12/24/2009 3:53:01 PM
12/24/2009 4:25:18 PM
12/24/2009 4:28:45 PM
12/24/2009 4:33:12 PM
yes. it keeps prices for INSURANCE down. Insurance isn't insurance if the company is forced to give it to everyone, no matter what. As someone else said, it's charity. And a bad effort at it, at that.By the way, it's fucking HILARIOUS that the Dear Leader referenced Social Security and Medicare as he trumpeted the passage of this bullshit legislation, considering that those two programs alone will bankrupt the nation. At's a shame that the things liberals are most proud of are going to destroy the nation's well-being.]
12/24/2009 4:36:06 PM
I love to see these freemarket capitalists decrying the effects of the free market. Companies have always been able to write off business expenses, and if they choose to spend that money on heath insurance to entice and retain employees that is their business. These freemarket capitalists are now calling it a subsidy "from the government" - like not paying taxes on business expenses is a government subsidy. John Locke must be rolling over in his grave. d357r0y3r even went as far as to call it "government intervention". Please. It's government non-intervention. The businesses are deciding what to spend their money on. I agree that the outcome may have unintentional consequences, but that can be changed only by government intervention. Now they say that Insurance companies should be able cherry-pick their clients to the detriment of the federal goverment - the payer of last resort.
12/24/2009 5:14:43 PM
12/24/2009 5:28:04 PM
You seem to have a lot of ideas that only work in an ideologically ideal world. I know that businesses, or individuals for that matter, shouldn't have to pay taxes, but they do beulah, they do ...Maybe you should come back when we have an ideal world. Then maybe we can implement some of your ideas ....
12/24/2009 5:33:52 PM
12/24/2009 5:36:40 PM
(Can we stop with the point-by-point rebutals? They take up a lot of room and add very little that is new, besides "did too", "did not" ...)
12/24/2009 5:48:36 PM
12/24/2009 9:57:50 PM
^ I do believe that everything is slated to begin at the beginning of 2014, with it in full effect in 2016. Also, now that I have read what was said again, my original interpretation appears to be incorrect for people at the highest level. It appears that I was wrong in thinking that the 8+ grand was for subsidies, not the price ceiling on premiums.That's what happens when I miss a few key words. However, if you think those current rates now will be the same in 6 years, you're crazy.
12/24/2009 10:50:46 PM
12/24/2009 11:26:49 PM
12/25/2009 12:50:45 AM
^^ Bingo ... (and well said by the way) ....
12/25/2009 1:13:18 AM
^ I understand what your plan proposes.What I'm asking is what's to stop someone from dumping a plan that is paying for a condition that developed under that insurance companies care to another one that offers lower premiums, or because they simply have to due to a job change.Your plan partially causes some of the same "extra" costs that the current plan does, just in a different manner. There's nothing to keep a person from dropping an insurance company paying for a condition that developed under their care, leaving them to absorb those expensive costs. Lets be honest, some of those procedures can costs hundreds of thousands of dollars, and it only gets worse as people get older.Either way, you still potentially have insurance companies paying for expensive medical procedures for people who aren't even paying them. And this is especially problematic for people who develop life long conditions or get diseases that will last them the rest of their life (like diabetes, HIV/AIDS, ect).Your idea isn't bad, it's different. I don't see anything that makes it worse than the one proposed by the Democrats, but I don't see it really making it better. I also don't see people abusing the system of taking the tax penalty and only getting insurance temporarily. What's to stop insurance companies from only offering contracts that last 2-3 years, like cell phone contracts? I don't know if that's what they do now for individuals looking for care. But it would keep someone from signing up for a contract when they get sick and then just dropping it when they're all better.And I by no means think that the current bill is "great," or even "good." I think it's OK. I think it's got some things in it that makes it better for people who do play by the rules, instead of damning us.
12/25/2009 1:19:43 AM
12/25/2009 11:35:52 AM
12/25/2009 2:26:39 PM
12/25/2009 3:11:47 PM
12/25/2009 5:02:07 PM
12/25/2009 5:52:54 PM
12/25/2009 8:21:13 PM
12/25/2009 11:02:31 PM
12/26/2009 12:02:16 AM
12/26/2009 2:47:47 AM
12/26/2009 11:14:54 AM
12/26/2009 3:53:57 PM
12/26/2009 4:36:05 PM
12/26/2009 8:05:32 PM
12/26/2009 9:12:35 PM
12/26/2009 9:13:13 PM
12/26/2009 9:14:52 PM
I think people are talking with thier feet. Its why you are seeing a decrease in population (taxpayers) in many liberal havens. They HAVE to force people to pay on the federal level, instead of growing up and saying NO for once. Like a bunch of children. " But I want it, give it to me.. i NEED it". While some people are leaving for another state, businesses have been leaving the country for years now. But Im sure this will help lure them back. LOL
12/26/2009 10:10:02 PM
12/26/2009 10:48:38 PM
If you are talking about this asinine scenario [and you are, as you posted later. thanks]:
12/26/2009 10:49:01 PM
12/27/2009 12:22:54 AM
[continued]
12/27/2009 12:23:19 AM
12/27/2009 1:52:30 AM
12/27/2009 2:19:05 AM
12/27/2009 4:51:55 AM
12/27/2009 4:52:20 AM
12/27/2009 5:34:45 AM
12/27/2009 12:45:36 PM
12/27/2009 4:38:00 PM
12/27/2009 7:23:14 PM
12/27/2009 7:24:06 PM
Last thing and then I'm done with you because clearly you're not interested in having a real conversation / debate about this:
12/27/2009 7:43:52 PM
12/27/2009 8:29:46 PM
12/27/2009 8:31:27 PM
12/27/2009 8:42:19 PM