8/14/2009 4:33:13 PM
8/14/2009 4:46:08 PM
^ It depends on which bill you are talking about For "the America’sAffordable Health Choices Act of 2009," HR 3200, 1 trillion is only for the first 10 years. There is a perpetual, ever-increasing difference between the plans projected expenses and revenue. The projected rate of growth in health-care expenses is greater than the projected growth in tax receipts on high earners and additional revenue from assumed Medicare cuts.As per CBO's Director: “In the legislation that has been reported, we do not see the sort of fundamental changes that would be necessary to reduce the trajectory of federal health spending by a significant amount. And on the contrary, the legislation significantly expands the federal responsibility for health care costs.”Considering we cannot pay for Medicare as is, it is incomprehensible that we would add a new, unsustainable layer to the mix.[Edited on August 14, 2009 at 6:18 PM. Reason : .]
8/14/2009 6:04:20 PM
8/14/2009 6:11:06 PM
Economist, John Cochrane, on his health status-insurance idea as a way to protect against loss of coverage due to pre-existing conditions.
8/14/2009 6:30:33 PM
8/14/2009 7:47:05 PM
Oh no, we've angered the Brits!http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/08/14/britain.america.nhs/index.html
8/14/2009 9:07:44 PM
8/15/2009 12:33:20 AM
The democrats are not the only ones with a plan. Here are some ideas from the Cato Institute:
8/15/2009 10:54:13 AM
^ those are all good ideas except for number 2 and 5, and i'm not sure what 7 is saying.
8/15/2009 11:07:19 AM
If only the GOP would listen to a think-tank other than the Heritage Foundation, I'd almost believe that they were acting in good faithHonest question: if we were to remove the employer-provided insurance tax benefit, how would the transition be managed? I imagine insurance prices wouldn't move immediately, would they? It seems there'd be a significant amount of time between employers dropping coverage and coverage becoming cheap-enough for families to afford.[Edited on August 15, 2009 at 11:13 AM. Reason : ]
8/15/2009 11:09:42 AM
Whole Foods CEO John Mackey wrote a piece for the Wall Street Journal saying stuff like this:
8/15/2009 11:12:36 AM
8/15/2009 11:31:56 AM
8/15/2009 11:43:06 AM
8/15/2009 12:05:53 PM
8/15/2009 12:13:04 PM
^they are really getting into this too (for the record I am not among those boycotting)
8/15/2009 12:35:49 PM
Whole Foods employees are pretty damn happy every time I'm there. Mackey must be doing something right.
8/15/2009 12:45:06 PM
Yeah-- arguing against his advice is silly. The guy knows how to run things.The problem is that Mackey and Obama's goals aren't quite the same. Mackey is pointing out great ways to reform healthcare, while Obama is seeking reform and universal coverage.I really, really do wish that the Republicans were acting in good faith, so that they could push to integrate ideas like Mackey's (which sound an awful lot like McCain's better ideas) into the reform bill.
8/15/2009 12:53:15 PM
There are only two options: Fully support the current Healthcare bill, or you hate old people, everyone with a pre-existing condition or disease of any type, and anyone without health insurance.
8/15/2009 12:57:49 PM
^I thought if you fully support the current health care bill then that means you do hate old people & want to sentence them to death panels.
8/15/2009 1:06:25 PM
8/15/2009 1:20:56 PM
8/15/2009 1:49:30 PM
I have a question for all you dems who support this bill and are ready to get it passes ASAP. Do you trust the republican party (which clearly many of you despise) to run this program as much as you trust the democratic party? In the future, eventually the congress and president WILL be controlled again by the republican party. I'm not prodding necessarily, but just wondering if this has even crossed your minds.
8/15/2009 2:16:47 PM
^ Republicans might campaign as a unified block, but they run the gamut between people like GrumpGOP to Sarah Palin.I definitely trust someone like GrumpyGOP, or any number of republicans, to do what is best for the country when the time comes.
8/15/2009 2:30:42 PM
I'd be fine with the Republicans running it. It needs some cost-cutting measures, and by the time the GOP get's its crap straight (2016, 2020?), the plan will be too popular with people to kill it outright.
8/15/2009 2:31:56 PM
8/15/2009 4:13:49 PM
John Mackey provides the full, unedited version of his op-ed on his blog:
8/15/2009 4:46:43 PM
Boone,
8/15/2009 5:21:59 PM
8/15/2009 6:44:39 PM
^ Dude, I don't mean any harm, but is everything about "gay" with you?
8/15/2009 6:46:44 PM
^I was point out that it would be unfair to judge Whole Foods are being right wing based on this one action when they do other left wing things too, dude.
