3/11/2013 6:01:08 PM
what free market?you edited out the free market, does that mean that we have at least got to the point that oyu recognize that the concept of free markets is a myth?[Edited on March 11, 2013 at 6:06 PM. Reason : .]
3/11/2013 6:02:04 PM
But bro, that's thin privilege
3/11/2013 6:02:20 PM
please explain to me the free healthcare market or a current proposal to make it one
3/11/2013 6:08:45 PM
There are health care service providers. There are health care service recipients. There are, in some cases, third parties that help offset risk (insurance). Any individuals in any of these groups are allowed to contract between each other.No one is forced to buy or accept insurance. No one is forced to provide health care services. No one is forced to be a health care recipient. This isn't a health care "system" managed from the top down. This is people exchanging goods and services with people on a voluntary basis.I can't tell you exactly how a system without government intervention would look, just like someone in 1800 couldn't tell you how a post-slavery economy would work. I could speculate, but I simply don't know.
3/11/2013 6:16:13 PM
that's not a free market, there are all kinds of market controls and regulations on itPre-obamacare, post-obamacare, vouchers, other proposals... none of it is a free marketits all private industry writing rules that force government money into their pockets, its conservative privatization. we need the government money to stay in the government instead of private profits, keep healthcare inside the government. [Edited on March 11, 2013 at 6:20 PM. Reason : ...]
3/11/2013 6:18:39 PM
It was a simpler time, a better time. The year, was 1776, and Adam Smith had just penned his magnum opus, The Wealth of Nations. But something went very wrong that day. A young man known only as d357r0y3r was thrust forward through the space-time continuum to a turbulent and complex society in the year 2013! There, he attempted to impart his naive wisdom on an unconvinced audience, never once stopping to think that the world had outgrown his basic and tired narrative...
3/11/2013 10:30:56 PM
Healthcare has to be partially socialist, unless you're willing to let poor people bleed out in the ER waiting room.
3/11/2013 11:26:39 PM
3/12/2013 12:43:03 AM
3/12/2013 2:34:26 AM
3/12/2013 4:34:25 AM
But... Adam Smith
3/12/2013 6:37:50 AM
If we left it to the free market people would still be buying snake oil to cure their remedies, its been a really long time since we had anything that looked remotely like a free market for healthcare and its not something we should try to go back to
3/12/2013 10:09:06 AM
"Hello 911 what's your emergency?""OH MY GOD THERE IS SO MUCH BLOOD""We don't exist, sorry! Maybe try Bob's ambulance service -- oh but wait they are closed today. It is a Sunday after all. Hmm welp good luck shopping around!">dead
3/12/2013 10:37:02 AM
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324557804578374761054496682.html
3/23/2013 5:46:57 AM
3/23/2013 1:54:31 PM
It's not causing problems for the health insurance companies, they love it
3/23/2013 1:57:52 PM
I'm sure they do, right now they just got an additional 50 million people paying premiums, many of whom don't need the kind of coverage they have to buy.
3/23/2013 2:01:37 PM
they didn't help write it for nothing, gotta get that privatized money man
3/23/2013 2:22:42 PM
By the way, I know a lot of people love it, but how absurd is it that "kids" can stay on their parents insurance until they're 26?It would be ridiculous enough if it were allowed only if they could still be claimed as a dependent, or if they lived with the parents, or were full time students, but none of that is required. Idiotic.[Edited on March 23, 2013 at 3:20 PM. Reason : sdfdf]
3/23/2013 3:20:09 PM
"Kids" are maturing later, so it makes sense.
3/23/2013 4:13:53 PM
So 26 is the new 18?
3/23/2013 4:20:38 PM
Pretty much.
3/23/2013 4:25:41 PM
Man, we are fucked if that's the case. You don't have to be that "mature" to cut the apron strings and live on your own.
3/23/2013 4:31:03 PM
I expect part of it was making sure young adults were covered in that period between being a kid and getting their first job, or between undergrad and getting a first job, since it can take a while, especially in this economy.
