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View Poll Results: How is Obama doing? (poll started 6/6) | |||
Great - above my expectations | 18 | 6.87% | |
Good - met most of my expectations | 66 | 25.19% | |
Average - so so, disappointed a little | 64 | 24.43% | |
Bad - sold us out | 101 | 38.55% | |
Trout - don't know yet | 13 | 4.96% | |
Voters: 262. You may not vote on this poll |
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08-14-2009, 02:02 PM | #3601 | |
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I'm skeptical that R&D would dry up, but even if you're right, why should the American public subsidize drugs for the rest of the world?
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08-14-2009, 08:19 PM | #3602 | |
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WOW, just wow. Palin goes from being 'nuts' to being a possible leader in the movement.
GOP backs away from end-of-life counseling - Yahoo! News Quote:
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08-14-2009, 09:09 PM | #3603 |
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It's a very delicate matter. Once again the focus is on "Sarah Palin is insane", and the attempt there is to invalidate any opposition, but I think one can have reasonable concerns about this part of the bill.
The goal of Section 1233 is to pull the plug a little sooner on more people. There's no doubt about that. I have no problem with that in theory. And it does also does provide a "service", making sure people know more about their options. But the potential for abuse is there, and I definitely understand how this can freak some reasonable minds out (who unfortunately will be lumped in with Palin, whose continued relevance escapes my comprehension). I think this is a pretty good article that separates the right-wing hysteria that many liberals are trying to make the center of this issue from the real concerns. It's too bad that the real concerns have so little place in this discussion. It's all fear-mongering and then responses to the fear-mongering. Charles Lane - House Health-Care Reform Bill Oversteps on End-of-Life Issues - washingtonpost.com Last edited by molson : 08-14-2009 at 09:14 PM. |
08-14-2009, 09:13 PM | #3604 | |||
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Quote:
no its not, it is to allow end of life discussions, on a voluntary basis chosen by the patient and their family, to be covered as opposed to waiting until it is too late, like it was for my grandfather who died no semblance of the man I knew, in his awful painful sleepless night (I hope he got a few hours of real sleep) in a fight against pneumonia which was simply the last straw in a steep decline from a hip injury that saw him literally fight to recover eventhough the writing was on the wall. He was miserable, hated every second of it, but was in the machine and thus went through the rigors until the horrible, painful end. Quote:
yes there is Quote:
please dont throw quotes around service to diminish it.
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08-14-2009, 09:22 PM | #3605 | |
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And those concerns could easily be handled in the language of the bill if that was a real goal, but the people pushing the forced euthanasia line have no interest in actually solving any language problems in the bill. Don't blame the "hysteria" on liberals. When several Senators and Representatives make the death panel argument it's not the fault of a smelly guy in a coffee bar that has a Bush=Nazi sticker on his MacBook.
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08-14-2009, 09:25 PM | #3606 | |
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Agreed. I called it fear-mongering. You might have missed that. Some liberals take advantage of the right's fear-mongering to frame it as THE opposition, which is completely unfair to those who have legitimate concerns. You have to go along with this, you can't have concerns, because if you do, you're no better than Sarah Palin. It's kind of creepy. It's a way to suppress dissenting speech. I agree that those concerns could potentially (I wouldn't say easily) be handled in the language of the bill, but that's not where the debate is. You're either for justice and against suffering people, or you're a right-wing crazy. There's no voice in this debate for reasonable concerns. They're just not allowed to be acknowledged - I get the same response from your or Flash as if I was talking about death counsels. Last edited by molson : 08-14-2009 at 09:30 PM. |
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08-14-2009, 09:28 PM | #3607 |
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No, you can have concerns and they can be addressed, but those in a position to actually make decisions have no interest in working on the bill's language to make it better. Grassley is one of the lead negotiators for Republicans and he's been pushing the death panel idea. While you have legitimate concerns, the people making the decisions really aren't any better than Sarah Palin.
