alright, since you are gonna pay for it, I'm just gonna start eating bonbons and refusing to exercise. I'm just gonna really fuck you over something good, lol
3/20/2010 6:04:29 PM
somehow i don't think that's much of a stretch from your current lifestyle
3/20/2010 6:05:17 PM
you'd be surprised
3/20/2010 6:05:46 PM
so, let me get this straight. you are incredibly fit, but yet so enraged with this change in policy, that you're willing to sacrifice your general well-being to prove a point?you may be the first martyr in the history of mankind to go on a food-binge.
3/20/2010 6:08:03 PM
http://budget.house.gov/doc-library/FY2010/03.15.2010_reconciliation2010.PDFI'm still curious about the relevance of the House reconciliation bill at this point in time.It includes the public option, starting at page 1167, line 16.If the Slaughter rule has been abandoned, will the Senate then vote on this House reconciliation bill? Or will it go straight to the president's desk? Or neither?
3/20/2010 6:08:05 PM
the senate will have to vote on the reconciliation portion as well. and no, the public option will NOT pass muster for reconciliation. unless the Democrats want an all-out civil war on their hands
3/20/2010 6:10:52 PM
^^it will go to senate and if they dont like it then we keep the current senate bill. thats whats funny about the whole process.
3/20/2010 6:18:09 PM
3/20/2010 6:23:47 PM
This is totally legit since people called Bush a stupid war criminal. Tit for tat. You call someone a war criminal, we'll threaten to fucking shoot him.That was from a rally featuring actual GOP congresspersons today. Someone want to justify how this is "the average angry American"?
3/20/2010 6:28:00 PM
considering just how angry the populace is about this bill, it's not surprising. And when you factor in the illegal processes they are using, you have situation that could very well be a powderkeg.
3/20/2010 7:33:38 PM
what illegal processes exactly?
3/20/2010 7:41:54 PM
^don't you know? its in the constitution that only republicans can use reconciliation.
3/20/2010 7:59:27 PM
The quickest way to tell if Obama is lying to the American people, is to watch his mouth, if it's moving, he's lying
3/20/2010 8:11:40 PM
that's a clever new joke you've made!
3/20/2010 8:13:13 PM
or if he says "let me be clear" or "make no mistake." Generally, when he says that, he's about to spout some bullshit.as to the illegalities, the Slaughter rule would be one of them, if they used it. Another would be using reconciliation to implement the public option.
3/20/2010 8:53:16 PM
seriously though...anyone notice that when he speaks, especially on TV...the stock market takes a dive, and when he shuts his pie hole...it recovers...??
3/20/2010 9:15:52 PM
^^Would the public option not be sufficiently budget-related?
3/20/2010 9:33:39 PM
Tea party protesters call Georgia's John Lewis 'nigger'
3/20/2010 10:41:17 PM
In before "We're not racists, we just don't like Obama/Healthcare/Democrats!"
3/20/2010 11:09:25 PM
3/20/2010 11:42:09 PM
"Health care should pass tomorrow: now I can finally start smoking!" - Michael Ian Black
3/20/2010 11:53:42 PM
3/21/2010 12:19:00 AM
Does anyone know at what time this bill will be brought to the floor?Also, dems just lost a Yes vote...
3/21/2010 9:22:13 AM
I will be glad to see this thing pass - if for nothing else than to watch aaronburro get frothed up into a lather.Our national healthcare system is a disgrace. It's nice to see that there are people out there with the courage to do something about it.
3/21/2010 9:55:40 AM
^^ yes. the margin is apparently at least a handful. the key words there are "swing district"^ don't confuse courage with political necessity.
3/21/2010 10:41:42 AM
3/21/2010 11:24:19 AM
It's sad when issues like this become nothing more than a partisan game of "gotcha!" There's no concern about reasonable objections to the bill, because the assumption is that any legislation Democrats come out with is going to be "better than nothing."
3/21/2010 11:35:52 AM
hasn't any reasonable objection been responded to?
3/21/2010 11:44:31 AM
Not adequately.
3/21/2010 11:46:34 AM
Ok, which ones?
3/21/2010 11:47:22 AM
The bill doesn't address health care costs, which is the problem. All it does it try to regulate the problem away, which won't work.The bill doesn't address problems with the tax code, which connects employment to insurance. The bill makes it so people with pre-existing conditions can't be denied, which is stupid. It levies a fee on any business that chooses not provide benefits, which is going to hurt businesses. There's about a dozen other things I could mention on this bill, but there's no point in rehashing everything that has been said in this thread. I've made many of the same points over and over again, and so have other people.
