^^ I suspect UPS and maybe FedEx could profitably offer first class mail for less than 44 cents, it is just that they would go to prison for trying.
9/30/2009 11:21:24 AM
^^Well I wouldnt. I don't get my mail 20% of the time. That's no exaggeration either, my mail service is TERRIBLE. All my point was, when given the choice, it seems like consumers choose private enities enough for the private entity to profit and the public one to go in the hole (it's more than JUST this past year). Look at this analogy, who would you trust more to get your package to its destination (USPS or UPS/FedEx). If you say USPS youre full of bullshit.
9/30/2009 11:33:06 AM
i have a hunch you're exaggerating. i think in my entire life i've had one piece of mail that was lost. and i'm not entirely sure that the sender was being honest with me to begin with.^and i wouldn't trust ups 11 times more. if i was mailing my passport to the state dept. or something i'd use fedex. otherwise, i'd probably be fine with usps.[Edited on September 30, 2009 at 11:43 AM. Reason : .]
9/30/2009 11:42:30 AM
im really not, my mail carrier sucks. in the past I've had a little better but this one sucks, I'm ALWAYS getting my neighbor's mail. Anyways youre exactly proving my point, for something important you go with the private option, not the government. I would say healthcare is pretty important
9/30/2009 11:53:10 AM
9/30/2009 12:03:21 PM
^Thats because we have to for those things, when given the choice, people go for the best option, not the public one.
9/30/2009 12:09:12 PM
9/30/2009 12:12:41 PM
as a consumer we HAVE to, there are no other realistic options, which is what im afraid would eventually happen with a public healthcare option
9/30/2009 12:15:09 PM
I've put all my faith in Weiner at this point.[Edited on September 30, 2009 at 12:18 PM. Reason : I before E, except after W]
9/30/2009 12:17:39 PM
^^ Do you really wish you had a private option for all the things I mentioned?
9/30/2009 12:19:05 PM
Personally, I wish the Fire Department was profit-oriented rather than "saving my life" oriented. I think that would give me the best quality of service.
9/30/2009 12:21:51 PM
9/30/2009 1:19:19 PM
9/30/2009 1:23:30 PM
9/30/2009 1:24:33 PM
^^ A possibly illegal legal challenge to a possibly illegal law. That is for the courts to figure out.^ While those two aren't completely comparable, firefighting is no joke and requires traits that are in short supply as well. People pay for more than just intelligence. The benefit of a private fire fighting or private EMT agency is the fact that the town can fire and replace them if their services fall below the public's expectation. Removing tenured government employees is a bit more difficult.]
9/30/2009 1:25:49 PM
9/30/2009 1:26:28 PM
so angry
9/30/2009 1:29:02 PM
You're acting like I should be tolerant of stupid fucking bullshit. Sometimes I get irritated.
9/30/2009 1:29:50 PM
heathcare doesn't have to be for profit, it just needs to be sustainable. In the past the market creates a system thats profitable and thus sustainable, but in many places in our economy this has become practically impossible thanks to interference (in both directions) between the gov and corporations. Insurance as a means to have a sustainable heathcare system is retarded because people will always put more money in than they take out. A public option is no different, they just shore their losses with tax payer money instead of increasing premiums. The only way the system can be sustainable is if people pay the majority of the direct costs (as in what the doc gets paid) themselves. There are only two ways to bring those prices down. A free market where insurance providers and other interests dont corrupt government to distort prices, or price controls where the gov sets prices for every item (the french system). Its hard to see either one going over well in our current environment which means we'll probably end up with another unsustainable "insurance" system like medicare or social security.
9/30/2009 1:57:32 PM
also better education and energy prices can be used to make healthcare more affordable.
9/30/2009 2:01:31 PM
^^Totally agree. This public option does nothing to bring prices down.
9/30/2009 2:10:19 PM
^^^costs for private insurance have increased faster than medicare costs have over the past two decades.
9/30/2009 2:26:38 PM
Have you ever thought thats because private insurance benefits are greater?
9/30/2009 2:39:17 PM
so their costs should increase at a greater rate?are the extra benefits they're offering increasing in costs faster than the services that medicare offer? why?
9/30/2009 3:02:26 PM
because cutting edge medicines cost more on the whole
9/30/2009 3:05:56 PM
also: pharmaceutical advertising needs to go. we and new zealand are the only countries that allow this sort of direct marketing. i'd be interested to see what the advertising versus r&d costs are for some of these drug makers.
