Nope, no national evidence.Just logistics.This is my proof for being okayStep 1: Ask around to all insurances to try to get the best monthly premium. Remember, all because you have insurance there is still a deductible which is like $5000 EVERY YEAR (The price of three of my procedures) If I had insurance, I wouldn't have qualified to use any of it because I didn't exceed $5000. That means the $7200 I put into insurance in three years is untouched and they won't give it to me even if I asked.Step 2: If the insurance company feels safe gambling on outputting millions of dollars in hospital bills on whatever your insurance premium is, you should feel safe being able to pay yourself that same premium. Step 3: You know that insurance companies have to pay their employees, pay taxes, pay mortgage on property, and pay for advertising. That extra money is tacked on to your premium. The money that is spent on overhead can't be retrieved from "the insurance pot" because it's spent. Step 4: You know that money from you to the hospital will cut out the middleman (all the costs in step 3) which means less cost for you.Step 5: You know the doctors are gouging prices for insurance, yet insurance companies and insurance employees can still afford nice cars and executives are still rich. So with your premium, insurance companies can live well, pay all their bills, and have enough money to pay your price gouged doctor's bills. That's awesome except it doesn't explain how some people are getting $millions out of the system when they/themselves won't put that much into the system in a lifetime.How many people have to lose in order for that patient to win?Another way to look at it:When you give insurance money, they get to keep your money.You never get your money back.You have to ask for your money back when making a claim. you have to worry. you have to wait. you have to stay on the phone for hours of transfers and bureaucracy. After all of that, you can get still get denied. If you put in 10 years of money and can't afford it anymore and have to cancel your policy, you don't get your money back.Now...if you're responsible and pay yourself:You accumulate wealth.Your funds are instantaneous. No waiting, no asking, no worrying.You can use the funds for any reason unrelated to medical cost if you wanted to, like for any other emergency. It's your money.To me, it's a no brain. Insurance is a lottery. The winners are actually losers. If you ring up more bills than you can make payment, you're probably sick as a dog and your life has ended anyway. Like the lottery, many will play, few will win.
3/28/2012 3:06:37 PM
I want to see the receipts.
3/28/2012 3:31:22 PM
^^ you missed the fact that costs are higher on the provider side because they hire people to deal with the insurance companies.But you still incur those costs if you don't get insurance. You can argue that shopping around can eliminate this, but that's only a can, and it won't happen for most people, per the examples on page 2.From a certain perspective, it's unethical to buy insurance because you increase costs for those who can't afford insurance. In other words, you overspend on health care (more specifically, health care overhead) and by doing so limit what the market has to offer people who don't have the means to overspend in the same way. They have no choice other than to pay that price, although they can still avoid the insurance risk premium (which are in profits), and the administrative costs of the insurance company itself.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 3:34 PM. Reason : ]
3/28/2012 3:33:58 PM
3/28/2012 3:44:21 PM
Ronald Reagan's solicitor general basically sums up why any argument against the health care law is purely political in nature with absolutely zero constitutional basis.http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/post/reagans-solicitor-general-health-care-is-interstate-commerce-is-this-a-regulation-of-it-yes-end-of-story/2011/08/25/gIQAmaQigS_blog.htmlKey point for the lazy,
3/28/2012 4:30:32 PM
Nah, you're wrong. Based on your rationale, there's nothing the government can't get involved in, which would be consistent with your authoritarian approach.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 4:39 PM. Reason : ]
3/28/2012 4:39:41 PM
Totally consistent. If it were up to me, the government would "regulate" people like you out of the gene pool.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 4:48 PM. Reason : :]
3/28/2012 4:48:35 PM
3/28/2012 4:52:21 PM
3/28/2012 4:56:39 PM
^God you're easy to bait. Your girlfriend must get really bored waiting for your dick to get hard while you type that self fellating dribble.
3/28/2012 5:09:21 PM
Everyone is in the food market, that's not debatable. All but a negligible percentage of the population of this nation has used or will use food at some point in their lives. It's also not debatable that it falls under interstate commerce. The mandate is congress regulating the food market's funding mechanism. It's really that simple, and it's why most legal experts view this entire challenge as laughable.See, the Supreme Court has a very important job. They understand that their ruling here has far reaching implications outside of ACA. This case can also be pointed to in future justifications for whatever half-baked ideas Congress shits out. They have to consider that, and Verrelli did a piss poor job at defending the mandate.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 5:16 PM. Reason : ]
3/28/2012 5:15:09 PM
Sure, food is applicable, and if congress passed a law that said everyone had to buy "food insurance", or pay a tax penalty, then that would be perfectly legal. Of course if congress did that, then they would basically be saying that food = health care, which is only true in the simplistic little minds of people like you.
3/28/2012 5:28:47 PM
3/28/2012 5:30:32 PM
3/28/2012 5:36:47 PM
Is it activist to rule of the basis of "if this, what else?"This is the exact sort of argument the actual judges have made. The law in question pertains to mandating an individual purchase something. Yeah, I get that government has the ability to regulate "interstate commerce", which is a loosely defined term, but I'm fairly confident that it was not the intent of the writers that it includes my purchases.
3/28/2012 6:16:33 PM
3/28/2012 8:34:32 PM