Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by piscator » Fri Nov 01, 2013 3:01 am

Seth has no more clue about what he's talking about inre land rights than he does about insurance...that's the problem with always working from political first principles..
Pappa wrote:Do homeowners own the sidewalk outside their house in the US?
It all varies by case. Typically, sidewalks are within in the public Right of Way of the road. The "Right of Way" is one of the bundle of rights called "Title" to a property.
Now, depending on how that ROW was conveyed in relation to the parcel of land in question determines who actually holds title to - "owns" - the sidewalk. It's not cut and dried. A lot may have predated the road and sidewalk, and the landowner may own the land under the sidewalk, and, depending on jurisdiction, have merely "quitclaimed" certain of his rights conveyed to him in his title. In that case, he would "own" the sidewalk and actually pay some property taxes on area of land under the sidewalk, but he would have conveyed his right to sole use ("Way") to the local government "owner" of the Right of Way (these rights can revert as well).

Most often in newer subdivisions, the lot owner never owned the land under the sidewalk in the first place. It was all dedicated to the local government by the developer in exchange for tax breaks and other "Good and valuable consideration".

But public sidewalks are another matter entirely from the well-established torts pertaining to icy private property walks leading to the front doors of rental properties under discussion here. If I haven't exercised due diligence in clearing my walk and you slip and hurt yourself, I and my homeowner's (or property & casualty) insurance company will likely be held liable to make you whole should it become necessary for a judge to rule on it.

The body of land law is vast in the US, one of the major divisions of law like Constitutional law or criminal law or tax law. Expect very few general answers...

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by piscator » Fri Nov 01, 2013 3:39 am

Seth wrote:
piscator wrote:
Seth wrote:
piscator wrote: Insurance is functionally mandatory for all of us members of the First World, one way or another.
No, it's just generally a really good idea...

Like drinking water is a really good idea? Insurance is mandatory.
Why is it mandatory other than that government says it is?.
Because if you're going to do X, you have to do Y. Fuck your political fantasy world, insurance is mandatory to function in the world we live in, period. Piss and moan about how it got that way all you want, for all the good it'll do you.




Is going without insurance malum in se or malum prohibitum?
The former and the latter. Particularly if it comes to wishing one had it...


You are aware I hope that humankind survived for millions of years without even the fleeting notion of insurance entering anyone's head.
Same for penicillin and Novocain.


Again, you're making an aesthetic choice based on an arbitrary meta ethic. That's all Libertarianism is.
Er, that's all any social or political ideology is. So what? That doesn't mean that one ideology is inherently better than another just because you say it is.
That's just the problem with working from an arbitrary ideology instead of your brain cells. You didn't learn everything you need to know before you left kindergarten.

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by Seth » Fri Nov 01, 2013 5:41 pm

piscator wrote:
Seth wrote:
piscator wrote:
Seth wrote:
piscator wrote: Insurance is functionally mandatory for all of us members of the First World, one way or another.
No, it's just generally a really good idea...

Like drinking water is a really good idea? Insurance is mandatory.
Why is it mandatory other than that government says it is?.
Because if you're going to do X, you have to do Y.
Why do I "have to do" anything?
Fuck your political fantasy world, insurance is mandatory to function in the world we live in, period. Piss and moan about how it got that way all you want, for all the good it'll do you.
Evasion.




Is going without insurance malum in se or malum prohibitum?
The former and the latter. Particularly if it comes to wishing one had it...
Evidently you don't understand the terms.


You are aware I hope that humankind survived for millions of years without even the fleeting notion of insurance entering anyone's head.
Same for penicillin and Novocain.
Yup.


Again, you're making an aesthetic choice based on an arbitrary meta ethic. That's all Libertarianism is.
Er, that's all any social or political ideology is. So what? That doesn't mean that one ideology is inherently better than another just because you say it is.
That's just the problem with working from an arbitrary ideology instead of your brain cells. You didn't learn everything you need to know before you left kindergarten.
Sure I did. Problem is you learned a bunch of stuff that nobody needs to know and it's been infecting your psyche ever since.
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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by subversive science » Fri Nov 01, 2013 7:26 pm

I think Libertarianism may violate the Constitution, or vice versa.

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by Seth » Sat Nov 02, 2013 4:42 pm

subversive science wrote:I think Libertarianism may violate the Constitution, or vice versa.
How so? If you'll be specific we can discuss it.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by Gallstones » Sat Nov 02, 2013 5:31 pm

piscator wrote:Fuck your political fantasy world, insurance is mandatory to function in the world we live in, period. Piss and moan about how it got that way all you want, for all the good it'll do you.
I have no insurance, have had none for nearly 11 years now. I've functioned quite well.
It seems to me that the majority of humans in the world we live in have no insurance of any kind and most of them are functioning quite well as well.