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08-14-2009, 09:31 PM | #3608 | |
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So what? Why is this always the response, what the Republican leaders are talking about? I'm not a supporter of Republican leadership. What about the people that will actually be subject to this bill? When I try to start a debate here about reasonable concerns, you keep throwing Palin, Palin, Palin, Palin, Republican leadership, Republican leadership, Republican leadership. That's a small but telling example of what's going on in this debate throughout the country. Yes, if Republican leaders were smarter and cared more about the citizens and weren't only concerned with team politics, they'd turn down their rhetoric and express the concerns in a more reasoned way. But that ain't happening. So fuck the concerns, I guess. And for liberals who love responding to the right's rhetoric - as long as they can view is as the fault of the other side, as long as they feel like they're on the "winning team", they don't seem to be very sensitive to those concerns. Last edited by molson : 08-14-2009 at 09:38 PM. |
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08-14-2009, 09:37 PM | #3609 |
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Nobody's called you out or lumped you in with all Republicans or Sarah Palin or whatever. The article Flasch posted was about elected officials and Republican leaders. When you posted concerns they were addressed without lumping you in with anyone else.
Ultimately what you think or I think has little relevance. In a representative democracy the most important opinions are those making the decisions. Of course we're going to talk about them.
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08-14-2009, 09:41 PM | #3610 |
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yes.
Palin is forcing the people more like you in the GOP to slide her way and the fringe element is forcing the muting of the compromisers, maybe on both sides.
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08-14-2009, 09:43 PM | #3611 |
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Blame and political points seem more important than getting a good bill. To everyone, leadership on both sides. That's why this thing is going to fail. (I don't know if I mean this health care bill or America)
I tried to call something of a truce of sanity here - to back away from Palin and highlight the real concerns, but people have no interest in that. They want to win! They want to feel superior to the other side! Last edited by molson : 08-14-2009 at 09:45 PM. |
08-14-2009, 09:45 PM | #3612 |
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and I will then point you back to my "millions" post
OR it will get shoved down some people's throats, bad facets and all OR we will have to wait for either the pendulum to continue its swing further left or back to the right. The losers will be us.
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08-14-2009, 09:59 PM | #3613 | |
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Again, your concern was addressed. But why isn't it a legitimate point to state that the minority party has no interest in making the bill better, but is instead focused on using whatever tactics are necessary to kill it? That's what is happening here and the legitimate concerns are being sidelined because they aren't as effective as the lies. We can have a discussion about healthcare, and I think we have had a fairly productive discussion as long as Allah hasn't been involved. However, in the real world a very small group of people are going to be responsible for what does or doesn't get signed into law. To ignore the realities of the legislative process is to ignore the realities of our system.
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08-14-2009, 10:13 PM | #3614 |
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...and I was thinking about it. Isnt that what the last facet of the debate in this thread was about (ignoring the Allah section)? The idea that the vocal are drowning out the middle? If it's happening in the news, happening in the talk shows, happening in here, isnt it incorrect for the parties in this thread before that tried to state that the town halls and the masses were lining up against this particular health care bill, when in reality it is as you say it is and the health care bill is truly secondary to many many real points of interest?
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08-14-2009, 11:03 PM | #3615 |
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The irony in this mess is the people who who need health care reform the most are the ones against it.
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08-14-2009, 11:22 PM | #3616 | |
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Welcome to 2005 (and before) Amazon.com: What's the Matter with Kansas?: How Conservatives Won the Heart of America (9780805077742): Thomas Frank: Books SI
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08-15-2009, 02:39 AM | #3617 | |
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I would be interested in some demographic breakdowns of who has and who doesn't have health care and what kind of jobs they have. Does anybody have a good reference site for this stuff? |
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08-15-2009, 06:24 AM | #3618 | |
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While I think you were just throwing that out anecdotally...if in fact mostly true...then that would mean that the people pushing this legislation do NOT need it. So I'll ask the stupid question of the day...why do we need this bill? I liken this to the Bush tax cuts where rich people on the left were speaking out about how they felt they needed to be discontinued. Economic reasons for pro and con aside(I dont mean to dismiss them, it just isnt the point)...why have we become a country that seemingly (a) looks out for somebody else's immediate interests more than our own (b) cannot trust ourselves to donate (or payback) money into the government where it is needed (c) became an entire nation of philanthropers right under our own noses? |
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08-15-2009, 09:48 AM | #3619 | |
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But that doesn't mean I'm going to jump off the Obama ledge because "something needs to be done". All we can do is keep the debate going until a more reasonable solution appears (if that ever happens). In the meantime, I will guarantee that some on the left will sound like fools and the right will have its own set of oddballs. If people want to focus on the "my D- is better than your F" political party comparison - enjoy. You'll have plenty to banter as you explain why you are the tallest person at the midget convention. |
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08-15-2009, 09:55 AM | #3620 |
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The argument isn't accurate from that messenger. It is a scare tactic.
