U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
He's right-wing, you guys. You can't argue with anyone who belongs to a wing. They're fanatics.
"The fact is that far more crime and child abuse has been committed by zealots in the name of God, Jesus and Mohammed than has ever been committed in the name of Satan. Many people don't like that statement but few can argue with it."
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Guess you need to use your "free market" that you love and go find another plan.Coito ergo sum wrote:That's just wrong. You must be completely ignorant of the terms of this new law. I will be paying about 3 to 3.5 times for my insurance after the bill takes effect.NineOneFour wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Remember everyone, this plan was sold and billed as a vehicle to provide health insurance for all and that:
Health care will be more affordable than it is now as a result of this plan.
It will be budget neutral (at least), and would likely reduce the deficit.
Obama stated as follows: “I Will Not Sign a Healthcare Bill That Raises The Deficit by One Dime…Not One Dime!”
Opponents of the bill are adamant that health insurance will not be more affordable, and that it will raise the deficit. Even the CBO analysis based on these faulty assumptions concludes that in 2019 alone taxes will be $100 billion higher and spending will be increased by $200 billion.
Most of the proponents that I've seen say they believe that the deficit will be reduced and health insurance will be cheaper. I am fairly sure, however, that proponents don't really care if the deficit goes up or if health insurance is more expensive.
Oh stop squalling.
You aren't going to have to pay one lousy fucking dime.
So you're right and the CBO is wrong, whoever the hell THEY are??? Bunch of tools, right? Not edumacated like you who knows all and sees all. You're an economist, right, dude?No. It does not. They manufactured that assertion by removing the doctor fix and double counting savings.NineOneFour wrote:
And the bill REDUCES the deficit.
Sheesh.It's a fraud that the supporters of "health care reform" in general find it easy and tasty to swallow because it lets them delude themselves into thinking that this will bring on a paradise on Earth.
Oh, you're not.
Well, that explains a lot...
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
No, I think it's a step in the right direction. You, on the other hand, seem to be against any and all reform entirely.Coito ergo sum wrote:No, because I'm against THIS health reform and THIS health reform IS "more free market!" There is no public option, don't you know that? This is the mandatory purchase of insurance from private insurance companies! It's a giant boon to insurance companies because they get a captive market for their insurance (and can even raise their prices) because 32 million more people MUST buy their product!NineOneFour wrote:No, you wouldn't. You're against all health care reform that isn't more free market (TM).Coito ergo sum wrote:I'd settle for one that met Obama's criteria for a bill:Gawdzilla wrote:"Sorry, but that bill has flaws. So we can't vote for it. Give us a perfect bill and we'll gladly vote for it. We'll wait right here until you come up with one. What? Help find one? That's a trap, isn't it?"Jörmungandr wrote:Shame about the public option, but some healthcare reform is better than none.
1. Paid for
2. Did not raise the deficit
3. Make health insurance more affordable
4. Lower health care costs
This reform is not paid for, will raise the deficit, will not make health insurance more affordable, and will not lower health care costs.
What do you think this is? Socialized medicine? Universal single payer? Come on.
Yes, fuck the 32 million uninsured. It's soooo much better to leave them without health care than afford them the "luxury" of buying affordable insurance, right, dude???
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Well, then you don't live in America, because it's illegal in every state. You must buy auto insurance. If you don't, you'll get fined.Coito ergo sum wrote:No.NineOneFour wrote:Do you have to buy automobile insurance?Coito ergo sum wrote:
Why do you think they delayed the implementation of this until 2014? What possible reason would they have to do that?
Oh, well, you know, walking is a good alternative, just like dying in the gutter is a viable alternative to having health insurance.Because in my state one only has to buy auto insurance if one drives a car on public roadways.NineOneFour wrote:
Why do you think that is?
Do you take yourself seriously?
Do you actually know anyone who doesn't own a car?
And, BTW, even if they don't, they're still paying for the insurance on the bus...
They will when rates skyrocket in the next few years.Then we agree on that.NineOneFour wrote:
I agree it doesn't control costs.
"Can?" Yes, of course we "can." We won't though. Why? Because if they wanted to control costs they could have put that in the original bill in the first place. Why wait to control costs? You think the conservatives would have liked the bill less had there been cost controls in it?NineOneFour wrote:
We can fix that.
