposal that produces real savings in federal health care spending. Savings that will be applied toward the president's firm goal ... of enacting health care reform that is deficit neutral."As the health care system becomes more efficient through technology and innovation, Biden said, increases in Medicare and Medicaid payments to hospital will slow and, as more people are insured, hospitals will bear less of the financial burden in caring for those without adequate coverage."Today's announcement, I believe, represents the essential role hospitals play in making reform a reality. And the reality will be we must enact this reform this year," Biden said. "We must, and we will, enact reform by the end of August, and we can't wait."Biden was joined by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and representatives of the hospital industry.The hospital deal follows Obama's announcement last month of an agreement reached with the nation's pharmaceutical industry to cut drug costs for elderly Americans, calling it an example of the kind of compromise required for successful national health care reform.That agreement discounts medications for Medicare beneficiaries facing high out-of-pocket expenses when their benefits reach a gap in coverage.Following Biden's announcement, House Minority Leader John Boehner accused the administration and Democrats of "bullying health care groups into cutting backroom deals to fund a government takeover of health care.""Democrats, Republicans, and health care stakeholders must work together on real reform to give Americans better access to affordable health care, but that's not happening in Washington," Boehner, R-Ohio, said in a statement."It's time for Washington Democrats to abandon their 'go it alone' approach and work with Republicans on true reform that expands Americans' access to affordable health care," he said."[/quote]aaronburro's response"Apparently Biden doesn't understand economics. If the hospitals are going to "ask for less money" from the federal government for the services they will provide, then they will simply recoup the money by charging every one else more. Duuurrrrr. Either that, or they expect to get more out of this deal than they are giving up, thus making the touted "savings" bullshit to begin with. And, if it's neither of those two, then it must be the case that the hospitals are gouging consumers.Put simply, hospitals aren't going to simply take a pay cut. They will simply do what economics says they will do: shift the cost elsewhere. How's that for the government "competing with the private market?" It amazes me that people who are so fucking ignorant of the basics of economics can rise to be a senator or even the fucking Vice President."http:///message_topic.aspx?topic=570751]
7/10/2009 2:50:06 PM
1337 b4k4 Health Insurance or ELSE! http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/06/health/policy/06health.html
7/10/2009 2:52:00 PM
Socks``
7/10/2009 2:56:10 PM
do you enjoy talking to yourself?
7/10/2009 4:23:26 PM
7/10/2009 4:56:09 PM
7/10/2009 5:36:34 PM
Let's make a unified politics thread, too.And another for wars. That'll clean this section up reeaaaaaaaaalllll nice.
7/10/2009 8:00:10 PM
7/10/2009 8:21:30 PM
rich people do stupid shit like invest with Madoff.might as well let the gubmet take a shot with their money.
7/10/2009 11:22:07 PM
Let's ask Hoover how well raising taxes in a recession worked out
7/11/2009 6:15:15 PM
7/12/2009 3:18:25 AM
HUR: I want to address some of your premises that are a little off:
7/12/2009 8:45:29 AM
Why isn't health responsibility the main issue with the entire health-care debate?Many people like to point out that in a rich, modern and capable society, no one should have to fear losing their job or well-being over a RANDOM illness or injury. I agree.... but this is entirely different from what is actually being promoted. Universal health-care would mean that even if someone is clearly 100% responsible for their illness or injury, that others should have to at least help pay for it.Why don't more liberals propose a national pooling of risk ONLY for the RANDOM illnesses and injuries? The #1 objection to government-provided health-care is that everyone would have to help Joe Couch-Potato pay for his heart surgery -- that was very arguably entirely Joe Couch-Potato's fault. Joe Couch-Potato AND ONLY Joe Couch-Potato should have to pay for his self-caused health-care needs. Certainly, the line between self-caused and random illness and injury may be unclear, and it's reasonable to err on the side of being at least semi-random, but still: WHY SHOULD ANYONE HAVE TO PAY FOR ANYONE ELSE'S SELF-CAUSED MESS? (Unless, of course, they're your legal dependent.) ^
7/12/2009 1:14:34 PM
More good news from he land of mandatory insurance:http://www.boston.com/business/healthcare/articles/2009/05/28/insurers_ranked_on_payment_records/
7/12/2009 5:49:35 PM
^ I do not think it will be doomsday but I do agree the gov't involvement will be detremental.If anything hospitals and doctors need to be unleased to a degree from the smoothering bureaucracy of federal regulations,insurance guidelines, and the AMA monopoly on precedence. For example the ER should only be for emergencies. Unless u are having a heart attack, blood is gushing from your arm, or you have a 104.5 degreefever on a sat night and turning yellow; then hospitals should be able to give you the boot. The AMA, insurance industry, big pharma, and medical industry knew this day was coming. I fault them for our transition into healthcare socialism for notbe proactive enough to "fix" their problems before a liberal democratic congress took shit into their own hands.