I guess Im not sure if your comment was directed at me or the idea in general that Palin is the spotlight instead of the message carrying weight...
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08-15-2009, 10:05 AM | #3621 | ||
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Flasch, you just don't get it. We don't care about the messenger. We want to hear the message from BOTH sides of the debate. You cannot make an informed decision just hearing from one side of the argument because they have less 'spin.' The fact is that both sides are spinning the hell out of this debate. It's how they get people to pay attention to their message, right or wrong.
Instead of listening to the arguments and discussing their merits, you attack the messenger, thus negating any credibility on your part. You become a part of the spin machine of the Democratic Party. If you claim to be so independent, act like it for once! Use the thing in your skull that separates us from the rest of the animal kingdom.
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08-15-2009, 10:17 AM | #3622 |
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youre wrong...IMO, I do get it just fine.
I believe that Palin is grabbing more of the neutral people to her side (on a graph it might be an extra 3% or something I guess, but that adds up). Eventhough the message she has put out there is false it is that 'win' that Arles mentioned that has trumped the vision of a solution. That is a bad thing, to win by misinforming. For example, the moderate GOP member who was pushing for this that called her a name at first is now backpedaling. Why? Because of the pressure that even spun arguments are causing. This is not good for you or me since it will make finding a solution that much harder. I agree with you in that this is occurring, right or wrong. I believe wrongly if one uses a scare tactic, or hyperbole as you'd liken it, to take those that maybe aren't as well read on the topic at hand and push them into a corner. This is why you see the debate taking on all sorts of deeper facets about things that have nothing to do with health care or their costs. Now you say we, but look back in this thread alone and see that the scare tactics do have an effect, just from links alone. For some reason I think perhaps youre seeing the word "Palin" and insinuating something from the word alone. On the otherhand I view her as a leader not just of the GOP but of many people out there who look up to her for right or wrong, good or bad thus IMO she is being very untruthful in her statements but strategic and smart for her goal which is why I do believe in this case, due to her stature to her fans, the messenger is somewhat more important than average joe. As my sales partner just said after a short re-read, "If celebrity backing didnt mean anything people wouldnt get paid millions to do it." and she's a Republican. I think I get it just fine.
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08-15-2009, 10:27 AM | #3623 |
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Is there one Democrat, on the planet earth (or at least FOFC) that has ANY concerns at all about this plan? Is there any Democrats that would change anything, or think that any of the plan is misguided? I haven't seen that here, and I haven't much of it anywhere else. It would seem that this plan is absolutely perfect in every way, in their view.
Any plan, anything that was devised, would be supported by the same old regular people. If we had an alternative reality where there was a different plan out there, it would still be supported by the same people. So how can the arguments of these supporters have any credibility? Obviously, it's not everyone. There's certainly tons of Democrats I respect and it's easy to see whose opinion is worth something - they don't blindly support everything that their team spits out. That's yet another problem with team politics. The plan doesn't have to be good. You can't question your team. You have to go along with your team, and attack the other team. Last edited by molson : 08-15-2009 at 10:35 AM. |
08-15-2009, 10:42 AM | #3624 | |||
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yes I have concerns. As I mentioned above in my "millions of people" post there are a million different concerns including their costs. Quote:
Unfortunately right now there isnt 1 bill I support in its entirety and there are a bunch of different facets of multiple bills being bantered about. I have great concerns over cost BUT I will say this, as Ive said before: "If you dont trust the mouthpiece's words, than what is there to talk about?" If Obama says it must be Self Sufficient and you scoff and say, "Well thats a pipe dream." than what is left to talk about? Same as during the campaigns, if you dont take someone for their word than you can tune out and just vote for the person you wanted to anyways. Same thing here. Quote:
That is unfortunate about the 'win' thing we have been talking about. I think whomever on both sides wants to see 'win' at all costs OR let the other 'team win' so that they'll fall on their sword and we can 'win' later, is really aborting the welfare of the people and our country.
