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Topic: Political Irony: Republican Health Care
IgorFrankensteen's photo
Sun 01/15/17 11:44 AM

I disliked the ACA from the first time I heard about it. I found it illogical, unwieldy, and suspected it would make a mess of things.

The only thing I had in favor of it, was that it was SOMETHING, and not the absolutely NOTHING, that the Republican Party was insisting we accept as the only other option.

Today, only because of the passage of the ACA, I am watching as leading Republicans scramble finally to come up with a real, and better way to deal POSITIVELY with Health Care in the United States.

Aside from the as yet unmentioned fact that the Republicans had almost eight years to propose an alternative and failed to even try to do so, I will end up being gratified to the ACA for finally forcing the GOP to come up with something other than " Eh, yer on yer own" as a policy.

no photo
Wed 02/01/17 03:40 AM
As you may well know,in the UK we have a NHS,
National Health Service,it cost nothing if you are a Pensioner, Unemployed,School age, or otherwise, it is paid for by the 30 million
People that go to work, through a NIC, National Insurance Contribution,
So all 70 Million of the Population, receive free Health Care,either at home or in Hospital, sure it has it's problems,but overall it works well,some people still wish to go for Private, that's OK, it's their money, and it doesn't bother them that they are paying for both, they can afford it, in fact it frees up more funds for those in need,I have never understood why the United States have never taken this on board.


soufiehere's photo
Wed 02/01/17 08:24 AM

Aside from the as yet unmentioned fact that the Republicans had almost eight years to propose an alternative and failed to even try to do so, I will end up being gratified to the ACA for finally forcing the GOP to come up with something other than " Eh, yer on yer own" as a policy.

Ah yes, the unmentioned time the R's did NOT use to pass anything.
When in charge.
Can hardly wait.

msharmony's photo
Wed 02/01/17 08:31 AM

As you may well know,in the UK we have a NHS,
National Health Service,it cost nothing if you are a Pensioner, Unemployed,School age, or otherwise, it is paid for by the 30 million
People that go to work, through a NIC, National Insurance Contribution,
So all 70 Million of the Population, receive free Health Care,either at home or in Hospital, sure it has it's problems,but overall it works well,some people still wish to go for Private, that's OK, it's their money, and it doesn't bother them that they are paying for both, they can afford it, in fact it frees up more funds for those in need,I have never understood why the United States have never taken this on board.





americans are reluctant to pay for 'others' if they feel others dont 'deserve' it,,,

Manturkey1's photo
Wed 02/01/17 08:59 AM


As you may well know,in the UK we have a NHS,
National Health Service,it cost nothing if you are a Pensioner, Unemployed,School age, or otherwise, it is paid for by the 30 million
People that go to work, through a NIC, National Insurance Contribution,
So all 70 Million of the Population, receive free Health Care,either at home or in Hospital, sure it has it's problems,but overall it works well,some people still wish to go for Private, that's OK, it's their money, and it doesn't bother them that they are paying for both, they can afford it, in fact it frees up more funds for those in need,I have never understood why the United States have never taken this on board.





americans are reluctant to pay for 'others' if they feel others dont 'deserve' it,,,



Really. .... We (USA) spend more on worldwide hunger than another. All while our veterans ( BIG SALUTE) go without ! What about our own needs ??

msharmony's photo
Wed 02/01/17 10:15 AM
americans can imagine other people 'deserve' it , apparently

but fellow americans,, not so much




no photo
Wed 02/01/17 11:26 AM
I'm just wonderin how those 13 million(or so) illegals here get into the system? Whose paying for them?

yellowrose10's photo
Wed 02/01/17 11:46 AM
Edited by yellowrose10 on Wed 02/01/17 11:46 AM
I know many working Americans that work but can barely afford to live, forget paying for others. That seems IMO to be the norm. If I were to get Obamacare, the deductible would be like me giving the government money when I end up paying, in full, anyway. I know people in England (feom both sides)....1 thinks it's insane to pay for everyone and the other (who is on that program) hates the crappy care and waiting for ages for medical help.

Keep private insurance and reform Medicaid, Medicare and (especially) VA benefits

IgorFrankensteen's photo
Wed 02/01/17 11:47 AM

I'm just wonderin how those 13 million(or so) illegals here get into the system? Whose paying for them?


They don't. It's a propaganda myth that they do.

yellowrose10's photo
Wed 02/01/17 11:57 AM
Edited by yellowrose10 on Wed 02/01/17 12:07 PM


I'm just wonderin how those 13 million(or so) illegals here get into the system? Whose paying for them?


They don't. It's a propaganda myth that they do.


In this country, hospitals don't turn people away (regardless of income or status). It's called the Hippocratic Oath

no photo
Wed 02/01/17 11:57 AM


I'm just wonderin how those 13 million(or so) illegals here get into the system? Whose paying for them?


