getting about time to take up arms
3/27/2012 5:33:27 PM
Yeah, fuck helping other people.
3/27/2012 5:40:09 PM
Electricity is price-controlled to protect citizens from what would otherwise be an entirely unregulated monopoly. Similarly, hospitals are usually complete monopolies in an area. Therefore the price of every service they offer should be set by the government.I'll be glad when this weak healthcare law is overturned so we can get busy really regulating things.
3/27/2012 5:51:23 PM
3/27/2012 5:52:00 PM
3/27/2012 5:55:47 PM
@disco_stuWhat are we supposed to take from the quoted article? That people give health insurance will have health insurance? If anything, it is a condemnation of the group that was provided access to Medicaid. Only a quarter of them took it.
3/27/2012 5:59:24 PM
Students should be drafted from the general populace to undergo medical training with no right of refusal.Anyone accepting government healthcare assistance should be required to submit to dietary monitoring and daily physical training.[Edited on March 27, 2012 at 6:05 PM. Reason : .]
3/27/2012 5:59:53 PM
http://www.npr.org/2012/03/27/149465820/transcript-supreme-court-the-health-care-law-and-the-individual-mandateThere's no way this shit doesn't get overturned. Verrilli is a bumbling fool.
3/27/2012 6:27:22 PM
Supreme court justices sit around and have shitty arguments all day just like we do. Only they are GODS. [Edited on March 27, 2012 at 7:56 PM. Reason : .]
3/27/2012 7:47:40 PM
one justice hinted at this today, but the absurdity of claiming that "healthcare isn't like other industries because you are already in the market" is due to the fact that CONGRESS MADE IT THAT WAY. Congress fucked up the market in a way that everyone knew would fuck it up, so now the only solution is for the gov't to tell you you now have to buy something. The only solution to a law being in existence is not to repeal the law, but for Congress to make a massive power grab. what. the. fuck.
3/27/2012 8:22:27 PM
3/27/2012 8:26:52 PM
3/27/2012 8:58:15 PM
Yes, taxes are tyranny.
3/27/2012 9:45:09 PM
Ha ha. The penalties in the law are largely voluntary because the law specifically prevents the IRS from any recourse when someone refuses to pay the penalty other than deducting it from your refund check. As such, everyone, just refuse to get insurance until you are sick, adjust your withholding to make sure you owe every year, and then refuse to pay the penalties to the IRS. Bravo. http://reason.com/blog/2012/03/27/if-the-penalty-for-uninsured-taxpayers-s
3/27/2012 11:00:47 PM
Ha! Yes so funny. Let's pretend to be safe because of some loophole that can be filled later on.
3/28/2012 1:17:58 AM
No really, how is this different from raising everyone's taxes, then giving tax breaks to people with insurance? Doesn't that sort of thing happen all the time?
3/28/2012 8:04:31 AM
Apparently it costs $600 to get tested for a few common STDs. Holy hellAt least I know I don't have the clap.
3/28/2012 9:23:32 AM
3/28/2012 10:05:34 AM
3/28/2012 10:58:15 AM
At only $300 a month, you too could afford a single round of cancer treatment after only 2 years! Self-insure today!
3/28/2012 11:06:06 AM
Nobody said you have to pay your medical bills all at one time.If you ring up a $1,000,000 bill, you don't pay yourself a premium, you just pay the bill $300 for the rest of your life. As long as you make a valiant effort to pay your bill based on your income, you'll be safe from the hospital suing you.
3/28/2012 11:13:22 AM
And how do you think the hospital will go about making up the costs you can't pay despite your "valiant effort to pay your bill based on your income" ?
3/28/2012 11:17:12 AM
Overcharging.
3/28/2012 11:20:48 AM
Simple. Communize the entire medical labor field, revoke all medical patents, collectivize pharmaceutical manufacturing and the costs will simply disappear. If it drives innovation overseas, so be it. We have sufficient medical technology now in most cases that is simply wasted because the majority of patients can't afford it. Let the foreigners do the R&D, we'll just steal it like communists have always done.
3/28/2012 11:20:52 AM
3/28/2012 11:26:48 AM
3/28/2012 11:37:16 AM
3/28/2012 12:12:38 PM
I'd rather pool my risk with people will help bring down my premium. I don't want to pool risk with obese people, old people, smokers, etc. Those people are likely to be very costly to the insurance company.You do have some idea of what group you're in. No, you don't know if you're going to get hit by a bus or get cancer, but these are low risk, high cost scenarios. If you're fat, you smoke, and you never exercise, you're going to get diabetes or heart disease on a long enough timeline. Those people should have to pay higher premiums. I want to shop for insurance that calculates the risk I present and charges me an appropriate premium.Yes, you could make the argument that everyone will be old, therefore everyone will benefit from paying in. It's just not true. Old people do have more health problems, but these problems can be the consequences of a lifetime of bad choices. You can sometimes get away with being obese for the first 40 or 50 years of your life. After that, shit will go downhill fast. There are 80 year olds that are healthier and actually present less of a liability to the insurance company than 35 year olds.I know - it's just not fair that healthy people pay less. Everyone should pay the same premium and the same costs, even if they're 500x the burden on the system than others.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 12:38 PM. Reason : ]
3/28/2012 12:35:17 PM
3/28/2012 12:37:58 PM
3/28/2012 12:40:51 PM
I'm tired of paying for people that don't pay for their own insurance.When an uninsured freeloader shows up at an emergency room, they still receive healthcare that isn't paid for by them.It gets paid through tax-supported public programs, the health care provider lose profits who then shift the cost to private insurance companies which result our premiums going up!
