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Health Care Reform

It appears that today might be the end of a very long road to health care reform. There's been a lot of debate on the subject really leading back before the election. The mainstream sounds like an echo chamber, so I'm hoping you guys have better insight. Will this bill do what the administration claims to do, or is it as bad for the future of America as Fox says?

2,044 comments

  1. A false choice, of course... by dtmos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nothing is as bad for the future of America as Fox says.

    BTW, I've seen thousands of comment trolls, but I think this is the first story submission troll I've seen.

    1. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the bill before you jump to conclusions.....

    2. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Except Fox. Fox is bad for America.

    3. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      BTW, I've seen thousands of comment trolls, but I think this is the first story submission troll I've seen.

      You MUST be new here...

    4. Re:A false choice, of course... by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 5, Funny

      We have nothing to fear but Fox itself.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    5. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      BTW, I've seen thousands of comment trolls, but I think this is the first story submission troll I've seen.

      It's a good idea, maybe it'll help keep the bullshit left vs. right bickering out of the tech stories.

    6. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The truth is, the non-left of the American public (i.e. centrists, libertarians, independents, right, etc) would better trust the government to run healthcare if they actually had a better track record of running other programs. Find any government agency that's tried to do exceptionally well and you'll find that the smaller the scope of their responsibility the better they did. Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Postal Service, any regulatory agency - you get the picture. The federal government simply doesn't have a good resume; you can't blame the unbiased peoples for not loving the idea of the government running yet another program.

    7. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kagura · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Except Fox. Fox is bad for America.

      Just because Fox says the health care reform is bad doesn't mean that we should therefore support the reform. It disappoints me that this is the first comment I saw when I opened up this page. The point of this article is to discuss the reform in a constructive manner, not to bash entire ideologies just because they are not your own.

      I am temporarily residing outside the U.S. at this time, and I haven't been paying attention to the argument. My mind is still malleable on this, so convince me one way or the other! Now, let's get back to a real discussion regarding the pros and cons of health care reform!

    8. Re:A false choice, of course... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      BTW, I've seen thousands of comment trolls, but I think this is the first story submission troll I've seen.

      You must have kdawson's stories hidden.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    9. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      A false argument, of course...

      The bill does not create a government agency to run health care. That would have been a single payer system. The bill is a set of consumer protections for health care consumers.

    10. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Nothing is as bad..."

      Yeah. Keep saying that. When our government starts taking away our liberties (forcing people to buy health care, taking away private property to give to another private party are just two examples), I'd say that's bad for America. When it continues to spend us into either runaway iflation or economic ruin, I'd say that's bad for America. But that's just me.

      Any rational person can see this "budget neutral" bill is a hoax. 10 years of taxes, 6 years of real benefits. WTF? Additional budget trimming based on rasing the capital gains tax with estimates of increases in tax revenue that are NEVER going to materalize (as they never have in the past when estimates like this were used).

      If I STILL wasn't paying a tax to help support the spanish american war, I'd think this was a joke.

    11. Re:A false choice, of course... by OzPeter · · Score: 1

      Except Fox. Fox is bad for America.

      Just because Fox says the health care reform is bad doesn't mean that we should therefore support the reform.

      I think the issue the OP has with Fox has nothing to do with the Healthcare bill. A position that I also support.

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    12. Re:A false choice, of course... by linzeal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You must be new here. When political stories hit Slashdot it is usually a bare knuckled ugly showdown between Anarchists, Liberals, Republicans and the Libertarians with the truly insane individual thrown in for good measure.

    13. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThePhilips · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The federal government simply doesn't have a good resume [...]

      Very true. And that is valid for any country.

      Though on other side, the question all Americans should be asking themselves is: do private insurers have better resume???

      One can easily bash gov't - bashing health insurers might backfire (who like all the big businesses have their hand in pretty much everything). And if gov't does shitty job, one can always vote for opposition/independent - you rarely if ever have much choice when dealing with health insurers.

      Disclosure: not a U.S. resident.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    14. Re:A false choice, of course... by KDN · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Full bill, but not the final bill. Deals are still being made. Even the CBO says that the numbers are preliminary. And frankly, 10 years of taxes and 6 years of benefits means they are cooking the books.

