12/21/2009 8:42:37 PM
^^^AHAHAHA, so you regularly insist the whole two-party system is fucked.But when the Senate botches the public option, you claim it worked beautifully as a check on the mercurial whims of the American public.You're a fucking douche bag.[Edited on December 21, 2009 at 8:46 PM. Reason : ]
12/21/2009 8:42:43 PM
12/21/2009 8:45:32 PM
You didn't answer my question. Does a senator himself have to do the filibustering or can he commit a bevy of clerks to do his biding?
12/21/2009 9:42:10 PM
having the clerk read the bill isn't a filibuster. like i said, one amongst many stall tactics.
12/21/2009 9:49:27 PM
12/21/2009 11:53:50 PM
.[Edited on December 22, 2009 at 11:57 AM. Reason : double post]
12/22/2009 11:39:04 AM
One thing I heard some legislator talking about on NPR was a part about letting people stay on their parents health insurance a little longer. Between college & getting that full time first job & waiting out a probationary period at said job can create a lapse of time when a lot of young adults go uninsured and just have to hope that nothing goes too wrong. I'd think preventative medical practices then are better than holding out & hiding a problem until you can get insured. When I worked at the vet clinic, several techs and receptionists, mostly college educated, had that as their first job, and several of them ignored health problems and ended up in the ER... like 5 people in my few years there which was some what striking because this wasn't an issue of getting more poor people insured & practicing better preventative health, it was people with a middle class background relying on ERs.Not that this necessarily has anything to do with the health care reform bill, but another annoying thing from my experiences with insurance was the rates skyrocketing at the vet clinic every year, so they would switch insurers on an annual basis. For the last 4 years or so I've never been to the doctor with the same insurance twice. The frequent switches on behalf of my employer kept prices down a little, but depending on insurers I switched back and forth from being considered a young & health male, to being one in a group of largely middle aged women with health problems. Some kind of stability year to year would have made budgetary planning a little easier.
12/22/2009 11:57:41 AM
^^^Preventing insurers from denying to coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.It's a resounding success for the Democrats in their uphill battle to righteously reform healthcare!WOOT WOOT!
12/22/2009 12:01:29 PM
That's an absolutely awful idea, though. The whole point of insurance is that you get it before something happens. If insurance companies can't deny someone that has a pre-existing condition, then why pay premiums? Just wait until you get sick, then get a plan. Get treatment, then drop it again. Who ends up footing the bill for all the premiums that the person didn't pay throughout the year? Oh, that's right...the rest of the people on the insurance plan. So now, not only are healthcare costs going to go up, but insurance premiums are going to go up. Resounding success indeed.Pre-existing conditions wouldn't even be such a huge problem if the government wasn't providing an incentive (through subsidies) for employers to pay employees with health insurance in lieu of actual wages. Health insurance does not need to be connected to your job, because you can lose your job. If these people got insurance through private plans, it wouldn't even be an issue.This is what happens when people that don't understand insurance try their hand at "reform." We get these terrible bills that only make the problem worse, and anyone who calls a spade a spade is demonized by the left as a shill for the insurance companies.
12/22/2009 12:37:35 PM
Forgive me if I keep hammering on the fact that the Republicans had a chance to do any damn thing they wanted ... The problem was the thing they wanted to do was nothing.
12/22/2009 12:43:16 PM
12/22/2009 12:45:16 PM
12/22/2009 1:14:35 PM
The Senate is already structured to overrepresent less populated states, which tend to lean conservative. A threshold of 60 obviously goes significantly further. I think much of the "statesmanship" and more national focus of senators is in many ways a thing of the past.
12/22/2009 1:37:31 PM
^ Unless you're Joe Lieberman, in which case it's "all about me."
12/22/2009 1:39:06 PM
He's no statesman, he's a Leiberman.
12/22/2009 2:52:18 PM
12/22/2009 4:08:22 PM
12/22/2009 10:19:19 PM
12/22/2009 10:24:00 PM
^What do they do if they can't afford health insurance on their own, they don't qualify for medicaid/medicare and their employer doesn't offer medical insurance, IE, someone who's unemployed, their severance ran out, yet they earned too much money for the year to qualify for Medicaid.Or how about someone who just got a new job and it takes 30 days for them to be eligible to get health insurance? Are they to wait as their cancer spreads, putting their chance of survival at a lower chance with each passing day, all because of the fucked up way the system works?No matter how you cut it, there are people who fit both of those areas. Not everyone who doesn't have health insurance is in that position because they want to. There are many people who are in a position without health insurance because they have to.And as much as you'd like to ignore the elephant in the room, there is always a chance that you yourself may find yourself in such a position one day.Health insurance and the ability to get treatment for a condition that isn't your fault isn't something that you should have to work for to get. While I'm not a big fan of welfare checks going out to people who work the system, this is one "entitlement" that I think is justified. Because whether you like it or not, the uninsured DO impact you.
12/23/2009 12:29:26 AM
Here is an e-mail from Organizing for America. I mentioned before "One thing I heard some legislator talking about on NPR was a part about letting people stay on their parents health insurance a little longer. Between college & getting that full time first job & waiting out a probationary period at said job can create a lapse of time when a lot of young adults go uninsured and just have to hope that nothing goes too wrong." But I didn't know the details beyond what I heard on NPR, this had the cut off year.