I think the conservative douchebags would kill any and all attempts at reform because they're sociopaths.
As for which one of us isn't thinking, I'd say the one quoting Breitbart is the one that is reflexively reacting instead of actually using independent thought...Go through your moronic false accusation at someone else. You just want to paint any opposition to the law as "whining" because it's easier than actually thinking.NineOneFour wrote:
You just want to whine and throw the baby out with the bathwater because you don't get to have your little libertarian utopia.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Actually, the CBO has been less than sanguine about several manifestations of bills. The CBO is not controlled by the Democrats, so sorry to burst your paranoid conspiracy theory.Coito ergo sum wrote:CBO report regarding HR 3200.NineOneFour wrote:It's from the Recto Absurdum database.Clinton Huxley wrote:I'm curious about these numbers (15% of gross income etc). They sound a tad high. How is that worked out?
I realize, yes, the numbers the CBO publishes are generally absurd understatements of how much things cost and overstatements of cost savings, but that's because lawmakers set the assumptions that the CBO must follow in drawing their conclusions. However, when it's a Democrat drafted bill in a Democrat controlled government, the CBO statements are essentially admissions against interest because the Democrats control the assumptions. When the CBO comes out with numbers, that is, realize that it's based on Democrat assumptions.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Citation needed, McFly.Coito ergo sum wrote:LOL!NineOneFour wrote:OMG, NO!!!!!Coito ergo sum wrote:Look - the $43,000 and over number is straight from the bill. It's not wild speculation. It's not anything from the Republicans. It's 400% of the poverty level. Nobody gets government assistance who makes over 400% of the poverty level.Gawdzilla wrote:I've seen endless wild speculation about this bill. Most of it comes from thin air as far as I can tell. Not accusing the Repugnicans of lying, you understand, I just thinking they're lying out their ass.
And I'm still waiting for them to come up with something better.
That would seem to be something very basic about this bill that anyone who says they "support" it would be familiar with. Criminy....
No assistance for anyone who makes over 400% of poverty????
Oh...wait...there are yearly and lifetime caps over what can be charged now...
Yes -no assistance for anyone who makes over 400% of poverty. Think, McFly, think!
I'm going to type slowly, so you'll be sure to understand.
This bill will insure, they say, 32 million more people.
17 million or so of those 32 million make over $50,000 a year.
Obviously not, since the subsidies go up to $88,000 dollars.Therefore, more than 1/2 of those that are being "covered" must pay for 100% of their own insurance coverage that they "could not afford" (since we're told that the need for this is because people can't afford insurance).
Try to type slower, maybe you'll actually read the garbage that you're spewing.
Actually, it's more like 45 million, but some of them speak Spanish or are non-whites, so you could give a fuck if they die in the gutter.So, take it from the top: 32 million people can't afford insurance now.
[qoute] So the government is going to make them buy it. And, everyone making more than 43,000 a year will pay for their own insurance, plus cost sharing, to the tun of $7,600 a year average! 17 million make over 50,000 a year, and obviously a whole bunch more make between 44,000 and 50,000, so they too will get no assistance.[/quote]
No one under $250,000 is going to have to spend a dime more than they are now UNLESS they are voluntarily uninsured, which is the cohort that you describe above. I have NO sympathy for these people since when they DO get sick, they pass on the costs to the rest of us who choose to get health insurance.
I think you're one of those that thinks he's immortal, indestructable, and invincible and doesn't buy health insurance. When you do get sick (and you will), then your plan is to dump the costs on us: i.e. the responsible insurance policy holders.
So, no, too bad.
Yeah, wow, that 2.5 trillion sounds awful. Until you realize that it's a smidgen of the defense budget...That's what we're overhauling the insurance system to the tune of $2.5 trillion over 10 years for?
I get that you're being deliberately dishonest with your figures, yes.Get it yet?
No one thinks its free.Or are you folks just going to cover your ears and go: "la! la! la! la! la! - give me my free insurance! I know it's going to be free! Oh, yes!" click heels three times "I know the insurance is going to be free - even if they tell me flat out in the text of the bill that it's not free -- I know somehow it will be free..."
In addition, something on the order of 10-12 million of the uninsured are people eligible for SCHIP and Medicaid already, but have simply not enrolled for some reason.
