Liar
now with 17% more class
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2003
- Posts
- 43,715
Um... I didn't post the bill.Thank you again for posting the bill, Liar. It's actually not hard to understand, but it does take a bit of time to read it.
But yer welcome.
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Um... I didn't post the bill.Thank you again for posting the bill, Liar. It's actually not hard to understand, but it does take a bit of time to read it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by R. Richard
• Page 58: Every person will be issued a National ID Healthcard.
• Page 59: The federal government will have direct, real-time access to all individual bank accounts for electronic funds transfer.
The government will then be able to track each and every citizen and enforce wahtever the goverment wants, without judicial review. You could appeal a governemtn decision, but thye took all yo0ur money.
By John The Author:
COMPLETELY unlike now through the IRS, to which every financial transaction is reported automatically and which has unilateral authority to freeze your accounts, garnishee your pay, and prevent you from accessing your money.
I was unaware of the situation: "IRS, to which every financial transaction is reported automatically" I work on a cash basis, taking most of my pay from the cash I take from the people I collect from. I also take watches, jewelry, things like that. The cash I keep and voluntarily pay taxes on. The chattels I turn over to my employer who disposes of them via some system not known to me. The man also pays me in cash. Could you please detail the 'automatic reporting system' in effect? TIA. I would, just for laughs, like an IRS agent to come to me and try to impound my wallet. [I'm talking alone here, not supported by the courts and scumbags.] How in the hell is the IRS going to garnishee my pay? Are they gonna send an agent with me when I process a deadbeat? TIA. I would, just for laughs, like an IRS agent to come to me and try to prevent me from accessing my money. [I'm talking alone here, not supported by the courts and scumbags.]
Is anyone afraid the national health card is a backdoor to tracking everyone?![]()
When not covered by a employer policy I searched around and chose my own high deductible policy. It was not particularity flexible. Then managed care came in and was supposed to save money and cut costs but all it did was drive down the docs reimbursement rates, restrict freedom of choice (who you can see) and make some savvy people rich. Now I have United HealthCare and they've been fine, even great in some aspects, but they make the decisions, you know?
Insurance is a for profit business and the first line order of business is to deny claims to the insured and to create as many payment barriers as possible to providers. It's pretty a fucked up system already. I'm not afraid of a government option becoming available.
well Jo
yeah I am, I'm a small business owner, and before I started my own business I depended on my employer to provide the healthcare options, some plans were expensive and offered very little. A couple were exceptional.
Now that I am self employed there's not a lot out there for me. I don't want the govment telling me what I can and cannot have, but I would appreciate a reasonable rate from the private insurance companies so I could offer something to employees, and at the same time insure my family, but as it stands now, and seems the future, not happenin.
Everbody in washington is talkin about mainstreet and small business, they're full of shit! cause it ain't happening.
Sorry, you're right, RR; I should've said "Any transaction that involves a bank such as a credit card or a check." (What on earth do you do, if you don't mind me asking?)
Given that there's not a lot of difference to what's currently available to them now and is used for other things, no, not a bit. I don't see any signficant differences at all.
Me, neither. I currently have great insurance and my wife, as a judge, has okay insurance (mine's a lot better). When I go back to freelance next year, I'll be using her insurance again. It's certainly better than nothing at all, but it's not stunning. Without health insurance, I'd be in seriously bad shape.
If you don't pay the man what you owe him, he sends in a couple of 300 pound goons to collect. If they fail you get me. Actually, I'm not a nice person.
Warning: Late night meanderings below...
The way I see it, there are only two systems that can provide good health care for the broad masses, and at the same time keep the total costs down. A singular and heavily regulated system, or true competition.
You have neither right now. Right now, there's no incentive for insurers, drug companies and even hospitals and clinics to excel and provide the best possible VFM. Because they are not directly competing for the good grace of the consumer. The consumer can't make fast and informed choices, when faced with having to buy a health care service or even coverage.
A singular system, like British NHS, isn't perfect, but generally works. Because there are laws in place for government run organisations designed to cut the overhead. Madating among other things that all aquesitions are made by rulebook. All providers of (for instance) wheelchairs are allowed to compete for the contract, and the buyer (the guv'ment) must choose the lowest bidder among those that meets the buyer's wheelchair spec. A singular system (single payer and/or single provider) has a political incentive to provide VFM. Botch health care, and it's nobody's fault but the elected and replaceable politicion. Run the cost high, and other parts of the budget will suffer.
