7/11/2007 10:32:37 PM
7/11/2007 10:35:45 PM
7/11/2007 10:58:53 PM
haha, your premiums go down bc statistically speaking you are at less of a risk to USE the insurance with auto ins. However, as you age you are more likely to use the medical insurance so you pay more. Not regulated? I live on the border, and we get into a total FUBAR with trying to manage bc/bs of NC and Va. They coverage is different, the reimbursement is different. And they often decline payment bc they are of a different state. However, after a day on the phone we can finally get our 50 bucks.So you are telling me that insurance companies charge more for higher risk people? You serious clark?(in my best cousin eddie) [Edited on July 11, 2007 at 11:08 PM. Reason : .]
7/11/2007 11:05:59 PM
^ I dont even know how to respond to anything in your post. If anything it's more evidence of how fucked up and retarded our system is, that it takes a day on the phone to get a 50 dollar reimbursement.It's not even that they charge more for higher risk people. As soon as you actually DO get something, the ONLY way to get coverage is through an employer with group insurance. Which, effectively is a small-scale variation of a universal healthcare plan.
7/11/2007 11:12:20 PM
7/12/2007 10:52:04 AM
7/12/2007 12:39:24 PM
7/12/2007 12:41:23 PM
only if medical payments are over a certain % of your income if the government cared about affordability, they could also make premiums tax deductible for people who pay their own medical insurance, not just for people who use a payroll deduction
7/12/2007 1:31:35 PM
7/12/2007 2:01:15 PM
Words.... too many words....I have no real experience with regards to private versus public healthcare. None of us really do. We can debate idealogy and fling internet links in each others' faces until we're red in the face... and we'll wind up right back where we started.So, lets establish some common ground - The current state of healthcare in the US sucks.The status quo isn't working. Too many people don't have health insurance. They don't have it because they can't afford it.Why is this? I hear conservatives saying "market forces" are the answer. It's fair to say that this strategy isn't working. Is the answer to remove government influences and control in healthcare? Or is the answer to socialize healthcare completely? Right now we've got one foot in and foot out. We're using a quasi-socialized medicine policy with private healthcare coupled with Medicare and Medicaid.This "hybrid" system has led us to where we are now.I want to hear about proposed solutions, and not idealogical rhetoric. If you believe socialized healthcare is a bad idea, give us your ALTERNATIVE. If you don't have a proposed plan to reform healthcare, you've got no grounds to criticize other proposals.We can all agree SOMETHING needs to be done. Move the debate away from idealogy and move it towards practical solutions.[Edited on July 12, 2007 at 2:32 PM. Reason : d]
7/12/2007 2:31:18 PM
medicare and medicaid is often contracted out to different insurance companies, btw.Im am curious as to why you think healthcare SUCKS.There are plenty of people who choose not to have healthcare. This is america, and they still have that choice...at least for the time being. LOL
7/12/2007 2:52:04 PM
7/12/2007 5:18:49 PM
^ That would suck royaly, then not only would my out of pocket payments increase, but I would be taxed more, essentialy having even less money to pay for my healthcare. The point is to get the government out, not give them more incentive to be involved.
7/12/2007 6:14:34 PM
A point that SiCKO didn't address was the cost of specific health care items and procedures to governments with socialiced medicine versus the cost to us as American consumers for those same items and procedures.
7/12/2007 6:48:06 PM
7/12/2007 6:57:54 PM
7/12/2007 6:59:11 PM
LOL, Noen is turning into Kris
7/12/2007 7:24:24 PM
howso?
7/12/2007 7:36:16 PM
I certainly agree that our current healthcare system has some major problems. I'm not sure how to fix these problems but I don't believe that socialized healthcare is the answer. Anyone who has ever seen the inside of a VA hospital can tell you about the bang-up job the government does with that sort of thing. Getting back to the original topic, I generally don't agree with much of what Micheal Moore says, but I try to at least hear him out. The problem is that he comes across as such an over-inflated ass that he completely puts me off before I even get a chance to hear what he has to say. He spent half of that interview either pissing and moaning about Iraq, or blasting CNN for not agreeing with him enough before he even answered one question about the movie. He may have had some good points but by that time I didn't want to hear them, at least not from him. And for a guy who has proven to not be 100% on the level in the past, he sure spent a lot of time telling CNN that they needed to tell the truth. I mean no disrespect to anyone who shares Moore's views on healthcare (although I'm inclined to dissagree). It's just that the guy is a polarizing figure and I tend not to like those no matter what their views are.
7/13/2007 12:13:20 AM
7/13/2007 12:50:04 AM
7/13/2007 12:50:27 AM
No, I very much do understand. The problem is, you and I have different understandings. The difference is, where I believe your understanding comes from a difference in philosophies, you seem to think mine comes from an ignorance of medical care for the poor when you know nothing about me.Dear lord you are dense.