And no one is eligible for welfare but haven't enrolled. That's a lie. Getting medicaid and/or SCHIP is not an easy process and usually you must be without assets that you can liquidate (such as a house or business) before you are eligible. Your canard is that you look at these people and say, well, fuck them, they should enroll in medicaid. Except they aren't eligible because they have assets even though they don't make a high salary. You would have them become destitute before they get help.
Which sums up your philosophy in a nutshell, which is an appropriate receptacle.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
That's some massive ownage right there, but he'll still come back several posts later to shit all over the people who are 'eligible for medicaid and SCHIP but aren't enrolled for some reason'.Valden wrote:Ahem...Coito ergo sum wrote: In addition, something on the order of 10-12 million of the uninsured are people eligible for SCHIP and Medicaid already, but have simply not enrolled for some reason.
From Wiki-Gov - MedicaidMedicaid is a joint federal-state program that provides health insurance coverage to certain categories of low-income individuals, including children, pregnant women, parents of eligible children, and people with disabilities. Medicaid was created to help low-income individuals who fall into one of these eligibility categories "pay for some or all of their medical bills."
Having a limited income is one of the primary requirements for Medicaid eligibility, but poverty alone does not qualify a person to receive Medicaid benefits unless they also fall into one of the defined eligibility categories. According to the CMS website, "Medicaid does not provide medical assistance for all poor persons. Even under the broadest provisions of the Federal statute (except for emergency services for certain persons), the Medicaid program does not provide health care services, even for very poor persons, unless they are in one of the designated eligibility groups."
There are a number of Medicaid eligibility categories; within each category there are requirements other than income that must be met. These other requirements include, but are not limited to, age, pregnancy, disability, blindness, income and resources, and one's status as a U.S. citizen or a lawfully admitted immigrant. Special rules exist for those living in a nursing home and disabled children living at home. A child may be covered under Medicaid if she or he is a U.S. citizen or a permanent resident. A child may be eligible for Medicaid regardless of the eligibility status of his or her parents or guardians. Thus, a child can be covered by Medicaid based on his or her individual status even if his or her parents are not eligible. Similarly, if a child lives with someone other than a parent, he or she may still be eligible based on his or her individual status.Lets say I get paid $7.24 an hour, which is the min wage for Colorado.Many groups of people are covered by Medicaid. Even within these groups, though, certain requirements must be met. These may include your age, whether you are pregnant, disabled, blind, or aged; your income and resources (like bank accounts, real property, or other items that can be sold for cash); and whether you are a U.S. citizen or a lawfully admitted immigrant. The rules for counting your income and resources vary from state to state and from group to group. There are special rules for those who live in nursing homes and for disabled children living at home.
In general, you should apply for Medicaid if you have limited income and resources. You must match one of the descriptions below. (Even if you are not sure whether you qualify, if you or someone in your family needs health care, you should apply for Medicaid and have a qualified caseworker in your state evaluate your situation.)
Pregnant Women
Apply for Medicaid if you think you are pregnant. You may be eligible if you are married or single. If you are on Medicaid when your child is born, both you and your child will be covered.
Children and Teenagers
Apply for Medicaid if you are the parent or guardian of a child who is 18 years old or younger and your family's income is limited, or if your child is sick enough to need nursing home care, but could stay home with good quality care at home. If you are a teenager living on your own, the state may allow you to apply for Medicaid on your own behalf or any adult may apply for you. Many states also cover children up to age 21.
Person who is Aged, Blind, and/or Disabled
Apply if you are aged (65 years old or older), blind, or disabled and have limited income and resources. Apply if you are terminally ill and want to get hospice services. Apply if you are aged, blind, or disabled; live in a nursing home; and have limited income and resources. Apply if you are aged, blind, or disabled and need nursing home care, but can stay at home with special community care services. Apply if you are eligible for Medicare and have limited income and resources.
Other Situations
Apply if you are leaving welfare and need health coverage. Apply if you are a family with children under age 18 and have limited income and resources. (You do not need to be receiving a welfare check.) Apply if you have very high medical bills, which you cannot pay (and you are pregnant, under age 18 or over age 65, blind, or disabled).
I would still not qualify for Medicaid, as I don't fall under any of the categories for Colorado.
However, under the new reform bill, I would.
