http://www.drudgereport.com/flashocs.htm
5/24/2009 10:27:09 AM
haha, yeah nationalized healthcare will bring the GOVT out of debt. So adding the mother of all entitlements will help out that spending problem for sure.I think if I was interviewing him I would have been like this reporter.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_qffNdZZ-g&feature=PlayList&p=FE4DF5441A6B510A&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=6
5/24/2009 10:31:41 AM
I do like that he said he wouldnt bailout the states. I just dont believe it. Esp california, too many voters.He makes sense in long term vs short term problems, however he fails to realize he will only make them worse."So we've got a short-term problem, which is we had to spend a lot of money to salvage our financial system, we had to deal with the auto companies, a huge recession which drains tax revenue at the same time it's putting more pressure on governments to provide unemployment insurance or make sure that food stamps are available for people who have been laid off"Well if more people are applying for unemployment and food stamps and the states are taking in less money... why increase the amount of money and time they get for both? Wont that deplete what we do have faster? Shit, in virginia he wanted virginia to allow unemployment benefits to parttime workers. Even high school students could have gotten onto it. This is the kicker right here."So, one option is just to do nothing. We say, well, it's too expensive for us to make some short-term investments in health care. We can't afford it. We've got this big deficit. Let's just keep the health care system that we've got now. Along that trajectory, we will see health care cost as an overall share of our federal spending grow and grow and grow and grow until essentially it consumes everything... "So somehow if the govt takes over healthcare the overal share of federal spending will NOT increase? Giveme a break. Our govt provides around 50% currently, and the boomers are coming into medicare age. So that will be going up, but how is rapidly moving towards 100% govt controlled healthcare NOT increasing the share? We cannot afford medicare/medicaid and SS long term. I have NO confidence that providing healthcare for the majority of the people added to that will somehow improve our fiscal situation.
5/24/2009 11:10:12 AM
so, it only took 40 years for a President to actually come out and admit the obvious? the rest of his answer, instead of just the Drudge headline, is a good, point-by-point response
5/24/2009 12:11:43 PM
It actually is theoretically possible for a universal healthcare plan to reduce the deficit in the long run, just like it's theoretically possible for tax cuts to result in increased revenue (although this rarely happens).If people know their health is taken care of, it makes it easier for them do do "risky" things like going back to school to get an education to get a job (increasing skilled jobs at the same time), or to change jobs more quickly so the job market is less stagnant. It also makes it easier for small businesses to grow to medium sized businesses because they don't have to worry about healthcare overhead as much.However, whether government can actually institute such a system with the fingers of lobbyists from across the healthcare system in the pot is another question.[Edited on May 24, 2009 at 12:59 PM. Reason : ]
5/24/2009 12:58:36 PM
5/24/2009 1:04:44 PM
It's also theoretically possible in that we already pay more than most countries with universal healthcare. We are already the worst in our current state. The system that has evolved in the US has the worst of private and public features -- that's why there is so much incentive to try something else.You know your shit is fucked when completely public programs are doing something more efficiently than you are. It's as if you were running organization that looked up to the DMV as a model of performance.[Edited on May 24, 2009 at 1:26 PM. Reason : .]
5/24/2009 1:15:18 PM
Yeah, i'm sure there are multiple ways to look at it...Wasn't Elizabeth Edwards on The Daily Show last week saying that 1 in 700 dollars spent on ALL healthcare in the country went to this one particular CEO of an insurance company's salary? If true, that's pretty astonishing.
5/24/2009 1:17:41 PM
5/24/2009 1:46:59 PM
Sorry but it's true.
5/24/2009 3:23:05 PM
5/24/2009 3:35:35 PM
hawe'll never switch to a gold/silver standard though.
5/24/2009 3:38:21 PM
5/24/2009 3:54:36 PM
yeah moron it might be possible, but as the govt provided healthcare per population has increased, so has the costs. lets not forget it was basically govt that mandated HMOs in teh first place in an attempt to lower costs. healthcare has to be rationed. it used to be rationed by dollars, which is the easiest and best way to ration anything. now we have the govt and private insurances rationing most of it. The only way to keep a high level of service while reducing costs is to get the govt out of healthcare as much as we can.
5/24/2009 8:45:36 PM
5/24/2009 10:24:20 PM
5/25/2009 7:28:43 AM
Broke? Please!
5/25/2009 7:11:19 PM
just noticed that guy on the left has a stack of bills on his head.. o yea the thread title reads like a post-it on the refrigerator..Don't forget to pick up milk at the store - BO[Edited on May 25, 2009 at 7:42 PM. Reason : ..]
5/25/2009 7:32:42 PM
well maybe BO did put that post-it on the fridge for his wife to read... so she could go out and make more money!
5/25/2009 7:47:37 PM
5/25/2009 8:25:37 PM
Are there even any studies that support that? I'm paying health care out of my pocket now and I haven't become any less risky than when the company was paying for it, and the company was paying for better health care. I still mountain bike, I still go for road rides.
5/25/2009 8:57:52 PM
Of course there aren't. That assertion is a logic exercise based on toy models of how people behave in the real world. No need for actual evidence about what works and what doesn't in the real world[Edited on May 25, 2009 at 10:34 PM. Reason : .]
5/25/2009 10:34:31 PM
5/25/2009 10:38:16 PM
You have a point. Reduced regulation and lax enforcement of existing regulation certainly worked well for the banking industry lately, it should work even better for health care.
5/25/2009 10:44:17 PM
What are the countries with healthcare systems that are more private than ours? What are their costs per capita?