    15. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Exactly right.

      If Fox news says its bad for America... It's probably good for Americans.

      However this bill does not contain the public option or universal health care. It's basically a mandate that we all buy private insurance at existing rates. It does not appear to lower the current rates...

      There's some good stuff in the bill such as getting rid of preexisting condition limitations etc.. but unfortunately without the public option, there will be no competition or healh care reform.

      The democrats failed to do what they were elected to do, and now they're passing the dead remains of their failed efforts.

      We wanted to get away from the private insurance companies, or at the very least force competition and have them lower their ridiculous rates which generate them massive amounts of profit every year.

      Now... All this bill is at the heart of it... is a bill that delivers us right to those private insurance companies... who will profit even more than ever.

      I'm still trying to understand IF this bill will lower existing rates. If not... then every American is going to be forced by law to pay $1,150 a month for healthcare.

      Thats bizzare. I'm not sure how thats reform.

      There are subsidies in the bill which will may help (time will tell)... but for those currently paying for private insurance... I'm not sure I see the reform when it comes to current rates.

      Can anyone shed light on this?

    16. Re:A false choice, of course... by pandaman9000 · · Score: 2

      It is a LOT more than that. You are ignorant or deceptive.

    17. Re:A false choice, of course... by Enry · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Well, there was that one from yesterday about the Obama administration rejecting zillions of FOIA requests conveniently ignoring that the Obama administration didn't exist for 1/3 of the time they're alleging this happened.

    18. Re:A false choice, of course... by Apollo_11 · · Score: 1

      Fox news is bad Actually investigating then reporting, just silly. Or is it silly not to allow private enterprise in the health care arena compete across state lines ?

    19. Re:A false choice, of course... by polar+red · · Score: 3, Insightful

      do private insurers have better resume???

      NO.

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    20. Re:A false choice, of course... by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 1

      Nothing is as bad for the future of America as Fox says.

      BTW, I've seen thousands of comment trolls, but I think this is the first story submission troll I've seen.

      Virtually every story about Apple or Microsoft is more of a troll submission than this.

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    21. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh you mean how we have lost all those freedoms from 9/11, and every 'incident' since. It's not a specific side of the isle causing the problem. Health care is good for America, and the current system is broken. I work for a medical device manufacturer and even though this is going to place huge tax burdens on us, it's still going to be good in the long term.

      Time for a new alternative. This is not a choice of black or white but Budweiser v. Bud Light. The donkey is the same animal with slightly less balls.

    22. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When has a government program ever come in at or below the budget estimates. They couldn't forecast their way out of a paper bag, let alone accurately predict costs over a 10 year period.

    23. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was an ASSOCIATED PRESS news story, fool!

    24. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Someone mentioned that people should read the bill (which they should), so I figured I would help out and provide the links to what is available.

      Would you rather there be nothing available? Actually, don't answer that...it's clear your mind is made up without actually reading anything.

    25. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      First off, this isn't health care reform. It doesn't change all that much about the health care system. It's health insurance reform.

      To that end, there are some small gains: insurance companies will be forbidden from doing some seriously awful things, like retroactively revoking the insurance of patients who get expensive illnesses, on the flimsiest of possible excuses (and in some cases based on faulty data that they refuse to investigate further).
      In exchange, there are a lot of parts that are a big giveaway to insurance companies: because we've focused on giving everyone insurance instead of giving everyone health care, individuals are forced to buy insurance, but with inadequate oversight to ensure that insurance companies don't just gouge prices. Further, there isn't any choice for an insurance plan governed by democracy instead of stockholders, so we can probably expect that the small number of insurance companies will behave oligopolistically and raise prices, as usually happens when a small number of huge players control the market.

