There's not much room to argue with the fact that Democrats are committed to keeping the *long name health care law* otherwise known as Obamacare. There's also not any room to argue that Republicans are against it.I don't get this - why? The constitutionality point being debated now is the mandate to buy health insurance. Sure there are other parts that expand handouts, but overall people pay for their own stuff, as evidenced by the argument that it's deficit-neutral.For the sake of argument let's assume that it is actually deficit-neutral. This law then: - forces a mandate on people - still has everyone pay for their own insurance - just for the record, it's very pro-industryThis isn't progressive! I don't get it! I don't like the bill because I am left-leaning. If I was more right-leaning I would probably like the bill more. Has the world gone crazy!
3/28/2012 9:41:11 PM
Communism is the answer.
3/28/2012 9:56:52 PM
3/28/2012 9:57:38 PM
It doesn't make sense because you're still looking at the political system as a left and right system.left and right are the same party now: They're called Republicrats.
3/28/2012 9:58:20 PM
geniusboy you are mere inches away from becoming a true republican anarchist.but there's no doubt you're vote will be going to support the one party that clearly is furthest from what you support... so this topic is in vain. you'll have your dream of obama care soon enough with a 2/3's majority senate
3/28/2012 10:33:58 PM
3/28/2012 11:03:38 PM
It sounds like your objection is that the law doesn't go far enough, not that it is somehow a push in the opposite direction. But keep in mind the next step the bill's authors had in mind. The bill will ultimately eliminate competition in the insurance industry and create regulators in charge for said insurers, rendering them de-facto government sponsored enterprises. There is really no effective difference between the insurance industry this bill will ultimately create and nationalization. Sure, the managers will still be appointed by shareholders rather than the civil service, but what they can sell to who for home much and how they can spend the money they collect is dictated by regulators.^ Ok, so your only objection is that the bill might not divert tax dollars to cover healthcare. Well, it does, trust us, the bill was not and could never have been seriously believed to be deficit neutral. But, let us assume it was. If the Bill had de-jure nationalized the entire healthcare industry, but remained deficit neutral, are you saying that would not be a progressive outcome? [Edited on March 28, 2012 at 11:13 PM. Reason : .,.]
3/28/2012 11:10:09 PM
^^^I think you have the wrong person.[Edited on March 28, 2012 at 11:10 PM. Reason : .]
3/28/2012 11:10:48 PM
It's a corporatist gift for the insurance industry.A public option is better than an individual mandate. Allowing employers to give employees health benefits as a stipend would also help things.
3/28/2012 11:20:15 PM
^Exactly it is nothing more than a gift horse to the insurance industry (who love to find any way possible to deny claims to those with serious health issues). I don't understand how anyone on the left can get behind this bill.
3/28/2012 11:36:19 PM
3/28/2012 11:36:49 PM
^^ a gift horse is a bad thing.
3/28/2012 11:38:28 PM
ha, cmon, even you democrats should be laughing at this one:
3/29/2012 12:17:52 AM
3/29/2012 12:32:03 AM
I understand the whole impetus for the health care bill. Health insurance in this country after all is fairly expensive and, from my own personal experiences, the companies are never willing to cover entire procedures.However, I don't get the mandate at all from a purely progressive standpoint. I understand it even less since the "public option" fell flat on its face in the final fort of the legislation. To me, the public option was the whole selling point of the entire thing and made it seem like a pretty good idea. If you can't afford private health care, then go public. Even if the public option would likely be more of a bureaucracy than anything, everybody wins under that arrangement.The way it seems to be now is that, come 2018 when the mandate comes into effect, you are basically forced to go to a private provider or pay a fine. I don't understand what the legal justification is for forcing people to buy something more or less something that many people in this country can't really afford in the first place (otherwise this legislation would have never existed).
