Originally posted by Rapscallion
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Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) ruled constitutional - strong reactions abound
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Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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Originally posted by Greenday View PostWell, we aren't getting universal health care. We are getting "Some people get health care without paying for it, some get health care and pay for it, and some pay for it but don't get it." That doesn't fly with me. Nor is that really "universal" health care.
We are getting a system wherein everyone must purchase health insurance in some way (with provisions that help keep the insurance companies from donning said sandpaper condoms to begin with) and those who do not, and are able to, will pay a fine/penalty/tax/whatever. Which they should, to help cover the cost when they eventually DO get sick.
Seriously, where did you get "Some people get it without paying, some pay and dont get it, some pay and get it" from?
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Originally posted by Duelist925 View PostExcept thats not the case. Thats what we had. We had a system where insurance companies could screw the customer over, and often did, vigorously, with sandpaper condoms.
We are getting a system wherein everyone must purchase health insurance in some way (with provisions that help keep the insurance companies from donning said sandpaper condoms to begin with) and those who do not, and are able to, will pay a fine/penalty/tax/whatever. Which they should, to help cover the cost when they eventually DO get sick.
Seriously, where did you get "Some people get it without paying, some pay and dont get it, some pay and get it" from?
Where did I get it? Well, this act means that poor people will get free health care. If you can't afford it, the government just gives it to you. That leaves the people who "can" afford it. So either you purchase health insurance and then you are insured. Or you don't purchase it, pay anyway, and still don't receive health insurance.Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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Originally posted by Greenday View PostHealth insurance companies aren't changing anything. We are still going to overpay and still get crap service.
Where did I get it? Well, this act means that poor people will get free health care. If you can't afford it, the government just gives it to you. That leaves the people who "can" afford it. So either you purchase health insurance and then you are insured. Or you don't purchase it, pay anyway, and still don't receive health insurance.
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Originally posted by Greenday View PostWell, this act means that poor people will get free health care.
RapscallionProud to be a W.A.N.K.E.R. - Womanless And No Kids - Exciting Rubbing!
Reclaiming words is fun!
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Originally posted by Greenday View PostThe main argument against universal health care is being able to spend our own money the way we want. I earned my money so why does someone else get to spend it the way they want?
You don't get to keep everything you earn because you are part of a society. If you don't like that, you really need to go be a hermit in some third world nation. After a while, I'm sure you'll figure out that you get a lot more out of modern civilization than you give up.
Also, the cost of caring for people who need emergency service because they don't have any preventive care costs a lot more than just taking care of them at the early stages of pretty much any issue.
Anecdote time!
My boss had breast cancer. Since she has health care, she had regular checkups. During a regular checkup, they found something. It was cancerous. So she had surgery and radiation treatment, and today she's fully healthy.
My old boss, who had health care also had cancer. But he didn't go in for regular checkups (the situation forced on those without insurance) and by the time he actually did get it looked at, it was too late. He was in stage 3 and heading quickly to stage 4. We lost him less than 2 years later. If the current boss was not in a position to buy and take over the company, fourty people would have lost their jobs.
There are hundreds of small businesses that are exactly one medical emergency away from disappearing and the entire community loses.
We don't live in vacuums, and our health affects a lot more than just our immediate circle of family and friends.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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Originally posted by Greenday View PostHealth insurance companies aren't changing anything. We are still going to overpay and still get crap service.
Where did I get it? Well, this act means that poor people will get free health care. If you can't afford it, the government just gives it to you. That leaves the people who "can" afford it. So either you purchase health insurance and then you are insured. Or you don't purchase it, pay anyway, and still don't receive health insurance.
And...where did you get THAT info? Please, cite your sources dude.
For starters, to be poor enough that the "not buying health insurance" fee kicks in, you have to make a rediculously low amount of money. Are you honestly bitching that people making THAT little aren't going to be hit by more taxes?
Here, read.
Or here
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Originally posted by Rapscallion View PostDie younger and don't take your pension from those hardworking corporations who won't make enough profits this year from your lower life expectancy. Boohoo and sob and all that.
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Letting someone die with no treatment at all is horrible, but it's cheaper than trying to cure something like cancer.
Cheaper is not always better.
A cartoon I saved a while back that's buried somewhere deep in my hard drive comes to mind. I don't remember whether it was Bizarro or Pardon My Planet, but it's an exam room scene, and the doctor says "Good news! Your insurance company says they'll cover you. Unfortunately, they also say it will be with dirt.""My in-laws are country people and at night you can hear their distinctive howl."
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Originally posted by Rapscallion View PostThis is fascinating. It truly is.
From what I've gathered from watching all of this from afar is that Obama went down the route of forcing people to purchase health insurance as a promotional tool - how could the right wingers protest if corporations were having income thrust upon them?
When Massachusetts introduced health care reform, the mandate was included. The PPACA is modeled on the Mass. bill, and uses a lot of Romney's arguments from the time.
Originally posted by Rapscallion View PostThe GOP may as well run campaign ads that read, "We're not willing to let you get health care until we get this guy out."
When Obama made health care reform his signature issue, the GOP gleefully latched on to it, anticipating a repeat of what happened with Clinton. One of them made the bold proclamation, "This will be his Waterloo." It was never about the law. It was always about preventing Obama from achieving anything. Republicans are genuinely afraid of him because he's smart and is able to engage the American people.
Originally posted by Rapscallion View PostI've seen economic arguments brought up. How many think that having a less-ill population will harm the economy more than it assists it? How many businesses are forced to make less profit when their employees are missing work?
Rapscallion
If that means supplying free health care to a handful of people, so be it. I can live with that small cost given that the majority of people will pay their fair share.