      There will be some savings relative to the current system -- on the government's part -- but nothing like what could be achieved by a system that allows everyone to buy in to Medicare (and couples that with Medicare reforms like more careful monitoring of doctors who prescribe medically needless tests & procedures to make more money, and allowing Medicare to negotiate lower prices for its prescription drug benefit). The present bill is probably slightly better than not having it, but only very slightly.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    26. Re:A false choice, of course... by Zot+Quixote · · Score: 0

      You can't really claim the OP offered a false choice when Fox News is pretty much the embodiment of mainstream Republican thinking. Part of my problem with the right is, they tend to be pretty conformist. Sometimes this is a good thing. Its definitely an effective thing. They have very strong party discipline, and moderates are pressured and pushed out. Honestly, as an Ohioan, I'm sort of sad to see George Voivovich retiring, but he sounds out of synch with his party and there is blowback for that. My point is, the right may be good at some things, but diversity of viewpoints isn't one of them. So, pointing to something on the right and saying its not representative of the right wing is hard to do. Any examples you can come up with are, like Voinovich, getting pushed out.

    27. Re:A false choice, of course... by imgumbydamnit · · Score: 3, Informative

      Regarding your first point "When our government *starts* taking away our liberties...", are you new to the party? Federal, State and Local governments long forced people to buy this or that, and eminent domain has been exercised since the days of the railroad barons. You may have some valid points, but you taint them when you pretend that this administration is doing anything to us that past administrations did not.

      --
      To err is human. To arr is pirate.
    28. Re:A false choice, of course... by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      don't forget google in that too.

    29. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 3, Informative

      (forcing people to buy health care, taking away private property to give to another private party are just two examples)

      I'm not a fan of the bill -- the lack of a public option creates, as you say, a major problem by forcing people to give money to insurance companies that have little incentive not to gouge their captive market. A mandate *is* necessary, though, for insurance-based health reform to work. (That's why single-payer was the way to go...)

      As for the other, that's inevitably always going to happen. Unless the government carries out its necessary functions entirely itself (which wouldn't be a bad thing, but would probably be considered "socialist" or something), there will always be government contractors and the like. But redistributing income is a core part of every government, ever. Taxing the serfs to keep your warriors in meat and mead fits that description just as well as does Social Security, the Space Program, and the local fire department.

      When it continues to spend us into either runaway iflation or economic ruin, I'd say that's bad for America.

      We are nowhere near runaway inflation. In fact, there is a substantial risk of a very bad deflationary spiral at present. (see e.g. graph here). Deflation is bad; it means wages decrease, consumer spending drops, and job losses keep mounting. I mean, deflation is wonderful if most of your assets are dollars. If you own anything of value though, like say a gold stockpile, or a house, or if you like jobs, deflation is very very bad. And there is approximately zero chance of Zimbabwe-style inflation in any imaginable non-post-apocalyptic America over the next fifty years.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    30. Re:A false choice, of course... by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      I think that's pretty much it. People will be fined for not applying for private insurance. And private insurance cannot deny people quite so easily anymore.
      It's not much. actually I'm not even sure if it is helpful or harmful.

      Right now the US government provides healthcare for about 2.8m military personal (active and retired) and their families for about $40b/year. For $1250/mo that is a pretty efficient program. I suspect it is because it was not defined by 10,000 pages of bureaucracy on Capitol Hill.
      But to support the same sort or service to every American as public (or even mandatory private option), I assume we'd all have to kick in an average of around $1250/mo. Assuming that the hospitals and clinics are of the same level of efficiency and provide the same level of service as the MHS. I think I am comparing apples to apples here.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    31. Re:A false choice, of course... by Ironhandx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, the government forcing, and then helping if you are unable to do it yourself with the forcing, you take care of yourself is definitely a bad thing. This bill actually doesn't go far enough to socialize your health care, and your taxes need to go up to support it as well as pay down debt, but your health care premiums disappear in exchange. Don't raise taxes for the little guy, but the capital gains tax, and the taxes on anyone making over $250,000 a year definitely need to rise. Raise the capital gains tax but build in a $50,000 buffer so that the little guy that makes some money on the home he built doesn't get screwed, but make that a yearly limit not a per-event limit. Tax the upper 5% a little heavier, they can certainly afford it, and hey, guess what, once you're done taxing them more heavily /they'll still be rich/.