7/13/2009 9:02:59 AM
what do you suggest for people who have chronic health problems and lack the money for health insurance?
7/13/2009 9:16:14 AM
7/13/2009 3:41:16 PM
and who is going to decide what health problems are personal problems and which aren't?for instance diabetes can often be caused by poor health decisions just as much as lung cancer.if someone gets lung cancer do they have to prove that they weren't smokers?
7/13/2009 3:53:56 PM
7/13/2009 6:39:38 PM
Per the Tax Foundation, if the 5.4% surtax outlined in the House health-care bill is implemented, the top tax rate would rise to over 50 percent in 39 states. NC would be over 54%. If you include sales tax, it is likely just shy of 60%. http://www.taxfoundation.org/publications/show/24863.html
7/14/2009 9:32:32 PM
run it like a voucher system. give vouchers for purchasing health care, the same way a voucher system would work if we did it in schools. now you're argument is with the concept of universal access to healthcare and your belief in it as a privileged and not a right, not with the way it's run.then you're left explaining why it's right for someone who can't afford life saving treatment to be punished for past problems by being allowed to just die.
7/14/2009 11:25:10 PM
or you are left explaining why one person should be able to enjoy a service without ever paying for it.
7/14/2009 11:33:08 PM
do you feel the same way about schools? or how about police?just because our society doesn't judge basic health care as a right doesn't mean that it shouldn't be.
7/14/2009 11:37:29 PM
I'm just worried about the costs of insuring approximately 50 million people.We should first address the exorbitant price of healthcare in the country. It seems like Obama has only paid lip-service to the concept of actually lowering health care costs. Inefficiencies in the system and profit-margins only account for a portion of these excessive costs. We also need to lower the barrier to entry in the health care insurance market, and give more choice to the consumer. I'm not sure that a heavily-subsidized government plan modeled after Medicare does the trick. It might be an attractive option to the millions of fat, old and sick uninsured, but it'll be a huge money pit unless many more millions of healthy people join in order to balance out the sick patients. Is the goal for the "public plan" to eventually supplant our current system of employer-based coverage? It'll certainly undermine it, and I'm not so sure that is not the goal.
7/14/2009 11:47:19 PM
7/14/2009 11:51:56 PM
i don't believe any of those are rights, no.But then again, I paid for my college and now pay for the children of others to go to school.I pay for police.healthcare is not a right. Any one should be able to purchase health care, if he has the funds. That is the furthest extent that such a "right" exists. A right such as that cannot exist where one man must give up his labour or property in order for another man to "exercise" his right. Just like McD's shouldn't be forced to give a meal to any slob who wanders in off the street and says he wants a burger without paying. McD's can freely give that man a burger if they want (and I believe they might even have a policy to do so, or is that Wendy's), but the gov't shouldn't force them to do so. So it is with healthcare.You'll duly note that the gov't provides food stamps, and I don't believe it should. If you can't make enough money to be able to afford food, then you should probably die, because you are a waste of life and space. Laid off? I understand that, that's what charities, friends, and savings are for. Can't find any of them? You should have planned better or been nicer to people. It's cold, it's heartless, but it's the truth.What about the kids? If you are such a loser that you can't afford food, then I'd prefer your kids die, too, so we stop passing along the stupid genes. Millions made it through before the advent of food stamps, so why should we assume people today can't?
7/14/2009 11:52:39 PM
7/14/2009 11:56:41 PM
7/15/2009 12:05:37 AM
such fantastic responses.
7/15/2009 7:08:09 AM
7/15/2009 7:55:37 AM
7/15/2009 8:30:00 AM
^^Cycle of life, baby.(Except I disagree about the kids -- It's not their fault, they shouldn't be punished by starving to death -- it's bad enough that they'll be taken by social services while their parents continue to suffer....)Also, this whole "starve to death" thing is really just a liberal scare-tactic. OUR SOCIETY IS NOT EVIL. WE ARE NOT CANNIBALS. WE WOULD NEVER LET CROWDS OF PEOPLE STARVE TO DEATH, UNLESS THEY CHOSE TO REFUSE HELP. They overwhelming best part about this, AND LIBERALS SHOULD FUCKING LOVE THIS, is that when the government stops stealing the property and fruits of labor from successful people in order to give it out as food stamps (which often buy junk-food and crack, anyway,) then the many hungry and starving people that are still unable to fend for themselves will still need a source of free food -- and this food will come from private charities, as it already does, but in larger amount to meet the rising need. As these private groups, most of which would be churches, spend more money on helping the poor, they would be left with little money to spend on their efforts to push their other less-than-noble agendas. In other words, if 95% of your charity goes to feeding the poor, THERE'S NOT MUCH LEFT OVER FOR: 1) trying to keep creationism in the schools. 2) trying to keep abstinence-only education in the schools, 3) trying to keep drugs illegal, 4) trying to prevent gay marriage, 5) trying to get homosexuality labeled a disorder, 6) trying to encourage patriarchal families, 7) trying to keep "in god we trust" on the money, and other bullshit agendas. What's that? The church is discontinuing it's fight against ________ [some backwards shit] because it needs the money to feed starving people? OH NOES.