Your numbers seem off. The top fine for not getting any insurance would be $2,085 a year, regardless of how much they make (for families) while for individuals it would be only 2.5% of their income, which is also less then what they would be paying for private insurance. So really, they can always just not buy insurance, and instead just pay the fine.So, take it from the top: 32 million people can't afford insurance now. So the government is going to make them buy it. And, everyone making more than 43,000 a year will pay for their own insurance, plus cost sharing, to the tun of $7,600 a year average! 17 million make over 50,000 a year, and obviously a whole bunch more make between 44,000 and 50,000, so they too will get no assistance.
*
The penalty will be phased in, starting at $95 or 1 percent of income in 2014, whichever is higher, and rising to $695 or 2.5 percent of income in 2016. But families would not pay more than $2,085.
*
American Indians don’t have to buy insurance. Those with religious objections or a financial hardship can also avoid the requirement. And if you would pay more than 8 percent of your income for the cheapest available plan, you will not be penalized for failing to buy coverage.
*
Those who are exempt, or under 30, can buy a policy that only pays for catastrophic medical costs. It must allow for three primary care visits a year as well.
He likes to think that so he can sleep well at night because then it puts the burden back on them instead of him having to face reality.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Can I ass you a question?Coito ergo sum wrote:Talk out of my ass? What are you, four years old?NineOneFour wrote:That must be why the US has a higher infant mortality rate than all of Western Europe.Coito ergo sum wrote:Never said it would...but, you will be forced to spend a lot more money on health insurance than you do now, which is the opposite of one of the things that Obama said he was trying to do here.FBM wrote:If you make USD35k~43k/yr, you're not going to the soup line over this.
Bull - fucking - shit. Children are already fucking covered 100% without any issue -- Medicaid - SCHIP - etc. The current health care bill (soon to be law) has nothing whatsoever to do with "saving the chill-run."FBM wrote:
This bill will help a lot of people, including millions of children whose only sin is being born into a poor family.
Tell me, do you always talk out of your ass?
Do you actually possess any empathy at all for others? Because so far in this thread it's all about YOU and how much more YOU think YOU will have to pay, while YOU are dissing everyone who is poor, downtrodden, etc.
Told you, Valden. Except it only took one post for him to repeat this lie.More than 80% of all "uninsured" children are now eligible for some type of publicly-subsidized coverage (and if they visit a hospital or medical facility for care, they would be enrolled right there).
Oh, it's bleeding all right.That's a bleeding fact.
Wrong. The cap is state by state.Are you even from the US?[/qutoe]
Gosh, I don't know. Any normally observant person who possessed the minimum daily requirement of intelligence could look under my avatar to find out.
[qutoe] If not, then at least educate yourself on the system before you criticize it. SCHIP provides health care coverage for families that earn too much to qualify for Medicaid but are not offered or cannot afford private coverage. States provide coverage for uninsured children under 18 with their parent's incomes up to 43,000 a year presently.
[Think about that for a second. The Democrats who wrote the new law think that if you make over 43,000 a year you can afford your own insurance, because that's where they cut off the fucking government assistance! Right NOW children of parents making 43,000 and under can get their kids covered for nothing for SCHIP.
Wrong. Valden already owned your ass on this.
Can anyone translate this for me?But, of course, it's so emotionally appealing to claim you are "saving the chill-run..." But, go back to your reverie, my friend, and rub another one out for your hero.
Citation needed.The CBO says NOW that insurance will be more expensive, and Democrat Senators have acknowledged that fact.NineOneFour wrote:Yes, of course, YOU know better than the CBO...No. However, Obama said health insurance would be more affordable. It ain't going to be. It's going to be more expensive. Obama said it would not be signed into law if it would raise the deficit. It will raise the deficit.FBM wrote:
Is a little compassion for the poor out of the question?
The CBO says it will REDUCE the deficit. Interesting how that suddenly becomes more expensive in your eyes.
Oh, wait, I forgot that you masturbate to Fox News so you can believe five impossible things before breakfast.
With apologies to Douglas Adams.
Which was a different bill.The CBO said in the fall,
118 to 149 billion dollars is your idea of "break even"?reviewing HR 3200, that it would not reduce the deficit. The CBO says NOW that it comes in just about break-even,
Are you a poe?
