The Medicare comparison is off base simply because of the difference in demographics. The number of people eligible for the public option (at least initially) is way way less then the number of people currently enrolled in Medicare. Secondly, Medicare is for old people who get sick a lot and are generally very expensive to insure. The public option will be mostly for people like you and me, who are cheap to insure. The sort of people who insurance companies actually make money off of. I go to the doctor once a year for a physical and a blood test. The dentist maybe a couple times a year for cleanings. Outside of emergencies, that's about it. So arguing that this program will lose money because Medicare did makes no sense.
10/12/2009 11:39:10 AM
10/12/2009 11:58:52 AM
10/12/2009 1:06:38 PM
10/12/2009 4:55:06 PM
I want the number eligible for the public option to be increased! Why do only the poor get the option of a public plan? Employer sponsored health insurance is hardly insurance at allhttp://baselinescenario.com/2009/08/05/you-do-not-have-health-insurance/Why should I be denied the option b/c i'm a productive individual who also has an employer option?
10/12/2009 5:23:37 PM
10/12/2009 5:35:51 PM
From the denver post article on the previous page:
10/12/2009 8:17:36 PM
10/12/2009 8:22:19 PM
Well yes, I suppose if your entire worldview is based on the idea that life is a zero sum game and companies and rich people are the devil whose sole purpose is to keep everyone else down then you might find that statement funny.Now do you have anything useful to contribute, or are you aspiring to new levels of inanity?
10/12/2009 11:02:06 PM
How exactly do you think an insurance company makes money? (Hint: It's a hell of a lot like a casino.)
10/13/2009 12:20:41 AM
Well yes. The whole reason anyone offers insurance at all is because of the odds that you won't need to collect on it. And this is evil because....? If the odds were not in favor of the insurance company, you would never be able to trade $200 / month for $millions, because no one would take that risk.
10/13/2009 7:48:49 AM
Running a health insurance company isn't like a casino in the slightest. Once you're covering more than 10,000 people, then you're taking in more money in a month than what the highest probable liability for any one person is. And yes, the odds are stacked on the side of the premiums, and even if they're loosing too much money too fast, they can raise premiums.Uncertainty is not the same as gambling people!
10/13/2009 8:52:18 AM
in before McDanger responds with his typical "i'm smarter than you" response.
10/13/2009 9:04:28 AM
^ LOL! 3. . .2. . .1. . .
10/13/2009 9:08:04 AM
mrfrog, that sounds exactly like how a casino operates. Running a casino is not really risky, they don't get unlucky and go bankrupt. They only go bankrupt if people stop playing. It is because, as you say, due to the law of large numbers the casino can play the odds and win a consistent profit every month. The same thing done by Insurance Companies. And, because such games work so well, both Casinos and Insurance earn small but consistent profits. Running a casino or health insurance company is no more like gambling than running Walt Disney World. Now, if you want real gambling, look into the film industry. Those suckers lose real money, and because of it earn huge profits on average.
10/13/2009 10:12:39 AM
I have a new healthcare proposal, and it will only be one page long, not the thousand pages those liberals have come up with:Ban health insurance.Simple, isn't it? Now, instead of having to pay into privately run socialist health regimes, where your money pays for other sick people, you instead get to exercise your freedom to use your own money to pay for health costs. This will encourage personal responsibility, as people will be able to save up their own money to pay for any medical bills they might incur. Healthy? Then you have nothing to worry about and will have lots of money saved up! Sick? You better work hard!
10/13/2009 11:11:13 AM
10/13/2009 11:22:49 AM
Any ideas that don't involve lining the pockets of politicians?[Edited on October 13, 2009 at 1:47 PM. Reason : zxcv]
10/13/2009 1:46:47 PM
10/13/2009 1:49:17 PM
^^ Yes, see my suggestion above.
10/13/2009 1:54:06 PM
14-9 Senate Finance vote passes, Snowe votes with the democrats
10/13/2009 2:55:48 PM
^^^ Not can, will.And corruption is hardly a separate issue. Corruption is one of the reasons why health care is so expensive in the first place. If you don't address corruption, you can't adequately provide care.^^ Sorry, I didn't realize the mindless drivel you leak in this thread was something you considered a valid idea
10/13/2009 7:50:21 PM
and with Snowe, Obama now has his "bipartisan support."
10/13/2009 7:55:48 PM
So let me get this straight, the Baucus bill will start confiscating income upon being passed, but not take full effect until 2015, meaning we're healthcare costs will go up (on account of the increased taxes) before the bill even takes place. I can't imagine that politicians won't spin this and blame it on those evil health insurance companies and push for more aggressive control over the health care industry.Also, someone please tell me how this is remotely constitutional.
10/13/2009 8:09:21 PM
what is this "Constitution" of which you speak?
10/13/2009 8:18:49 PM
There's no way the Baucus bill would pass by itself. The Democrats wouldn't allow it. The health + finance combined bill will include a public option, no doubt about that.[Edited on October 13, 2009 at 9:36 PM. Reason : .]
10/13/2009 9:35:49 PM
Well, it might pass the senate, then be merged with the house bill which contains a public option, so that the final, merged bill contains one. But yeah, whatever hits BO's desk will have a public option of some sort.