12/23/2009 4:01:36 AM
12/23/2009 8:27:49 AM
12/23/2009 8:33:21 AM
is recision the problem or is increasing rates more of the problem? I would be all for regulation against insurance companies of all types, not just health, concerning the practice of recision. its fucked up on several levels. Nationwide yanked my parent's coverage after one claim! there is something wrong with that. Insurance needs reform, I definitely agree with that. we are just going about it the wrong way.I say make them compete against each other. then you will find what the bottom line pricing is for their services.
12/23/2009 8:41:23 AM
So far I've seen two answers:"Yes, it's being abused, because it's not currently conducive to my ends""No, it's not being abused, because it is currently conducive to my ends"Any opinions regarding the filibuster that go beyond that?
12/23/2009 8:45:26 AM
It's a legitimate tactic. I don't know enough about it to know how they could reform it to make it less fucking obnoxious.I also think threatening a filibuster is exceptionally annoying...
12/23/2009 8:58:56 AM
12/23/2009 9:02:51 AM
Sure it's legitimate. Is it ideal?I'm not so sure, anymore. Look at how it's been used in the past. There aren't any real-life Mr. Smiths.Then there's the issue of giving the filibuster to the Senate. The body that is inherently less-representative of the will of the people. Ideally, I'd give it to the House.
12/23/2009 10:31:27 AM
What would be ideal is if we actually followed the constitution and the 10th amendment. The senate would be taking on a lot less responsibility and there wouldn't be as much of a need for filibusters. If we had filibusters in the House, that would be epic. Nothing would ever get passed, with the exception of salary increases, maybe. It's supposed to be harder for things to pass in the Senate. Cloture serves as a balance for filibusters, and I think it's better to err on the side of legislation being too hard to pass, rather than too easy.
12/23/2009 10:45:04 AM
12/23/2009 11:20:14 AM
12/23/2009 1:24:36 PM
^ No. Not exactly. You're over-generalizing just as much as he is. There is no way that he can backup what he had said with concrete facts. I will concede that there are people who don't prioritize health insurance. But his generalization is one based on belief, not facts. Just as there are people who spend their money on 100 dolllar/month cell phone plans, big screen TVs and expensive cable/Internet packages, there are families of four making just enough money to pay for their car to get to work, and for rent and food to put on the table, and clothes to put on their children's, as well as their own. However, they aren't eligible medicaid, and there's very little financial aid to help them out. Sure, maybe they can actually purchase health insurance, but it's one thing to actually be able to buy something, and another to afford it. I had a friend who I worked with who was diabetic (Type I). He was 21 at the time, moved to Greenville, SC and had just gotten a job at a plant that I was at. He had just rented an apartment with a friend (I think split between them, he was paying something like 150 bucks a month). He was making 8 bucks an hour at the plant, wasn't eligible for Medicaid OR for the group health care, in which the wait period was 60 days. In case you don't know, insulin is VERY expensive, especially if you're making 8 bucks an hour.I recall one day at work his insulin pump stopped working properly. He had to leave work early (a 12 hour shift), go home and be on the phone all day. This kid wasn't some person trying to live beyond his means. He drove a 1994 Honda Civic, lived in a reasonable apartment, and yes, he had a cell phone as his only means of communication (I think he had something like a 40 dollar/month plan, not one of those over-exaggerated 100 dollar/month plan that you used). Fortunately, he was able to get on the phone with his doctor, who helped him override the pump settings, after figuring out that the tube had a little clog in it. He was VERY lucky he didn't have to go to an emergency room, which would have cost him 3,000 dollars of money he simply didn't have. It was ridiculous for him to have had to risk his life, all because he didn't want to be hammered by health cost and end up financially bitch slapped.So please, my friends, tell me how the system is working for people in similar situations as him? Because to me, it's pretty God damn shitty. It's pretty shitty that he has to make a 1 month supply of insulin last 2 months, and it's pretty shitty that he has to risk diabetic coma, all for reasons that aren't really his fault... After all, he didn't ask for Diabetes.We can get into gross over-generalizations, or we can get into specific examples, that are either fictional and plausible, or real examples. But I think this summary in a Wikipedia article bests describes the current situation, as it encompasses many aspects of why people are uninsured:
12/23/2009 4:29:47 PM
Tbill doesn't change any of that, and no bill will change any of that. The government cannot legislate lower costs, period. All it can do is move money around, and that's what it's doing. If you want to take money from one person and give it to another, then just come out and say it. Trying to force people to buy insurance isn't going to solve the problem, though.[Edited on December 23, 2009 at 4:40 PM. Reason : ]
12/23/2009 4:40:09 PM
12/23/2009 4:42:36 PM
Bridget put in another thread that she has many medical issues, they will not deny you coverage but you will be paying through the nose for it.....so it will be too expensive for you to have.