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08-15-2009, 10:47 AM | #3625 | |
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I wish the Democrats didn't give a shit about appeasing the Republicans. The Democrats should be debating amongst themselves in Congress. That's where productive disagreement and improvement might be possible. But they're apparently too afraid. One Democratic voice v. One Republican voice sucks. We need the Democrats to start mixing it up in their own party. Why are they giving Palin power at all? Everyone complains about her mouthing off, but how much power does she have? We're not bringing this plan to a general vote. Maybe some Republicans will complain that the bill isn't "bi-partisan" but who the fuck cares - isn't that why we have elections? I'd rather have a plan that involves Democrat disagreement and compromise than anything that's "bi-partisan". If they believe in the plan, they need to stake their political careers on it. If they're not willing do to that, then you have nobody to blame for Palin's influence. What's the end game goal of this crusade by the Democrats - to get Palin to change her mind? To get Republicans to stop following her and start following them? I don't care how many websites they set up or town halls they have. People's feet are DUG IN on this. Even if you can convince someone that there won't be a "death counsel", there's not going to up and join your party the next day. They'll disagree on some other basis. This entire barnstorming for support strategy has been a disaster. It hasn't increased support, it's increased resistance. The fact that the resistance is perceived as "wrong" is irrelevant. Last edited by molson : 08-15-2009 at 11:03 AM. |
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08-15-2009, 10:53 AM | #3626 |
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Well I think the debate is healthy if it stays on topic no matter the parties involved. I think the Blue Dogs have done a good job of being a concerned voice as well as some of the members of the GOP. I just hope the opposition is opposed to the bill based on the bill's pros and cons and not issues on the periphery or a broader 'win' strategy. If so than their voices should be heard. Fringe voices tend to get the headlines and thus more sheep but its the more moderate heads behind closed doors that'll get a solution put forth that people can then truly talk about. Honestly, I think talking about the bills now is somewhat of a fruitless endeavor. PS my GOP friend here agrees with that.
Since you added the death panel part let me answer in this edit my stance: Im not trying to change anyone's mind on anything. I simply want the rhetoric to be truthful, that is all and leaders, be it in politics or not, to realize that their words carry more weight than average Flasch, or Molson, or MBBF and thusly they have a duty to be more deliberate in their choices. If she's read up on the topic and is against the bill than she should voice that opinion but simply leave out misinformation. That is all. If people disagree with a facet of the many bills being talked about based on that facet than I say more power to them. The resistance isnt "wrong" by any means as long as theyre resisting what is actually in the bill itself as opposed to the grander conversation or misinformation being spun. heck, dissent is what I was clamoring for for all the years of the Bush administration after I turned against the war in Iraq so I would be a hypocrite to be against it now. Dissent is good. Dissent that is based on lies (just like support based on lies) is dangerous. On that note, I have heard some great cases both for and against the bills and their facets on CNBC since this started and rarely are the scare tactics involved. It can be done.
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08-15-2009, 11:28 AM | #3627 | |
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I don't know how you can argue that A and C are accurate. I think we overall are a country of individuals that looks out for their own interests much more than for others'. See the economic meltdown for evidence. |
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08-15-2009, 11:30 AM | #3628 | |
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I see a lot wrong about the health care bill. We need a single-payer system like the rest of the world seems be able to make work, but that will never happen because it's (gasp!) "socialism." |
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08-15-2009, 12:28 PM | #3629 | |
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If Democrats want to do that, and they're so sure it's going to work, they have the numbers to do it. I'd love to see a Democratic single-payer v. multi-payer debate be the center of this thing right now. Instead we have a debate over the existence of death counsels, and how best to mitigate Republican influence. Hey, I know how to do the latter - ignore them! Why is everybody even complaining about Palin and town hall reactions if this thing is going to work? The Republicans are at their lowest point in decades, and they're still wielding all this power somehow. Last edited by molson : 08-15-2009 at 12:29 PM. |
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08-15-2009, 12:33 PM | #3630 | |
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But the Democrats aren't all the same. The Blue Dogs won't go for a single-payer system because their constituents won't let them (will not re-elect them if they support it). |
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08-15-2009, 12:40 PM | #3631 | |
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Exactly - Democrats aren't the same. That's what I'm still hopeful for - I want to see them fight it out amongst themselves and come up with the best plan possible. Not lob missiles at Sara Palin. Maybe there's not the support for a single-plan right now, but this is definitely the opportunity for the supporters of that idea to gain some ground. Maybe this debate does go on behind the scenes, for all I know. But I'd love to see Democrats publicly disagreeing with Democrats, same with Republicans. That would warm my heart. Everyone's more concerned with having a unified front for some reason. Last edited by molson : 08-15-2009 at 12:44 PM. |
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08-15-2009, 01:29 PM | #3632 |
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The problem is a lot more complicated than a simple numbers game. Look at Baucus. He's got enormous power in all of this because he's the chair of the Finance Committee and he's decided that instead of only worrying about how it's financed, he wants to have control of the bill. If the Dems didn't stick to seniority in committee assignments a bill would have gotten to a floor vote weeks ago.