Originally posted by Greenday View PostThe main argument against universal health care is being able to spend our own money the way we want. I earned my money so why does someone else get to spend it the way they want?Originally posted by Rapscallion View PostI cannot combine these two statements of yours as being anything other than contradictory. One says you're for a system where you think there's an ideal situation, and yet that actually goes against what you say now.
I am confused.
Rapscallion
However, his assessment is correct. It's very childish really; "I've got mine, to hell with you," is the basic response . . . from the same people who loudly (and incorrectly) proclaim that Christianity is the basis of American law.
Originally posted by Duelist925 View PostSeriously, where did you get "Some people get it without paying, some pay and dont get it, some pay and get it" from?
Some who need it, but don't qualify for programs and don't have access to insurance die because they don't seek care until it is too late. I see that all the time.
Those who are able to pay, pay out the nose. Americans pay more for their health care, and get lower quality of care, than Europeans do with their single payer systems.
It's stupid.
Originally posted by HYHYBT View Postbut it's an exam room scene, and the doctor says "Good news! Your insurance company says they'll cover you. Unfortunately, they also say it will be with dirt."Good news! Your insurance company says they'll cover you. Unfortunately, they also say it will be with dirt.
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Originally posted by Panacea View Post*snip*
Oh, I agree with Greenday. He's right. Some people DO get it without paying. I see this all the time with some of the Medicaid bottom feeders (the jackasses who complain about a $5 co pay or that they can't afford Children's Tylenol while reeking of cigarettes. Or the illegals who borrow the Medicaid cards of legal residents, "Oh, that's my work name." Riiight.
Some who need it, but don't qualify for programs and don't have access to insurance die because they don't seek care until it is too late. I see that all the time.
Those who are able to pay, pay out the nose. Americans pay more for their health care, and get lower quality of care, than Europeans do with their single payer systems.
It's stupid.
I just don't see how Obamacare will create more of this kind of thing (people abusing the system, etc)--which is what I'm fairly sure Greenday was saying.
Not saying it doesn't happen--just saying it's wrong to say that Obamacare will make such a situation worse.
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Try being someone like me:
I work at a job that is not the best paying in the world
I am over 50
I DO have problems that I have not been able to address in the last 10 years or so mainly because I can not afford the rising cost of even the basic good coverage health/medical insurance (company offered or private insurance).
I make enough in annuola salary to NOT qualify for my states Medicaid program even if there is a premimum and I have a little too much in assets (can not have things like a retirement account or savings)
I work at a job that does, however, offer "health" insurance @ $1300 per year in premimums with some "restrictions":
1. 2 or 3 doctor visits a year capped at $75 per visit. the rest is out of pocket
2. a couple of "allowed" lab tests per year. the rest out of pocket.
3. no ER coverage so all out of pocket if say I break my arm
4. no drug coverage
5. no surgery coverage
6. no wellness ocverage
7. no annual physical converage
8. no women's specific comverage
9. no big "ticket" item coverage like MRI/CAT/cancer tests
I opted not to get this "coverage" becasue is was basically worthless as I would have to pay out of pocket for most medical expenses.
two cases in point:
I finally finished (about 7 months ago) paying off an ER visit (I detailed that situation in a previous post some months ago) that all told cost me around $5000. NOW if I had opted to get my company's health coverage my bill STILL would have been $5000 and that would have still come out of my pocket.
My GF who did opt in to this "coverage" had this happen every year for the last how ever many years:
GF goes to the doctor for annual checkup. office does some bloodwork and other test to check to make sure the hypertention drugs she is taking are not doing her any damage.
office submits paperwork to the insurer. insurer pays office paltry sum as per the policy. GF is out-of-pocket for $700 - $800 for ONE SINGLE VISIT NOT including $50 or $60 per month for the drugs she need to take.
This woman is/was not a moucher or a leach off of the government and niether am I. she worked (sometimes 2 jobs) for the last 28 years until something else happened (degenerative brain disease) that forced her out of the workforce.I'm lost without a paddle and I'm headed up sh*t creek.
I got one foot on a banana peel and the other in the Twilight Zone.
The Fools - Life Sucks Then You Die
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Jester, I'm confident that in 18 months when the exchanges start taking effect, that you will be able to find affordable coverage that actually covers you. I expect it to cost you around $400/month without the subsidy (don't know if you'll qualify, but you may) since you are single.
Florida won't have an exchange; Scott Walker (who perpetrated the greatest fraud on Medicare in US History when he ran HCA) has publicly said there will be no exchange in Florida that is state run. But the Feds will step in and start one.
Originally posted by Duelist925 View PostOh, I completely agree with you--there are bottom feeders who abuse the system, there are people who need aid and don't get it, and there are people who pay through the nose. and the american health care system severely needs an overhaul.
I just don't see how Obamacare will create more of this kind of thing (people abusing the system, etc)--which is what I'm fairly sure Greenday was saying.
Not saying it doesn't happen--just saying it's wrong to say that Obamacare will make such a situation worse.
The PPACA is not a perfect law. It is primarily insurance reform, even though there are health care reforms within the law. Specifically, the emphasis on preventative and primary care, and the change in focus from interventional care (ie care only when you get sick) to prevention in reimbursement and the focus on evidence based care and outcomes in reimbursements.Good news! Your insurance company says they'll cover you. Unfortunately, they also say it will be with dirt.
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Im really hoping this opens up avenues of health care for me. Ive been without since I got out of the Army since the premiums were just way to expensive for me. Not to mention the trend of premiums going up and benefits going down.
My options for insurance also mimicked Rackets, in that it covered very little. Luckily, Ive been healthy, but a 10,000 emergency room would have cost me 10,000.Last edited by bara; 07-01-2012, 06:29 PM.
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