Romney wants to do the exact same shit Bush did.
7/25/2012 2:25:41 AM
Which is the exact same shit Obama is currently doing.
7/25/2012 8:39:46 AM
double post[Edited on July 25, 2012 at 9:00 AM. Reason : .]
7/25/2012 8:39:58 AM
7/25/2012 8:48:21 AM
7/25/2012 1:14:54 PM
7/25/2012 8:52:40 PM
7/25/2012 11:43:52 PM
7/26/2012 8:58:08 AM
7/26/2012 2:10:14 PM
7/26/2012 2:12:32 PM
7/26/2012 2:28:39 PM
And Obama's debt is being "incurred in order to give more money to the top 2% of the country"That is how things in Washington work. Just because it is a different section of the top 2% doesn't change shit.
7/26/2012 3:07:19 PM
Actually, most of Obama's policies have benefited the bottom 98% more than anyone else. Just because you say something, doesn't make it true.
7/26/2012 4:10:07 PM
^
7/26/2012 5:35:26 PM
7/26/2012 5:39:17 PM
So the people who will now get health care, who work for the auto industries who still have their jobs, and who benefited from the stimulus bill money with jobs didn't benefit the most from Obama's policies?
7/26/2012 7:57:14 PM
nope.
7/26/2012 8:23:25 PM
Obama gave me a million dollarsProve me wrong, faggots.
7/26/2012 11:14:25 PM
7/27/2012 12:35:33 AM
You think the average government worker is rich? You're insane. But I already knew that.
7/27/2012 1:06:55 AM
Speaking of people benefiting from the new healthcare laws, by 2014, almost every state in the union will have switched fully to a "managed medicaid" model (http://www.kff.org/medicaid/upload/Medicaid-and-Managed-Care-Fact-Sheet.pdf) to save money, and will be dropping their "Fee for service" models. What this means is that if you are enrolled in medicaid in a state, the state, you will be enrolled with an MCO (basically HMOs run by a massive medical group rather than the insurance companies), and that MCO will be paid a fixed dollar amount per year to manage your care. If you rack up a lot of medical costs, they lose money, if they manage to keep your costs down, they make money. Essentially, your MCO is vastly incentivized to get you the cheapest care they can. Whether that means providing you with potentially expensive up front treatments in exchange for lower recurring costs, or it means getting you the absolute minimum care they can to get you to shut up and go away remains to be seen.Because of the way this works, by 2014, it is estimated that 90% or so of physicians of all types will either be directly employed by an MCO, or employed by a hospital or other large medical group contracted with the MCO. In other words, if you thought the insurance company interfered with your doctor's ability to treat you, wait until the people paying your doctor are also the ones deciding what care your eligible for.As they say, I told you all of that so that I could tell you this; this past month, two of the largest MCO groups, comprising managed medicaid in 19 states across the country announced that they will be merging (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303343404577516393834465420.html) with more mergers occurring country wide and more expected over the next few years as companies struggle to remain competitive under the new laws. I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to decide whether the ever increasing consolidation of medical services is a good or bad thing for the consumer
7/27/2012 1:24:56 AM
^^ Every industry employs janitors. But just because not everyone at Citibank is rich doesn't make my statement that "Citibank employees earn far more than the median income" any less true. Check the statistics. The average government worker earns far more than the average American. So diverting more resources from average Americans to government workers will increase income inequality.
7/27/2012 9:18:02 AM
I'll read it when you provide it. Until then you're just bullshitting.
7/27/2012 11:53:44 AM
7/27/2012 12:15:48 PM