I'll stick with the CBO figures over yours, thanks. Since they come from your rectal database.BUT that's based on the assumption given to them by the Democrats that the "doctor fix" is not part of the health care reform (about $300 billion dollars), that plus the fact that the CBO was forced to double count various items of "savings" demonstrates clearly that the real effect of the reform is to markedly, and dramatically, increase the deficit.
Wrong.You have to be poor to get Medicaid. That's right. But, you don't have to be poor for your kids to get SCHIP - you can get SCHIP up to the median family income in the United States.NineOneFour wrote:Well, that's a happy lie. You have to be DIRT poor to get medicaid, and I mean, fucking eating goddamn dog food for dinner poor.Compassion for the poor my ass. The poor in the US get Medicaid for free. The disabled can get Medicare and social security benefits. Children are covered by Medicaid and SCHIP.
Wrong.And, remember - the current bill requires people to pay for their own insurance if they make over 1.33% of the poverty level.
You get subsidized up to $88,000. I guess I'll keep repeating that until you actually read it.
That's a lie.They will get "some" assistance above that level, scaling down as income rises to $43,000, and above that level - nothing at all.
Already dealt with this bullshit.Once again, you keep forgetting the real numbers. 17 million of the 32 million who will be insured by this daft proposal are making over $50,000 a year. About 20 million or so make above $43,000 a year and will get no government assistance at all. NONE. ZIP. ZILCH. NADA. So, we're talking about 12 million people, who will get "some" assistance from this plan. The stupidity of this plan is that we could just fucking buy those 12 million people their insurance in full, and it would be 100 times cheaper than this boondoggle overhaul.NineOneFour wrote:
A lot of hardworking Americans cannot afford health insurance and did without until now.
No, it will reduce the deficit.It will.NineOneFour wrote:
But all you say is "it'll increase the deficit".....waaaa....waaaa...
ROFLFalse choice. This new law will not save lives.NineOneFour wrote:
Which is more important? Saving lives or your own political ideology of fiscal conservatism?
Yeah, because the 44000 who die every year due to NOT HAVING HEALTH INSURANCE will still die, in your opinion?
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Okay.But, I'm all for raising the cutoff to qualify for Medicaid an SCHIP. Let's make it 250% of poverty.
I don't think that "cheaper" means what you think it means...Far cheaper than this monstrosity....
Hey, you like it if people die in the streets, so you should be happy with the system the way it is now.Citation needed.NineOneFour wrote:Or maybe become more financially competent.Giant red herring, that. How about, a single guy making $44,000 being able to buy insurance for $2400 a year (no problem) now, and instead being asked to shell out $5300 (average per CBO estimate) once the law takes effect, plus shell out an additional $2300 in "cost sharing?" I guess that guy has to give up his country club, cars and boats, right?FBM wrote: Or is your third car and country-club membership more important?
Correct.No one making $44,000 has to pay that, now or ever.
Are you kidding me? You're Mr. CBO, right? That $5300 number comes from a CBO report estimating average premiums - single individual making $44,000 a year would pay $5300 on average, according to the CBO, for their own insurance.If you do, I feel sorry for you because you are financially incompetent. I make more than that (a lot more) and pay less (a lot less).
I won't be for long.You pay a lot less NOW. You WILL pay more. You get NO assistance under this bill if you make more than 44,000 a year and are single.
You will be required to buy health insurance and it will be more expensive than you pay now, by far. But, you like the idea of paying more anyway. So you ought to be happy.
Last edited by NineOneFour on Wed Mar 24, 2010 10:47 am, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
As much as is necessary. Sorry, you don't get a free ride. You have taken out of society in the form of education, child care, health care, roads, military protection, police, fire protection, clean air, courts, etc. so you get to help pay for them.mozg wrote:There's already a state-run program in existence in every state that provides low or no cost health insurance to any child who isn't already covered by some other form of health insurance. It's called CHIP (Children's Health Insurance Program), and there's no income restriction as far as parents not qualifying to have their children covered by it because they earn too much.FBM wrote:If you make USD35k~43k/yr, you're not going to the soup line over this. This bill will help a lot of people, including millions of children whose only sin is being born into a poor family. Is a little compassion for the poor out of the question?
It does require them to actually fill out a form to register for it, but I can totally see how that might be too hard.