10/13/2009 11:45:08 PM
10/14/2009 9:58:37 AM
^^Yeah, that's pretty much been the idea since day one. Let Congress do their thing until the bill gets to the Senate/House conference committee and then put the screws in to make sure the final bill has a public option as well everything else the White House wanted.
10/14/2009 10:02:00 AM
^^ you have this mistaken notion that I somehow supported most of Bush's policies. That couldn't be further from the truth
10/14/2009 8:10:18 PM
I'm pretty interested in the PriceWaterhouseCooper study. It focuses on what actually affects me: a middle-class privately insured worker. And as far as I can tell, I'm gonna be paying more under this bill in order for the government to provide subsidies to those who can afford health care, but choose not to. I like the idea of health care reform, but this bastardized bill that came out of the senate finance committee doesn't look too promising.
10/14/2009 9:52:30 PM
Some commentary about the study:
10/15/2009 12:40:22 AM
Thank you for that youtube link to a liberal douchebag internet talk show. Complete with bonus footage from thinkprogress. Now lets talk about the reform bill without using talking points and links to partisan blogs / radio shows, shall we? The reform package tries to extend coverage to an extra 29 million people, while being revenue neutral. Or it'll actually reduce the deficit, if you believe the CBO. Now how does it do that? Primarily by providing subsidies to those who cannot afford coverage, and penalties to those who can afford it but choose not to get it. There are cuts to Medicare, and a lot of fees in there for the insurers, drug makers and hospitals. But the end result is that a lot of these costs will be passed right on to the consumers. There are not many cost controls in this bill. Instead, it'll be more expensive for insurers to provide coverage, and there will be more subsidies for the poor. Who foots the bill? Well, you and I and those already with insurance. There won't be any new direct taxes, but these fees and medicare cuts will likely cause the insurers to shift a greater burden of the costs to those who are already paying for health care. And that's what I'm worried about.
10/15/2009 3:09:36 AM
and why the hell is there a cap on how much of my own money I can dedicate to a medical savings account?
10/15/2009 6:29:22 AM
^^ I dunno about you, man, but it looks like that "liberal douchebag" footage was from C-SPAN. Does C-SPAN have a liberal bias? Oh god, the liberals have their tentacles everywhere!
10/15/2009 8:36:24 AM
Labor unions turn against parts of health bill Updated 8h 22m ago
10/15/2009 11:06:15 AM
Europe is failing. Their recent elections have shown a backlash against socialism and their inefficiencies.
10/15/2009 1:39:30 PM
10/15/2009 8:29:17 PM
^^^Shocking news! Corporations are allied with republicans, labor unions are allied with democrats.
10/15/2009 11:54:45 PM
Looks like some people are misinformed regarding healthcare-- they support the individual components being pushed through, but have less support for these components when you call them "the proposed changes to the healthcare system."Overall, it's pretty clear that Americans want the bill. With a public option.
10/20/2009 12:13:42 PM
Im sure the majority of americans want free cars too. How long can we afford this is a better question.I actually agreed with this from the NY Times."But any lawmakers voting “yes” should have no illusions about what they’re voting for. This version of reform probably won’t make health care more affordable for most Americans, or place the system on firmer footing for the long run. Despite all the talk about a once-in-a-generation opportunity, our political class will have barely finished congratulating itself before rising costs will force everyone back to the negotiating table to consider more radical approaches."http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/19/opinion/19douthat.html?_r=1[Edited on October 20, 2009 at 12:17 PM. Reason : .]
10/20/2009 12:14:59 PM
^^ those are pretty strange results indeed. i wonder if that's because people are misinformed though, or if it's because they think congress is writing the plan for the insurance companies and not the people?[Edited on October 20, 2009 at 12:22 PM. Reason : ]
10/20/2009 12:21:09 PM
10/20/2009 12:23:50 PM
The bill, along with the taxes it calls for, will save money, so says the CBO
10/20/2009 1:46:10 PM
Just like TARP and the stimulus saved money, I'm sure.
10/20/2009 1:48:37 PM
^^ the bill will be revenue positive, mostly by instituting annual fees on insurers, practitioners and hospitals, as well as cutting back on Medicare spending.Health care spending will undoubtedly rise, however. That means higher premiums and co-pays. This bill does a lot of things, but there aren't many cost-cutting measures in it. It is more aimed at extending coverage to the uninsured via subsidies, and regulating the industry so that they can't reject applicants based on pre-existing conditions. The elephant in the room is the cost of coverage, which will continue to escalate under this reform package.[Edited on October 20, 2009 at 3:21 PM. Reason : 2]
10/20/2009 3:18:45 PM
10/20/2009 9:00:37 PM
It's the same CBO that republicans refer to when it suits their interests. http://voices.washingtonpost.com/capitol-briefing/2009/10/cbo_medical_malpractice_reform.html?wprss=capitol-briefinghttp://voices.washingtonpost.com/capitol-briefing/2009/10/the_ten_republican_members_of.html Face it, you guys are screwed on this one. Public Option, here we come.http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/10/pelosi-prepares-to-move-ahead-with-robust-public-option.php?ref=dcblt
10/21/2009 9:50:11 AM
10/21/2009 10:06:05 AM
10/21/2009 10:21:12 AM