^^ where in the hell did that come from?
3/14/2008 2:38:13 PM
3/14/2008 2:38:46 PM
If I am paying money into the SS system, then I had best get that returned to me. If not, then its just another tax which I am personally not willing to pay. Fuck socialism
3/14/2008 2:42:34 PM
haha. you think you will see any of that money back. how cute
3/14/2008 2:45:21 PM
3/14/2008 2:47:29 PM
3/14/2008 2:59:58 PM
3/14/2008 3:01:32 PM
^^ Hey, man, I didn't bring up fucking Iraq/War on Terror--how about putting the blame where it belongs? But with some of the moonbats, all roads of discourse lead to the war and Bush-bashing--and you know it.^ QED. [Edited on March 14, 2008 at 3:05 PM. Reason : .]
3/14/2008 3:04:50 PM
^^ We're not in Iran, we're probably not going to invade it. We don't have any substantial force in Venezuela (though I'm sure somebody is down there).Iraq is improving daily and we do have a moral responsibility to fix what we have broken. As Colin Powell said, "you break it, you buy it." Unfortunately that price is being paid for the apathetic masses by the in the blood of a relatively small number of service members and, quite probably on the backs of they and their peer's economic futures. I do believe that hope exists for Iraq and largely because we have one of the most brilliant minds the US military has produced in 50 years at the head of our forces now. I've been able to sit in teleconferences with GEN Petraeus and I can tell you the man is absolutely phenominal in his grasp of the details and realities he faces. It is a very pleasant contrast to those on both sides who spin results on the ground to their personal political agendas.^ hey big guy, you need to get over the fact that every time someone replies to your comments, it doesn't mean they're attacking you personally. The war on terror is a relevant topic when we discuss how we spend our money. You, however, have stated numerous times that simply appealing to numbers isn't a justification for something and when you point out just how ignorant the masses you're referring to are (and I hope to God you believe that the fact that only 28% of the public has any grasp of the price we're paying in blood is a shameful fact) then your comments take up space without adding to the debate.For the purposes of this debate, the question isn't the morality of the war, it is the conduct of military operations and our bang:buck ratio.]
3/14/2008 3:14:50 PM
^ You can't be serious--"public attitudes" are directly related to funding of the war. It's only because of the public attitudes toward the war that funding for it has continued.If people were truly as against the war as the media and others have portrayed and claimed, we would have been out of Iraq long ago. I'm not off topic at all.
3/14/2008 3:31:15 PM
Back on topic. With the war in Iraq being an inevitability for the next 24 months (the minimum estimate currently being put forth by the DoD for extraction of service members) do we really respond to that by implementing a health care program that will massively increase the federal debt and, at some point, possibly push the nation into depression?
3/14/2008 3:35:42 PM
Hooksaw The majority of the 1 trillion $ spent in iraq is spent fighting brown people.And thats what we're currently discussing. Not the billions spent more then half a century ago.
3/14/2008 4:12:30 PM
We're not discussing brown people at all actually.
3/14/2008 4:21:07 PM
No, you're discussing the federal budgetA noticeable part of which will be the Iraq war.
3/14/2008 4:25:03 PM
Correct. And it is going to go on for at least two more years, so it doesn't factor in the short term of our discussion. It is also something that we have far less discretion over -- since, as Duke pointed out, it is ongoing -- than something that hasn't even been started.But he is right to say that a government program such as UHC would be ongoing. That sort of commitment is killing companies like GM right now. We assume that those economic laws do not apply to us because we have been the world superpower for so long, but when people start dumping dollars, something to that effect most certainly will apply. So, the question is, do we continue down the path we're on, or start making cuts, where possible, in order to bring our fiscal alignment back into order.What good is UHC if the economy collapses?]
3/14/2008 4:26:23 PM
^^^^ Case in point.^^^ You may not be discussing "brown people," but he and some others here are--THEY CARE MORE THAN ANYBODY ELSE ABOUT THE BROWN PEOPLE! I KNOW THIS BECAUSE THEY CONSTANTLY TELL ME THEY DO!!!1In any event, the following post by you in another thread was really on topic, JCASH.[/sarcasm] Get off your fucking high horse, will you?http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=500489&page=10
3/14/2008 4:41:59 PM
^^yepwhy, oh why, would anyone think this is a good idea? i mean, look at how it turns out every time we try a social experiment like this--the federal gov't fucks it away massively. why on Earth do people want to do it AGAIN, especially on such a large scale?i mean, under the best of circumstances, Social Security is not a good program. Under less than ideal circumstances (retiring baby boomers), it's a crippling mess. Entitlement programs in general eat up a colossal amount of our budget (and I use that term loosely), and generally don't produce particularly good effectiveness (and some of them are a downright waste).The fact that our current system is AFU is not justification to enact a different, yet still retarded, wasteful, and unconstitutional system....and once we have it, we will be stuck with it forever...just like nobody is willing to take it in the teeth in the short term to get rid of Social Security.[Edited on March 14, 2008 at 4:50 PM. Reason : asfd]
3/14/2008 4:49:07 PM
3/14/2008 11:05:07 PM
3/15/2008 12:27:11 AM
It sure does.Does the word "relative" mean anything to you?
