FBM wrote:Is it actually true, though, that anyone making less than 50k/yr gets a free ride? If not, that's a meaningless and misleading statement.
No, that isn't what I was trying to assert.
I was referring to the fact that Obamacare forces people to buy insurance, and if they make something less than about $40,000 a year, then they have to pay full freight, without any government assistance. Some assistance I think is supposed to be available on a sliding scale, a little bit for those making in the 30k's and more for those in the 20s. The problem is the price -- in that people making $40k to $50k range are going to be asked to pay 10-15% or so for health insurance. That's huge for someone making that kind of money. They get no help. They have to pay and they have to buy, or they get an IRS penalty and the IRS will come down on them if they don't pay the penalty.
The alternative mentioned was to just have a single payer. I said that that doesn't address the problem of cost, because it means that taxes have to be raised to pay for all the healthcare. That will mean a combination of huge tax increases and a reduction in available services. It has to. There is no way to do it otherwise.
So what would you do with people who couldn't stand a 10-15% tax increase, because they're only making $30k, $40k or $50k. What do we do? Raise their taxes? Or, make 40-50% of the population pay it for them? That was my point.
My freeloader comment was a reference to the Obama administration saying that their plan was designed to make everyone pay when now we have freeloaders. Well, if you're going to make everyone pay, then I guess everyone would get to pay 10%-15% of their gross, no matter what income level. If you let some off the hook, then you have different freeloaders.