3/29/2012 1:43:11 AM
^^DUMBASS^100i made a prediction about dems calling it all romneys idea but you used it literally the next post??IBTObamacare = repubicanCare all along in 3....2.....1.....[Edited on March 29, 2012 at 2:06 AM. Reason : hahahhaa]
3/29/2012 1:48:57 AM
As a Socialist, I'd say it's Fascist in the most academic sense of industry leading government in helping industry. It's not single payer, there's no public option, nor is it universal or equal-access, all of which would have been progressive options. The right's on point, I think, with its critique that the mandate all but forces people to purchase a product on the market, and further legally codifies our slavery to Capital. Some of the results of the mandate are "progressive" insofar as it attains some progressive goals, like expanding coverage, and has a few progressive stipulations, like exemptions from the mandate for the poor, but other than that I'm not pro-mandate. Obama campaigned on single-payer and that was one reason I voted for him, and was sorely disappointed that this position quickly downgraded to a public option, which downgraded to "Hey let's try something the GOP thought up 15 years ago, they'll definitely get on board for that!" It was a trash idea when they came up with it, and it's a trash idea now when the Democrats try with futility to appropriate it for the sake of bipartisanship. And to be clear I'm not talking about the whole of Obamacare, just the mandate. Outside of the individual mandate it's definitely quite progressive in very good ways that protect the weak and disadvantaged from the more powerful. Still, it requires the mandate to fund large portions of it, I believe, so I'd much rather just get a public option or a single payer system that cuts out the private insurers altogether. They've failed spectacularly as an entire industry to demonstrate meaningful competition and consumer service, something they get away with only because healthcare is a life necessity and an expensive one at that.
3/29/2012 8:57:55 AM
I never felt like I understood the argument for single-payer. I think a part of the logic is that it would reduce some of the billing overhead, which is obviously a huge problem, but I never perceived any substantive argument for (what I find to be) this poorly defined term of single-payer. I'm mostly indifferent until the specifics are more clear to me.I loved the idea of a public option. It it makes the insurance companies go out of business, then.... yay. I see many arguments for why I would want to opt into the public option. If I was a politician, my first health care objective would be decoupling it from the employer/employment. A public option could accomplish some of this, and I just like taking the simple option. I seriously seriously doubt that the public option would have comparable overhead to private insurance. At least as I understand it, that's kind of the point.
3/29/2012 9:37:25 AM
3/29/2012 10:01:03 AM
3/29/2012 10:02:14 AM
3/29/2012 10:02:49 AM
3/29/2012 11:17:21 AM
yes lets ignore the non-medicare government overhead. cause that doesnt count right? also we can ignore the inneficiencies created by government mandates that insurance companies cant work across state lines. That medicare doesnt cover everyhing insurance covers. That private insurance has a lower claim denial rate than medicare, etc... etc...
3/29/2012 11:25:35 AM
How about the whole "not having profit as a priority" part?Look Shaggy, you're going to have to do better than that. The arguments you're making there can be applied with equal vagueness to any government program imaginable, they're one-size-fits all copouts. If you have some evidence of the "true, hidden" overhead of Medicare you're claiming, then post it. Otherwise drop it.
3/29/2012 11:27:11 AM
3/29/2012 11:39:39 AM
3/29/2012 1:17:19 PM
It is an anti liberal policy. Bad for environment bc no population control. it's anti liberal/nazi. it's just bad.
3/29/2012 4:41:07 PM
lolz, my thread helped spawn a new thread.
3/29/2012 5:24:39 PM
Regarding the OP:If I'm not mistaken, progressivism has historically consisted of reluctant reform aimed at quieting popular risings, as opposed to making any fundamental changes.That being said and coupled with comments made previously with regard to the health care law being a boon to the insurance companies while offering only meager reforms, the law appears to be in line with historical progressivism. I'm not sure that the law could be labeled as liberal without any form of a public option.Regarding the public option:I felt like it could have made the individual mandate more palatable to the American public, maybe even more palatable to the Supreme Court. Does anyone else have any thought on how the Supreme Court would have viewed the public option?It was the most determining factor as to whether I could support the health care law or not.With regard to the Supreme Court's decision:If they strike down the entire law, I can't foresee another health care law that includes the public option anytime in the near future.However, if the Supreme Court merely strikes down the individual mandate, what are the chances that the public option might become a political possibility? My guess is that it would only be achievable if the Democrats regain the House; even then, I think that it would have a slim probability of reaching the president's desk.Who knows, though? If the individual mandate is struck down as unconstitutional, it perhaps would give the president more incentive to push for the public option. Or would the Supreme Court's decision that the individual mandate is unconstitutional rule the public option out, as well?
3/29/2012 5:36:55 PM
3/29/2012 8:40:34 PM
3/29/2012 11:46:56 PM
3/29/2012 11:47:08 PM
government lately is on a fucking role in the 'how can i control population health, population count, population birth, population death, population everything, everything about controlling the populace' lawsbirth control, health insurance mandates, controlling drug distribution, drug prices, availability everythinggonna be interesting how much they can get their claws on and control.
