Now that Obama is re-elected, can we stop pretending that Obamacare is some kind of socialist program and call it what it is: privatization? This is privatization at its core; instead of the government offering a service they pay private industry to provide that service and attach requirements. Is it socialism when we hire road contractors, or school lunch service vendors? No, its privatization. I'm not talking about whether its good or bad, just can we have a reasonable discussion about what it is? At its core its privatization and its paid for by new taxes.
11/7/2012 4:38:32 PM
Obamacare is a massive expansion of Medicaid, as well as subsidization of the cost of care for lower-income earners through a complex set of fees and taxes, mostly on businesses. That is not privatization in any way, shape or form.
11/7/2012 4:42:06 PM
let's start with you telling me why it was even needed when EMTALA has been in place almost 30 years now?(and, yes, i do agree healthcare reform was needed, i just believe this was an extreme way to do it, and it is set up in a way that could eventually evolve into a horrendous NHS form of administering healthcare; slippery slope, and whatnot. the same reason i was adamantly opposed to the Patriot Act).
11/7/2012 4:44:54 PM
It's an advancement of paternalism. It asks employers to do more for their employees' health coverage, as a response to rising costs. A number of people on the margins will be assisted by expanded federal programs, but in most cases their employer will take a penalty too.The only problem is that employers have wanted to be dealt out of this system for the last decade. Hiring has more friction that ever and most of what I see from Obamacare is a functional increase of the minimum wage - a battle the Democrats haven't been able to win on its own merits.I'm all for government taking care of its people. I'm personally agnostic to the degree of our taxes we use for such purposes. But it doesn't do that, it creates responsibilities and passes them on to other people. Obama had my vote in 2008, and he lost it in 2012 for this exact reason.
11/7/2012 4:52:30 PM
11/7/2012 4:54:24 PM
I've always wondered why the federal government doesn't own more businesses beyond a bank.If a state needs to hire a construction crew/contractor for a new government building or to build a new bridge or repair roads, then hire the federal company and all the profits go towards the national debt.If the insurance companies are making so much money off of premiums, then why not have a federally-owned insurance policy where that money can be used for government-funded programs?I feel like the same thing could happen in manufacturing and service distribution. It would create jobs, likely provide tax-free services (since the money is going to where the taxes would go anyway), and help fix the national economy.Biggest downside is it creates major competition for private business owners. But that's what capitalism is all about, right?
11/7/2012 4:55:55 PM
the only difference between obamacare and a voucher-type plan is the amount of individual control you think you have. they are both privatization and they will/would both increase costs.
11/7/2012 5:01:11 PM
11/7/2012 5:03:23 PM
They all use private healthcare, its funneling money to private industry. It's privatization.
11/7/2012 5:05:08 PM
11/7/2012 5:08:43 PM
11/7/2012 5:10:27 PM
So lets take the building roads project. For DOT projects, the DOT will bid scopes along with private companies and will take them if they win. I should know, I've bid against them as a contractor that did public works projects.Also, efficiency is not the issue of concern, cost to the consumer are.
11/7/2012 5:15:44 PM
11/7/2012 5:16:44 PM
Efficiency is always a matter of concern when competition is taken out of the equation. bdmazur was suggesting that we end the bidding process and cut private contractors out of public works projects.Your example obviously doesn't apply.
11/7/2012 5:18:51 PM
11/7/2012 5:21:37 PM
11/7/2012 5:51:55 PM
11/7/2012 5:55:22 PM
How about we stop pretending that Obamacare is anything that can be characterized by a single word or phrase.
11/7/2012 6:05:23 PM
11/7/2012 7:25:06 PM
11/7/2012 7:30:19 PM
11/7/2012 7:59:13 PM
^ So requiring everyone to buy PRIVATE insurance with their own money (or possibly with government money) is SOCIALISM?
11/7/2012 8:34:45 PM
11/7/2012 8:35:19 PM
^^ private insurance that must provide every last thing the government says it must have? What part of that, to you, is "private"? It's actually worse than private, in that case. Moreover, like I said, the intent of Obamacare is to destroy the private health insurance companies so that democrats can say, with a big shit-eating grin, "Hey, we tried the free market and it didn't work. Now on to socialized medicine!!!" When your intent is socialism from the beginning, you don't get free-market brownie points by claiming to do something via private companies
11/7/2012 8:38:22 PM
Ground beef is not private, because the USDA says it must contain at least 73% actual meat to be called "ground beef"; health insurance companies are not private, because HHS says their revenues must be used for at least 85% actual health-care.
11/7/2012 8:42:02 PM
Ummm. Dictating some specifications for a product is not the same as dictating damned near every specification for it. Surely you can see the difference between the gov't saying what something must be in order to be sold at all, and gov't saying what something must be in order to receive a certain label, right? This isn't a matter of only "x% of premiums must go to such and such a service." This is a matter of nearly the entire product being directly specified by the government.Second, the purpose of USDA labeling of ground beef is not to undermine the entire beef industry so that the gov't can later take it over.Moreover, Chance would have us believe that if any part of the system is claimed to be private, even if it actually isn't, then the whole entire system is private, and that is absurd. Ronnie's Widgets might supply one specific bolt for my car, but that doesn't mean the maker of my car is Ronnie's Widgets.]