Ergo, the hypothesis that insurance is mandatory to function in the world we live in is void. And from that, the world we live in didn't "get that way" at all. Insurance as an expectation occurs only in isolated political groups, and are minorities in the world we live in.

If you have numbers to refute this and support your claim I'd like to see them.
Last edited by Gallstones on Sat Nov 02, 2013 5:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by Gallstones » Sat Nov 02, 2013 5:36 pm

subversive science wrote:I think Libertarianism may violate the Constitution, or vice versa.
I'd like to know how you can support this conclusion myself. An outline will do, no need for a dissertation.

It seems to me that the practice of eroding and violating the Bill of Rights is being done, and has been being done by Democrats/Liberals and Republicans. Particularly since they are the ones who have been holding the reins for so long.

Some of the BofR might violate the principles of Libertarianism, but not vice versa.
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The Second Amendment forms a fourth branch of government (an armed citizenry) in case the government goes mad. ~Larry Nutter

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by subversive science » Sat Nov 02, 2013 8:50 pm

Gallstones wrote:
subversive science wrote:I think Libertarianism may violate the Constitution, or vice versa.
I'd like to know how you can support this conclusion myself. An outline will do, no need for a dissertation.

It seems to me that the practice of eroding and violating the Bill of Rights is being done, and has been being done by Democrats/Liberals and Republicans. Particularly since they are the ones who have been holding the reins for so long.

Some of the BofR might violate the principles of Libertarianism, but not vice versa.
Most schools of Libertarianism, particularly those vocally advocated in the US, promote laissez-faire capitalism which is at direct odds with the power that the Constitution gives the government to regulate interstate commerce. Rather straightforward, actually.

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by Seth » Sun Nov 03, 2013 5:08 am

subversive science wrote:
Gallstones wrote:
subversive science wrote:I think Libertarianism may violate the Constitution, or vice versa.
I'd like to know how you can support this conclusion myself. An outline will do, no need for a dissertation.

It seems to me that the practice of eroding and violating the Bill of Rights is being done, and has been being done by Democrats/Liberals and Republicans. Particularly since they are the ones who have been holding the reins for so long.

Some of the BofR might violate the principles of Libertarianism, but not vice versa.
Most schools of Libertarianism, particularly those vocally advocated in the US, promote laissez-faire capitalism which is at direct odds with the power that the Constitution gives the government to regulate interstate commerce. Rather straightforward, actually.
Ah, thank you for specifics. You might want to make note of the fact that what the Supreme Court said about "interstate commerce" and what the Founders said about it when they wrote the provision are markedly different. Until 1887, the original intent was followed by Congress, which limited the regulation of commerce "among the several states" to resolving disputes between the states themselves, rather than the post-Lochner era direct regulation of commerce itself. The Founders intended that Congress be able to adjudicate and resolve disputes between state legislatures themselves over things like tariffs and taxes on goods from one state passing through another state enroute to a third state, which clearly interfered with, and was intended to interfere with interstate commerce to the benefit of the state in the middle. This was one of the significant problems with the Articles of Confederation that preceded the Constitution. The Congress had no power to resolve or prevent trade-killing tariffs and taxes levied by individual states on the passage of goods through a state.

Congress never, ever contemplated the nearly plenary power over even private action on private property involving no commerce whatsoever as the Supreme Court upheld during the New Deal in the 1930s. This case, Wickard v. Filburn upheld an FDR New Deal regulation that assigned maximum quotas for the growing of wheat that applied to ALL farmers. Roscoe Filburn grew 11.9 acres more wheat than FDR's Agricultural Adjustment Act allowed him to grow as a part of a scheme by FDR to drive the price of wheat up artificially by limiting supply (during the Great Depression, when people were starving and standing in soup lines because there wasn't enough food... :fp: ). Filburn's extra 239 bushels of wheat were not sold, they were used to feed his own family and livestock on his own property, none of which entered commerce either, being consumed on the farm by Filburn and his family.

The Supreme Court upheld the AAA and ordered Filburn to destroy his excess wheat, citing a decision by John Marshall in Gibbons v. Ogden in 1824 that gave Congress expansive powers to regulate individual transactions in "interstate commerce" rather than state policies about commerce AMONG the states.