      On another note socialist health care has FAR more up sides than down sides. The entire argument from the perspective of the common guy in america once you get past all the bullshit he's been fed by those looking to protect their extortion racke... ahem, I mean business models is that they know a guy(or they themselves) who went to a hospital somewhere else and "It wasn't as nice". Basically it wasn't a hotel. Which a hospital should not be to begin with.

      This bill, from what I've read doesn't go far enough in getting your health care system rectified. What you actually need in order to fix it is an elimination of health insurance along with the companies altogether. Hospitals still run themselves but Government is the one with their hand on the cash bag. Almost everyone in america seems to think of government as inefficient and lax. Well, as someone who has worked in more than one large corporation as well as in a Government(albeit the canadian government) department, the government wins on the efficiency scale, by a fair margin.

      For one, hey, sure, some government officials will get kick backs from other people for doing them favors. However this isn't nearly as bad as it is in big insurance companies etc where the guys literally just cut themselves checks out of YOUR money. There are no checks and balances, stockholders don't really give a rats ass what these guys do as long as their profits are protected, which means these guys are out to screw you in as many ways as they can possibly get away with doing. Don't ever think that your health insurance companies are the best way to go, you're paying for all of the corruption and greed within the organizations as well as the profits demanded by the shareholders before anything ever gets passed along to you for the premiums you're paying. With government you end up with a few lazy people working there because its a little harder to get fired and costs go up on workers generally by about 50% because of this. Considering some insurance companies exec bonuses alone dwarf their entire wage budget, without including profits, shareholder dividends etc, how the hell can anyone even begin to say this is a better way of doing things?

    32. Re:A false choice, of course... by mikerz · · Score: 1

      It's not fair to compare to private ensurers as they are now -- there is a clear corporatist slant to how Washington has operated for a long time, and frankly -- lobbyists from private insurance have put in a wealth of distortion on the market courtesy of the government. This particular situation highlights two things: the greediness of companies to ensure their own survival (a constant) and the corruption of government (another constant).

      It's certain that more government intervention is going to both increase overall healthcare costs (via insurance costs) and drive overall healthcare quality down because that's what it always does and what it has been doing steadily.

      True reform would not be imposing more restrictions, regulations, and bullshit state-invented rights -- it would be repealing what drives healthcare to be expensive in the first place (many many things).

    33. Re:A false choice, of course... by ByOhTek · · Score: 2, Informative

      Annoying thing is, I read the bill (off the senate site) around sept/oct of last year, and rather liked it.

      I need to get around to reading the newer bill, but there are already a lot of huge changes I know of that I don't like...

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    34. Re:A false choice, of course... by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      first of all, your arguments lack cohesion.

      - are you concerned about "liberty" or are you concerned about the budget?
      - are you concerned about the budget or are you concerned about paying taxes?
      - are you concerned about paying taxes or are you concerned that your tax money is going to fight wars from 100 years ago?

      maybe you are legitimately worried about all these things, but you should work on developing a logical framework for government into which all these ideas fit. and no, "I don't like paying taxes" is not a logical framework in terms of how a modern government is run.

      let me make this as simple as possible. forget all the little things, like whether the bill is budget neutral or covers abortions, that's just filler.

      here's the deal: the health care system in this country is broken. to fix it, you can pay some extra taxes to the federal government for the rest of your life, or you can pay hefty fees to the insurance companies for the rest of your life.

      that's the whole debate.

      --
      It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    35. Re:A false choice, of course... by ByOhTek · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hey! I walk in on my own accord. Nobody needs to throw me!

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    36. Re:A false choice, of course... by garcia · · Score: 1

      There's some good stuff in the bill such as getting rid of preexisting condition limitations etc.. but unfortunately without the public option, there will be no competition or healh care reform.

      My wife and I recently had our first child. There were mistakes during the epidural phase which required another one to be done about 8 hours after we arrived. Due to this we wanted to see an itemized bill and what we received was right in line with what all the horror stories tell you:

      1. $14.05 for one 600mg Ibuprofen (people, bring your own bottle of 200mg Advil and take three)

      2. Incoherent and unintelligible charges (Doctor Visit $1496.23 is not itemized enough, sorry)

      3. When they thought my child was uninsured (he was on his mother's but they didn't yet notify the hospital) charges were halved for the "uninsured discount".

