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8/13/2009 5:31:39 PM
LaRoucheLaRoucheLaRouche is on fire.
8/13/2009 6:21:54 PM
Can we stop pretending that protesters are legitimately representative of the real concerns people have?
8/13/2009 6:49:33 PM
^ Hear, hear!
8/13/2009 6:52:59 PM
message_topic.aspx?topic=570926&page=1
8/13/2009 6:58:12 PM
Remember when republican congresspersons couldn't even meet with their constituents because virtually all of their public meetings were being disrupted by anarchists, gutter punks, and random-ass Asian guys afraid of aliens or something, even though that last group doesn't even fit in with the first two?Me neither.
8/13/2009 7:04:05 PM
^ What are you babbling about? Some Democrats--the ones who aren't chicken shit--are meeting with their constituents:Butterfield holds town hall on Obama health planPosted: Aug. 11, 2009http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/5769391/[Edited on August 13, 2009 at 7:22 PM. Reason : Who's stopping them?]
8/13/2009 7:21:51 PM
Well, it seems a bunch of groups - the Service Employees International Union, the drug lobby Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the American Medical Association and the Federation of American Hospitals - are planning to spend money on advertising in support of the plan.http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090813/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_health_care
8/13/2009 7:35:12 PM
8/13/2009 7:38:18 PM
8/13/2009 7:58:15 PM
i think the current polls speak for themselves[/thread]
8/13/2009 8:00:39 PM
8/13/2009 9:54:32 PM
A sample is not a trend. There is no doubt there has been an organized effort at derailing healthcare reform. There has been a lot of (purposeful) disinformation. Wait until the other side ramps up. Then we will see.In my opinion, we have the worst healthcare system in the industrial world (by any number of measures). It is an embarassment. Almost anything would be better.
8/13/2009 9:55:01 PM
do tell what these "measures" you have seen that show we have a terrible healthcare system... Is it the fact that so many people come to the US for advanced treatments that are available nowhere else?
8/13/2009 9:56:58 PM
8/13/2009 10:30:29 PM
DON'T TASE ME BRO
8/13/2009 10:33:52 PM
8/13/2009 10:42:21 PM
more like...DON'T TASTE ME BRO!!![Edited on August 13, 2009 at 10:44 PM. Reason : ``]
8/13/2009 10:42:36 PM
Is it also the fact that americans go to other countries to get reasonably-priced procedures?
8/13/2009 10:43:47 PM
HI, DR. NICK!
8/13/2009 10:45:28 PM
aaronburro:
8/13/2009 10:53:42 PM
8/13/2009 10:56:02 PM
Senate drops end-of-life consultationshttp://tinyurl.com/ognak6If there was nothing improper with these consultatations and they were deemed so damned important, why'd the Senate drop them like a hot potato? Curious.
8/14/2009 5:02:59 AM
If people are too stupid or too diluted by lies to comprehend the benefit then they shouldn't receive it. Would this be the same provision that encouraged living wills? The same living wills that were once championed by the right yet now draw such ire from them. . . Curious. Actually, revolting would be more apt.
8/14/2009 6:30:59 AM
8/14/2009 7:28:55 AM
My mom works in medicine. She said she went for a semester in college to the UK. Back then, she said they were 30 years behind the US.
8/14/2009 8:26:58 AM
Man, the only thing those pictures tell me is that liberals are waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay more creative with their protests than conservatives.
8/14/2009 9:16:14 AM
I didn't base my opinion of the US healthcare system on life expectance (which your first link hopes to debunk). I based it on the cost, the amount of the population without access to healthcare services, and what I see as insurance companies penchant for finding ways to not pay for care - i.e. pre-existing conditions, loopholes, etc. I don't belive that profit margin is the most effective driver for a national healthcare system.There is no doubt that we do well with cancers, and are more effective than others at early detection. But, as far as satisfaction goes, both studys can't be right. These quotes are from the National Center for Policy Analysis (your second link):
8/14/2009 9:25:58 AM
8/14/2009 9:44:14 AM
Yeah, if Britons are so dissatisfied with their health care system, why have they come out in full support of it in response to the attacks coming from here?http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/6018227/Barack-Obama-health-plan-British-experts-defend-NHS-against-US-Right-wing-attacks.htmlhttp://edition.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/08/14/britain.america.nhs/Also, beyond just an example of UHC in action, why do we keep talking about Canada and the UK's health care system so much? The reforms being proposed aren't the same as Canada's single payer system. Nor is it anything close to the government run NHS in the UK, where doctors are actually government employees. I know I sound like a broken record, but it's far far closer to the French health care system, which uses a mix of a universal "Medicare" plan and employer based coverage to guarantee health care for everyone. How about you show me why that system is so bad and why it wouldn't work for us.
