magic
10/21/2009 12:11:02 PM
10/21/2009 3:24:16 PM
10/21/2009 3:37:23 PM
It's not even "appeal to emotion," though I am emotional about it and don't understand why everyone isn't. It's appeal to sanity and appeal to realism. Think about it economically - if people die because they have no insurance, think of all the workers and other important people you're losing.
10/21/2009 4:06:51 PM
10/21/2009 4:08:02 PM
If they were important workers, they'd have insurance already. I mean thats just a reality. The people without insurance are the unemployed and those who have low economic value. Ironically, if they died off the demand for workers doing the same work would increase and so would their benefits.So yes, it is an appeal to emotion. Personally I would rather improve their economic value through education. That, combined with lower energy costs (and lower taxes in other places) would increase their purchase power and lower healthcare costs. This is before doing anything to the healthcare industry at all. At this point they'd be contributing more to society than they take out. The idea that these people are essentially doomed to be poor their entire lives and that the only way for them to survive is through handouts is bullshit. Most of these people aren't poor because their stupid or poor because they dont want to better themselves, they're poor because they dont have access to quality education. They're poor because they're getting fucked by retarded shit like cap and trade or the lack of new nuclear power. They're poor because their politicians have convinced them they cant do any better for themselves. We need to give them the tools to better themselves. We'll certainly have to give them assitance in the meantime, but that assistance should be part of the whole package, not the entire thing.
10/21/2009 4:17:20 PM
Hardly any point in debating this now. If it passes and you guys are right, and it makes things worse, you can say you told me so.[Edited on October 21, 2009 at 4:23 PM. Reason : .]
10/21/2009 4:23:28 PM
I would rather you be right, and I would glean no satisfaction from you being wrong. If you're wrong, then like I said, everyone gets screwed. The same goes for anything relating to economics. I really do hope that I'm wrong, and we're not headed for incredibly hard times...it's my life at stake. My evaluation of the situation is that we are, though.
10/21/2009 4:26:50 PM
^^Thats not entirely my point. yes its a horrible fucking idea, but it also means this legislation will be considered a "fix" until it completely fails in 20 years or so. My biggest problem is that the underlying problems of healthcare costs are not being fixed and the passage of this legislation will effectively prevent them from being fixed for a long time.[Edited on October 21, 2009 at 4:27 PM. Reason : a]
10/21/2009 4:27:08 PM
Shaggy, why do you hate poor people
10/21/2009 4:27:43 PM
Just curious, what do you think are the problems that need to be fixed but aren't being fixed?tort reform, etc?
10/21/2009 4:31:45 PM
In terms of healthcare reform, its things like the idea of using insurance for more than just unexpected problems. The market is distorted by insurance companies being the payer for every procedure someone might need. The effect is that people who cant afford insurance cant afford what insurance companies pay doctors and hospitals. If everyone payed for their own care out of pocket hospitals and doctors would have to lower prices to be able to survive. This would mean profit motivated hospitals would probably go away and doctor salaries would drop, but affording care would no longer be based on you being insured. It would also mean you get to pick your own provider instead of the ones your insurance company is willing to deal with. You can get the same effect with price controls as in the French system. Price controls mean government control which is not ideal. In terms of overall reform, energy prices can be dropped by incentivizing individual power generation with wind and solar, building more nukes, and repealing backwards ass shit like cap and trade. 100% Tax credits for companies and individuals who generate their own power with small scale wind and solar would put a huge dent in energy prices, not to mention expanding the industry and making wind and solar more efficient. This wont ever happen because even though it would be great for the environment, "green" special interests would hate it because its pro business, politicians would hate it because it would decrease tax revenue, and the oil/coal companies would hate it because it would lower their profits. Lower energy prices lower the costs of everything not just healthcare. Energy costs should be tackled ahead of everything else.Second on the agenda, is education. If you increase someones education, you increase their economic value and you increase their purchasing power.After those two are tackled, we can look at healthcare and do some tweaking. First off, insurance should only cover unexpected stuff. Health insurance should pretty much work the same as car insurance. Coverage is limited to the most extreme expenses, and general maintenance and care is up to the individual. Plus, insurance companies should be able to operate over state lines. Competition = lower prices. In addition to lowering costs, if someone is paying out of pocket (free market or price controls) they're more likely to take better care of themselves. And if they dont, they pay that extra costs themselves. Bad habits wont be an expense for those who take care of themselves. The goal should be to lower costs accross the board while at the same time rasing the economic worth of poor people. You'll still end up with some people who cant afford it and for those remaining folks you can have your subsidized public option. Reform is not about just one thing here or there, its pretty much a collection of system wide reforms that effect each other.