As far as 'compassion for the poor', I prefer to make my charitable contributions where I see fit rather than have the government and special interest groups spend my money freely as if they had earned it themselves. Exactly what percentage of my paycheck am I supposed to cheerfully hand over to the government as if they're entitled to it?
You don't like it, great, go live off the grid and pay no taxes. Just don't use any of society's benefits either. You don't get to have your cake and eat it too.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Actually, the best system at keeping people down is the current one, which you are hopelessly in love with.Coito ergo sum wrote:So what? I never said some people aren't lucky. Do you have a a problem paying attention? The point the other bloke and I were discussing was not who was the best at pulling themselves up by their bootstraps, but rather whether the new system is any better at not "keeping people down" than the "old system."NineOneFour wrote:Hey, great, you made it.Coito ergo sum wrote:How, exactly, does that change? Medicaid still exists. People are just forced to buy health insurance if they make above the 133% of the poverty line. They get "some" assistance on a descending sliding scale on up to 400% of the poverty line. Then, those making over $43,000 get pounded in the ass in order to pay for a bunch of other people's free health care. So, a guy who breaks his balls to go to school, get a decent job and make 45,000 or 50,000 a year at a professional job, like an engineer or accountant, gets fleeced.FBM wrote:It's nearly 1 a.m. here, so I'm not going to try to go point-by-point. All I can say is that I grew up poor. If our family's income went over a certain line, no more Medicaid. And I mean that line is very thin. The old system enouraged people to stay poor rather than cross that line.Coito ergo sum wrote:?
And, you know what? Lots of us grew up "poor." My parents separated cash in different envelopes each month when I was a kid and paid the bills. They sacrificed, and said "no" to many requests on our part. We were given socks, underwear, hats and gloves along with Christmas presents to make it look like we had more to open. The one thing that my parents gave to me when I graduated high school though, the most valuable thing, was a sense of self-reliance. I would hate to have the sense of entitlement that some people have these days.
What you don't get is that a lot of what got you to here was plain old LUCK.
Not your skill. Not you being an awesome human being. But just LUCK.
Some people don't have it.
I'll stick with the CBO, the New York Times, and the Washington Post, all of which disagree with your feverish freeper WorldNutDaily calculations.You're the one who obviously has no idea what they're talking about. Stop getting your talking points from the DailyKos and AlterNet. I hope you're not American. I can understand your ignorance of what goes on here if you are outside the country. I wouldn't even expect you to know all the facts. If you are American, though....NineOneFour wrote:You need to actually read the bill and not Fox News Epic Fail. It doesn't soak anyone.And, nothing changes with this new reform. It merely increases the welfare state, and places additional burdens on those who make the mistake of obtaining a modicum of income for themselves. This is not a case of soaking people who make $250,000 a year and buy yachts. This is a case of soaking a guy or gal who makes $45,000 or $50,000, and handing over a chunk of his or her money to pay for someone else's health insurance. Like it or not - and it's fair enough that a person likes it or doesn't - that's what it is.FBM wrote:
Cross the line, and no more help from the gummit. Suddenly a broken leg could bankrupt you, well before your annual income climbed to $35~43k. Alternatively, you could seek unreported income, which always ran the risk of landing your poor ass in jail. A lot of options there. The safe bet under the old system was to remain safely poor so that the gummit would take care of you. Good night, and I hope I haven't created any ill-will by stating my viewpoint.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
And now it has a majority supporting it.Coito ergo sum wrote:And libertarians, moderates and independents. Before the bill passed it was opposed by 59% of the population. That's a very healthy majority of opposition.Martok wrote:And that would be conservatives.Coito ergo sum wrote:
Well, of course it's a huge defeat. It's a huge defeat not just for conservatives, but for anyone who opposed the health care "reform."
IN fact, if you look at the poll that you cite, 13% oppose the bill because IT WASN'T LIBERAL ENOUGH.
But then, you're not one to actually cite facts, are you?
Most of them, thank goodness.Republican ideas in it? The Republican ideas were ignored.Martok wrote:
Sure liberals aren't thrilled with the way bill turned out - Far far too many republican ideas in it - but its a start.
Liberal republicans?There are conservative Democrats, and liberal Republicans, although they are minorities in both parties.Martok wrote:
Besides, republicans have been wrong on just about everything since 2000 that I really can't take any conservative

Only if you consider someone slightly to the left of Albert Speer to be "liberal"...