7/13/2007 3:44:23 AM
You are arguing about a painter having an eye appointment. I'm arguing about the 25 million people without the means to afford medical care, much less insurance.
7/13/2007 3:44:45 AM
Even if a socialized system would fix the problems in our health care system, Does anyone have any real faith that our government is capable of effectively supporting one? I certainly don't. All of the truly intelligent people who would be capable of creating a socialized system are smart enough to stay the hell away from the public sector. When is the last time that our government (whether federal or state) has had real success with any large scale effort that directly benefits the public?
7/13/2007 7:46:42 AM
[Edited on July 13, 2007 at 9:25 AM. Reason :
7/13/2007 9:24:19 AM
This shit is getting too long so I'm only going to hit on the major points:
7/13/2007 9:33:38 AM
Here's an idea that I would support: Rather than scrapping the entire system as it currently exists, what if a government controlled insurance company was formed that would compete in the same market as profit-based providers. If, as you socialists claim, too much profit and too little service is the problem, the state owned insurance company, focused on servicing the population rather than the shareholders, should be able to undercut the for-profit insurance companies while still providing better services to their policy holders as well. Eschewing profit as a mission, it should be able to offer more affordable policies for a large portion of those without medical coverage. It's not a be-all-end all type of solution, but it can address one of the large problems with the healthcare industry.
7/13/2007 10:02:47 AM
Now thats an idea I could see supporting. I've actually always wondered why, if profit is the big problem here, why there aren't non profit insurance companies, similar to how a Credit Union functions like a non profit bank. I presume it in part has to do with regulations on who and how health care and insurance can be provided.
7/13/2007 12:07:24 PM
michael moore is a ranting morbidly obese fool
7/13/2007 12:32:20 PM
^.theres no way i'm reading the rest of this thread.
7/13/2007 1:59:51 PM
7/13/2007 2:10:46 PM
Taking the non-profit status to another level would be a government run organization (rather than a non-profit which is still a private business) that competes in the free market. If a government run healthcare organization can do a better job than what we have today, why not have it compete? IF it's executed properly, at worst it can bring the price of health care down by forcing the insurance companies to lower their prices and and at best, provide better service too.And maybe some of you will get your wish, and the big insurance companies will be unable to compete and be driven out of business.
7/13/2007 3:19:21 PM
That is essentially what universal health care does, except at a larger scale. It won't work as a government run opt-in program though. Because it won't change the inherent flaw with the system now. That is, healthy people with high income won't buy it until it's too late to qualify (ie after a major injury), and those in poverty will still be the huge drain on the system they are now, because they won't be able to purchase it.It's not a monopoly as dipshit 1337 b4k4 keeps blabbering. There is nothing preventing private service from continuing. The whole concept of universal care, in monetary terms is:-By covering everyone equally, you lower the amount of bleed money spent on people who would otherwise receive substandard care (homeless, destitute people), which is already happening now as a way for hospitals to lessen their losses to free care patients.-The healthy person who has private health insurance now pays about the same amount, but rids themselves of deductibles, copay, et al.-The chronically ill, elderly, children and invalids all get coverage that already comes out of our pockets via state programs and medicare.-With the current HMO group insurance limits gone, no more company insurance, which means more money in the pockets of the employee and the potential for more tax break on the consumer end.Really the only ones who "lose out" under a universal system are the people like 1337 b4k4 proposes who have no insurance and don't realize that they are going to get assraped with their premiums as they age. And even they end up paying LESS over their lifespan than by waiting until middle age to get coverage.
7/13/2007 6:34:10 PM
Healthy people lose out in a universal system. They end up having to pay extra taxes so that the government can pay medical bills for everyone else.
7/13/2007 6:56:39 PM
7/13/2007 7:14:26 PM
7/13/2007 7:18:37 PM
7/13/2007 7:29:08 PM
You said that in reference to the hospital getting their money from an HMO. It has nothing to do with treatment. And no I haven't, but I have decades of published literature to tell me about the people who have.
7/13/2007 9:12:52 PM
7/13/2007 10:50:27 PM
7/13/2007 11:31:39 PM
7/14/2007 11:51:23 AM
7/14/2007 12:13:19 PM
^NCDOT contracts their work, it was Granite Construction who fucked up and paid up 3million bucks for the repairs. The federal government bailed them out with another 14.4 mil.
7/14/2007 1:04:00 PM
7/14/2007 1:15:20 PM
http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/121502/You can read just as well as I can. There was an agreement, it wasn't done per the agreement, and they paid for it.And as for the bailout, it's called ability to pay. 3 million was what the contractor had, so it's what they paid. The fed bailed out the rest, because the alternative was to not have a usable highway.
7/14/2007 1:21:50 PM
7/14/2007 1:26:20 PM