i dont think the democrats have faith in us to take care of this through charities. why dont they have faith in us and the medical business? oh right they have no faith in anyone but themselves and their socialist friends.
12/22/2009 4:54:56 PM
You don't base national healthcare policy on a hope and a prayer ... If charity was an effective policy, we would not be having a debate right now.
12/22/2009 5:26:07 PM
12/22/2009 6:45:41 PM
^^ And if the current system worked, we wouldn't be having this debate either.
12/22/2009 7:17:29 PM
12/22/2009 10:14:42 PM
this whole endeavor has been ridiculous on so many levels. very sad.
12/22/2009 10:20:33 PM
Quoting the Cato Institute is hardly credible. They have a vested interest in healthcare insurance reform dying.
12/22/2009 10:22:51 PM
^Don't we all have a vested interest in our health-care? And if you're worried about lack of credibility, there are plenty of democrats to fit that bill.
12/23/2009 2:09:27 AM
And if you're worried about lack of credibility, there are plenty of democrats to fit that bill. Smooth transition
12/23/2009 3:44:09 AM
^^ Yeah, I posted a piece about that peculiar exemption on the last page. It was mostly ignored--it just doesn't fit the narrative of many left-wingers here.
12/23/2009 3:47:43 AM
the main thing I have seen now is 'Pubs questioning the Constitutionality of a bill that requires people to purchase a product, as well as deals like the Senator from Nebraska received (i.e...is it Constitutional for 2 Senators to agree that the American public as a whole will pay for Nebraska's medicare forever?)
12/23/2009 8:34:05 AM
12/23/2009 10:27:24 AM
why on earth would you ever want to penalize people who are already paying for their own insurance.bat shit crazy.
12/23/2009 11:30:23 AM
Am I missing something on this? 15,000 dollar annual penalty for...not having employee provided health insurance and making 88k for a family of four? Are you kidding me? 88k is barely enough to get by in California with a family. How did anyone think this was a good idea?
12/23/2009 11:54:34 AM
I imagine that no insurance provider in the nation will continue to stay the course without revising to meet the government mandated standards. So if you're currently insured you're going to have to go back to the negotiating table with your insurance company to make the mandated changes to your policy basically.Of course there will be some market for insurance that isn't for covering the mandate. Maybe there will be baby insurance packages that covers just what the primary mandated coverage does. But when people go back to their insurance providers to update their plan to the new regulations... yeah... they'll probably get boned.
12/23/2009 12:38:31 PM
12/23/2009 1:35:32 PM
No dropped coverage for pre-existing conditions is a win, in and of itself.Insurance is supposed to spread the risk. The bigger the pool, the more the risk can be spread around. Healthy people do pay for unhealthy ones ... that is insurance. Insurance companies were cherry-picking the risk, maximizing profits to the detriment of anyone that was sick. That is not insurance - that is a rigged game.Fuck all of the haters .... at long last ... something is going to go through ... and if the Republicans don't like it, lord knows they've had their chance ...
12/23/2009 3:01:42 PM
12/23/2009 4:37:56 PM
Earth Dogg, how about you post the whole fucking biased article, or link to it, instead of just posting quotes that bias the reading of the article to favor your own stance.See, I can do it too:
12/23/2009 5:38:04 PM
1337 b4k4:
12/23/2009 6:54:25 PM
^ I hope you don't mind, but I also want to use what you said as the beginning of another point. In addition to what you said, if the insurance companies are allowed to do what they've been doing, skewing the population to maximize profits, then what happens to the "uninsurable?" People are born with pre-existing conditions, and people may eventually have to leave their own healthcare that they had before they got sick. If they get into a large group plan, then they might get lucky, but if they have to get insurance on their own, they're screwed. They either have to pay out the nose, which they may not even afford to pay for astronomical rates, or they won't get covered.The system as it now favors the healthy be keeping them healthy If you're already sick, you're boned. And a health care system shouldn't be run like that. There's no reason to have a system that discriminates against the sick like it does now.What I don't understand is how can people be against having insurance companies being unable to discriminate against the sick. The people who are for the current insurance system, are you not aware that you yourself may end up as one of the unfortunate? Are you that cocky that you think that nothing bad will happen to you? Do you just not want to think about ever being unfortunate? Are you that high up in your ivory towers that you don't think you can fall out? Do you think you have all your bases covered that you'll never end up being screwed? That you'll never lose your group plan, or that you'll never lose your job and be unable to afford health insurance?Whether you'd like to admit it or not, or whether you don't ever want to think about the prospect of losing your cozy security blanket, the current system DOES put you at risk.If you think that the GOP's wishes to try to lower costs through allowing you to purchase insurance across state lines, having tort reform, allowing individuals and small businesses to pool together and get a large group plan (how they even plan to force that into allowing insurance companies to do that is beyond me) is going to help prevent you from being without insurance in a time when you can't afford it will work, then you're crazy.All that the GOP's plan does is make health insurance cheaper for those who already have it, and I AM FOR THAT. As to how much cheaper, who knows really? It's one of those things you won't really find out if it works until it's put into practice, but in theory, it sounds like it will help. But what I don't see GOP's plans helping out is people who currently can't afford health insurance. Yeah, it will help out a few people, but people who are considered the "working poor," I don't see their plans as helping them in any way. I see it as truly helping those who can just barely afford health insurance now and helping those who can barely not afford health insurance now, and that's if their plans do anything.There's still the issue of a lot of uninsured people, especially those who refuse. Because whether you realize it or not, they DO impact YOUR premiums. Hospitals and doctors DO pass on some of THEIR costs onto YOUR health bills, which YOUR insurance company pays for. They do this to lower the bills for uninsured people so that they might actually be able to pay the hospital bill, all while upping your bills. That doesn't seem very fair at all, but that's how the system is. I feel that by getting more people insured, especially those who choose to go without insurance, it will help lower premiums as well.