You're anything but "reasonable".Reasonably oppose.Martok wrote: seriously when they bitch and moan about health care reform.
Which way do you vote?Perhaps, but for me, I did not oppose it because of anything the Republican Party said. I've never been, in my entire life, a registered Republican. Ever.Martok wrote:
There's a nine out of ten chance they're going to be wrong about that to.
Gotcha.
Using only websites that agreed with your preconceived conservative notions.I researched the issues on my own,
Like Glenn Beck.and leaned towards receiving information from those who supported the bill.
LOL
Anything that saves lives is a monumental waste of money, right?I think the only way a person can support the bill that passed is to be supportive of it for the larger issue of getting "something" passed and worry about fixing it later, or to not really understand what is in this bill. I, for one, do not think it is a good enough bill to be that "something." I think it's worse than nothing, and a step in the wrong direction, and a monumental waste of money.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
You obviously know NOTHING about UHC in other countries. Health care is less rationed than it is here.Coito ergo sum wrote:That was when the promises were being bandied about about how the insurance would be "cheaper." Remember when it was supposed to save everybody $2500 on their annual insurance bill? LOL That, of course, is long gone, because they couldn't keep up the charade that it would reduce the cost of insurance.Jörmungandr wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
And libertarians, moderates and independents. Before the bill passed it was opposed by 59% of the population. That's a very healthy majority of opposition.
After a year of tiresome debate over the issue, the loss of the public option, and widespread disinformation such as "death panels" and "rationing", it's not surprising. Last year, 55% were in favor of "major reform" of the health care system.
That was also when the promise was that it would reduce the deficit. It won't, and everybody with 1/2 a brain knows it won't.
Then people got sick of the "you're going to get it whether you like it or not" attitude of Pelosi, Reid and Obama, and became disgusted by the back-room deals and payoffs. Frankly, if that behavior was engaged in by the previous administration some of you folks would have been calling for impeachment.
You talk about "disinformation?" This thing was sold on disinformation.
Rationing is in the nature of a nationalized health program. When their aren't enough resources to go around, decisions have to be made as to what services can be had by whom. The administration never denied that rationing wold occur. Their response to those allegations was that rationing decisions go on now. So, it wasn't "disinformation" about rationing. Both sides were actually correct - yes there will be rationing, but of course, there are scarce resources now so the free market does the rationing by means of price, supply and demand.
The death panels were just a scary name for something that is actually in the bill. It was the "advanced care planning" provision: http://www.lifenews.com/bio2916.html There actually is a panel in the bill that will make decisions about what expensive services will be available to older people and what won't. That is just flat out true. Of course, it's not a "death panel" in the sense of an individual appearing before a panel to plead for grannie's life, and then they pass thumbs up or down. So, sure, to that extent the death panel allegation was a fabrication - the implication was wrong.
You are a fount of disinformation.
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
BIG TIME.born-again-atheist wrote:He's right-wing, you guys. You can't argue with anyone who belongs to a wing. They're fanatics.
Dude even cited a pro-life theist whackjob site.
And he earlier stated he mostly looked at websites that supported the bill.



Dear Conservatives in general:

Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Left-wingers are just as retarded.
For some reason, both left and right go against anything that their opposite would support no matter how beneficial it might actually be to the people they're supposed to support.
For some reason, both left and right go against anything that their opposite would support no matter how beneficial it might actually be to the people they're supposed to support.
"The fact is that far more crime and child abuse has been committed by zealots in the name of God, Jesus and Mohammed than has ever been committed in the name of Satan. Many people don't like that statement but few can argue with it."
-
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2010 11:27 am
- About me: Married, ethnically German, hardcore Social Democrat, ex-Dittohead, ex-Libertarian, went to Catholic school, father was a religious cultist who thought he had the gift of prophecy and could communicate with the "other side".
..............................
So, had a weird life. Better now. - Location: Surrounded by fundies and mutants in Texas
- Contact:
Re: U.S. passes "historic" healthcare bill
Thanks, but I'm not a left winger. I suppose I am when it comes to America in 2010, but then Genghis fucking Khan would be a moderate compared to most of the GOP.born-again-atheist wrote:Left-wingers are just as retarded.
For some reason, both left and right go against anything that their opposite would support no matter how beneficial it might actually be to the people they're supposed to support.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests