^^ reading comprehension. It is a statement in favor of healthcare reform utilizing already available resources.
11/5/2010 7:20:47 PM
From page 60 back in March:me
11/6/2010 7:04:30 PM
Insurance Company Bailout[Edited on November 6, 2010 at 7:19 PM. Reason : You can't regulate these fuckers. Public option or leave them completely alone for competition.]
11/6/2010 7:14:06 PM
^^nice job. We are STILL waiting on that post obamacare bump. lolJust wait until the 85% who currently have ins and are happy with their health care, but concerned with the costs, premiums go sky high.
11/7/2010 12:17:17 AM
I was way off on that first statement. I'll admit I was wrong. I thought all the talk of death panels & the like, combined with a reality of no-death panels after it was implemented would help change opinions. I still think the state of the economy had more to do with election results than anything else.The second one was right on though. It was simply calling out hypocrisy (although since you didn't include the pic I had posted w/ said quote the sarcasm may not have come through with your re-quoting it). They said if it fails, game over. And when it won, they still said that also means game over.And now almost every quote I have in this nearly 1.5 year old thread:
11/7/2010 1:55:12 AM
^Don't try to derail this thread with your gay agenda.I have never been adamantly opposed to the healthcare reform bill that was rammed through congress. It has some good policy within. My whole point was that it was a can of worms that the Dems didn't need to open while the economy was spiraling. I will give Obama a lot of credit for using most of his political capital to get the bill done. But ultimately, it cost his party in the polls, and that was no surprise to me. Now he will have to pull a Clinton and seize on some republican ideas if he wants to get anything done in the next 2 years.
11/7/2010 11:04:44 PM
11/7/2010 11:41:50 PM
11/7/2010 11:42:41 PM
Did someone say "Gay Agenda?"
11/7/2010 11:50:00 PM
Wait Supplanter is gay?^ no way that is Elton John. No openly gay man I know, no matter how flamboyant, would have poor enough taste to wear windshield-wiper glasses. That is for closeted rich white Republicans who actually order stuff out of Hammacher-Schlemmacher (or however you spell it).
11/8/2010 12:02:41 AM
I hear they where them at the Bohemian Grove.And now ten thousand hit-men are after me.
11/8/2010 12:15:42 AM
12/13/2010 12:28:59 PM
12/13/2010 1:42:01 PM
I'm surprised it took this long.
12/13/2010 1:52:54 PM
fantastic, now we all get to keep paying for these individuals who get sick, rack up huge bills, but don't have health insurance because they "chose not to".
12/13/2010 2:53:47 PM
You don't have too. Why not just refuse to cover their expenses? It was not always the law that any individual must be cared for just by arriving at the emergency room.
12/13/2010 3:10:08 PM
12/13/2010 3:24:52 PM
public option would be legal the same as the income tax or social security or medicare are legal.[Edited on December 13, 2010 at 4:08 PM. Reason : a]
12/13/2010 4:08:47 PM
Just to clarify my question:Would this judge have ruled the mandatory coverage provision unconstitutional if people were able to opt into a public option?His reference to purchasing a commodity in the private market is why I ask.
12/13/2010 4:21:18 PM
12/13/2010 6:05:33 PM
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/flashback-when-asked-where-constitution
12/13/2010 9:56:29 PM
12/14/2010 12:15:03 AM
The ruling could have an unintended effect if it is overturned by a higher court.
12/14/2010 12:20:41 AM
^^
12/14/2010 1:32:11 AM
It seems to me that an insurance mandate is certainly unconstitutional, but a public option wouldn't be. I hope the failure of this act will lead to a better one in the future that actually benefits citizens.
12/14/2010 2:11:49 AM
public option is just as retarded. insurance should not pay for all your healthcare costs. its fucking stupid to put in a middle man for no fucking reason.
12/14/2010 10:42:03 AM
Public option is dead, and it won't be ressurected. Rightly or wrongly, it is viewed as a precursor to a government-run single payer system, and that will never happen in America.Republicans used to advocate the individual mandate. McCain, Romney, Frist, Scott Brown and others have supported an individual mandate on healthcare at various times. It is pretty much a requirement if we want to extend coverage to everyone.If the Supreme Court rejects the mandate as unconstitutional, they will have to go back to the drawing boards because the bill doesn't work without it. In that scenario, Healthcare will once again be untouchable and nothing will happen for at least another decade. [Edited on December 14, 2010 at 11:26 AM. Reason : 2]
12/14/2010 11:24:01 AM
http://tpmlivewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/2010/12/judge-who-ruled-health-care-reform-unconstitutional-owns-piece-of-gop-consulting-firm.php
12/14/2010 12:00:26 PM
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1210/46383.htmlDems throwing out 1 Trillion in spending trying to pay for Obamacare so the new repubs cannot elect to fund the beast.Whats another trillion at this point? And they wonder why they got voted out.