This has been expanded subsequent to Wickard v. Filburn with complete deference of the Supreme Court to Congress in whatever regulations Congress has chosen to enact over commerce of any kind anywhere, even totally within a state that never leaves the state on the premise that it might "affect" interstate commerce. Filburn was hammered because, the court held, if he had not grown his own wheat for his own consumption, he would have had to buy wheat on the open market, and that if many people did what Filburn did it might have a detrimental effect on the fiscal policy attempts of Congress and FDR to closely control wheat prices under the AAA, meaning that even totally private conduct could be regulated by Congress because it might somehow "affect" interstate commerce. This complete deference by the court continued unabated until the 1990s, where the Rehnquist court overturned the "Gun Free Schools Act" in the case US v. Lopez, reasoning that there was no "commerce" at all involved in prohibiting people from possessing guns within 1000 feet of a school. This was the first of a few SCOTUS rulings after 1990 that placed any limits at all on the Commerce Clause power.

So, the original intent of the Commerce Clause comported as well as it could with Libertarian philosophy, given the fact that Libertarian philosophy itself seeks severe limitations on the power of Congress to begin with, restricting it ONLY to the specific powers mentioned in Article 1, Section 8.
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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by subversive science » Sun Nov 03, 2013 11:51 pm

Seth wrote:
subversive science wrote:
Gallstones wrote:
subversive science wrote:I think Libertarianism may violate the Constitution, or vice versa.
I'd like to know how you can support this conclusion myself. An outline will do, no need for a dissertation.

It seems to me that the practice of eroding and violating the Bill of Rights is being done, and has been being done by Democrats/Liberals and Republicans. Particularly since they are the ones who have been holding the reins for so long.

Some of the BofR might violate the principles of Libertarianism, but not vice versa.
Most schools of Libertarianism, particularly those vocally advocated in the US, promote laissez-faire capitalism which is at direct odds with the power that the Constitution gives the government to regulate interstate commerce. Rather straightforward, actually.
.
So the answer is yes, the Commerce Clause violates Libertarian tenets, but in practice the clause is necessary for effective governance. Considering all of your previous arguments have hinged on some archetype Libertarian society where mere hard work confers economic prosperity and those who are denied insurance coverage can simply spend tens-to-hundreds of thousands of dollars on medical procedures, that's not moving the goal posts, that's changing the playing field to justify the fact that the Constitution does not strictly conform to your contrived Libertarian existence. Basically, your arguments are B.S. because they're based on shitty assumptions, and when those assumptions are questioned you either evade the charges or try to shift the basis of your arguments.

However, if you insist on using idealized realities, then when the government death panel denies your procedure, you can just pay for it yourself.

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by Warren Dew » Sun Nov 03, 2013 11:58 pm

subversive science wrote:So the answer is yes, the Commerce Clause violates Libertarian tenets, but in practice the clause is necessary for effective governance.
I see you avoided quoting any of Seth's actual post, as it would show how ridiculous your position is. Regulating wheat that someone grows on his own farm for his own family's consumption, that never crosses a state border, is not "interstate commerce" by any reasonable interpretation. The government just used that excuse to extend Federal power well beyond the limits of the Constitution.

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by subversive science » Mon Nov 04, 2013 12:12 am

Warren Dew wrote:
subversive science wrote:So the answer is yes, the Commerce Clause violates Libertarian tenets, but in practice the clause is necessary for effective governance.
I see you avoided quoting any of Seth's actual post, as it would show how ridiculous your position is. Regulating wheat that someone grows on his own farm for his own family's consumption, that never crosses a state border, is not "interstate commerce" by any reasonable interpretation. The government just used that excuse to extend Federal power well beyond the limits of the Constitution.
All Seth did was attempt to obfuscate a rather straightforward incompatibility between Libertarianism and the Constitution. The Constitution may embody many of the principles of Libertarianism, but it is not a solely Libertarian document. Moreover, it has to be applied to an ever evolving world in a practical manner, which means interpreting it in the context of modern society. Constitutionality is not a sufficient condition for Libertarianism, nor vice versa, and to suggest that it is belies a simplistic and incomplete understanding of Libertarianism.

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by Tero » Mon Nov 04, 2013 2:16 am

WD, wheat is a bad example. Wheat produces wind borne pollen. We can regulate that.

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by piscator » Mon Nov 04, 2013 4:58 pm

Gallstones wrote:
piscator wrote:Fuck your political fantasy world, insurance is mandatory to function in the world we live in, period. Piss and moan about how it got that way all you want, for all the good it'll do you.
I have no insurance, have had none for nearly 11 years now. I've functioned quite well.
Poor thing! Doesn't drive, doesn't work, doesn't enter commercial buildings... You may call that "Functioning", but I call it, "Indigent".

It seems to me that the majority of humans in the world we live in have no insurance of any kind and most of them are functioning quite well as well.
I suppose they forage in the woods for food too. But they don't live in the First World.