They don't. It's a propaganda myth that they do.


laugh

no photo
Wed 02/01/17 12:59 PM
It's hardly free in the UK and anyone who calls it free is plainly wrong.

I've worked all my life and been in hospital once for about 3 days. Yet I've paid national insurance every month of my working life to support the NHS.
Yes I think it's a good system but anyone who calls it free needs to think again.

mightymoe's photo
Wed 02/01/17 01:43 PM

It's hardly free in the UK and anyone who calls it free is plainly wrong.

I've worked all my life and been in hospital once for about 3 days. Yet I've paid national insurance every month of my working life to support the NHS.
Yes I think it's a good system but anyone who calls it free needs to think again.


did they threaten to put you in jail if you didn't pay?

no photo
Wed 02/01/17 01:46 PM


It's hardly free in the UK and anyone who calls it free is plainly wrong.

I've worked all my life and been in hospital once for about 3 days. Yet I've paid national insurance every month of my working life to support the NHS.
Yes I think it's a good system but anyone who calls it free needs to think again.


did they threaten to put you in jail if you didn't pay?

No, but I don't think we have a choice.

Why, did the liberals threaten people with jail?

mightymoe's photo
Wed 02/01/17 02:07 PM



It's hardly free in the UK and anyone who calls it free is plainly wrong.

I've worked all my life and been in hospital once for about 3 days. Yet I've paid national insurance every month of my working life to support the NHS.
Yes I think it's a good system but anyone who calls it free needs to think again.


did they threaten to put you in jail if you didn't pay?

No, but I don't think we have a choice.

Why, did the liberals threaten people with jail?


not really, just a CT.. but they fine us if we don't pay...

no photo
Wed 02/01/17 05:02 PM
Republicans had almost eight years to propose an alternative and failed to even try to do so

There is no viable alternative in this legal and cultural system.

americans are reluctant to pay for 'others' if they feel others dont 'deserve' it,,,

There's more to it than that.

More such as in order to pass some kind of single payer/NIH system, like in the UK, it would require all people to pay into it. ALL. That includes poor people.
No more earned income "credits." No more tax refunds.

Otherwise (or in addition to) it would require huge cuts to other things. Like social security, military spending, education, veterans, agriculture.

Medicare right now has some 45 million beneficiaries, and there are approximately 70 million medicaid beneficiaries.
More than 25% of the entire budget is spent on medicare/medicaid, more is spent on healthcare than anything else, even the military if you compare it honestly rather than cherry pick.
Budgets that deficit spend, budgets that require the U.S. to go into $20 trillion worth of debt.

Do you know many democrats that would propose a bill from either approach?
Increase taxes significantly/reduce income exemptions, or cut the budget of the military, social security, other entitlements, education? All of which already spend significantly less than medicare/medicaid?

For the first few years Obama kept falsely bragging about how he didn't raise any taxes.
Obama pushing the ACA kept touting how it would be budget neutral, how it would "only" cost something like 750 billion dollars, how the fines would offset the costs, how the competition in the marketplace would drive costs down.
Without those lies, without the false numbers he used that proved to be complete BS, he would never have passed the ACA.

Politicians don't want to be seen as raising taxes.
Politicians don't want to be seen as cutting benefits.
One or both would have to happen in extremely significant ways for any kind of effective universal healthcare system to be enacted.


Not to mention it's not "just" Americans reluctance to pay for another persons benefit.
You also have basic capitalistic psychology driving citizens.
Things like "super size for only $1 more!"
How is everything run? "Half off sale! BOGO! Use your savers club card! We honor competitor coupons. Free medium coffee with every $10 gas purchase. Rollback prices. Going out of business sale! White sale this weekend."
Why do you think it's called "Black Friday?" And do you automatically associate "deals" with Black Friday?

People want their moneys worth and then some. They want to get more than they're paying for.
They want the perceived value they are receiving to outweigh the perceived value of what they're paying.
Force them to pay for something, they will want to get their moneys worth. Basic moral hazard of insurance.
Healthcare, and especially insurance, only work if you consume less than you pay for, the aggregate consuming less than it pays for.
You make them pay $1, they want $1.25 in value.
That = overuse. That will always drive up costs.

There's also the fundamental idea that one is not entitled to the efforts of another. Private property rights.
Healthcare is doctors. Healthcare is a product of another's efforts.
Professional healthcare is not seen as a right, it is ultimately a luxury. It's not a natural resource.

Other than that you can say this:
reluctant to pay for 'others' if they feel others dont 'deserve' it,,,

is a basic tenet of "democracy."
"I want control and a say over who gets and does what."
You can either have democracy, or you can have universal healthcare.
The two are not compatible. One or the other will fail over time if you try to have both.