9/30/2009 3:10:47 PM
^I agree. They need to make money, but I think the whole pharma-doctor relationship is corrupt.
9/30/2009 3:13:45 PM
9/30/2009 3:27:42 PM
corrupt != legal, whether it happens with you or not is one thing, but it does happen. also doctors dont take costs into mind when they are prescribing medicine, they just prescribe a lot of times what has been pounded into their heads by the pharma companies
9/30/2009 3:43:36 PM
9/30/2009 3:52:12 PM
9/30/2009 5:21:03 PM
Education costs are rising faster than medical costs, why arent we talking about cutting funding to schools by 40% over 4 years?
9/30/2009 11:07:54 PM
^I actually agree. Where is the uproar on education costs? I dont mean providing education to more people via grants/scholarships, but why has the actual cost increased much higher than the rate of inflation?
10/1/2009 9:30:26 AM
probably because people like to waste money on things like buying laptops for every child
10/1/2009 9:36:59 AM
i would tend to agree that education is a much bigger priority over health care costsface it, healthcare is a 'new' 'right', and frankly I don't think it should be a right, it should be a privilege granted with a job (the employer wants to get production out of you not sickness/injury) i still don't think that anything the government plans to do will affect it's cost one cent to the vast majority of citizens. i'd rather they get with it on education and beat the shit out of the teachers union (frankly it's too strong in many cases allowing crap teachers to keep on teaching more often than protecting good teachers from incompetent management), individualize education money to the child, who then can go to any school of their choosing and thus bringing the money with them (to a limit of course by either first come first serve or lottery if it comes to that). this should FORCE schools to compete with each other for teacher talent, teacher pay, and good quality educational opportunities. (btw government run preschool is a horrible idea, their headstart program sucks nuts (no advantage by 2nd grade)as for the kids that don't want to go to school have them work in the fields instead and see how fast they decide that perhaps school isn't such a bad idea...the costs of higher education are almost completely different by contrast with primary and secondary education...
10/1/2009 3:32:54 PM
http://www.politico.com/blogs/glennthrush/1009/Boehner_searching_for_first_public_option_backer.html?showallBoehner says he hasn't met any regular American who supports a public option.But never fear! I have emailed his office and offered my time (as I'm in DC for the next few months and residing just a few blocks from his office) so that he can meet with one of us rare unicorn-like citizens who supports a public healthcare option.
10/1/2009 8:42:55 PM
10/1/2009 9:52:22 PM
10/2/2009 10:26:43 PM
10/3/2009 8:48:33 AM
10/3/2009 11:14:44 AM
10/3/2009 11:44:15 AM
Boone, just posting another generalization. Following your lead.
10/3/2009 12:34:17 PM
part of the reason a gov't option would be more efficient is its ability to lower cost. A large portion of private healtcare costs goes into assessing eligibility. In other words, if we can stop typing to figure out who gets coverage and who doesnt we can lower the costs for everyone
10/3/2009 3:24:44 PM
Because if there is one thing the government is known for, it's saving money.
10/3/2009 3:30:33 PM
in all honesty, if you want to understand why the economics of health care differs from traditional markets (instead of parroting rightwing catchphrases) read Arrow's 1963 piece on the Uncertainty of Health Care economics. http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/82/2/PHCBP.pdf its old but still relevant
10/3/2009 3:38:08 PM
10/3/2009 8:45:36 PM
^^ Even if the economics are significantly different, it does not follow that government involvement, management and payment is the optimal or indeed even a desirable solution. Our government barely manages to provide adequate health care to our armed forces and veterans, two groups of people who of all the people in the country have claim to government provided care. Yet just a few months ago, our president was talking about offloading that care to private resources and insurance.
10/3/2009 10:58:10 PM
I hope we don't get any kind of health reform. as a nation we don't deserve it yet.
10/4/2009 2:15:06 AM
Yes, because an opposition to a massive overhaul in the level of government involvement in our health care is clearly an opposition to reform in the health care industry. There are clearly no possible solutions to the problems that exist in the industry except the government stepping in and paying for it all.This is exactly why I don't want government involvement increased, because the moment you make something about politics, you can no longer have a reasonable discussion about the topic without some damned idiot foaming off at the mouth about how his opponents are neo-nazi heartless bastards who hate poor people and minority children.
10/4/2009 8:36:44 AM
10/4/2009 9:51:42 AM