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2012-04-05, 11:54 AM | [Ignore Me] #16 | |||||
Colonel
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And if you do have insurance? You're still participating in socialism. You're paying for their operations, their kids with cancer, their prescriptions, their frivolous use of the emergency room. We are all already paying for everyones health care. Having an insurance mandate doesn't make things socialist.. it already is highly socialist. But it is implemented in the absolute worst, and most inefficient, possible way, because some people can't stand the thought of giving people something with no strings attached, they feel everything must be earned in some fashion. So we got the awesome mix where you still sometimes can get what you didn't earn(i.e. expensive emergency care), but you will be severely punished for it, and of course the massive inefficient bureaucracy intended to deny people. As for the welfare state breeding entitlement whores? In the year 2000, national unemployment was less than 3%. People want to work when work is available. There may be a few people living happily off the public tit, but they are very few and far between, and have ridiculously low standards. Or possibly are disabled. Life on the dole(what little you can get these days) is a miserable existence. And capital gains? Phooey. In the 90s, it was 28%, the economy was strong, unemployment low, and we even managed to balance the budget a few times. Maybe it helps a bit, but it certainly hasn't proven to have been all that helpful.
I mean.. those countries exist.. right now. You can open up wikipedia and read all about them. They are, right now, literally doing, and doing so quite successfully, what people here are saying is completely impossible and the worst idea ever. And then you point this out, and they say it wouldn't work, and you ask why. No real answer there, but pretty much the only reason it doesn't work is because a large portion of people do not want it to work. A nice self fulfilling prophecy. Last edited by CutterJohn; 2012-04-05 at 12:07 PM. |
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2012-04-05, 01:07 PM | [Ignore Me] #17 | |||||
Colonel
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You're right that moving them all to the US would be a state problem. The bigger problem is actually finding out if they have evidence against the people they take. That information is secret though meaning for many people there it's impossible to be released even if you are falsely accused. That and the whole torture thing. Basically if you have to hold people in another country because what you're doing is so unethical then you probably are doing it wrong. I think everyone else refuted most of the conservative talking points so I'll not reiterate those, but this one always irks me because people are so misinformed about it. I'm kind of surprised Malorn fell for the giving money to rich helps the poor succeed in the economy. There has been no supporting evidence for that. You would only gain that viewpoint from reading opinionated conservative media.
Also as mentioned a lot of healthcare related things are random occurrences that destroy one's savings. This happens on a daily basis with people that get their appendix removed. Even with insurance it can often cost up to $8K dollars. I believe it's around $20K-40K without insurance and that's assuming you get out of the hospital as soon as it's over and rest at home. (Meaning only staying for like 10 hours). I have amazing insurance because of where my dad works and I still paid $1K dollars after a surgery. I was only there for 3 hours. Quick walk in got knocked out in like 20 minutes and went under the knife then woke up and was wheelchaired out the door where my mom was waiting. (Couldn't drive since I was still out of it). That was a surgery that happened in a matter of a week from when I met a doctor about the problem. On top of that I had to pay like a 10 dollar deductible for the following 2 follow-ups to get the stiches removed which wasn't a problem, but seemed a bit odd since I've never seen a deductible that low. (I've only been sick like 3 times in my life and never been to a hospital before that point so maybe it's really common). I'm hoping within our lifetime we don't have to deal with that, but I think it might be impossible convincing people that healthcare should be a right. For now Obamacare seems to be the most agreeable solution.
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2012-04-05, 02:37 PM | [Ignore Me] #19 | ||
First Sergeant
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I'm mixed on the health care issue.
On my cynical side, If people don't want the mandate...then they better fucking not let idiots who choose not to get health care go to the emergency room and jack up prices for the rest of us responsible folks. On my softer side, I think everyone should have healthcare as a right. But I can understand how some would feel this goes against capitalism. Of course, I'd say we stopped being full capitalism over a century ago. |
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2012-04-05, 03:03 PM | [Ignore Me] #20 | ||
Colonel
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I could go on the emotional side and start linking the recent influx of hundreds of Obamacare stories. This one was on reddit today.
I can understand the more capitalist idea that people in that situation should file for bankruptcy or receive poorer care</sarcasm>. I'd rather just forgo the whole bankruptcy problem if we can give someone the care they require then we might as well do all we can. It's a lot less stress on families who really should be focused on their own well being, not on their mounting bills because of something they can't control. Bit idealistic maybe.
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2012-04-05, 05:42 PM | [Ignore Me] #21 | |||
Corporal
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I am not going to comment on the rest of the post but I think you need to be a bit more honest with your assessment of Pres. Obama laying out "the truth" for his health care bill.
Sure as hell sounds like an overreach to me. Whether you want to call it socialist or not is up to you. |
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2012-04-05, 07:02 PM | [Ignore Me] #22 | |||||
Colonel
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The cost has to go somewhere. Currently in the US the cost just goes into everyone's premiums when Hospitals are hit with the bill. Pushing it into insurance companies raises rates potentially, but it's really not different than putting the burden on hospitals who then increase the prices of services to cover those bills. So Obama did lay out the truth. It's just extremely complicated and most people don't fully grasp where the costs are going and coming from. When the costs are solely on hospitals to help poor people in the ER you're looking at a huge cost. So much so that it's difficult to use a doctor in the US without insurance. Something as "simple" as visiting a doctor to get something checked can be 100 dollars in most states. (Sometimes more. Free clinics I believe are cheaper like 60-80 dollars). It gets more expensive if you need a quick test done. Like a strep throat test. Easily 50 dollars for the test (though I heard some places do it for 20 dollars). Takes like 15 minutes for them to do in their labs. I had one done less than a year ago after my coworker got strep throat and brought it into work. I have insurance so I didn't have to deal with the full cost. Anyway the huge cost we see is caused because of how poorly hospitals are protected from liability and having to help people that can't pay. Redirecting that cost on insurance companies with a plan to force people to buy insurance is a fairly legitimate way to manage those costs so the healthcare system doesn't have to.
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2012-04-05, 07:40 PM | [Ignore Me] #23 | |||
Corporal
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Also I take issue with how the bill was presented initially as not a tax, and now the SG is trying to claim it is a tax and thus within the scope of the congress. The duplicity is pretty disgusting given the fact that it paves the way for further intrusion by the government. |
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2012-04-05, 08:38 PM | [Ignore Me] #24 | |||
First Sergeant
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I recently got on my Fiance's insurance...and they wanted me to wait 6 months due to a "pre-existing condition" My comment was more towards some people who say, "I don't want insurance! I want to pay out of pocket!" Who'd I would wager are in the same group that shout, "Get your government hands off my medicare!" |
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2012-04-06, 01:01 AM | [Ignore Me] #25 | |||||
Colonel
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The only thing invoking the constitution accomplishes is ensuring next time this comes up(and it will, seems to be a giant push every 10-15 years since the 60s), a mandate, the conservative compromise thats been peddled the last 4 times there was a massive health care push, will simply not even be on the table. Declaring this unconstitutional will guarantee a single payer solution.
Last edited by CutterJohn; 2012-04-06 at 06:30 AM. |
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2012-04-06, 06:27 PM | [Ignore Me] #28 | ||
Colonel
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I think you forgot to turn on Fox this morning. You ran out of talking points. Also I wanted this to be a nice discussion without that kind of banter.
Did anyone watch that PBS thing I linked at the bottom of my first post? It's a good watch.
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[Thoughts and Ideas on the Direction of Planetside 2] Last edited by Sirisian; 2012-04-06 at 06:28 PM. |
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