Keep private insurance and reform Medicaid, Medicare and (especially) VA benefits

None of those systems work.
Social Security is barely keeping afloat because it receives more in taxes than it pays out, its future unfunded liabilities as the population ages are a huge problem.
Medicare and medicaid pay out more in benefits than they take in through taxes.
Part of social security money is being used to subsidize medicare and medicaid, not to mention debt.
Rob peter to pay paul and kick the can down the road, don't worry about unfunded liabilities now, just cut benefits later.
"Later" is now for the VA, and it's giving all sorts of horrible service, but commensurate with its budget.

In this country, hospitals don't turn people away (regardless of income or status). It's called the Hippocratic Oath

It has nothing to do with the Hippocratic Oath.
Hospitals used to turn away people without insurance all the time.
They were run like any other business.
"We have the right to refuse service to anyone. If you can't pay, don't come here, go to that government subsidized place with the bad doctors."
Then in the 80's the government intervened and passed a law requiring all hospitals to treat patients no matter what their insurance status.
At the very least "stabilize" them before allowing a transfer.
I think it was part of a social commentary plot line in the 70's movie Mother, Jugs, and Speed.

Other than that, doctors turn away patients all the time. Many to most will only accept a certain number of medicaid/medicare patients, and only certain insurance carriers.

Why, did the liberals threaten people with jail?

The law had to be written a certain way, in order to garner votes, where the full power of the IRS could not be used against people for not paying their tax fine for not carrying health insurance.
The IRS was limited to keeping any tax refund money if you didn't pay the tax fine for not carrying insurance.

No politician wants their opposition to run ads like "Senator Davies supports your grandma being thrown in jail after making the choice of either eating dogfood or paying for health insurance. Vote for Jim D'Bag."


illegals here get into the system? Whose paying for them? ... They don't. It's a propaganda myth that they do.

Not really a myth.
Illegals have anchor babies.
Anchor babies are eligible for benefits, which also benefit family.
Housing, WIC, medicaid, food stamps.
Illegals can go to school, subsidized by government.
Illegals can walk into any emergency room and get treated.
Not to mention identity theft, forged documents, overstaying expired green cards past the mandatory minimum 5 years, allow for them to "get into the system."

It's not "a propaganda myth that they do," at best it's just the cost/severity/problem is overstated, made to look worse than it is because the principle is "bad."

IgorFrankensteen's photo
Fri 02/03/17 03:36 PM
It's not "a propaganda myth that they do," at best it's just the cost/severity/problem is overstated, made to look worse than it is because the principle is "bad."


You're supporting what I said, while saying I'm wrong.

The problem of children of illegals is a Constitutional one. Saying that it isn't, is false.

Every mess needs to be cleaned up, but what we've suffered way to much of during my lifetime, has been people plying political games with issues and concerns like these.

Until the Constitution is changed, the politically exaggerated concerns about "anchor babies" will remain, no matter what anyone else claims.

IgorFrankensteen's photo
Fri 02/03/17 03:39 PM
It's not "a propaganda myth that they do," at best it's just the cost/severity/problem is overstated, made to look worse than it is because the principle is "bad."


You're supporting what I said, while saying I'm wrong.

The problem of children of illegals is a Constitutional one. Saying that it isn't, is false.

Every mess needs to be cleaned up, but what we've suffered way to much of during my lifetime, has been people plying political games with issues and concerns like these.

Until the Constitution is changed, the politically exaggerated concerns about "anchor babies" will remain, no matter what anyone else claims.

Rock's photo
Fri 02/03/17 06:04 PM
Those of us, who have read, all 2,000+
pages of crap, titled "Affordable Care Act",
saw just how very little of it, has anything
to do with health, or healthcare.


Jonathan83's photo
Sat 02/04/17 02:18 AM
I have found that illness is almost entirely environmental and is avoidable. If our government should decide to stop stressing us out with their inefficiencies, perhaps fewer of us would be sick. If American jobs were more abundant (meaning government needs to stop encouraging business to operate outside of the US) there would be more people with more money. More money generally means better health because we can buy better foods and less toxic personal care/everyday items.

We can't blame every sick person for being sick. Some people are mentally exhausted and physically fatigued from all the undue stress caused by the abundance of taxes and regulations (many of which are very harmful to small business owners). There would be far fewer people on government assistance programs if the government would keep the wealth of this country in OUR pockets instead of sending everything overseas.

Let's not forget about all of the untold/unrecognized genetic mutations because of cheap products, bad medical practices (radiology and using radioactive tracers when there are other safer options) and bad international business standards that we have to deal with because of our debt to China.

In any case, it's imperative that we realize the real cause of disease and stop getting upset with each other because of what it is that we are unaware of. Vicious cycle...

And, not to upset anyone here, but what about all the illegal immigrants that really have no place here. I feel that this country needs to get back up on its feet again before letting more people in from other countries.

As it is, approx. 85% of our earned income goes to taxes and regulatory fees in one form or another. You can't fix broken people until the broken government is fixed.

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