      Etc.

      Now, instead of having a public option--which will just push this burden on to the people while "insuring" those who are currently uninsured, the government should have made it clear that this type of overcharging and clearly obtuse billing charges are unacceptable. But no, instead we're going to pass a bill which costs a trillion dollars (of money which we don't already have) and then it's going to do very little to fix the real problems inherent in the health care industry.

      This is not a win for anyone.

    37. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      When our government starts taking away our liberties

      You mean like this? http://haacked.com/images/TerroristsHateFreedom.gif

    38. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Dude, break ranks with the ininformed and READ THE BILL. It's out on thomas.loc.gov & there are plenty of summaries about what each section does.

    39. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if gov't does shitty job, one can always vote for opposition/independent - you rarely if ever have much choice when dealing with health insurers.

      Whoa there! Yes you do. There are several insurance providers and only one government. Like social security (et al.) no politician is ever going to make cuts so you don't really have a choice there. A politician would outright fail getting into office saying they were going to make social security cutbacks. The opposition would be all over them for taking away retirement and generally being mean to the elderly.

      The reasons health insurance is high isn't because of insurance companies in total. It's because of the way the system works now. If you go in for a simple blood test for something like cholesterol levels, the labs will run all kinds of tests simply because they can just charge it off to the insurance companies. They take a $30 test and turn it into a $300 test because, "The patient has insurance. We might as well run these tests as well. Gotta keep these technicians busy and in work."

    40. Re:A false choice, of course... by xaxa · · Score: 1

      If I STILL wasn't paying a tax to help support the spanish american war, I'd think this was a joke.

      Did you bother to read the first bit of the Wikipedia article you linked to?

      Although in popular belief the telephone excise tax has been in place continuously since the Spanish-American War, it has actually been repealed and reinstated several times

    41. Re:A false choice, of course... by slyrat · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There is at least one part of this bill that, being a diabetic and a contractor, am hoping gets through. That is that the pre-existing condition exclusions that insurance companies do. Because of how much of a difference it would mean for me personally it is almost impossible for me to not want it to pass. I guess, if possible, it would be nice to just have that part as a separate bill or something similar. Otherwise, having used the healthcare in England, I had really hoped that a single payer system could have been gotten through. I know that is almost impossible here in the US, but I can dream.

    42. Re:A false choice, of course... by Zot+Quixote · · Score: 0

      Postal Service is amazing. They're having money problems right now, but then so is everyone.

      Before the advent of Social Security, more than half of all seniors died in poverty, now almost none do.

      Americans are pretty schizophrenic on the Medi's...all these people who are saying "Keep government out of my Medicare/Medicaid don't seem to have a solid understanding of how this all works."

      Bottom line is, this is one of the places where the conventional wisdom is wrong. And I think part of the "conventional wisdom" is pretty much right wing propaganda. People with money who think they can put one over on the dumb american public. Unfortunately, they haven't been proven wrong yet.

      The real answer is, HCR is good for quality of life, good for the economy, and hopefully this is just the first step.

      On a personal note, my sister is uninsured and just started a job where she'll have insurance in a few months. IF HCR doesn't pass, everything that came before this is a pre-existing condition, which would be very bad for her.

    43. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's how they make their money, by scaring and shocking people, they call it sensational news. At home, I have the same thing, but a little different, the 5 o'clock news, full of accidents, murders and rape, all with grossly misleading titles (oh yeah, and a stupid blond newscaster that always smiles through the whole thing, that has got to be the creepiest thing ever). It's the reason I quit watching TV a long time ago, I want news, unbiased information, complete and truthful.

    44. Re:A false choice, of course... by stronghawk · · Score: 1

      The federal government has a better track record than Enron, AIG, Lehman Brothers, Chyrsler, et. al. When you drink your next glass of water, eat your next hamburger, munch on your potato chips, or mail your next bill payment remember how much you can't trust the government.

    45. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Though on other side, the question all Americans should be asking themselves is: do private insurers have better resume???