10/21/2009 5:03:01 PM
this may have been mentioned somewhere else in this thread, but the past two this american life episodes have focused on the health care system and were really well done.you can find them here:http://www.thisamericanlife.org/Radio_Episode.aspx?sched=1320http://podcast.thisamericanlife.org/podcast/392.mp3
10/21/2009 6:38:47 PM
Liberal Media Claptrap! Really though, that show is awesome.
10/22/2009 12:23:44 PM
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/10/nelson-conrad-say-dems-white-house-leaning-toward-including-public-option-in-senate-health-care-bill.php*cough*I'm still predicting it will happen, especially now.
10/22/2009 3:13:25 PM
Olivia Snowe's threatening to filibuster a public option bill.Hopefully, the Dems will remember that her title is NOT President Snowe this time and won't gut whatever they've got planned just to satisfy her.
10/22/2009 3:18:23 PM
10/22/2009 3:56:55 PM
10/22/2009 3:59:07 PM
You realize it's completely pointless though, right? No filibuster will even come close to happening.
10/23/2009 3:35:02 PM
unfortunately
10/23/2009 3:38:17 PM
the GOP has already lost this fight and they know it. they are moving onto to trying to bash Obama over Afghanistan.
10/23/2009 3:39:31 PM
Um. . .you do realize that the Democrats control both the White House and Congress, right? And yet it's still the Republicans fault that the majority party can't pass legislation that it claim everyone wants?
10/23/2009 8:39:34 PM
thats what msnbc tells them.
10/23/2009 10:13:25 PM
10/23/2009 10:59:38 PM
also, a rather interesting article from the Economist:
10/23/2009 11:09:19 PM
http://theplumline.whorunsgov.com/health-care/reid-to-hold-presser-today-to-announce-health-care-decision/
10/26/2009 12:45:29 PM
Interesting article about misperceptions regarding foreign healthcare
10/26/2009 3:52:18 PM
Who's got my cookie?
10/26/2009 4:04:58 PM
all requests for cookies must now be submitted directly to whitehouse.gov for approval.
10/26/2009 4:24:15 PM
1. It's all socialized medicine out there. Definitely a mis-perception, but I don't get the impression Congress has actually weighed all the available options2. Overseas, care is rationed through limited choices or long lines.Government only options, which this current legislation appears designed to drive consumers to, pretty much does.3. Foreign health-care systems are inefficient, bloated bureaucracies. Most of the government run programs are. The most efficient are the German / Swiss models where, despite government involvement, competition is rampant.4. Cost controls stifle innovation. The US market is still one of the biggest consumers of health care products in the world. Just because a product is created in France doesn't mean it'll only be marketed to France. The knowledge of the US market drives a great deal of innovation.5. Health insurance has to be cruel. Wait, isn't that the boogey man the Obama administration has been pushing?
10/26/2009 10:05:33 PM
10/28/2009 12:05:21 PM
I thought democrats thought for themselves though... and that was a good thing. I guess its not unless your "thinking for yourself" is whatever the president tells you to think. good going joe. So he is worried that the added taxes would slow an economic recovery? Holly shit, someone took basic economics. Looks like Nate Silver needs a course or two.
10/28/2009 1:02:35 PM
http://www.dailykos.com/tv/w/002298/Yeah, I'm sure he has legitimate concerns
10/28/2009 3:53:23 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpAyan1fXCEI can play that game too. Liebermans reasoning from that article is sound.
10/28/2009 4:24:30 PM
^^ There isn't much universal about these bills. The Bacus bill would reduce the uninsured by only around 60%. ]
10/28/2009 5:50:53 PM
Uh, the Senate bill doesn't introduce new taxes and it LESSENS the deficit. Granted, you can't trust that completely, but there's hardly any proof that it will lead to new taxes. The PO is funded by the people who buy into it - it'll just be nonprofit instead of for profit. The house bill introduces one new tax - on families who make over a MILLION dollars per year. I think they can handle it. It also reduces the deficit and possibly saves even more than the senate bill.You can't just say something and make it true - you must show evidence. Right now, the evidence is on the side of the Dems.
