at the company I work at and afterward he is holding a public forum where we are encouraged to ask Congressman Price questions. So come on T-Dub...if you could ask Congressman Price something what would it be? I need something intelligent to ask...hahaha.
8/28/2009 9:08:57 AM
clearly you don't visit the soap box very often. these retards have nothing insightful to offer
8/28/2009 9:15:10 AM
Ask him if he will vote a bill that does not include a public option.If he says yes, ask him why he doesn't support a public option.
8/28/2009 9:30:09 AM
ask him if he's ever read any of the US Constitution. If he says he has, ask him why he's supporting Obama's agenda that directly violates the 10th amendment.
8/28/2009 9:32:21 AM
Ask him when they start warming up the ovens.
8/28/2009 9:36:56 AM
Ask him for his ID.
8/28/2009 9:42:32 AM
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.I'm not exactly sure what bcsawyer is getting at. Do you have any specific examples?
8/28/2009 9:53:08 AM
8/28/2009 9:59:52 AM
lol it ain't holler-than-thoughit ain't even snarkyit's just absurdest bullshitand in the endit has just as much effect on the world as anything posted in here... well thought-out or noti've been on here for almost ten years and i'm gonna say what i wantif you don't like it, ignore it[Edited on August 28, 2009 at 10:13 AM. Reason : your blood pressure will thank you for it]
8/28/2009 10:10:18 AM
^ I was mainly referring to qntmfred's post. But your post had enough of your usual I'm-above-it-all air--with a sprinkle of mockery--that I included it.
8/28/2009 10:15:00 AM
there's nothing "above" anything... i don't approach this site like thati'm in another dimension watching the hate train roll through on a monochrome monitor
8/28/2009 10:24:19 AM
marko is the LAST person on the website fitting a "I'm-above-it-all" attitude and mockery is his MO. he does it so well with excellent thought out posts that amazes me sometimes.
8/28/2009 10:40:47 AM
OK so I'd really like to ask something about how Obama says that government provided health care will be optional, but from what I understand, it really won't be optional. Also, maybe mention the negative affects it will have on businesses that already provide their employees health care, but I don't have any references from the health care reform bill to back up my assumptions. Anyone have any ammo I can use?
8/28/2009 11:34:29 AM
I don't understand how "but from what I understand, it really won't be optional" and "I don't have any references" goes well together.How do you feel that it won't really be optional?
8/28/2009 11:40:16 AM
i've heard it will and heard it won't. i don't have any proof though.
8/28/2009 11:52:03 AM
^^^^ Okay, I could be wrong--I've been wrong before. But marko's posts sure feel that way sometimes. BTW, this ain't the goddamned mod forum. ^ More potential questions:5. If the need to pass health-care reform is so urgent, why does the plan not take effect until 2013?6.From a study by The Lewin Group, which is a health care and human services policy research and management consulting firm:
8/28/2009 11:56:20 AM
It will be optional. Even in places like England, that have a strong government health care plan, people still can and do purchase supplemental private insurance if they want.The only business that it will have a negative effect on is a healthcare insurance business, because they will have to reevaluate their pricing when competing against a government plan.If you work for a healthcare insurance provider, then I'm sorry.If you don't, then I don't see how this will negatively impact your company. If anything, they will save money by you switching to a public plan or when your insurance provider lowers their prices.
8/28/2009 11:58:48 AM
^ You are wrong.
8/28/2009 12:02:47 PM
I've got a few for Rep. Price: -Have you considered any alternative plans to the Obama proposal at all, such as the model proposed by CEO of Whole Foods John Mackey and many other reform advocates, which proposes shifting away from employer-sponsored insurance, toward individual catastrophic coverage and Heath Savings Accounts?-According to the CBO, President Obama's plan currently proposes over a trillion dollars in new spending, yet only covers a fraction of the uninsured. Meanwhile, the same report estimates that the cost savings from covering said uninsured will be minimal. Therefore, how do you propose to cover this very large amount of new spending without further deficits, which are already quite extreme?-How does this plan ultimately control the longer-term structural issue of a rise in medical spending? -Do you favor normalizing the tax treatment of employer-sponsored and individual plans?-Do you favor allowing insurance companies to compete across state lines, rather than the current model where insurers are regulated at the state-level?-Do you believe that eliminating risk-based pricing from insurance will somehow not raise costs on other consumers? Why?-Do you favor eliminating risk-based pricing for other forms of insurance, such as auto insurance? Why or why not? How does this square with your current support of the Administration's plan?Those are a few I could come up with.