3/30/2012 10:44:03 AM
Providing birth control for voluntary use is not a form of controlling people, it's actually a liberation.Seriously, when the cashier at McDonalds asks you during your 5th visit of the day, "Do you want cream with your coffee?" do you blow up and yell at them to stop telling you what to do?[Edited on March 30, 2012 at 11:01 AM. Reason : .]
3/30/2012 10:51:26 AM
yes. people are currently prevented from obtaining birth controland ipadsand mcdonalds every 10 secondsand free housingand free carsand phonesand LTE broadbandand andandandgreat point
3/30/2012 11:10:31 AM
The birth control thing kind of drives me nuts.How many things are health insurance plans mandated by law to provide? Should birth control be unique? No, it shouldn't. So we've already committed the moral hazard, and a specific group is upset, you don't have any argument to fall back on...Unless you protest federal involvement in the first place. In which case, fine, let's get them out of everything about health insurance.
3/30/2012 11:12:10 AM
3/30/2012 11:15:18 AM
Lonesnark before you deliberately steer the conversation to something you can disagree with me more on, since you seem to do that for the sake of it, can you at least agree that providing birth control is not "controlling the populace"? Like, let's just assume there's a magical fountain that spits out birth control pills, free of cost to everyone including taxpayers, and the government distributed the pills to everybody who wanted them. Would that be a sinister plan to control the populace?I'm trying to squeeze a reasonable opinion out of you, and force you to put off ranting against the government for 1, maybe 2 posts, but bear with me.[Edited on March 30, 2012 at 11:29 AM. Reason : .]
3/30/2012 11:28:09 AM
having an iphone(or other smart phone with a data plan) is just as liberating as having birth control too str8foolish.we should put that in the 'mental health' clause. what do you think?are you personally against that?
3/30/2012 1:14:39 PM
Are you schizophrenic or do you just frantically shift focus and angle to avoid actually being taken to task for your dumb remarks?
3/30/2012 1:21:46 PM
3/30/2012 2:58:55 PM
Fucking hell man you're going so far out of your way to be argumentative here.Ignore the source of the pills.Ignore who pays for them.Ignore how they're distributed.Let's just assume that a magical charitable Ayn Randian ubermensch is giving them out to everybody because of a misplaced sense of altruism (which does not exist or is immoral or whatever). Just tell me if, from the perspective of people who wake up and find a birth control pill in an envelope that is available for them to ingest if they so choose, are they being "controlled"?Try, for one moment, to not be argumentative for the sake of it and help me clear 1 piece of false rhetoric from the conversation before we move on to what you came in here to rant about regardless of what the rest of us were saying. When pack_bryan said it was "control" he was not referring to taxation or laws or your fucking bedtime, he was talking about reproductive freedom of people receiving the pills. So why don't you actually address the issue you barged into a conversation of, instead of steering it (as you always do) to more vague topics you can deliver your standard rant on.[Edited on March 30, 2012 at 3:28 PM. Reason : .]
3/30/2012 3:20:27 PM
3/30/2012 3:38:23 PM
3/30/2012 4:04:26 PM
3/30/2012 4:14:44 PM
3/30/2012 5:01:55 PM
Yes, but he has not tried to describe the current legal changes as:
3/30/2012 6:06:47 PM
The bizarre calculus of emergency room chargesReaders share their experiences about the bewildering fees charged by hospitals. Even medical professionals can be baffled by the way costs are determined.http://www.latimes.com/health/la-me-lopez-erfollowup-20120401,0,6799675.columntl;dr:Medical billing is crazy, here are some absurd stories.Paying out of pocket is often more expensive than the co-pays with insurance.I guess this is my problem with assuring that everyone has health "insurance". It's not insurance if it means you pay more when you go to the doctor. That's nonsense with a nonsense cherry on top. Hey, let me pay a monthly premium so that I can pay as much or more when an unexpected bill comes up.There's no telling how much higher the bills can go if we let the government mess it up further. I'm talking about a fully broken system. It makes me think of the irony of cash being burned for heating in hyper-inflation economies. One day we may all be insured people, fighting tooth-and-nail for the system to let us pay for the doctor out of pocket.No, that's even more absurd than burning cash.[Edited on April 2, 2012 at 9:13 AM. Reason : ]
4/2/2012 9:12:27 AM
4/2/2012 11:02:09 PM
First False Propaganda showing Obama is going to win 2012 elections.New poll shows Obama making big gains with female voters in battleground states
4/2/2012 11:22:42 PM