6/28/2012 11:25:00 AM
ahahaha and now it looks like WRAL's server has crashed.
6/28/2012 11:27:08 AM
I think one of the funnier aspects of the legislation is the myth of the "pre-existing condition".House burned down but I didn't have home insurance. I want home insurance to cover that damage retroactively. The burned home was a pre-existing condition.Got in a wreck, it was my fault, totaled my car. Only had liability insurance, not comprehensive. I want insurance to cover that damage. The wrecked car was a pre-existing condition.Anyone else see how absurd this is? You don't get insurance for things that happened, you get insurance for things that might happen. It's supposed to be about pooling risk to offset costs of potential catastrophic events.
6/28/2012 11:29:36 AM
The problem is health insurance companies will pull shit like you have a melanoma biopsied years ago and you were declared 100% cured. But because you have that on your record, they won't cover you for cancer.Personally I think if we never called it insurance in the first place we wouldn't be having arguments like this. "Healthcare coverage" etc.
6/28/2012 11:32:17 AM
^you sir win an Internet
6/28/2012 11:33:40 AM
Yeah, and it's not like you have to pay the tax. Guys with guns won't show up if you refuse. They won't blow your brains out if you resist arrest. It's all voluntary and optional.
6/28/2012 11:40:35 AM
a friend of mine on Facebook keeps stating how the constitution has taken a huge blowalso he misses the days of natural selection
6/28/2012 11:54:38 AM
6/28/2012 11:56:27 AM
Enjoyhttp://www.buzzfeed.com/daves4/people-moving-to-canada-because-of-obamacare
6/28/2012 12:02:51 PM
hahah
6/28/2012 12:03:19 PM
^^For those that are saying that they will move:[Edited on June 28, 2012 at 12:06 PM. Reason : Like this one better]
6/28/2012 12:05:33 PM
6/28/2012 12:12:12 PM
6/28/2012 12:14:17 PM
6/28/2012 1:57:39 PM
6/28/2012 2:25:37 PM
I think Medicaid is something around ~16% of people. And if you add up Medicaid, Medicare, and VA benefits it's about 25%. And obviously there are income limits to Medicaid, which are not very high.[Edited on June 28, 2012 at 2:32 PM. Reason : ]
6/28/2012 2:30:21 PM
Hey Beethoven
6/28/2012 2:42:58 PM
6/28/2012 2:46:02 PM
6/28/2012 4:32:08 PM
6/28/2012 4:38:18 PM
A penalty for inaction. Sounds legit.
6/28/2012 4:41:13 PM
is there going to be an affordable option for me?because there isn't currently one
6/28/2012 4:42:27 PM
I'd rather they fine the dipshits for not buying healthcare coverage than fine everyone else who has to pay for the visits to the ER the dipshits take whenever they have a cold and don't have healthcare coverage.
6/28/2012 4:42:59 PM
6/28/2012 5:17:31 PM
6/28/2012 5:24:02 PM
6/28/2012 5:39:22 PM
6/28/2012 5:53:09 PM
^ You're just saying they should be impoverished by medical bills because they can't receive healthcare coverage?http://www.buzzfeed.com/gavon/the-internet-responds-to-supreme-court-ruling-on-olol
6/28/2012 6:08:45 PM
6/28/2012 6:18:55 PM
^I fucking love destroyer's postsSTFU whiny libs, healthcare is a service. CONSUMPTION REQUIRES PRODUCTION!
6/28/2012 6:23:50 PM
^^ Since you have not offered what you think the solution should be, we only have your half-correct ideas of how these companies define and use "pre-existing conditions" to deny healthcare coverage to individuals. I agree that this legislation is not the solution, but as long as politicians are in the pockets of lobbyists it's sadly the best start to reform we'll probably get. Personally I would like to see a system similar to Australia's but I doubt that would ever happen.
6/28/2012 9:30:38 PM
its not a "start" to any reform. it's more of the fucking problem!