8/28/2009 12:05:03 PM
8/28/2009 12:06:15 PM
^^ Those are good.[Edited on August 28, 2009 at 12:06 PM. Reason : ^]
John Mackey also believes that Americans do not have a fundamental right to health care.
8/28/2009 12:07:28 PM
8/28/2009 12:10:03 PM
Dr Steve...how does the proposed plan only "covers a fraction of the uninsured"I thought the idea was to cover everybody?
8/28/2009 12:13:02 PM
i'm thinking about somethig more generic like"Congressman Price, can you in layman's terms please explain how the proposed bill for the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009, as introduced on July 14, 2009, will work to increase the overall health of American's while saving American taxpayers money?"
8/28/2009 12:18:14 PM
8/28/2009 12:25:19 PM
Whatever you ask, make sure you know what you are talking about, when I've talked to him before it wasn't like asking a professor a question & waiting silently for the answer to take notes on... he is apt to start a conversation with you.
8/28/2009 12:27:59 PM
8/28/2009 12:31:55 PM
8/28/2009 12:37:59 PM
I just want to confirm this before moving forward. You believe that American citizens do not have a right, regardless of personal poverty, to food, water, and shelter?
8/28/2009 12:42:47 PM
I don't think these things qualify as "rights." These are things that we, as a society, have seen morally proper to provide. This does not make it the same thing as a "right."Case in point: do you have a right to walk into a doctor's office and demand that they treat you? Do you have a right to walk over to a farm and demand that they feed you? Do have a right to walk into someone's private home and demand that they provide you shelter?So why is it and different when it's more diffuse?
8/28/2009 12:46:42 PM
You're obfuscating what I mean by "right." I'm sorry if I was confusing.By "right," I mean that I believe that a democratic government, as elected by it's people, is required to provide certain goods and services to it's citizens. These included, but are not limited to, food, running water, shelter, electricity, education, and, yes, healthcare. This is what I mean when I say that citizens have a "right" to these services.
8/28/2009 12:52:32 PM
This conversation reminds of this video I just saw:
8/28/2009 12:57:52 PM
8/28/2009 12:59:11 PM
I believe all of those assumptions, yes. What is the purpose of a government if not to provide those services, including leadership, to the people?
8/28/2009 1:04:18 PM
8/28/2009 1:13:32 PM
I understand your position, that the government should provide for a few basic services but not others. How does one decide which services, though? You mentioned "sanitation, roads" as two services the government should provide. Why? Why can't a private, for-profit company be in charge of sanitation for a city? Why can't a private, for-profit company be in charge of building the roads in a city? Surely these two services can be provided more efficiently by a private company than the government.
8/28/2009 1:24:17 PM
8/28/2009 1:37:40 PM
Government (July '09): You car dealers will be reimbursed in 10 days under the Cash for Clunkers program--and we can run health care the same way.Car Dealers (September '09): Where's our money?Government: Ah. . .um. . .paperwork and stuff. Oh, look, there's the Queen (runs way). Car Dealers: (Tap, tap, tap.)Government: (Crickets.)
8/28/2009 1:37:57 PM
Health care isn't excludable. Look at our emergency rooms.[Edited on August 28, 2009 at 1:41 PM. Reason : ]
8/28/2009 1:41:00 PM
8/28/2009 1:43:12 PM
8/28/2009 1:43:42 PM
let us know how it went sparky
8/28/2009 2:48:18 PM
ok so this is the question that i asked
8/28/2009 3:26:02 PM
8/28/2009 3:50:09 PM
8/28/2009 4:14:53 PM
8/28/2009 4:18:47 PM
Because everyone in America should be insured regardless of how healthy they are?
8/28/2009 4:19:23 PM
Again, the issue here is a conflation between insurance and care. Your premise is likely more one that, "Every American deserves health care." Which is fine and all, but let's be clear to start.If I am walking in with a costly existing condition, how is this insuring against an unknown future cost? It's no longer an unknown, possible future risk. Again, every American also deserves shelter; does this mean we should insure your house after it burns down? At this point, it's not really "insurance" anymore. So why are we trying to pretend otherwise?
8/28/2009 4:23:06 PM
I suppose that's comforting to persons with cancer who are denied treatment from private health insurance companies.
8/28/2009 4:37:37 PM