      In markets (e.g. car ins., life ins., etc.) where there is a direct relationship between the consumer and the insurance company, I would say the private sector has a really good record. It is only when there is not a direct relationship (i.e. the consumer doesn't pay for most of the premiums or services rendered) that the market gets all bent out of shape. Transfer the tax benefits of providing health insurance from employers to consumers and allow insurers to compete across state lines and I believe you will see costs go down. People with preexisting conditions through not fault of their own ought to be covered by state managed high risk pools.

      We should try these options first since they would cost almost no money. This would increase competition between insurance companies (which the left has been complaining about) and give additional tax benefits to individuals while removing tax benefits to companies.

    46. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Further, there isn't any choice for an insurance plan governed by democracy instead of stockholders" First, true capitalism is democracy (People vote with their money). Second, why the government? If you wanted profit out of the equation, why not a heath care co-op? Or not-for-profit insurance?

    47. Re:A false choice, of course... by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      Instead of trying to convince you of anything, let me offer the following question:

      Is it sensible to convey responsibility, without conveying an equal amount of authority? That is, does it make sense to claim that the government is responsible for the health of the populace without also making the claim that the government should have the power to do what is necessary to make the populace conform to healthy habits?

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    48. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The government has a bad resume?

      This morning I was awoken by my alarm clock powered by electricity generated by the public power monopoly regulated by the US department of energy. I then took a shower in the clean water provided by the municipal water utility. After that, I turned on the TV to one of the FCC regulated channels to see what the national weather service of the national oceanographic and atmospheric administration determined the weather was going to be like using satellites designed, built, and launched by the national aeronautics and space administration. I watched this while eating my breakfast of US department of agriculture inspected food and taking the drugs which have been determined as safe by the food and drug administration.

      At the appropriate time as regulated by the US congress and kept accurate by the national institute of standards and technology and the US naval observatory, I get into my national highway traffic safety administration approved automobile and set out to work on the roads build by the local, state, and federal departments of transportation, possibly stopping to purchase additional fuel of a quality level determined by the environmental protection agency, using legal tender issed by the federal reserve bank. On the way out the door I deposit any mail I have to be sent out via the US postal service and drop the kids off at the public school.

      After spending another day not being maimed or killed at work thanks to the workplace regulations imposed by the department of labor and the occupational safety and health administration, enjoying another two meals which again do not kill me because of the USDA, I drive my NHTSA car back home on the DOT roads, to ny house which has not burned down in my absence because of the state and local building codes and fire marshal’s inspection, and which has not been plundered of all it’s valuables thanks to the local police department.

      I then log on to the internet which was developed by the defense advanced research projects administration and post on freerepublic.com and fox news forums about how SOCIALISM in medicine is BAD because the government can’t do anything right

    49. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If Fox news says its bad for America... It's probably good for Americans."

      Except they have no ability to criticize a "conservative" leader. I mean, the concept there is that Fox is good for Americans because they hold the government accountable to the people. Where was all that accountability during the last administration? They slammed Clinton, and they're slamming Obama... they seemed to be pretty happy during the Dark Ages in between.

    50. Re:A false choice, of course... by Chrisq · · Score: 5, Funny

      I think the issue the OP has with Fox has nothing to do with the Healthcare bill. A position that I also support.

      maybe not nothing, if Fox raises your blood-pressure that much you might have a personal interest in health care provision.

    51. Re:A false choice, of course... by ajs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It disappoints me that this is the first comment I saw when I opened up this page. The point of this article is to discuss the reform in a constructive manner, not to bash entire ideologies just because they are not your own.

      I think that a valid and healthy debate could be had around the topic of how bad Fox "News": is for America, not because they're conservative (they're actually not) or because of their ideology, but because they represent the worst and least productive form of debate, approximately equal to that of two schoolyard kids yelling, "am not," "are so," at the top of their lungs.