12/23/2009 7:29:54 PM
12/23/2009 9:01:51 PM
12/23/2009 9:54:04 PM
CASH FOR CLOTUREThe Washington Post's Dana Milbank coins a new political moniker.Dec 22, 2009
12/23/2009 10:48:44 PM
12/23/2009 11:02:47 PM
12/23/2009 11:19:34 PM
Oh aaronburro, you seem to have a bit of a chip on your shoulder. I guess I can get one too. Lets see how it works out.
12/24/2009 12:11:12 AM
12/24/2009 12:21:48 AM
12/24/2009 1:11:42 AM
It has passed the senate this morning as of a few minutes ago.http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34584011/ns/politics-capitol_hill/
12/24/2009 7:32:38 AM
OMG Harry Reid said 'No' initially. Freudian slip!!!1 Faux News jumped all over that one. . .
12/24/2009 7:39:27 AM
If you don't understand how prices are determined and what causes costs to go up and down, you will not be able to solve the healthcare problem. When this bill makes the problem worse, and it will, there will be more "reforms," assuming our system of government doesn't collapse first. I've provided so many solutions in this thread and other threads that would bring down costs for everyone, guaranteed, but no one cares. The supporters of this bill don't want real solutions. Any solution that doesn't involve health insurance for everyone isn't a solution, to them, because it doesn't match up with their political agenda. In a free market, prices should go down. Just look at laser eye surgery - not covered by insurance, usually. The procedure keeps getting better, safer, and more accessible around the country. Does the cost go up? No. The price has gone down substantially since it came out years ago. And it continues to get cheaper. Prices always go down over time, until the government gets involved. Congress tries to legislate lower costs because they don't understand the price mechanism, and all we get is higher costs. It isn't by random chance that healthcare is getting more expensive. It is a direct result of government intervention and regulations.[Edited on December 24, 2009 at 8:51 AM. Reason : ]
12/24/2009 8:50:10 AM
I agree that there are more solutions that could have been implemented - like allowing for cash payments for routine visits, etc. Why the fuck didn't the Republicans do something about it when they had their chance! They could have done something real and taken the credit for it. Now they're reduced to complaining about what did get done. In the words of someone famous: "Do something, or STFU!" (There is nothing to stop them from still trying to implement some of those solutions by the way.)As I have said before, not being able to be dropped for pre-existing conditions is a win in and of itself. Health insurance is not like car insurance. You can choose how you drive, you can not always choose your health. In order for health insurance to work there has to be a large pool, randomly selected, so that the healthy can pay for the sick, until the healthy become sick anyway, at which time they start using the services. Anything else is a rigged game. The goal of requiring insurance is to get the 15% of the population without insurance into the pool.I know that you think the government can do nothing and the free market can do everything, but I don't think the goal of our national healthcare system should revolve around maximizing corporate profits. That's an easy task in the insurance business. You just take money in, and don't pay out. Lord knows we've seen enough of those tactics being used by way of pre-existing condition and nit-picky insurance rules which all seem find reasons not to pay.In short, I do think there are common sense things that could have been done, and I wish the Republicans would have done some of them. But they were too far in the pockets of those making good money dropping people they would have to pay out for - to the detriment of the general public. In truth, the Republicans didn't want to do anything. Now that the outcry has gotten to the point where something has to be done all the Republicans can do is complain that we are not doing the right things. STFU, you had your chance. As someone once said, "The problem with Socialism is Socialism. The problem with Capitalism is Capitalists." I don't think the government can do it all, but I also don't think the free market can cure all ills - like looking after everyone's healthcare interests.
12/24/2009 11:22:30 AM
12/24/2009 11:42:14 AM
^^Actually, I desperately hope that I'm wrong about everything I believe on that subject. I hope that Keynesian economics is correct and that the government will be able to save this country from economic disaster, because if it isn't, I'm going to be one of the people that suffers greatly. Do you think I want hyperinflation or some other kind of severe economic downturn, just so I can say "I told you so"? How does that benefit me in any way? I just graduated not that long ago and I barely have any money saved. It's my life at stake. I'd like to just pretend, like you and most Americans, that we're going to recover from this and everything will go back to normal. Unfortunately, everything I have read and studied leads me to a totally different conclusion. Just look at my post in this thread: http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=556098&page=49. How can you read that and think that we're not in some deep shit?[Edited on December 24, 2009 at 11:47 AM. Reason : ]
12/24/2009 11:45:44 AM
12/24/2009 11:59:37 AM
how? If this bill is a terrible terrible bill, how can one not point that out?
12/24/2009 12:07:25 PM
12/24/2009 12:25:28 PM
^ the pre-existing condition thing is not just for people who are “irresponsible” as you are alleging. The majority of people that get burned by that are more than likely just normal people.It’s probably the one part of the bill that most people actually support. Republicans would have never been able to remove that without getting railed by the public for it.
12/24/2009 12:31:29 PM
That's because the average American is too stupid to understand how insurance works. We're going to bankrupt the insurance companies, and the government can "save the day" by bailing them out, or just letting them go out of business, and coming in with a single payer system.
12/24/2009 12:34:18 PM
12/24/2009 12:57:33 PM
12/24/2009 1:04:03 PM
12/24/2009 1:05:27 PM
12/24/2009 1:11:48 PM
12/24/2009 1:22:34 PM
I forgot to mention:gloat gloat gloat
12/24/2009 1:37:08 PM
12/24/2009 1:47:34 PM
12/24/2009 2:13:07 PM
so whats in the bill? social abortion?
12/24/2009 2:17:52 PM
12/24/2009 3:51:14 PM