But the general point that the Dems are too chickenshit won't get any argument from me. Despite your belief that I'm all for the Dems, that just isn't true. I have policy goals that often align with the Dems, but the elected officials often piss me off. That's why I don't give money to them. Personally I think there's a lot wrong with the bills being discussed and the longer Grassley has veto power the shittier they get. I'll stick with what I've believed from the beginning, without real cost controls the final bill will likely be worse than doing nothing. Then we can revisit this in ten or fifteen years when Medicare is really busting the budget.
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08-15-2009, 02:10 PM | #3633 | |
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It's fine to have an ultimate goal of a single-payer system, but even if I could wave a magic wand and make it happen - it would be a disaster. We don't have anything remotely close to a needed infrastructure for the medical needs, financial needs and patient needs for a single-payer system to work. In fact, if I was an extremely cynical republican team-first guy - I'd be all in favor of a single-payer system passing. It will bomb horribly, the democrats will lose a ton of seats (and maybe the presidency in 2012) and the single-payer dream will be dead. Instead, the democrats need to be smart if this is their goal. Do a bill that slowly improves on the infrastructure with tax incentives, setup a "poverty single-payer plan" for those under 30K, extend unemployment coverage for those who lose their jobs and provide additional tax incentives for small business owner to buy private health care. Leave the 70+% of people with solid employer-provided coverage alone. This won't cost a ton and there will be some small victories (more people covered, more protection for those that lose their job, improved infrastructure,...). Plus, it takes the boogie man argument away from the republicans. They don't need the republicans to do any of this stuff, but for some reason it's either all or nothing with this crew in congress. It's almost like the attitude is that if we can't help all 30 people in a room without insurance, we will do nothing. Even if there's a very solid initial attempt that could help 18 of the 30, they want no part of it. All or nothing. The problem with this is even if you win, you lose as we are not capable of supporting such a shift if it's passed (esp before the next set of elections). Last edited by Arles : 08-15-2009 at 02:12 PM. |
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08-15-2009, 03:01 PM | #3634 |
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There is no movement in Congress for a single payer system. What's being proposed is a small step, largely what you've stated support for with the addition of a public option to force competition in the insurance market. All the talk of nationalized healthcare is going way beyond what's currently being discussed.
But again, the real problem is the rising costs of healthcare. If the curve isn't flattened to some degree we'll be in a real crisis in a couple of decades when the only options are large tax increases or severe cuts in Medicare. I don't think this bill will do enough to cover costs as too many Senators seem inflexible on any costs reductions, but that's the real problem. We could cover all the uninsured tomorrow if we wanted, but that still won't solve the impending budget crisis.
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08-15-2009, 04:29 PM | #3635 | |
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I think that that is a good thing. When the GOP was in office I was upset that they didnt listen to the Democratic minority to the point of changing the rules sometimes to keep them in the closet, so to speak. I dont want to trample on the GOP's voice either. FWIW, Im not complaining about Palin simply the verbiage she, and other people in role model positions, are using.