7/15/2009 8:44:37 AM
I understand the rationale of part of the current system. To an extent those with high income or inheriting high volume of wealth havemore to lose due to social unrest, increased crime due to poverty, a soft national defense, and a crumbling infrastructure as well as the ability to maniupluate/lobby/influencefavorable legislation as a positive feedback for their income/wealth generation; hence the rationale for a progressive income tax and taxeson wealth like the estate tax. I do support a more "flat tax."This also seems to be the rationale for the basic "safety net" of gov't subsidized housing and food stamps.The current situation though is starting to get out of control. Nowadays any lazy piece of shit, baby popping mama, or trailer trash canget gov't subsidized housing, food stamps (that could feed me like a king for a month), healthcare, a welfare "check" on top of their foodstamps pay outs, and can even get a FUCKING CELL PHONE WITH PREPAID MINUTES thanks to uncle sam. I heard an advertisement on the radio today.Who would have thought I always considered it a privilege to have a mobile phone. Herbert Hoover had his famous speech todayin 2009, instead of being a chicken in every pot a car in every garage. He would be advocating a Cell phone in every pocket, a 60" bigscreen in every living room, and a leased Lexus in every garage.[Edited on July 15, 2009 at 9:51 AM. Reason : d]
7/15/2009 9:51:14 AM
you know why they're doing the cell phone thing right? besides having access to emergency services if needed, one big obstacle to the poor getting jobs is not having a phone at which they can be reached when applying for jobs. either they can't afford a phone at all or they don't keep up with their phone bill consistently so their number is often disconnected or they change numbers frequently. that was the main argument behind that program. so that they would have a better chance of getting a job and getting off the government teat.
7/15/2009 10:26:49 AM
7/15/2009 10:30:51 AM
haha i wonder if Willy Nilly and HUR are intentionally trying to sound like the villian from a Lucky Ducky comic. "Those poor have it so good because they live near squalor on my dime!!! "
7/15/2009 10:57:22 AM
^What your cute little cartoon fails to show are the politicians who used Lucky Ducky in order to gain power. If politicians hadn't created a welfare state in order to garner votes, Lucky Ducky's life might have been a lot different.
7/15/2009 11:24:24 AM
^ yah, i feel the same way. if the government didn't provide unemployment benefits, food stamps, etc no one would be poor. I mean, they couldn't afford to be, right? Force a man to either work or starve to death and dad gum it he will work or starve to death. I mean, obviously the only reason anyone lives in poverty is because they are too lazy to throw themselves off the government tit!
7/15/2009 12:03:09 PM
7/15/2009 1:02:45 PM
If only our poor could live like these people did, without government handouts:Or like this people:Instead our poor have to suffer the poor misery of government imposed poverty:[Edited on July 15, 2009 at 1:38 PM. Reason : ]
7/15/2009 1:38:20 PM
GOP's Healthcare Organizational Chart of Democrats Health Plan:http://docs.house.gov/gopleader/House-Democrats-Health-Plan.pdf
7/15/2009 1:51:51 PM
^^With section 8, you get this:http://www.barker-inc.com/vacancies/details.php?id=691
7/15/2009 3:19:37 PM
Section 8 pays for part of that. The tenant has to pay too.[Edited on July 15, 2009 at 3:41 PM. Reason : And a lot of the places that accept Section 8 look like moron's post.]
7/15/2009 3:39:51 PM
haha the small buildings look exactly like the building I live in. also Im pretty sure the big building isnt government housing. could be wrong tho.one more thing, the majority of section 8 housing in new york city has very long waiting lists and normally the rents range around 300-400 for a 1bedroom apartment if your lucky. Im not sure what section of the bronx this photo is but chances are 1bedrooms will run around 800 dollars a month at the cheapest.[Edited on July 15, 2009 at 5:24 PM. Reason : ya dig.]
7/15/2009 5:18:52 PM
^ yeah, that's my point...Our poor people are still poor, but they have opportunities not to be destitute thanks to anti-poverty programs. Our societies are better off not having the slums seen at the early part of last century, or in other countries where the gov. doesn't have the means to aid their poor.There could always be reform in the system, but there is absolutely no rational reason to eliminate the programs.
7/15/2009 5:25:08 PM