I completely agree that it doesn't go far enough.
7/31/2009 10:59:13 AM
7/31/2009 12:41:59 PM
^
7/31/2009 12:58:07 PM
It's not clear to me that we should let theoretical market forces dictate our healthcare. I mean, you want Hershey's and Willy Wonka to compete in a free market? Fuck it, I don't give a shit. As a consumer, candy isn't that important to me. But healthcare seems too important to be left up to the magic of market. And it isn't quite right to let our nation's health be a for-profit bidness. I know profits supposedly incentivize efficiency and result in a quality product, but profits also incentivize insurance companies to behave badly. And for each quality product out there, profit-oriented attitudes have also created a crappy corner-cutting product.I dunno, it seems like we're being presented with two options: big ass corporations to have all our money and power over our health or a big ass government to have all our money and power over our health. And I wouldn't be so cynical about the corporations if they hadn't done such a shitty job thus far (and gotten wealthy doing it).
7/31/2009 1:42:42 PM
7/31/2009 1:43:47 PM
7/31/2009 1:56:10 PM
Bridget, I would argue healthcare is too important to create a government monopoly. If it refuses you then you die. Even a poor person can raise money to pay a doctor, either by selling the family car or charity, but not even a middle class person has a chance of convincing a bureaucrat to make an exception. As it is, the argument in congress is not over market vs government, but replacing one single-payer with another single-payer. Both will still say no to patients, the only difference is that when an insurance company said no you could call the Media and get an exception or maybe work out a 50/50 payment plan. Now, when the government says no in accordance with the government list of unapproved treatments, it is illegal and no amount of media coverage will change their mind. As for your fear of size, there is a third option you are ignoring. Your doctor can be as big as you want him to be. All you need to find is a private practitioner which owns his own business and all care decisions would be between just the two of you. Of course, such a relationship in the form of insurance (pay me an annual retainer and come see me as much as you want) is illegal, so if you fear size why not make that legal?
7/31/2009 2:03:52 PM
we're not arranging a single payer system so your point is rather moot. those who wish to keep their private option may choose to do so and those who choose to go with the public competition may do so as well. i'm not seeing why this is 1) so hard for people to grasp and 2) why people are concerned about additional competition coming to market.
7/31/2009 2:10:01 PM
7/31/2009 2:23:00 PM
^^^Exactly. It's the government in the first place that has made insurance companies and doctors so expensive and limited.
7/31/2009 2:37:39 PM
pretty much i don't want to pay for your healthcaremore incentive needs to be placed on primary care and preventative care, how to do the latter i don't know, but that alone could cut costs significantly across the spectrum of time.
7/31/2009 3:34:07 PM
7/31/2009 5:44:57 PM
7/31/2009 8:02:24 PM
^Do you realize how hard it is to get Medicare though? Or how many people who really need it don't understand the process enough to appeal a denial?
7/31/2009 8:35:33 PM
7/31/2009 8:59:38 PM
I'm not sure where people are getting the idea that denials would be any lower under a government-run plan. http://www.boston.com/business/healthcare/articles/2009/05/28/insurers_ranked_on_payment_records/[Edited on July 31, 2009 at 9:53 PM. Reason : .]
7/31/2009 9:53:14 PM
get out of here with that evidence and logic, man...
7/31/2009 10:00:16 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/02/us/politics/02hulse.html?_r=1&hpanyone else think they are going to use reconciliation? there was like one week in may or so where it got a little press, but then just went away. guess we'll have to wait til oct 15
8/2/2009 1:00:03 AM
great points burro and nilly.Let me ask a question. The govt has a history of dealing/handing money and programs.. JUST LOOK AT IT.Expandings govts role in healthcare is like putting Bernie Madoff in charge of SS. Then justifying it by saying he made some people very happy, and it worked for awhile. When Bernie basically is going to jail for providing a private SS scheme. Ironic huh. Just look at thier track records. The govt role in healthcare keeps expanding, always with the promise to lower costs...yet here we are.And medicare is going bankrupt and is completely underfunded. Going by "popularity" of a program that is shifts virtually NO costs to the consumer while ignoring the actual dollars of the program is fucking childish sarijoul. Frankly I expected more from you, your thoughts are usually backed with logical thinking. I think a program where people got cars for 10 dollars, or got 4500 for an old car that isnt worth that would be popular....oh but who cares if we dont have the money to support it.