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08-15-2009, 07:37 PM | #3636 | |
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It's an odd setup in this country. I can understand people not liking this particular plan, but it seems like many on the right are just against health care reform. I bring it up because the red states are for the most part the unhealthiest with the lowerst life expectancy. When you're life expectany is almost 5 years lower than someone living in another state or country, you'd think you'd be about getting some change. |
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08-15-2009, 07:47 PM | #3637 | |
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There is no pressure in these other countries to reform health care and go back to a private system. I mean if all these other countries are happy with what they have and live longer, you'd think people here would take notice. |
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08-15-2009, 10:52 PM | #3638 | ||||
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Social Security and Medicare also provided options to people who didn't have any. 80% of US citizens have some form of health care, with many people having fairly cost-effective (for them) and quality plans provided by their employer. If these 80% start seeing longer waits, rationed care and more difficult access to doctors (combined with higher taxes), there will be a pretty big outcry. I think most people are fairly ambivalent on this issue unless it starts costing them a lot more or their health service/wait times/access worsens. That, IMO, is why the democrats want a lot of cover with this bill. They know it will get worse until it gets better and this isn't the 1940s where Americans will sit and listen to thousands of soldiers dying abroad and not bat any eye. We don't have the stomach for any kind of pain in 2009 (war, health care, economy, you name it). Quote:
If happiness is all that counts, 89% of Americans are happy with their own personal medical care according to June poll here: EDITORIAL: Health care's big secret - Washington Times Quote:
Zogby had a similar finding in June of 2009: http://www.zogby.com/news/wf-healthcarereform.pdf Quote:
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08-15-2009, 11:36 PM | #3639 | ||
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We've also never lived under a different system. Ask people on Medicare if they'd like to switch to a private system. I'd be interested to see a poll of people who have lived in countries like Canada or the UK and the U.S. As someone who has lived in both, Canada's system is just better for the country. Last edited by RainMaker : 08-15-2009 at 11:38 PM. |
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08-16-2009, 12:31 AM | #3640 | ||||||
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
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My point was that most people with health care are happy with the quality of service they are getting. So, coming up with a solution that had a high chance of impacting that service (wait times, rationing, ...) should be a last resort after other things (ie, targeting cost/uninsured) have been tried. Quote:
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08-16-2009, 12:41 AM | #3641 | ||||
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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For those wondering about the British NHS, here's an article on the major issues it faces moving forward:
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A&E patients left in ambulances for up to FIVE hours 'so trusts can meet government targets' | Mail Online Quote:
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Yeah, sounds like a plan we should all be envy of in the States. |
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08-16-2009, 07:23 AM | #3642 | |
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Again, there is no plan in Congress that would create anything remotely like the NHS. Whether or not NHS is good or bad is irrelevant to the discussion.
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08-16-2009, 07:26 AM | #3643 |
"Dutch"
Join Date: Oct 2000
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08-16-2009, 07:37 AM | #3644 |
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Location: Newburgh, NY
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Well the NHS may be the worst example of a single payer system and their big problem is that they don't spend enough money on it. Did you know that the US already spends more tax dollars per capita on healthcare than the UK? If the UK matched our total spending per capita on healthcare I'd expect the NHS to be fantastic. The NHS gets trotted out because it's the easiest to find flaws with, but if you look at other European systems you can find single payer that works very well.
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08-16-2009, 07:39 AM | #3645 | ||
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We have great doctors and great medical technology. No one in this health care debate is arguing that. The poll has nothing to do with what's being debated. The issue is costs and access. Our health care system is great if you are healthy, have money, and have health insurance. Quote:
It's akin to saying your football team is faster and stronger than everyone else but not caring whether they win more games. Your neighbors prefer corporate suits to decide the fate of their health. That's fine, but at least with a politician I'm getting someone who has a vested interest in me being happy and getting better (votes). |
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08-16-2009, 07:40 AM | #3646 |
College Starter
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Out of curiosity...why wasn't France on that list?
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08-16-2009, 07:40 AM | #3647 | |
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08-16-2009, 07:47 AM | #3648 |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Feb 2006
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I continue to love how we bring up countries that have 60 million or less people and expect a system for 300 million to go just as smoothly. Most of these countries are similar in size to California and we've seen how well they run things.
Last edited by rowech : 08-16-2009 at 07:48 AM. |
08-16-2009, 07:48 AM | #3649 |
Hall Of Famer
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I'm assuming those against the national health care system are opposed to having Medicare too, right?
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08-16-2009, 08:44 AM | #3650 |
Coordinator
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Location: Jacksonville, FL
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looks like the Co-op option is gaining traction. Lets see if the other side of the debate wants to come to compromise too.
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