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Re: Socialized medicine's inevitable death panels

Post by Seth » Mon Nov 04, 2013 6:59 pm

subversive science wrote: So the answer is yes, the Commerce Clause violates Libertarian tenets, but in practice the clause is necessary for effective governance.
Yes and no. The Commerce Clause as applied most certainly violates Libertarian tenets...not to mention constitutional original intent. As originally intended it does not necessarily do so because the original intent was that the power was granted in order to preserve and protect the Union itself by regulating the actions of the several states in their commercial interactions with other states. States, you see, have no rights. They, like Congress, have only powers and authorities granted to them by the people, which may be amended or revoked by the people at will. One of the only legitimate functions of the federal government is to adjudicate disputes between the competing political bodies of the several states as a "super legislature" made up of representatives from each of the states. But the purpose of the federal government is (or should be) to deal ONLY with those things that cannot be effectively regulated or dealt with by the states themselves, ALL of which are explicitly enumerated in the Constitution itself, which provides exact and precise instruction on what, and ONLY what the Congress has power to legislate. Everything else not mentioned is left to the states or the people. Is this power to adjudicate disputes among the states necessary? Yes. Does it comport with Libertarianism? Yes.

By illegally redefining the scope of the Commerce Clause the Supreme Court, in cahoots with the Congress itself as well as the President, the intended scope and power of the federal government has been turned from oversight of the relations among the states and necessary things like coinage, post roads and national military actions into a despotic and tyrannical micromanager of the daily lives of ordinary citizens, something that was never, ever, ever contemplated by the Founders.

The best solution to the vast majority of the problems we face today in the United States is a constitutional amendment of the Commerce Clause to make it explicit that insofar as interstate commerce is concerned, Congress' and the Executive branch's power and authority extends only to adjudicating and resolving disputes regarding actual movement of goods or persons in interstate commerce brought to it by the legislatures of the several states themselves. In other words, Congress would have no power to regulate any actual commerce by citizens, it would only have the power to regulate the laws of the legislatures of the states where such laws interfere with or impose duties or taxes on the passage of goods or persons physically across state lines...and NOTHING else.
Considering all of your previous arguments have hinged on some archetype Libertarian society where mere hard work confers economic prosperity
I've never said any such thing, so that's a strawman argument.
and those who are denied insurance coverage can simply spend tens-to-hundreds of thousands of dollars on medical procedures,
If they want to, and can do so. Otherwise they may perhaps have to rely upon the voluntary charity of their community...or they may perhaps suffer the consequences of fate and their lifestyle choices, which includes dying of some medical condition.
that's not moving the goal posts, that's changing the playing field to justify the fact that the Constitution does not strictly conform to your contrived Libertarian existence.
No it's not.
Basically, your arguments are B.S. because they're based on shitty assumptions, and when those assumptions are questioned you either evade the charges or try to shift the basis of your arguments.
Please be specific.
However, if you insist on using idealized realities, then when the government death panel denies your procedure, you can just pay for it yourself.
[/quote]

Yes, I can. Or not. But in any case I can find no rational, logical, ethical or moral justification for using the jackbooted thugs with machine guns as my proxy to extract from other people what I think I need or want by way of medical care. The simple fact is that sometimes you die. To me it's better to die than it is to become a thief and steal from others. I understand that the proletarian dependent class has been well indoctrinated to believe that anybody who has more than they do is evil and must be stripped of their property and enslaved to the service of others, but that's just Marxist propaganda and ideological blindness, not reason.

Libertarians fully believe in helping others, particularly those in genuine need, because it is the moral, ethical, charitable, altruistic thing to do and in most cases is in our enlightened and rational self-interest to charitable and helpful to the disadvantaged for many reasons, not the least of which is, as MrJonno puts it, to keep the ravening hordes of starving proletarian dependents from attacking us.

The essential difference between Libertarianism and literally every other form of government is that Libertarians are insistent on prohibiting the government from trying to achieve social good by force and coercion. Instead Libertarians believe that at worst government's legitimate duty is to PERSUADE people to VOLUNTARILY donate their time and goods to help the destitute and sick and those who, through no fault of their own, find themselves in dire economic circumstances.

It is NOT the case that Libertarians are selfish pricks who care for no one but themselves. This is a classic strawman built by ignoramuses and the deliberately mendacious Marxists among us as a simplistic Alinsky-style attack on Libertarianism that has exactly zero basis in truth or Libertarian philosophy.

Libertarians merely eschew the use of force or fraud by anyone, including the government, to compel people to labor on behalf of or contribute to the welfare of anyone else.

This does NOT mean that Libertarians are unwilling to labor on behalf of or contribute to the welfare of others, merely that they object to being ordered to do so under threat of violence and imprisonment.
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