Well then, allow me to address your argument based on semantics and rephrase my assertion to say "All of the things the government does in that example were put in place b/c the private sector couldn't or wouldn't do it in a way that benefits the general public."
8/9/2009 4:55:37 PM
That is an entirely different assertion than the first, but equally as questionable. I will leave it there given the subject of this thread.
8/9/2009 5:06:27 PM
I find it rather telling that none of you on the right felt inclined to refute the video from page 12 that Supplanter posted. . .
8/9/2009 5:58:29 PM
I didnt watch it. Its rachel maddow. Its like getting your news from SNL only without some of the facts.
8/9/2009 6:14:26 PM
that's the spirit.
8/9/2009 6:18:30 PM
Article I, Section 8, Clause 3:[The Congress shall have power] To regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the Indian tribes;Let that put an end to the constitutional question.
8/9/2009 6:40:11 PM
Under today's bastardized interpretation of the commerce clause, it is difficult to argue a universal health-care scheme is outside the purview of the commerce clause. The original intention of the commerce clause was to prevent restrictions on inter-state trade (e.g. state-level tariffs). Unfortunately, a number of SC judges (particularly during the New Deal) have gradually expanded the scope of the commerce clause based on their own interpretation of what the clause ought to mean as opposed to what it did mean to those who ratified it. (i.e. bypassing congress and the states in changing the meaning of the constitution)[Edited on August 9, 2009 at 8:03 PM. Reason : .]
8/9/2009 7:56:52 PM
So given that consumers can't buy health insurance across state lines, what part of health insurance is interstate commerce?
8/9/2009 9:02:21 PM
^?I live in VA. I get health insurance from my job who pays me from NJ. My insurer for VA is based in MD.
8/9/2009 9:16:32 PM
^^Congress has the constitutional right to pass a law forbidding such restrictions, but my guess is they have not done so given the lobbying efforts of state governments, who use mandates to satisfy their political ends, and insurance companies, who prefer the limited competition.^ Large employers self-insure and thus are exempt from state regulations under ERISA[Edited on August 9, 2009 at 9:27 PM. Reason : ,]
8/9/2009 9:21:15 PM
^^^It's also been arguably expanded to reach anything that affects interstate commerce.
8/9/2009 10:05:35 PM
8/9/2009 10:21:20 PM
Conservatism And Healthcare
8/9/2009 11:50:08 PM
that's funny. because gov't involvement in healthcare is what has caused those 4 things he mentioned in the 2nd-ish paragraph. How, then, is more gov't the solution, again?
8/10/2009 12:11:55 AM
Healthcare has a largely inelastic demand. When you get sick, you don't call around and price shop, especially for emergency care. Its not like shopping around for a used car or an XBox 360 game. There's not enough competition in healthcare to keep prices down. Only one side has the information and the organization to effectively negotiate prices, and then they lobby and get decisionmakers to create policies that empower them even more. That is not a free market, that is an anti-competitive market. And at least the government does not have a financial incentive to drop my coverage or deny my claims to satiate some "shareholder" somewhere.[Edited on August 10, 2009 at 12:55 AM. Reason : .]
8/10/2009 12:52:23 AM
couple questions about the bill and I'm hoping someone on here is a lawyer or knows legal speak. I am simply posting a specific line in the health bill (with the exact location of it) and am hoping that someone can either confirm or deny (with actual proof) my take on what it says. Since I haven't read everything and even if I had, I'd be lying if I said I understood what they were referring to in each line, so perhaps we can at least agree on what it says, regardless of whether or not we/you/I think it is right/wrong or good/bad.quick link http://energycommerce.house.gov/Press_111/20090714/aahca.pdfFirst up: page 59, lines 21-24
8/10/2009 4:58:46 AM
^ I assume you're referring to the House bill.I've found through looking through it that it's most comprehensible to take into context the entire section of any given subsection.That being said, most of what I have gathered is that the bill primarily provides provisions for various different services regarding a wide range of aspects concerning health care. Automatic funds transfer, I assume, would be no different than what millions of Americans already elect as their preferred payment method to thousands of corporations for countless services.
8/10/2009 5:53:12 AM
^^i really doubt it. especially considering plenty of americans don't have bank accounts.and that seems to say to me that they will have to allow for electronic funds transfers. not that they will require them.this is what it is amending:http://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/ssact/title11/1173.htm[Edited on August 10, 2009 at 7:49 AM. Reason : .]
8/10/2009 7:35:53 AM
Oh, sweet Jesus!'Un-American' attacks can't derail health care debate By Nancy Pelosi and Steny HoyerAugust 10, 2009
8/10/2009 7:50:27 AM
8/10/2009 7:51:33 AM
I don't think people should be shouting down others--I've been consistent in this. And concerning health care, I would much rather see a reasoned debate and discussion in the arena of ideas.But my point is that I didn't see Pelosi et al anywhere in sight when conservatives were being verbally and physically attacked. But now that it's happening to liberal Democrats, it's suddenly somehow "un-American." In any event, I think the type of uproarious meetings we've seen are quintessentially American. For God's sake, haven't Pelosi and Hoyer ever seen The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance?