3/28/2012 12:47:32 PM
Health care costs less than people think.I just got a minor outpatient surgery done.I also had an ER visitI also had a doctor's visit.I also has a preliminary doctors visit.I got a varicose vain fixed from my kidney to my leg. I had sedation. I was uninsured the whole time.Sentara Hospital sent me a bill for $743. I called today and said I was ready to pay, but before I do, were there any pay in full discounts or cash discounts by paying directly so the hospital could bypass the credit card fees. She told me there were no cash discounts, but there was a 20% uninsured discount. So it only cost me $592 for the hospital costs.It only cost me $170 for the ER visit for a separate incident altogether.My physician/doctor charged $352 for the surgeryThe preliminary check up to a physician to get surgery set up was $183.The preliminary ultra sound was $110 performed at the major hospital.Grand Total: $1400. That is only 4.6 monthly payments to yourself for $300 for an invasive outpatient surgery.While I was on the phone, I was typing this and they gave me another 20% the $170 ER visit for an uninsured discount. More than likely, I can get 20% off all the bills.It's not as intimidating as people make it out to be.In fact, even my doctor quoted me $5000 for this whole procedure. That is pretty far off the mark.
3/28/2012 12:53:17 PM
They would have charged insurance $10,000, who would have then paid $5000 as predicted.Communism is the only answer.
3/28/2012 12:55:35 PM
Communism is not the answer.The abolishment of insurance is an answer.It will force pricing wars, like normal competition, competing for your business.
3/28/2012 12:59:14 PM
For anyone who wants more data on medical costs than GeniuSxBoy's self reported anecdote:http://www.consumerhealthratings.com/index.php?action=showSubCats&cat_id=274
3/28/2012 1:02:05 PM
3/28/2012 1:05:24 PM
Based on the arguments today, it sounds like the SCOTUS doesn't feel like going through the entire 2700 page law to decide what else stays or goes if the mandate is struck down. That means it'll be an all or nothing decision and I just don't see them ruling against two centuries of precedent by wiping the entire law out. It'll be 6-3 in favor of the mandate.
3/28/2012 1:05:59 PM
3/28/2012 1:09:53 PM
So, are you saying your claimed costs are roughly representative of those the uninsured can expect?[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 1:21 PM. Reason : .]
3/28/2012 1:21:08 PM
3/28/2012 1:29:28 PM
3/28/2012 1:35:16 PM
3/28/2012 1:48:02 PM
3/28/2012 1:48:32 PM
"Generally" because there are a lot of cons out there. The more people are confused about the system the more the con can get away with.
3/28/2012 1:49:43 PM
Explain the "yes" part. What data are you comparing your personal experience to? Typically when someone makes a general statement, they're doing so based on knowledge of...something general.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 1:53 PM. Reason : .]
3/28/2012 1:52:28 PM
My sister has a terminal illness, so it's covered by insurance and (my mom and her) don't ask questions about the price of things.The cost of 1 pill is 20 times more than the cost a customer (us) can get the same pill at Rite Aid.If you think about it, Rite Aid's regular price is already 2-4 times the price they, themselves buy the medicine. Therefore by the time insurance pays for it, insurance is paying 2 x 20 to 4 x 20 markup = 40times the mark up to 80 times the mark up for one pill.For example. One pill at cost to insurance is $20. The price you can get the same one pill at Rite Aid is $1. The price Rite Aid buys the pill is 25 to 50 cents.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 2:05 PM. Reason : .]
3/28/2012 2:03:28 PM
Last trip to Rex a friend of mine took cost $9,000. That was for 10 minutes with a doctor and a non-ICU stay overnight.GeniuSxBoY seems to be referring to a functional medical market, which is something I think most Americans are unacquainted with. Small practices offering reasonable and competitive prices for honest services is such a small fraction of the medical industry it's hardly even relevant to this discussion about the state of our national health care and health insurance industry.
3/28/2012 2:03:53 PM
3/28/2012 2:06:52 PM
3/28/2012 2:09:35 PM
I was asking what data you're comparing your experience with the doctor/ER/surgery to, not a tangential story about your sister buying a prescription drug. That is, do you have any reason to believe that your costs were representative of the country at large aside from "Saying so bolsters my argument."I have a few anecdotes too though, in addition to the average-cost consumer information on that page I provided before. My girlfriend, for instance, got 3 stitches about a month ago after stepping on some glass at a pool. She's uninsured and had to pay $1100 for a 2 hour visit to the emergency room plus $150 for an x-ray. Of course, we didn't really spend time shopping around, her foot was sort of pouring out blood.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 2:20 PM. Reason : .]
3/28/2012 2:19:45 PM