10/29/2009 2:46:44 PM
I'm pretty sure that both versions of the bill call for taxing health care benefits over a certain amount, something that Obama referred to as "the biggest middle-class tax increase in US history" on the campaign trail.But getting past that, what do you thing will happen when insurers are required to pay billions of dollars in fees? When drugmakers, hospitals and device-makers are required to pay billions as well, in order to subsidize health care for the poor? How about when insurers are required to offer coverage for people who don't buy healthcare until they get really sick? These health-care companies are gonna raise their rates, and coverage is gonna get a lot more expensive for those of us who currently have coverage. And the doctors and hospitals are gonna raise their rates to counter escalating costs and cuts to Medicare from this bill.There may be no new taxes beyond the marginal taxes proposed in the House plan, but all these fees and cuts to insurers and practitioners will be passed on to the consumers, in this case you and I.
10/29/2009 7:10:18 PM
^ which is going to push people towards a public option. or perhaps the companies might just eat in to their massive profits to compete with each other.I don’t think it’s a given prices will sky rocket.
10/29/2009 7:37:56 PM
Massive profits? I don't see how a 6% profit margin is "massive".And yes, you're absolutely right that the end-game for the Dems is to drive so many people into the public option that the employer-based system buckles.
10/29/2009 7:56:30 PM
10/29/2009 8:03:43 PM
^ like what? Our education system doesn’t suffer from those problems, medicare doesn’t seem to have those problems on a national scale, roads are still pretty cheap to use, municipal water is still pretty cheap, electricity is also fairly inexpensive. In some cases, it’s cheaper to the “customer” for the local gov. to fly a helicopter ambulance, than what you typically pay for a regular ambulance elsewhere.
10/29/2009 8:08:56 PM
^ I don't even know where to begin with that retardation. You can't prove any of it.
10/29/2009 8:11:12 PM
10/29/2009 8:21:08 PM
10/29/2009 8:23:18 PM
10/29/2009 8:27:26 PM
10/29/2009 8:32:29 PM
10/29/2009 8:42:34 PM
10/29/2009 8:51:48 PM
Look, the increase in the cost of education has largely gone hand in hand with the increasing number of grants and loans being given out by the Federal government and a concurrent rise in demand without a rise in capacity. Now, I'm not arguing that more people going to higher education is inherently a bad thing, but there is a reason the cost of higher education has gone up.On the local level, the US spends more per capita on students than any other developed nation and still produces some of the worst results. While primary education is locally controlled, the Federal government still provides a substantial amount of funding which has done nothing to improve the overall quality of schools. For what it's worth, part of the reason that many of the above countries have high scores have generally homogeneous societies which demands high standards of their students for admission into higher education. There is incentive for performance, something Federal government involvement has yet to produce. They're also substantially smaller in population than the United States and, as can be expected, their governments are significantly more responsive.Social Secuity is a ponzi scheme. Medicare is only a few years from becoming insolvent. The entire warfare / welfare state is currently funded by debt and has no real value to back it up.It is simply impossible for the Federal Government to make the decisions necessary on a daily basis necessary to the efficient operation of health care, education, car production, etc. Furthermore, with no capital investment, and therefore no assumed risk, congressmen and bureaucrats are free to manipulate the sectors it controls without fear of personal loss save for the most egregious examples of corruption.
10/29/2009 10:03:40 PM
^ social security was doomed from the beginning.Medicare’s problems can be fixed with proper healthcare reform.Congress doesn’t sit around micromanaging the entities it creates, they hire (generally) qualified people to run things once they lay out the groundwork. How those things run is entirely a product of who they hire, and how well the groundwork is laid out. You can sit around and nay-say and try to create the Republican’s self-fulfilling prophecy that gov. can’t work, or you can try and figure out how to make gov. work. Gov. is not inherently incompetent or dumb, it’s people that are dumb, and dumb people are everywhere, including the private sector.
10/29/2009 10:19:12 PM