8/2/2009 10:24:31 AM
if health care is for everyone, then everyone should pay its a luxury, not a right
8/2/2009 2:14:49 PM
If god didn't want poor people to get sick and die, he wouldn't have made them so poor.
8/2/2009 2:19:21 PM
what does that have to do with anything
8/2/2009 2:22:13 PM
Heath care is a luxury. If you can't afford it, you don't deserve it. Therefore, poor people deserve to get sick and die. LOGIC, BRO.
8/2/2009 4:12:24 PM
8/2/2009 6:30:45 PM
8/2/2009 6:42:00 PM
8/2/2009 6:56:14 PM
8/3/2009 7:14:22 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090803/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_economyO rly? Who saw that coming?
8/3/2009 10:00:06 AM
"No one is talking about a government take-over of health-care"Yea right....http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-bY92mcOdk
8/3/2009 11:10:32 AM
Hunt, those numbers can be spun in any direction. Someone could just as easily say that those claims are denied so much more often because the government is better at filtering out spurious claims and that the payouts are only 30 days worse (in the 50s) than the best (in the 20s) which is hardly a big deal in the world of business transactions.I'm not saying any of those things are true, I'm just saying "lies, damn lies, and statistics."
8/3/2009 1:30:13 PM
Regarding women's suffrage as a right – if women's suffrage is a right, why has it been thought of as such only in the past century? True rights are intertemporal. They do not come into being merely because of the capacity to pay for them. In other words, why did our forefathers miss this one?
8/3/2009 1:33:39 PM
^^Adding 30 days to receivables outstanding has huge implications for cash-flow management.^ Our society's decision not to grant women the right to vote doesn't change the fact that voting, itself, was considered a right centuries ago. (i.e. if health care were considered a right by our forefathers, they would have granted it to white, male landowners.)[Edited on August 3, 2009 at 1:56 PM. Reason : .]
8/3/2009 1:55:22 PM
8/3/2009 4:44:47 PM
8/3/2009 4:55:02 PM
^^There are very few examples of true monopolies that sustained themselves without the aid of government. For 99% of businesses, the above is accurate.
8/3/2009 6:18:18 PM
8/3/2009 11:06:22 PM
8/3/2009 11:29:28 PM
8/4/2009 6:50:30 AM
Perhaps Pelosi and Friends could have used all the money they are handing away like lollipops with Ca$h 4 Clunker$ in order to fund their healthcare initiative.New Cars vs New Health Care Program we definitly have our priorities straight
8/4/2009 8:51:31 AM
8/4/2009 9:08:13 AM
8/4/2009 9:15:38 AM
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2009/06/30/alice_in_medical_care_97231.htmlThis article pretty much sums up the problem. Medical care is not cheap no matter what plan you use to cover the cost. The only way the cost of something could go down is if the government says, no surgery can cost more that $10,000, no medicine can cost more than $100, no test can cost more than $500, mal practice insurance can only cost $5,000 per year, and and no one can be awarded more than $20,000 dollars in a mal practice case. This isn't possible though and will never happen.
8/4/2009 1:12:21 PM
^^
8/4/2009 1:43:38 PM
LOL! Two illustrative videos: Paul Krugman--the hero of some of you--self-pwning:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EPd2i4Jshs"Sen. Arlen Specter, Secy. Sebelius Mobbed to Kill Health Care at Philly Town Hall"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yc362U69lms
8/4/2009 4:41:56 PM
Mobs make smart decisions.
8/4/2009 4:51:09 PM
[Edited on August 4, 2009 at 4:56 PM. Reason : Smug. ]
8/4/2009 4:55:31 PM
I can tell you've earned your roll-eyes merit badge.
8/4/2009 5:20:02 PM
^ GG on your misdirection attempts.
8/4/2009 5:41:56 PM
8/4/2009 5:46:41 PM
8/4/2009 5:48:35 PM