8/10/2009 8:20:09 AM
The Democrats are running scared because they know that either their political careers or the pack of lies they are selling is doomed.
8/10/2009 8:27:54 AM
Not to defend the liberal democrat healthcare boondoggle or say that two wrongs make a right but the rhetoric
8/10/2009 8:35:16 AM
^ Except. . .
8/10/2009 8:41:36 AM
8/10/2009 8:52:29 AM
8/10/2009 9:03:48 AM
8/10/2009 9:09:01 AM
^ What, conservatives being attacked?! Meet my thread about it:message_topic.aspx?topic=500124&page=1[Edited on August 10, 2009 at 9:33 AM. Reason : And have you already forgotten the Tancredo incident at UNC?]
8/10/2009 9:23:23 AM
i'm sorry if i don't feel sorry for the conservative pundits like buchanan and coulter trying to get a rise out of people. that is the entire point of their careers. and really i don't see the list in that thread as particularly long or impressive in regards to liberal attacks on conservatives. i could probably find an equally damning list about conservatives just from tea parties or people threatening ACORN employees.[Edited on August 10, 2009 at 9:35 AM. Reason : omg a pie!!!]^did i say it had never happened? i just don't think the equivalence is there.[Edited on August 10, 2009 at 9:36 AM. Reason : .]
8/10/2009 9:34:32 AM
8/10/2009 9:36:03 AM
8/10/2009 10:38:35 AM
8/10/2009 10:57:27 AM
I forgot to also mention in my previous post that the 15-year RAND health-insurance experiment concluded that there was no significant difference in the health outcomes between those who paid zero out-of-pocket and those who paid high coinsurance rates despite the former group using services much more often.
8/10/2009 11:23:17 AM
What are you telling me to "STFU" about.I was in a large part agreeing with you and talking shit about Pelosi's comments as well as my concerns over the healthcare bill.This was your chance to be like "yeah no matter who does this they are wrong.Instead you actually indirectly support my argument through example. So anyone who voted against the said actions in the 2001-2003 era are unpatriotic terrorist sympathizers yet those who supported it lacked the balls and were pussies for following along. So when push comes to shove you do in fact hooksaw care more about carrying the party line, dissenting teh opposition at all costs (even in the rare case the logic circuits in your brain turn on to recognize an instance the democrats MAY be right about any particular issue), and playing partisan hack (b.c it makes everything way more exciting like having a UNC v NCSU game 52 weeks a year). Surely compromise and working together to find the best solution for all of america (not just special interests, big corporations, and minority poor voters) is unpatriotic pussy silly stuff.[Edited on August 10, 2009 at 11:32 AM. Reason : a]
8/10/2009 11:31:14 AM
^ You must be stupid or something. This is the deal on the Patriot Act:
8/10/2009 12:00:29 PM
8/10/2009 12:04:41 PM
8/10/2009 12:06:04 PM
To be honest, without Republicans acting in good faith to limit the cost of this reform, it more than likely will be much more expensive than it should be. But yeah, the base responds better to retarded youtube videos, it seems.
8/10/2009 12:12:24 PM
^^^ If I were, I would--but I'm not.
8/10/2009 12:21:14 PM
If you want to play the independent card, you're going to have to disagree with Republicans at some point.
8/10/2009 12:22:34 PM
The republicans are perfect though! They always act in a patriotic American way and always support the bills most fulfilling to freedom, Jesus, and the interests of all American people. The democrats though are just freedom hating communists that are just trying to win the minority vote by handing out welfare checks and destroying big businesses. They also threaten national security by attempting a pussy thing called "diplomacy" instead of just sending in (or threatening to send in) the tanks and making all the evil doers in other countries agree with our values in liberty.
8/10/2009 12:29:47 PM
^^ and ^ You're both idiot trolls.
8/10/2009 12:32:02 PM
That's hilarious.Because those three things are the same three things every other Republican didn't like about George Bush, too.
8/10/2009 12:35:56 PM
^ And? Except I'm not a Republican--do mine have to be different? Says who, you?And that is not an all-inclusive list, dumbass. Perhaps I'll provide one for you sometime--in the meantime, you can piss off, idiot troll.
8/10/2009 12:46:28 PM
"I'm a Republican! Except I'm not!"And then the classic hooksaw personal attack. The hallmark of a winning argument.
8/10/2009 12:53:36 PM
8/10/2009 12:57:11 PM
8/10/2009 1:03:42 PM
^Boone, I truly feel sorry for you if you dont remember that basically EVERY NEWS SHOW IN THE NATION was covering the implosion of the Republican party late last year/early this year. A 2 year old has a better memory than that.And this has nothing to do with Youtube. If the middle class has to pick up any burden to pay for worse healtcare than what it already recieves, there is going to be a backlash.[Edited on August 10, 2009 at 1:18 PM. Reason : .]
8/10/2009 1:12:43 PM
If you can identify a single member of the conservative base who voted for Obama, I'll concede that you might not be posting via interdimensional wormhole.
8/10/2009 1:17:57 PM
8/10/2009 1:23:38 PM