12/14/2010 6:13:47 PM
12/14/2010 6:58:57 PM
12/14/2010 7:19:32 PM
^so sad. lol
12/14/2010 10:16:40 PM
'helping the middle class' my assholethere is no way that any sort of federal healthcare (in the form it is now, by 'requiring' it) will be found 'constitutional' by the supreme court....that's the whole purpose of the 3 way system we have, congress makes laws with no real eye on the constitution, the USSC eliminates non-con ones that congress comes up with, and the POTUS 'enforces' them
12/16/2010 4:40:06 PM
ObamaCare pwnt. Stay home
2/1/2011 6:07:11 AM
^^its definitely working its way to SCOTUShttp://news.firedoglake.com/2011/01/31/federal-judge-voided-entire-affordable-care-act-because-of-lack-of-severability/
2/1/2011 6:29:11 AM
damn those REAGAN-APPOINTED JUDGES!!!
2/1/2011 6:33:03 AM
I know I wasn't the only one that said this would make it to the Supreme Court. It's only a matter of time, at this point.
2/1/2011 12:15:08 PM
^yep. But it gives the Repubs more ammo for the repeal vote. (not that it is enough to overcome the senate numbers)
2/1/2011 12:25:54 PM
http://www.forbes.com/2011/02/04/health-sector-earnings-aetna-amerisourcebergen-marketnewsvideo.html
2/4/2011 2:04:59 PM
$215 million in earnings on $8.5 billion in revenues? What's that, 2.5% profit margins? Let's not pretend that the for-profit nature of our healthcare system is the only reason we spend so much for so little, or even the primary one. An unhealthy, fat populace full of smokers, who expect the very best of the best care no matter the cost, is why we pay so much. The profit margins for private insurers factor in, but it's a drop in the bucket compared to the enormous costs of providing the most advanced equipment, drugs, specialists and cutting edge procedures to an unhealthy population during end-of-life care. That said, I'd like to see a public option modeled after Medicare. I never understood the irrational fear of an optional service modeled after our successful Medicare system. A little competition never hurt anyone.
2/4/2011 4:57:58 PM
2/4/2011 5:09:37 PM
funny that this guy extolls how great Medicare is, when it is part of the reason prices have skyrocketed. A public option that had to actually compete might be one thing, but what we would get is one that just undercut competitors by not having to come even close to paying the same. The real solution is to get away from the insurance model for all but catastrophic medical events
2/4/2011 5:17:54 PM
^, ^^Ideologues, spouting more ideological bullshit and misinformation. But I would love to hear all about how Medicare caused healthcare costs to explode. Please explain this one to me.
2/4/2011 6:22:52 PM
Any kind of third payer system is going to drive up costs, because the patient (and the doctor) are disconnected from the true cost of treatment. When medicare pays 80% or 100% of treatment, and the doctor knows this, where is the incentive to cut costs? There is no incentive, because everyone involved knows that someone will foot the bill. It's the same reason that expanding accessibility to student loans causes tuition to go up for everyone. The intentions might be good, but when you don't understand (and don't care to understand) free market principles, you'll find that the long term consequences are worse than the short term benefits.
2/4/2011 6:35:59 PM
2/4/2011 8:36:58 PM
Sure, there will always be a crisis, and there will always be people that insist government intervention is the solution. However, your solution ended up creating a circumstance much worse than the original problem (an unsustainable SS/Medicare system that can't be fixed neatly), and while you may guided be compassion, those that you sought to protect have now become the most vulnerable, as they have no means to provide for themselves should the government teat suddenly become unavailable or inadequate.
2/4/2011 9:03:27 PM
2/4/2011 9:18:19 PM
A couple of reasons. Now, a culture of dependency has been formed - these people have been told that they didn't need to prepare, because a government program would forever been in place that protects them. There's no easier way to create and maintain a loyal constituency.Also, the cost of insurance and health care today are massively inflated due to third party payers. The doctors and hospitals will charge as much as they are allowed to charge, because it'll be paid for. That can only result in higher prices across the board. Hardly anyone, senior or non-senior, can afford to pay hospital bills without insurance. That's not how it should be, and should signal to you that there's a major, structural flaw.[Edited on February 4, 2011 at 9:30 PM. Reason : ]
2/4/2011 9:29:47 PM
Why do you always pretend like you are answering my questions when you are really just saying some shit you wanted to say. The culture of dependence is irrelevant. Suppose there's a prisoner locked in a cell. If you give him food, he will become dependent on your food, if you don't give him food, he'll just starve earlier.
2/4/2011 9:43:29 PM
but you are assuming that they are little more than prisoners in a cell. and that's a hell of an assumption
2/5/2011 9:30:29 PM