3/21/2010 11:56:56 AM
3/21/2010 12:00:16 PM
^ to which the rebuttal is compare current medicare costs to previous projections.... and it is apples to oranges anyway. so no, the cbo analysis is not an adequate response to that concern. the cbo estimates the cost of the bill and estimates the bill's deficit implications. the cbo has estimated a net deficit reduction. this does not mean that the cbo has estimated a reduction in health care spending, which inevitably rises. the cbo merely estimates that the cost of the bill will be made up for, plus $x, via tax increases, "cadillac" taxes, fraud reduction, etc.
3/21/2010 12:16:45 PM
^^Yeah wtf the CBO analysis has no bearing on the cost of healthcare. It just looks at the cost of the bill to the government. Also, the CBO is not credible.
3/21/2010 12:29:04 PM
does anyone have a link to a good, unbiased summary of the bill?
3/21/2010 12:31:05 PM
http://www.kansas.com/2010/03/19/1232064/democrats-release-health-bill.htmlThat's recent.
3/21/2010 12:32:13 PM
The bill is a guarantee for costs of health care to continue to rise at the current rate. The rate of increase in costs was obviously not sustainable and that's why we needed the government to come in and mandate insurance coverage.If they were interested in helping the situation... at all... they would have focused on the physical nonsensical-ness of the way we provide health care and build a system that encourages people to take care of themselves.There is serious innovation nipping at the heals of the monopoly of hospitals. In half a year the market could provide near zero-cost diagnostics from the internet that would beat the pants off any regular checkup.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ew0bn8mGAABut no body cares about such approaches that reduce cost because no one is interested in reducing costs. With the structure of the system the only innovation of interest is a development that justifies mandating a higher cost. Prescription drug makers know this and insurance companies know this.With the way things were going, we could have seen the evolution of a direct-pay market for health care where destitute Americans could get themselves reasonable care through innovative and cheap methods. That was the problem this bill fixes. Now we all get the same care. Delivered by a certified MD, at a certified hospital, audited such that it can receive payment from insurers. Regardless of how much it costs or whether or not we have enough MDs to do this.Because otherwise people might die or something. And it's better to have people die with universal coverage than without it. Or something like that.[Edited on March 21, 2010 at 12:53 PM. Reason : ]
3/21/2010 12:53:05 PM
and we will lose a lot of doctors because not as many slimeballs will be going into it for the money
3/21/2010 12:56:23 PM
do not feed the troll
3/21/2010 1:43:54 PM
The claim that 1/3rd of doctors will quit if the legislation is passed is fairly bogus.However, the fact remains that we don't have enough doctors as things stand to treat hardly the current people receiving health care and adding 35 million individuals will almost certainly cause there to be a major imbalance. And they've done SQUAT to ramp up the number coming out of med school and there's no sign of the situation turning around.Does this mean people will be denied treatment, etc. etc.? Maybe, and maybe not. But you can write whatever you want in a bill - it doesn't change the physical reality of the situation. If there are not enough X people to do Y number of Z procedure, and you mandate Y of Z, then you will not get it.
3/21/2010 2:22:35 PM
^theres student loan legislature built into this bill. They are a step ahead.
3/21/2010 2:34:23 PM
3/21/2010 2:57:14 PM
google will reveal that failure of an estimation. three words: orders of magnitude.
3/21/2010 3:04:38 PM
you can tell an argument is sound when the person doesn't even make it.
3/21/2010 3:30:13 PM
3/21/2010 3:56:15 PM
^x4 - http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/19/checking-the-math-on-health-care/This is a decent break down of the myriad ways in which the CBO estimations have the potential to be flawed. This boils down to the fact that the CBO makes an estimation, based on assumptions - some of which are probable, some of which are not so probable, for reasons political and otherwise. The article also details how the bottom line of this bill has been altered by the conscious decisions to include or not include certain related or unrelated policies. For example, the expensive "doc fix" was left out, while the money saving student loan reform was included. It doesn't matter that student loans have nothing to do with health care, what matters is they are used as one way to pay for the spending in the bill. Whether doing so is ethical is a wholly different topic.
3/21/2010 4:19:41 PM
3/21/2010 5:15:53 PM
you're trying to help him?this entire debate has nothing to do with healthcare, which is why making sound arguments about costs and rationing falls on deaf ears.This is all about consolidating power. Good luck convincing a liberal that it is a bad idea for their side to consolidate power for generations to come.[Edited on March 21, 2010 at 5:18 PM. Reason : s]
3/21/2010 5:16:47 PM
they made a deal to take federal funding of abortions. I'm all for this bill now 100% and so are a good amount of pro-life democrats.
3/21/2010 5:50:21 PM
3/21/2010 7:14:36 PM