6/28/2012 9:41:50 PM
6/28/2012 10:48:47 PM
Read this. it's a great tl;dr version of what's in the bill.http://www.reddit.com/tb/vbkfmMost people tend to fall into the category of it's good or it's bad and generally have no idea what actually changes. it's either "herp, taxes blah blah constitution duurrrr ObamaCare bad"or "derpity derp, free healthcare for all thanks ObamaCare!" there are a lot of different aspects to the bill, ranging from very good to very bad, with a lot in the middle. It's not the end of the world as we know it, nor is it a panacea for fixing the healthcare system in the country either.[Edited on June 29, 2012 at 12:25 AM. Reason : .]
6/29/2012 12:24:53 AM
6/29/2012 7:21:34 AM
I win btw. my prediction wasn't perfect, but it was close! 4 of the justices held it up on CC grounds, so I was off by one Justice's reasoning. 5-4 upholding ftw!
6/29/2012 8:30:12 AM
6/29/2012 8:31:18 AM
I've known a couple of people that has happened to and it blows. You can't really predict that you're going to get laid off and unable to find new work right away. I was terrified when I was unemployed for a couple of months in 2010 that I would get into an accident or something and be completely screwed because I couldn't afford the shitty plans offered to individuals.
6/29/2012 8:47:47 AM
I also think health insurance needs to be divorced from employers; however, my fear there is if salaries/wages will be properly adjusted to provide those benefits back to employees 1) because the total benefits package should go unchanged and 2) to purchase insurance, which is very expensive for some. I'm not sure how this can be regulated...Secondly, I am glad insurance companies will no longer be able to deny coverage based on pre-existing conditions - that is a huge issue because pretty much everyone has some type of pre-existing condition, some aren't as bad as others, and some just don't know it because they don't care/go to the doctor. When I was on my parent's insurance, I would go to the doctor for issues... which came back to bite me because when I applied for my own insurance, I got denied for pre-existing conditions. So doing the right then by going to the doctor, trying to get better, I get fucked by the insurance companies... makes sense .However, I don't care for the insurance requirement or penalty; I know this was essentially watered down; however, much of the idea survived. I would rather see it all go away as I truly believe the government shouldn't be forcing individuals to purchase services/products. Of course, my idea of better insurance is way out there and not attainable, so this point is moot. Essentially I'd rather individuals purchase just "insurance", which covers everything you want it to (health, care, home, life, etc., the more you add, the more you pay) and it covers you for anything that happens under that policy, thus no need for the state government to require vehicle insurance (your insurance, if you have it, covers you - such that if someone causes a wreck, each person's insurance covers themselves).I strongly agree with more regulation on all insurance; from rate increases, to when/how you can be dropped. Does this law impact how insurance companies can drop you? If you get really sick, can your insurance still drop you? That should be illegal, IMHO. You have insurance for a reason, but when some people use it, the insurance company is like, "fuck that, you used us???? bye bye then!"[Edited on June 29, 2012 at 8:48 AM. Reason : .]
6/29/2012 8:48:21 AM
If my premiums go down, the ACA is good. If they go up, the ACA is bad.That's about the extent of my opinion on the ACA.
6/29/2012 8:56:51 AM
6/29/2012 10:39:44 AM
Yeah so whateverI won
6/29/2012 10:48:17 AM
I wanna buy this shirt...just to wear it around and watch people's reactions.
6/29/2012 12:03:53 PM
6/29/2012 12:07:33 PM
6/29/2012 5:54:00 PM
wat.you don't have to have required insurance to allow people with pre-existing conditions to get insurance.
6/29/2012 5:57:25 PM
Really? How do you figure that's going to work?
7/1/2012 12:03:48 AM
7/1/2012 12:09:05 AM
I'm curious to see how the meager reforms in obamacare work. Economists are terrible at predicting anything, so experimentation is really the only way to find out if something works. The status quo is already pretty bad.
7/4/2012 12:59:52 PM
7/4/2012 1:44:30 PM