5/25/2009 10:44:25 PM
^^ the left wasn't blameless--trying to make every asshole in the world a homeowner
5/25/2009 10:56:02 PM
5/25/2009 11:19:28 PM
Welp, looks like every other rich country has universal health care. Most are private-public mixes, some are totally public, a few are single-payer. Our public-private system is at least double the cost of everyone else's public-private system. Americans are more dissatisfied with their health care than countries with universal healthcare (http://scienceblogs.com/denialism/2009/05/are_patients_in_universal_heal.php).Maybe this is too practical an idea, but how about we try out things that other countries have actually done to achieve better results in the real world? On the one hand, you have a collection of universal healthcare implementations that have better results than what we have now. On the other hand, you have assertions based on theoretical assertions about what might happen if your made the system more private (what percentages of privatizations/deregulations work out as the models predict?).If you are a decision-make in the real world, not textbook or messageboard world, you go with the less risky option -- the one where there are plenty of examples of how to implement something better (and worse!) than what you are doing right now.There are too many examples of bungled privatizations to assume that you will be able to feasibly implement a private system is not just better than what we have right now, but also better than other countries that are already paying half of what we do.[Edited on May 25, 2009 at 11:44 PM. Reason : .]
5/25/2009 11:43:12 PM
^^^ uhh, i think it's been pretty well established that was a distinctly bi-partisan goal, and both parties gone well out of their way to inflate the housing bubble
5/25/2009 11:45:13 PM
The housing debacle is a perfect example of the disconnect between the textbook and the real world. We live in a two-party democracy where compromise is the norm and policies are subject political concerns.If you are pushing a privatization policy that will not work if compromised, then you are pushing a failed policy. You judge a policy not by whether it is theoretically correct but by whether you can actually implement it in our system of government and still achieve good results.Perfect policy that can't be correctly implemented <<< less-than-perfect policy that can function in our realityThe people who don't give a shit about actually getting work done just complain about how we implemented the perfect textbook policy, incorrectly.
5/25/2009 11:57:32 PM
5/26/2009 1:42:33 AM
Once the baby boomers die off we'll be fine. And since none of them will be able to afford health insurance anyway, it will happen sooner.
5/26/2009 1:56:24 AM
5/26/2009 7:22:53 AM
5/26/2009 7:31:26 AM
5/26/2009 9:15:59 AM
5/26/2009 10:50:46 AM
5/26/2009 11:04:08 AM
5/26/2009 11:13:35 AM
5/26/2009 11:40:26 AM
5/26/2009 11:49:23 AM
nm[Edited on May 26, 2009 at 11:51 AM. Reason : ]
5/26/2009 11:51:05 AM
5/26/2009 12:01:34 PM
Our current system is highly regulated and the government is highly involved in saying what insurance you can get what you cant get and where you can go for care.If you dont realize this you're an idiot. Also, when you say you're paying out of pocket, are you paying out of pocket to the doctor for your care, or are you paying for your own insurance which pays your doc?Also, your problem is that you dont realize how much your employer used to pay for your insurance. They're paying several thousand dollars on top of your salary(~12,000 for a family of 4) for your healthcare. So if you're working somewhere for the same ammount as your previous job, but without insurance, you took a paycut.That extra $$ your employer used to pay, you now have to handle. In a purely out of pocket system, instead of your employer giving that money to the insurance provider, it would come directly to you or into a pre-rax HSA. You then pay the doctor directly with money from the HSA.Since younger people spend less money on healthcare you'll end up putting more money than you use each year into your HSA which will make a small bit of interest. When you get older and you need the money more, its there.Not only does this get rid of the beuracracy created by current insruance (lowering your costs), it also means you can shope around and pick your doc. Previously this was mandadted by your HMO. Then you get accident insurance that is priced based on risk to help eliminate the costs related to socialized risk. For most americans this would be a more affordable system that would result in better care. The gov can pay for those who still cant afford it, similar to wellfare or food stamps.
5/26/2009 12:31:12 PM
5/26/2009 12:31:57 PM
5/26/2009 1:04:49 PM
5/26/2009 1:40:15 PM
I agree with shaggy.As for medical care I dont think you will find many better than the US. BTW, look at the leading cause of death, and really most in the top 10, they are mostly lifestyle related. The fact that people are as big as they are, exercise as little as we do, and still live as long as they do is a virtue of our medical care.Nothing should be free to anyone. When something is given to you it is easily abused. Look no further than our current medicaid programs. THe majority of those on it, and not elderly, are obese and rarely show up for thier appointments. And ask anyone who works at a hospital ER and in an area with a high medicaid population, who the majority of people using the ER as a PCP are. Its simply handed to people with no expecations or requirements, other than they not go crazy and earn a living.
5/26/2009 1:48:31 PM
5/26/2009 1:56:05 PM
I dont doubt doctors make mistakes, they are human. But the leading cause? I dont believe it.Any data since your link moron?Well the leading cause of death is heart disease in the US. Heart disease. THe second leading cause is cancer. And the number 1 cancer? Lung."With an estimated 160,390 deaths in 2007, lung cancer is the leading cancer killer in men and women in the United States. It causes more deaths than the next three most common cancers combined (colon, breast and prostate). "http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/12/AR2008121203332.html[Edited on May 26, 2009 at 2:10 PM. Reason : .][Edited on May 26, 2009 at 2:11 PM. Reason : .]
5/26/2009 2:07:39 PM
SET EM UP
5/26/2009 2:13:31 PM