3/15/2008 12:34:05 AM
I have a lot of reasons for thinking that a socialist system would be an absolute disaster. But I'm too tired to spell them out for you right now. Suffice it to say that what works for France wouldn't work the same way for the US.
3/15/2008 12:51:06 AM
3/15/2008 1:17:40 AM
3/15/2008 2:31:20 AM
3/15/2008 3:05:30 AM
3/15/2008 8:24:55 AM
3/15/2008 10:56:59 AM
3/15/2008 2:39:42 PM
If you assume that the expense can be taken care of and the level of care would remain more or less the same (all of these somewhat doubtful to me)Then you have to bring up the fact that this will give the government more control over our daily lives. Currently, its not the government's business on the surgeries youve had or the drugs you are taking. If they control healthcare they can make it their business. It would be a basis for outlawing smoking, trans fats, and even alcohol in an effort to "cut costs." Right now what you do with your body is the business of you and your Insurance/healthcare provider, your Insurance cant pass laws (although i bet they wish they could, lobby anyone?)
3/15/2008 3:26:26 PM
JCSASHFAN, GM's problems relate more directly to retarded union deals and the fact that they spent 20 years making low-quality, ugly cars. A truly apples and oranges comparison.Secondly, arguing how UHC would bankrupt the government is pretty hilarious at this point seeing as how aside from having a free falling currency and still the most expensive healthcare system in the world, we're doing a pretty good job of bankrupting ourselves.BUT SANDSANTA, WE DONT WANT TO ADD TO THE PROBLEM!11!Yes, and thats why you should probably stop voting in people to power that clearly have no idea how to balance a budget. I'll readily admit that we, at this point, can't afford UHC or a vast portfolio of other progressive programs that would make our country not only more competitive on a global scale, but drastically better for the majority of you: middle and lower middle class citizens. That doesn't mean that we should discard them with a shrug and continue to embrace fiscally retarded policies.
3/16/2008 6:52:01 PM
I have to agree we should stop voting for people that spend more than they get.But how is UHC going to drastically improve my lifeif it increases my taxes which reduces my freedom of choice on how i want to spend my own money?and gives the government more basis and power to control my life?
3/16/2008 8:17:31 PM
AM I TALKING TO NO ONE?In 2006, 50% of foreclosures were due to medical expenses.ARMs may have taken a slice of that away since, but given that the actual number of foreclosures compared to all mortgages is relatively small, it wouldn't be a very big one.THE HEALTH AND ECONOMIC CRISES ARE RELATED[Edited on March 16, 2008 at 8:32 PM. Reason : ...]
3/16/2008 8:32:17 PM
the medical expenses because they were uninsured?
3/16/2008 8:55:23 PM
3/16/2008 9:54:44 PM
^^ Given the number of uninsured in the country (that'd be millions), is it so hard to believe?Yes, largely because they lacked insurance.That's the very concept of insurance.When you don't have it, your medical bills are astronomically more expensive. Especially for major medical care.
3/16/2008 11:25:05 PM
The why is pretty easy.The US pays the most for medical overhead of any industrialized nation. Ironic, considering thats the reason most of you rant against UHC in the first place right? Government causing too much bureaucracy and overhead? Couple that with the fact that the way insurance is structured actually isn't really free market to begin with, in that, you don't really have a choice when it comes to out of system medical just like you not having a choice when it comes to which health provider your company chooses.In essence, everything pointed out in this thread about the pitfalls of UHC actually describes the system this country operates under right now.
3/17/2008 12:41:18 AM
and so you think moving to a system which will REALLY implement that will make it better?how about we actually take away the fucking gov't regulation that has driven costs up so fucking dramatically in the first place? Government regulation, in the case of health care, has done what it always does. it drove up cost and decreased service. It will only get worse with UHC
3/17/2008 12:44:18 AM
^^Maybe you missed it the first two times.Allow me to re-reiterate:
3/17/2008 12:44:47 AM
^^^^if they dont have insurance then they eitherA) made the choice not to have it and decided to spend money on their big brand new house they cant afford the mortgage fororB)cant afford insurance. I understand that insurance is expensive and some people just cant afford it due to unemployment or other problems. But i think education and helping people get good jobs that they can keep is a better alternative than UHC.^^Yeah, I would be really interested to see healthcare go free market. It would be interesting to see just how far prices would go down.
3/17/2008 7:41:04 AM
message_topic.aspx?topic=456889 for UHC
3/17/2008 3:12:41 PM
Healthcare is free market currently, actually.Just not free market for you. Your employer is free to chose whoever it wants as a provider.I mean do any of you actually have any idea about what you're talking about besides duke and gamecat?I especially enjoyed the gentlemen that posted how care was free if you couldn't afford it. Do an experiment: the next time you get assigned a prescription medicine, try and get it without paying for it yourself. Also, please 2 research exactly what is covered by medicaide.
3/17/2008 3:51:47 PM
Not being explicitly laid out in the constitution does not make anything unconstitutional. If that were the case then EVERY law that isn't passed as an amendment would be unconstitutional. Now if there was anything in the constitution that said "THE GOVERNMENT WILL NEVER PROVIDE FOR THE WELFARE OF ITS CITIZENS" then I'd agree with you that it's unconstitutional.
3/17/2008 3:55:46 PM
3/17/2008 10:36:31 PM
3/17/2008 11:00:12 PM