Adapted from my facebook page:Voted - "Four more years" ... Hotbutton Issue: Healthcare ... I have long been angry and frustrated with a healthcare system where healthy people can opt out of the insurance pool and sick people can be thrown out via "pre-existing conditions". I would have accepted a solution from either party, but after 30 years of debating I feel that each party has had their chance. I don't want to see those gains rolled back.Fred: As I watch more and more people loose thier jobs, and business close, I keep looking for these great gains you people talk about. I just don't get it.Bob: More and more people aren't losing their jobs, and more businesses aren't closing (despite the gloom and doom of the election season). Things are on the upswing. Here is a Bureau of Labor Statistics graph of unemployment since Obama took office: http://liberalvaluesblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Bikini-Graph.jpgFred: I dont have to read it, I SEE it every day. Open your eyes to the truth. I am not reading any blogs or following any politics, I am just seeing the truth. ANYONE CAN MAKE UP ANY GRAPHS OR FAKE DATA.Fred: If so many are not loosing thier jobs, why is food stamps increasing out of sight? And those requesting more and more handouts? Are you really that blind? Bob, I thought that even you could see the truth and not the hype.Bob: I check a variety of sources, but, if I'm going to believe one, it's the Bureau of Labor Statistics ... It's the same data they use to beat him up with, and the same data he uses to tout himself. I know that things are still bad, but they are on the upswing. He took on the worst economy since the great depression - and it took us 13 years and a war to get us out of that (with all the WPA stuff) ... Like I say, healthcare is my hot-button issue. I don't want to move backward. Or, in the words of Wayne Gretzky: "Skate to where the puck is going."Fred: Well, I guess you could say this to make those numbers. Think about this, how many illegals have come into this country and taken the jobs that legal citizens had. Do those numbers make that right? I don't know, but I am pissed at watching all my friends loose their jobs with little to no hope of getting new ones. Not political at all with that statement, just American. I'm done ranting. I actually hope your right, but if your not....Ricky: I can see your point regarding health care. I think of my aging parents and the future for Terrie and I. There has to be a solution, however; I do not believe Obama's abilities will lead us to a better place in the future.Ricky This was an interesting website if it loads for you. http://www.usdebtclock.org/ As our debt grows, the middle class will pick up the main load in paying it down.Bob: I don't disagree with you on that Ricky ... It's one of those things I'm disappointed in Obama about. ... At the same time I don't think it is just something we can tax cut our way out of. Romney balanced the Mass. budget by instituting user fees on everything. Add to that tax cuts at the high end and it's a recipe for middle and lower class suffering. I think we have to raise taxes at the high end. The stock market is almost at an all-time high. People investing are making money hand over fist. If it hasn't "trickled down" to the middle class, it's time to have a long hard talk with the "job creators".Ricky: I fundamentally disagree with this approach, to me that sounds more like socialism.Bob: Ricky, they only call it socialism when the money moves downward. When it moves up it's called, "a good business environment". In both cases it's usually due to government policy. Right now we have the biggest gap between rich and poor since right before the great depression ( http://www.csmonitor.com/var/ezflow_site/storage/images/media/content/graphics/2012/0220/awealthgap_g1/11743278-1-eng-US/AWEALTHGAP_g1_full_600.jpg ). It isn't by accident. Policies on globalization have pitted American workers against the lowest wage workers in the world. This has been good for business and helped lift developing nations out of poverty. It hasn't been so good for U.S. workers. It used to be that increases in productivity were followed by increases in real income. This is no longer the case ( http://stateofworkingamerica.org/m/?src=http://stateofworkingamerica.org/files//Median-income-productivity-growth-47-11.png&w=640 ). Now most of the benefit goes to business. Before the housing bubble burst people could compensate for these pressures by taking out money from the only asset they owned (their homes). Now they can't. That's why we have seen such an increase in the need for government services (food stamps, etc.). On the other side of the coin, the stock market is back up and there are record profits, but it hasn't translated into more American jobs - all while the marginal tax rate is the lowest it's been since the great depression ( http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_WKZIieKYe3Q/TO9BYfEDEkI/AAAAAAAABgo/lCn49bnuJ7I/s1600/top+US+marginal+tax+rate.png ). No wonder government debit is going through the roof. Businesses and investors are doing fine, but there is no middle class tax base. Yes indeed, with all these changes, I do think it's time to take a hard look at the historical "social contract". People with money think it's because of hard work. People without money know it's policy.Ricky: And Obama's policies have left out the middle class...... There are a tremendous amount of people unemployed, and he did not address them..... He has been so focused on Obamacare that he has left everyone else behind.Bob: I think Obama did everything he could. He bailed out the auto industry, which saved millions of jobs - which is something Romney wouldn't have done (Ask the people in Ohio if he was concerned about the middle class). And if you look at the graph I posted above he turned a unemployment free-fall into positive job growth. Of course, he couldn't work with the Republicans on Capital Hill, so he had to do almost everything through executive order. One study said his arrogance and disdain for Republican Congressmen was a problem, and I'm sure there is some truth to that, but you can't discount the Norquist Pledge. It's tough to negotiate jobs programs when 95% of Republicans on Capital Hill have signed a pledge not to raise taxes, for any reason - even if there is a 100 to 1 ratio of spending cuts to revenue. I'm surprised more people have not brought that up during this campaign season: http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7419360n ... I think the real pressure on the middle class comes through the geopolitical influences that I listed about. There is a lot of equity out there, it's just that the "job creators" aren't using it to create American jobs.