12/23/2009 4:42:52 PM
^^ Yeah, I know that there's more, but that's been "The Big One" as far as making coverage more affordable, as well as allowing people to "pool together" and buy insurance together, much like how group plans for large companies work.I don't need to read 47 pages of arguments, when I can just read a 1 page summary off the GOP website:http://www.gop.gov/solutions/healthcareto find out about their ideas. While some of their ideas I agree with, like allowing people to buy across state lines and tort reform, I'm just wary about the actual effectiveness it has for people who cannot afford health insurance. I just feel that it will do little to address the problem that uninsured people have on premium rates. It can make things better for people who already have health insurance, and help ensure that they keep the coverage they have now. So if their ideas were to end up in the bill, I would be definitely for it. But I don't see that happening. Not with the way the GOP have been hell bent on stopping this bill. They seem to be more focussed on trying to stop this bill than trying to see their own ideas on lowering health insurance costs included in the bill. I suppose that it is because they want to break all associations with the bill. Instead of taking what might end up to be a mediocre bill (don't fret, the senate version isn't what will go to the President's desk, the House and Senate still have to meet to iron out the differences between both of their bills) and making it a better bill, by having stuff that can potentially lower insurance costs as well as having stuff that can potentially bring in more insured people (which can also help lower insurance costs), they just want to do what's in the interest of their own party, not in the interest of what's best for the nation.Of course, part of this is speculation, as I don't know of what was said behind closed doors.
12/23/2009 5:19:51 PM
^ Two things:1) the GOP != everyone opposed to the proposed reform2) Putting measures to reduce insurance costs in a bill that will increase insurance costs is rather pointless. At best you're doing nothing, at worst you're making it more difficult to get the costs reduced.However this conversation is better suited for the health care thread.
12/23/2009 5:45:24 PM
^ You're right about where this discussion should be.I will just say this. While you're right that if you put in cost savings measure in a bill that may increase health costs might mean that the total change in costs will stay the same now. But it's not pointless, because if you can get more people onto health insurance while keeping the costs the same, that, too me, is having your cake an eating it too. Even if it means that health costs might go up a bit, it's still a win win, because it's not going up as much.There's no way to make everyone happy. In my opinion, if you go the GOP route, you save people who have health insurance now, while not really fixing the crux of the issue. But if you go strictly the Democrat route, you get to the crux of the issue (to some extent), but costs potentially increase, which pisses off people who have insurance now. With both sides bickering the way that they are, I prefer it to be an all Democrat bill than an all GOP bill, but I would MUCH rather have an equal contribution on the bill in which both sides are taken in account for. I think that would yield the best bill.As it stands now, we, the citizens have to just sit by and watch this childish bickering between parties as one party cries "They're not letting us participate, so we'll filibuster," and the other cries, "STFU, you had your chance." All we get are bills that fix certain issues, while creating or exacerbating others.
12/23/2009 5:59:36 PM
12/23/2009 10:11:31 PM
12/23/2009 10:26:09 PM
Re: original postThe filibuster isn't being abused half as much as the United States Constitution. As long as it's being employed to fight legislation that is directly contrary to the law of the land, and/or a bad idea, I'm all for it.
12/23/2009 10:28:52 PM
Well put
12/23/2009 10:51:11 PM
maybe they should make the microphone get increasingly hotter the longer someone speaks into it. yeah, you can filibuster, but you've got to be willing to burn a few fingers over it.and dems should call lieberman's bluff. seriously. i doubt he has the stamina to talk that long. he'll need a nap at some point. he might even talk long enough to where he switches his position mid-filibuster[Edited on December 25, 2009 at 3:53 AM. Reason : ]
12/25/2009 3:42:52 AM
I do not see why there is such political stigma in altering one's political position or "flip-flopping" as politicians say it as a prejorative. This being directed at the lieberman comment above.You would think flip-flopping at least over the long term would be a positive trait in a politician. This means that you are not stubbornly constrained within party lines and are willing to be flexible with our opinion as new evidence or ideas arise regarding a given topic.
12/25/2009 3:27:37 PM
please. the comment is referring to lieberman's history of swaying with the polls. not to mention that republican scorn toward the democratic party almost always is on the basis of "flip-flopping."a politician changing his/her opinion in light of new evidence/results is one thing, but grand-standing and threatening to filibuster is quite another.
12/26/2009 3:02:47 PM
^^he directly advocated for a medicare buy-in because it was in opposition to the public option being put forth by the democrats at the time. and then when the dems switched to basically exactly what he had advocated for for YEARS he all of the sudden can't vote for it in good conscience now that the dems supported it. sounds pretty fishy to me. and i'm not usually one to care about flip-flopping. if he gave some adequate explanation as to what changed his mind then maybe i'd be okay with it. but he didn't.
12/26/2009 3:36:57 PM
12/27/2009 2:28:40 PM
Alright, the mystery of my medical issues has been solved. Somebody sarcastically suggested that I should join the military, and I lamely joked that I would get so many STDs that they'd have to kick me out.
12/28/2009 2:40:38 PM
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2010/02/04/biden-ponders-filibuster-reform/?fbid=_uZnLbrB2TV
2/4/2010 11:39:39 PM
2/9/2010 6:40:55 PM