True Competition is not the same a free market. On a free market, companies can choose to not compete, or to use other strategies to gain market shares than making a better product for a lower price. Companies can choose to pay inflated prices and pass the cost on to consumers, which in the case of health care means passing it on to insurers who then take it out on consumers in new and inventive ways. True Competition would be heavily enforced competition boosting and cartel killing legislation and regulation. Active pitching of would-be competitors against each other, so that the consumer always have viable options to choose between and the opportunity to do so.
Now, that won't be a perfect system either, because there are simply health care services that are too damn expensive to ever be profitable. Treatments so expensive that normal people couldn't afford them if they sold their house, car and kids. Those could probably be dealt with through tax finianced subsidizing. But the main point is, I find it more appealing to combine regulation that drive prices down on the basic stuff (treat fractures, infections and common diseases), and "socialize" the rarer stuff on a need basis, rather than to treat "health care" as one product with one solution.
The short version is most things the government messes with turns out to be a monolithic, bureaucratic nightmare that does more harm than good. War on Poverty, public housing, Department of Energy, Department of Education; the list goes on.
When all is said and done, taxes will increase, services will decrease, the fit will be kept fit. The chronically ill, the physically damaged, the elderly and anyone else who is of no use to the state will be given narcotics and sent home to die.
No one has read these bills and yet the full court press is on to pass them. The analysis presented here may be biased, but then ANY analysis of a social program contains bias. If by chance an objective analysis was prepared, most people wouldn't believe it due to their biases or preconceived notions.
This whole idea needs more study. If it began tomorrow, it couldn't be fully implemented for years...plus Congress and the bureaucrats would be tinkering with it incessantly as one by one the special interest groups went before committees with their various tales of woe.
Just remember: A camel is a horse designed by a committee.![]()
That was an image I reallt didn't want in my head when heading off to bed....that people keep getting their assholes to flutter about.
That was an image I reallt didn't want in my head when heading off to bed.
Oh well, I'll try not shut it out of my dreams.
G'night, Hangouters.
I've never seen why it was a problem to have basic medical care available for everyone and then additional "better" insurance for the more catastrophic stuff where you might want to improve your odds. For example, if you have only a given chance of, say, private room or a heart transplant or something on the basic insurance, then you can buy a policy to get better coverage over and above the basic. Something like that.
I'm still trying to figure out what the eeee-villlls of "socialism" are that people keep getting their assholes to flutter about. Some day, someone will explain it to me, I'm sure.
Kind of says it all about the climate of the debate doesn't it?Since then, conservatives have been using Gladney’s case as a cause célèbre to claim that “union thugs” are being used to silence dissent at health care town halls and have turned him into a hero of their movement.
Kind of says it all about the climate of the debate doesn't it?
The Right have loud, disorderly, and on occasion even violent people show up and disrupt the civil discourse at town hall meetings (organized or not, that's what they do, kill constructive dialog by yelling).
When the Left complain about it and question the motives of the protestors and the methods in which they protest, suggesting it's mostly lobbyist astro-turf, the reaction is "how DARE you try to stifle dissent, they're CITIZENS, why do you HATE DEMOCRACY and FREEDOM OF SPEECH?!" Instead of maybe, just maybe, admitting that it could be wise for people to dial it down a notch.
When the same kind of disorderly conduct happens in the other direction, it is instantly blamed not on angry and upset citizens getting over the line, but on "union thugs", organized brownshirt mobs working directly for the new Evil Socialist Empire.
And at the same time, the left is doing little to nothing to complain about holliganism on their side ("What? Oh, do you have monopoly on anger now?"). And so, the trench war continues.
It's splendid drama. Just sucks that it's not fiction.
Kind of says it all about the climate of the debate doesn't it?
The Right have loud, disorderly, and on occasion even violent people show up and disrupt the civil discourse at town hall meetings (organized or not, that's what they do, kill constructive dialog by yelling).
When the Left complain about it and question the motives of the protestors and the methods in which they protest, suggesting it's mostly lobbyist astro-turf, the reaction is "how DARE you try to stifle dissent, they're CITIZENS, why do you HATE DEMOCRACY and FREEDOM OF SPEECH?!" Instead of maybe, just maybe, admitting that it could be wise for people to dial it down a notch.
When the same kind of disorderly conduct happens in the other direction, it is instantly blamed not on angry and upset citizens getting over the line, but on "union thugs", organized brownshirt mobs working directly for the new Evil Socialist Empire.
And at the same time, the left is doing little to nothing to complain about holliganism on their side ("What? Oh, do you have monopoly on anger now?"). And so, the trench war continues.
It's splendid drama. Just sucks that it's not fiction.
Except for the fact that the people arrested for assaulting Gladney were SEIU union thugs?
Respectable union thugs only work for the Democratic hand that feeds them, ie, all the union payoffs in the Spendulous bill.