8/15/2009 7:02:54 PM
8/15/2009 7:52:20 PM
^^ Fair enough--and I swear I'm not trying to give you shit. It just seems that you're a bit of a Johnny One Note--I'm just being honest.
8/15/2009 9:17:04 PM
In the past month or two I have participated in threads about topics ranging from the Healthcare Thread, a couple of environmental threads, the birther movement thread, the cash for clunkers thread, a few threads about David Price, 2 or 3 threads on the issue of race, threads about affairs of government officials, one on the topic of the NC Senate race, one about the Raleigh City Council race… if you look outside of the soapbox my one note starts to look like pet & vet related threads especially in the lounge & in a story on the front page of TWW, if you look in chit chat then it’s mostly random stuff.Here is a list of threads I've started this & last month:
8/15/2009 10:47:47 PM
^ Fair enough, sir.
8/15/2009 11:47:13 PM
Per Keith Hennessey, some reasons to believe the public option will not always operate on a level playing field.
8/16/2009 10:56:00 AM
I'm not sure those examples are going to win anyone over, though. They're pushing out the private market because they're darn good services.Thank heaven for my FHA home loan.
8/16/2009 12:38:51 PM
^ I'm pretty sure the point KH is making is that they are pushing our private competitors because are subsided in such a way that they can compete bellow cost. The fact that you don't see that as a problem probably goes to your apparent criteria for what constitutes a good government "service": one that benefits him.[Edited on August 16, 2009 at 1:35 PM. Reason : ``]
8/16/2009 1:25:30 PM
8/16/2009 2:29:18 PM
Wouldn't you pretty much need to have something similar to a "death panel"? You could spend a million bucks on a 95 year old cancer patient to keep them alive for another month, and if it's all on the government's dime, someone would need to make the call. Spending whatever is necessary to keep everyone alive for the maximum amount of time is not a viable option under universal coverage, is it?
8/16/2009 2:35:54 PM
^^ I think the difference in the above is the voluntary nature of the setting. Notice that it is pointed out that 90% of patients have an advance directive, for instance. Hospice and palliative care are not bad things. They're not euthanasia. The fear, which I think has been blown up into "death panels", has been that patients will be shoved into hospice care against their will. The model pointed out above sidesteps this by having end-of-life decisions planned out by patients and their families (and not the government) well in advance.But this kind discussion about end-of-life care decisions is necessary, and would only become more so under a more government-funded system. The problem is that we've come to a perverse debate over "death panels" instead (although frankly, one has to wonder what the alternative is when the plan meets with the hard, inevitable reality of needing to control costs without a more voluntary, patient-directed plan in place).
8/16/2009 2:57:18 PM
8/16/2009 4:11:41 PM
8/16/2009 6:12:24 PM
Isn't the whole public option the intended meat of the bill? Or does this just mean that rather than having there be a public option, now the bill will focus on forcing insurance companies to accept everyone regardless of how much they earn etc?I mean the whole idea of making the system better run is good....I don't think there was ever a debate over doing things like giving some sort of incentive to encourage different doctors/hospitals to send along test results to keep from duplicating the same one right? I know that's not it, but what were some other sticking points in the bill that were holding anyone up?
8/16/2009 6:40:49 PM
^I have no idea what the other sticking points were. What else was even in the bills? I think most people have heard "public option" and were "Hooray, public option, heath care for all, this is awesome" or "Public option? No, I have enough government and do not want anymore. I hate this and will now try to find things in it that might get others to hate it too." (Gross oversimplification)Now, with "public option" off the table, whats the plan? I think most people who were against the government plan, myself included, believe that reform is needed, and there are many ideas thrown around in various editorials that I can see myself supporting. I guess now its time to see what congress comes up with when the recess is over. Or, the White House is just trying to give the antigovernment plan group nothing to bitch about during the rest of the recess. Last I checked, Congress, not the White House writes the bills.
8/16/2009 7:22:14 PM
8/16/2009 11:35:06 PM
^ he repeats the same old story about adverse selection leading to an "implosion" of the insurance market, yet he doesn't realize that the statistics that woman provides actually poke holes in that argument. If adverse selection was actually the problem, we would see a large number of chronically uninsured sick people. Yet, as she stated, only a small portion of U.S. citizens are chronically uninsured. And recent research from the Kaiser foundation (google it to see its a pretty well respected institution in these matters) shows that the uninsured are not unhealthy. All of this suggests that adverse selection is NOT the problem, no matter what Paul Krugman tells you.The guy may have delivered a one-liner that will get Rachel Maddow all wet, but he apparently has no clue about what he's saying.
8/17/2009 12:29:51 AM
8/17/2009 11:51:09 AM
8/17/2009 11:52:49 AM