11/7/2012 9:10:18 PM
Can we also stop pretending that health care is something that can ever be adequately addressed by a "free market" approach? Can we please acknowledge that there is an inherent uniqueness to health care that makes it impossible for a "private" system to ever work? For one, consumers are assumed to act rationally in a free market. Left to their own devices, consumers don't purchase health care rationally, they only purchase it when their need for it is at the absolute highest. This would be like only buying food when you started starving to death. Would the free market still work for food? A free market also requires competition and choice to work. The nature of health care constrains competition and choice. When your liver fails, you need a new liver. You can't get some other treatment or medicine that will fix it. There is only one choice, and you'll pay whatever it costs to not die. When your kid gets a 106 degree fever in the middle of the night, you don't shop around for the cheapest urgent care center, you haul ass to the closest one or call for an ambulance.So can we please just admit that health care is a unique problem that requires unique solutions?[Edited on November 7, 2012 at 9:48 PM. Reason : :]
11/7/2012 9:46:06 PM
11/7/2012 10:01:49 PM
11/7/2012 11:01:41 PM
11/8/2012 12:24:49 AM
I'm willing to bet $1,000 that not a single person in this thread read Obamacare.
11/8/2012 12:55:01 AM
did you?
11/8/2012 1:32:00 AM
Hell no. It's impossible to read. It's written in machine code (GO TOs, POINTERS, LOOPS, EXCEPTIONS, AMENDS, STRIKEOUTS). Only a computer or 1000 people assigned to reading 2 pages could read and interpret that bill.
11/8/2012 1:43:02 AM
Perhaps I may be of assistance: I am skilled in Logo.]
11/8/2012 1:55:38 AM
I've read parts of it; although the text of the bill doesn't make a compelling narrative (it's mostly, as IdiotSavanTxBoY alluded to, a set of instructions for modifying the United States Code, and therefore requires cross-referencing the Code to determine its effect), the places where large pieces of text are added definitely help you get an idea about it.This is the law as entered into the Statutes at Large: http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-111publ148/pdf/PLAW-111publ148.pdfIf you want "compelling narrative," consider reading Supreme Court opinions; I recommend the one upholding most of Obamacare without granting general authority to compel the purchase of a product or service, while making its Medicaid expansion voluntary on the part of the states.The slip opinion for NFIB v. Sebelius is here: http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/11-393c3a2.pdf
11/8/2012 2:23:50 AM
11/8/2012 2:36:24 AM
Some people are having trouble with this because in their mind private==free market. As soon as you see that this is not true, you will recognize that we have private health care and it has ballooned because of privatization. Our health care is not a free market, would not be a free market with any kind of voucher plan, and is private. Its the worst kind of privatization and its the reason costs are so high. We need actual socialized healthcare.
11/8/2012 7:03:42 AM
11/8/2012 8:00:14 AM
A welfare state is not Socialism. Obamacare did not put the means of production into the hands of the working class. Words have meanings. Stop.
11/8/2012 8:01:22 AM
11/8/2012 8:06:07 AM
11/8/2012 8:21:36 AM
11/8/2012 8:23:41 AM
11/8/2012 8:39:13 AM
For real. Obama started campaigning on universal, single payer, then it was downgraded to a public option, then finally the mandate because they thought Republicans would agree to one of their own ideas if the Democrats proposed it (ha ha ha). If Obamacare is Socialist, the Republicans of the 1990's were Socialist, and campaign-2008-Obama was fucking Kim Jong Il.[Edited on November 8, 2012 at 8:48 AM. Reason : .]
11/8/2012 8:47:39 AM
Obama never campaigned on universal single payer. His campaign plan was a series of reforms to lower the cost of care, but he opposed any kind of individual mandate.After the election, he realized that the individual mandate was necessary in order to spread coverage to the poor and uninsurable.[Edited on November 8, 2012 at 9:30 AM. Reason : 2]
11/8/2012 9:29:52 AM
healthcare costs are what drive healthcare costs, not the payer. if you want to control costs you have to fix all the problems that exist at the provider level. anyone who tells you otherwise is a lying sack of shit (politicians) or an idiot (political supporters)the best way to start fixing providers is to start implementing process controls whole hog. the few good bits of obamacare are the penalties that punish poor process controls, but they're limited in scope and amount. We need more work at the provider level and less smoke and mirrors about payment.
11/8/2012 9:34:51 AM
I agree there are several good bits of Obamacare. My problem is that I don't trust the people in charge to identify what's good and what's bad. Case in point...
11/8/2012 10:01:57 AM
11/8/2012 10:22:03 AM
That was from 2003, dude.In the 2008 election cycle, he his healthcare stance was a series of reforms that preserved the employer-based model of coverage, while lowering cost. He opposed any type of mandate until after he was elected.http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2009/jul/16/barack-obama/obama-statements-single-payer-have-changed-bit/[Edited on November 8, 2012 at 10:31 AM. Reason : 2]
11/8/2012 10:29:29 AM
11/8/2012 10:30:58 AM