8/14/2009 9:53:54 AM
8/14/2009 10:09:40 AM
8/14/2009 10:23:05 AM
8/14/2009 10:35:58 AM
^^Are you trying to make a joke? 10% over budget means it's failed? If our health care costs were only 10% more than our estimates, that would be considered a resounding success. Instead, we pay nearly twice as much more as percentage of our GDP, and leave a significant portion of our population out in the cold. Our costs are also rising faster than anywhere else, nearly twice the rate of inflation. That is failure. I swear to god, you people won't realize how big of a problem this is until the whole system crashes under it's own weight. Health care is a problem in almost every country in the world, but here, it's a goddamn catastrophe.
8/14/2009 10:43:44 AM
I don't see many people here denying that we have a problem.As well, who is being "left out in the cold?" Is it illegal aliens, who have no legal right to be here in the first place? Maybe it's people on Medicare who already have insurance. Wait, is it the people who don't take advantage of the services they already qualify for? Maybe it's the people who just don't feel like they need insurance, right?
8/14/2009 10:47:24 AM
^ yeah, gee, there's probably nobody who lost their job and don't qualify for medicaid, or have preexisting conditions and can't get on a plan, or are self-employed but are priced out of the premiums. Nah, nobody like that at all. And if there are, i don't know, a few people like that? Eh, fuck 'em
8/14/2009 10:50:23 AM
oh, of course those people exist. But they absolutely are not a "significant portion of the population," as was claimed
8/14/2009 10:52:54 AM
Then what are you complaining about? If the number of legitimately uninsured are so few, then it won't cost that much more to cover them. You should be applauding this news. You realize that to start out, the Exchange that includes the public option (if there even is one) will only be available to poor people who are either uninsured and individuals that are on plans that don't meet certain requirements. People on group plans (ie. employer plans), won't even have access to it.Keep in mind, I don't agree with your downplaying of the number of uninsured since there is quite literally no reliable source that can confirm your claims. But, even operating under the assumption that the problem is overblown, why does that mean it should be ignored?[Edited on August 14, 2009 at 11:09 AM. Reason : :]
8/14/2009 11:01:31 AM
ok, how about blue collar workers, retail workers, food industry workers, Walmart employees (over a million there already), and generally anyone on wages and not salary who don't get medical benefits from their employers, make enough to live out of poverty, but still can't afford premiums for themselves or their families?
8/14/2009 11:04:08 AM
8/14/2009 11:08:20 AM
8/14/2009 11:09:59 AM
8/14/2009 11:16:30 AM
These protests are mild compared to this shit:Democracy is messy, we should encourage active, energetic, participation in the democratic process . . . especially if it makes us uncomfortable.
8/14/2009 11:26:45 AM
8/14/2009 11:50:23 AM
HUR:
8/14/2009 12:23:39 PM
8/14/2009 1:15:34 PM
8/14/2009 1:34:23 PM
^ He wasn't talking about the bill being proposed, he was talking about now.
8/14/2009 2:03:24 PM
So then what do you think is going to happen? Do you not agree that the current rate of increase in medical spending is unsustainable? It's already double inflation and accelerating every year. See, despite all my bickering in this thread, I really don't care if Obama passes this bill or not because we're already headed for a UK style of socialized medicine whether we like it or not. I would still like to see it passed so we can go ahead and take care of all those uninsured as well as stop insurance companies from screwing people, but that's about it.It's already likely that regardless of what we do now, medical spending is going to reach critical mass and the industry is going to face a crisis just like we saw with the credit industry. Hospitals, insurance companies and doctor's offices are going to go bankrupt. Big pharma will survive since it can still sell to the rest of the world, but everyone else is screwed. What do you think will happen then? Same thing that happened with AIG, GM, and all those banks. The Fed is going to buy them all up and we'll have NHS in the US. It's going to happen, and all this opposition to health care reform is only going to speed up the arrival of the thing you guys fear the most. The next couple decades are going to be fun to watch.
8/14/2009 3:47:37 PM
8/14/2009 4:21:40 PM