3/23/2013 4:42:00 PM
There's no doubt that's why, but it doesn't make it a good idea.26 is 4 years after you should be getting out of undergrad. I have no problem with it if they're dependents, but after graduation we should not be requiring by law that insurers cover adults on another adults plan. Some insurers did it voluntarily before the law, so it's not like it was unheard of, but mandating it by law, I can't agree with that.Oh, and it's about as cheap to get individual coverage at that age as it ever will be. 20 somethings pay about the lowest rate of anyone.[Edited on March 23, 2013 at 4:49 PM. Reason : dsffd]
3/23/2013 4:49:17 PM
they did it because kids graduate college now with a lot more debt on average than they used to and have a lower job placement rate on average than they used to. i don't support any of this terrible conservative legislation, but saying its because of maturity levels is disingenuous (or outright wrong).^their insurance is the cheapest, but they are also very healthy and have a high debt to income ratio so they are unlikely to get it. putting them on their parents plan is the easiest way to force them to be covered. [Edited on March 23, 2013 at 4:59 PM. Reason : .]
3/23/2013 4:58:15 PM
3/23/2013 5:02:37 PM
I made an entire thread about how this conservative privatization plan is terrible, you don't need to tell me we shouldn't be doing it
3/23/2013 5:36:38 PM
3/24/2013 9:43:52 PM
Can you stop responding to single sentences and instead respond to people's points? Your incessant quote/response scheme is annoying and is a transparent defense for you not being capable of refuting complete points. I hope people stop responding to you when you post like that.
3/24/2013 9:51:52 PM
This may come as a shock to you, but individual sentences are *gasp* part of a point. Speaking to a particularly weak part of their point is intended to undermine the entirety of the point. I'm frankly shocked that you have a problem with this
3/24/2013 9:53:42 PM
No, you quote bomb because you can't reply to points or full posts.
3/24/2013 9:54:43 PM
Whatever helps you sleep at night, man.
3/24/2013 9:56:46 PM
What does Xanax have to do with this?
3/24/2013 10:28:13 PM
I figured you were using something a little more heavy duty than that. Good for you
3/24/2013 11:06:46 PM
Obamacare is bullshit corporatist privatization designed by corporatist pro-privatization conservatives to benefit private corporations
9/15/2013 4:53:51 PM
Someone explain why insurers should not be allowed to price based on gender
9/30/2013 11:09:54 AM
I mean, they should probably be pricing on risk and expected payout. I imagine they have models and forecasting that allows them to plug in every detail about a person and determine what kind of risk they represent. Is sex or gender off limits? I don't see why. Women and men are susceptible to different sets of diseases, and some of those may be more or less expensive to treat. Women may give birth and are vulnerable to all types of health problems that could come along with that. So, yeah, is sex or gender one of the many things that should be looked at.
9/30/2013 11:38:00 AM
9/30/2013 11:44:22 AM
http://www.gallup.com/poll/164696/two-three-uninsured-americans-plan-buy-insurance.aspx
9/30/2013 11:44:54 AM
that's exactly true
9/30/2013 11:45:39 AM
Is there a benefit to not going through an exchange?Other than not having government health insurance!!!1
9/30/2013 11:52:33 AM
do you have any employer healthcare, or did you lose it entirely? your plan is probably better than what you can get on the exchange if you have any kind of coverage, although you can go online and see what the different levels will offer for what price. but you will have to enter personal information to the government. (employer healthcare has to meet "minimum essential coverage" guidelines which is probably why you lost your insurance before. if you have new coverage it definitely meets what the basic exchange plans cover and probably a lot more. the exchange plans also keep costs down by limiting the network size)[Edited on September 30, 2013 at 11:59 AM. Reason : .]
9/30/2013 11:57:53 AM
No employer health insurance; no spousal insurance. I have pretty basic/bare coverage now. The ACA would probably open me to better plans, but at a much higher rate. I was denied coverage from BCBS previously, so the ACA isn't all bad in my book (as I've been saying).I did read somewhere that HDHPs will be available to those under 30, so I may go that route. Though the cost estimate was still about 2.5x more than what I pay now.
9/30/2013 12:01:57 PM
at the very least I would price out the different levels of coverage and see what made sense
9/30/2013 12:03:26 PM
9/30/2013 4:04:53 PM
The argument is usually that prices should be normalized universally, regardless of protected status. It's just not fair that obese smokers have to pay more for health care services than people who take care of themselves.[Edited on September 30, 2013 at 5:40 PM. Reason : ]
9/30/2013 5:40:20 PM
^^ no, its determining price based on risk. We can price based on other risk factors, but now I have to pay more because women are physically able to get pregnant. That doesn't make any sense at all.
9/30/2013 9:37:09 PM
9/30/2013 11:17:39 PM