11/4/2012 11:52:09 AM
11/4/2012 12:03:23 PM
11/4/2012 12:11:20 PM
Comprehensive healthcare is definitely less expensive if "comprehensive" includes preventative medicine and regular checkups.
11/4/2012 12:12:45 PM
I basically believe that the only tenable model for health insurance is one where everyone has to participate ... And that can't be done at the state level.
11/4/2012 12:15:33 PM
11/4/2012 12:33:56 PM
11/4/2012 2:30:14 PM
I'm still amazed that some people think that making people buy stuff with their own money is better than the "socialist" approach of taxing them and buying it.
11/4/2012 2:51:37 PM
Because so many healthy people had opted out of the insurance pool, insurers had to find ways to limit their exposure - i.e. pre-existing conditions and lifetime limits. Obamacare basically makes the trade-off: everyone must have health insurance in return for getting rid of pre-existing conditions and lifetime limits (see the Kaiser Foundation video on Obamacare: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-Ilc5xK2_E )Republicans demanded healthcare reform be kept in the private sector, so mandating private health insurance was the only option. And yes, there is a difference between being required to participate in private insurance, and being taxed for national healthcare. That's why Romney implemented it in Massachusetts (although Republicans would never admit that Obamacare is anything but a government takeover of medicine).
11/4/2012 5:31:45 PM
I am all for Obama, but he needs to stop saying things like "don't boo, vote for your revenge" and "I am just a prop". Dude, just run the fucking clock out man.
11/4/2012 5:50:13 PM
11/4/2012 6:01:40 PM
Any liberal supporting ACA either hasn't thought about it or is not a liberal
11/4/2012 6:07:46 PM
11/4/2012 6:26:28 PM
^ Are you making a point?
11/4/2012 6:31:51 PM
^ and now it's a bigger problem, so no, they didn't have to implement something.they should have created a decent solution, let it fail by Republican votes if they have to, and campaigned on that in the next election. Like a democracy.
11/4/2012 6:35:10 PM
^ Dude, rewind that and play it back. You basically applaud posturing and caution advocating change.^^ He is regurgitating the same data and charts that people have seen before which all show that top-down economics puts the tax burden on the middle class, favors the distribution of wealth to the already extremely wealthy, and does not correlate at all with any significant economic growth.[Edited on November 4, 2012 at 6:41 PM. Reason : v]
11/4/2012 6:41:19 PM
i'm advocating for change that doesn't blow
11/4/2012 6:49:31 PM
I disagree that it's a bigger problem ... They got rid of pre-existing conditions and lifetime caps. Those were the big ones. ... God knows the Republicans have had 30 years to do something better. Maybe that's why they got voted out ... Just like in a democracy.
11/4/2012 8:14:15 PM
11/4/2012 10:26:56 PM
11/5/2012 8:29:38 AM
I am, indeed, immune to those arguments ... maybe it's just a dose of weak sauce.
11/5/2012 2:47:49 PM
plus its more government money to private companies, so that will increase prices
11/5/2012 2:51:22 PM
government money handed over to private companies can decrease prices. Just replace the payment with a handout paid for by taxes. I wouldn't argue against that.
11/5/2012 3:07:37 PM