I'm just gonna duck and cover from the oncoming shitstorm.Drop some knowledge on this thread.
You mean the people who have had half a dozen kids and think everyone else is driving up their insurance costs?I'm just gonna duck and cover from the oncoming shitstorm.
I prefer cupcakes, myself.So, how about those proposed concealed carry laws for Wisconsin schools?
Been pretty crazy here lately, I won't lie. The old art museum building across the street from our library is now the building for Delta Defense LLC. Look it up if you are curious what that's all about.So, how about those proposed concealed carry laws for Wisconsin schools?
/distract
Actually, the proposal was already pulled anyway as of thursday.Been pretty crazy here lately, I won't lie. The old art museum building across the street from our library is now the building for Delta Defense LLC. Look it up if you are curious what that's all about.
Since https://www.healthcare.gov/find-premium-estimates/ already did almost all of that (including phone numbers is all that's missing), and it worked flawlessly when I tried it out two days after launch, I'm guessing the millions are going towards building the actual network infrastructure to share account information and calculate individual subsidies according to both federal and state laws. Still a giant mess, but this particular story is mostly a non-story.So it turns out 3 guys fixed healthcare.gov in their garage.
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2013/11/three-guys-built-better-healthcaregov/71195/
Wonder where all those millions of government dollars are REALLY going?
I don't buy the "Government bad" argument. You get what you elect, and I hate to say it, but we're all responsible for what has occurred.We should put the people actively making it worse in complete control!
Mostly the ones who championed/voted for this abomination, I'd say.I don't buy the "Government bad" argument. You get what you elect, and I hate to say it, but we're all responsible for what has occurred.
my issue with all the "this is proof healthcare was broken and why we should go with a single payer system" is that the very same people were the ones championing the ACA. The argument is pretty much the second half of a protection racket.I don't buy the "Government bad" argument. You get what you elect, and I hate to say it, but we're all responsible for what has occurred.
It's almost like they had to make a payment into the system with every single paycheck earned throughout their lives.All of these same arguments were made against Social Security. Try and take that away now from the very people who had railed against it and see how much they fight back.
This was my take on it too. It reformed some of the things that HAD to change (namely the preexisting condition shit), but virtually all of my liberal friends wanted and still want a single payer system. We all knew bending over backwards to accommodate big business was going to ruin it in the short term but now it's pretty much a sure thing that we will have single payer in our lifetimes. Just have to survive until then.Funny, I thought they were championing single payer, not the ACA. Look back and you'll find just about everyone who supported the ACA doing so reluctantly because the current system is failing millions of people, either through dropping people when they get sick or bankruptcy's number one cause being medical bills.
"They didn't want this to happen, but if congress had just passed a single payer system we could have avoided this and all future unpleasantness."This was my take on it too. It reformed some of the things that HAD to change (namely the preexisting condition shit), but virtually all of my liberal friends wanted and still want a single payer system. We all knew bending over backwards to accommodate big business was going to ruin it in the short term but now it's pretty much a sure thing that we will have single payer in our lifetimes. Just have to survive until then.
Or we could, you know... maybe be like England or Japan where they have both? Shocking, I know.Yes with single-payer you can join the illustrious club of those countries where it's ILLEGAL to pay for your own health care: Canada, Cuba, and North Korea. Sounds like an awesome result there.
That's not single-payer then. It's "the government will pay for you, unless you have the means to do so yourself" or something else. Short lines for those who pay, long for everybody else. Then that will be seen as unfair, and then there will be long lines for everybody (that's what happened in Canada). Single-payer is what Canada has. And you're right to be very very afraid of that.Or we could, you know... maybe be like England or Japan where they have both? Shocking, I know.
Everything worthwhile is for profit. Without personal incentive, there's no reason to strive. Quality of care will suffer. Would you rather go into debt to get the life saving surgery, or be able to easily afford the painkiller they'll provide you to comfortably wait until your end?I'd rather wait for health care than be afraid to see a doctor for fear of being financially destroyed, making matters worse.
Profit motive should never be a factor in something like health care. It's twisted and insane to me to even consider it as a for profit entity.
I don't think this is true. Pretty sure you can have private supplemental insurance in Canada.Yes with single-payer you can join the illustrious club of those countries where it's ILLEGAL to pay for your own health care: Canada, Cuba, and North Korea.
This is completely false. There will always be an incentive in medical advances, if only because of the completely indiscriminate nature of illness and injury. A cure for HIV, Aids, and Cancer will be found not because whoever finds it first will become rich (though they will, no matter what they charge) but because virtually everyone knows and cares about someone that is suffering from these... even the rich. Life expectancy will continue to extend because people are afraid of dying. Replacement limbs will become better and better (and cheaper) because ANYONE can involved in an accident that causes them to lose a limb. Polio treatments were devised because even people like a Roosevelt could get it. There is simply too much self incentive in ensuring that medical technology is the latest and greatest for people to stop making just because they aren't making as much money off of it.Everything worthwhile is for profit. Without personal incentive, there's no reason to strive. Quality of care will suffer. Would you rather go into debt to get the life saving surgery, or be able to easily afford the painkiller they'll provide you to comfortably wait until your end?
It doesn't take 8+ years of study, tens of thousands of dollars in student debt, and mandatory continuing education to run a charity. Or a church, for that matter. Though both do often seem to enrich their management quite a bit.Charities and churches would suggest otherwise.
He's talking about Shriner's and Saint Jude's Hospitals etc.It doesn't take 8+ years of study, tens of thousands of dollars in student debt, and mandatory continuing education to run a charity. Or a church, for that matter. Though both do often seem to enrich their management quite a bit.