      Want health care debate? If you watch Fox, you'll get "they're getting their shovels ready for grandma." Here's the conservative position (I won't say if this is my position, but I understand debate well enough to state it regardless of my position): this legislation represents an attempt to turn the health care industry into the airline industry. Regulating MPG ratings is easy for the government, but when it comes to industries that literally hold their customer's lives in their hands, we don't accept the concept of cost-benefit, and therefore we over-regulate until the industry cannot sustain itself. Then, we impose controls that prevent the industry leaders from failing in order to prevent our regulations from killing them. Eventually we have two choices: admit that we have socialized the industry or allow it to continue hemorrhaging money and treating its customers like cogs. This approach gives us the worst of all possible public healthcare options, even worse than what Fox has been calling it. Indeed, a government takeover of healthcare would be preferable, though it would sink our economy like a deadweight. Instead, we should be implementing controls that make the smallest possible changes to the healthcare system, yet improve its value to American citizens, while streamlining medicare and medicaid into something that doesn't bankrupt our nation, but continues to provide excellent care to our seniors and those who cannot (as opposed to will not) provide for themselves.

      I am temporarily residing outside the U.S. at this time, and I haven't been paying attention to the argument.

      Here's the problem: there is no argument. The argument is essentially: hey, we're going broke trying to provide healthcare and doing it radically worse with fewer covered than any other developed nation Vs. you're a socialist tyrant who wants to destroy our way of live, kill our elderly relatives and force all of our women to have abortions! That's not an argument, it's a reasoned position vs. a rabid chicken. Fox is the figurehead and spokesman for that rabid chicken and as such, we're not going to proceed to have rational debate in this country again until they're put out of their misery (preferably by declaring News Corp to be a political advocacy group and imposing the same controls on them as any other).

    52. Re:A false choice, of course... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Nothing? Probably. Since this is probably an attempt by Democrats to completely socialize medicine (despite protestations to the contrary) this bill is likely the result of starting from that point and then it being degraded by the inevitable resistance you anyone would with half a brain would expect from full fledged Republicans as well as less liberal members of the Democratic party.

      It's based on faulty wrong assumptions that aren't really appropriate for most of the American population.

      Not all change is created equal.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    53. Re:A false choice, of course... by JWW · · Score: 0

      A agree with your sentiment, but don't agree that this bill is slightly better. It's quite worse. Now before the lefties here flame me, I think the actual bill we're getting is worse than a bill with a public option. But the public option meant eventual death to the insurance companies, so it was certain from the beginning that that wouldn't pass.

      This current bill is just a ball of lies. The numbers don't add up.

      So the CBO says that for the first 10 years after this bill passes the deficit will go down $100 billion.

      Thats all fine and good, but breaking that down, it means that the gov't will bring in $500 billion in taxes and save $500 billion from Medicare (good luck on that, we've been trying to eliminate waste and corruption in Medicare for 3 decades, which means that real savings in Medicare will only be achieved by cutting services, Obama really means it when he insinuates that maybe people should keep taking pills vs. getting surgery, so grandma is not going to get hip replacement, she's going to get hooked on oxycontin). Anyway back to the math.

      $500b + $500b = $1t in "funding" over 10 years.

      $1t - $900b = $100b extra!! Yay!!!

      But this entitlement DOESN'T GO AWAY!!! I've already mentioned that saving $500b on Medicare is unlikely, but in the second decade it will be even MORE unlikely (if you've trimmed all the fat, all you have left is to cut to the bone). So lets leave that out no 2nd $500b savings from Medicare. So over the second decade starting in 2020....

      $500b in funding.....

      $1.5t in outlays (remember the first 4 years of this just built up a surplus)

      leaving us $1 trillion dollars in debt, under the most optimistic projections in the second decade of this system!!!!

      This bill is horseshit!!! By 2020 we will be faced with the only remaining option. We will have to go single payer and raise the taxes to cover it, or just keep building the debt. I think by then this will have so many problems and the insurance companies will be considered so evil that single payer will win the day. Not to say that single payer might not be the way, but is has its pluses and minuses.

      However, at the end of the day, the bill we see before us now is designed to FAIL. We are wholesale ignoring other things that could be done to bring down the costs of health care (like we've admittedly been doing for decades) and enacting a giant giveaway to the insurance companies, and the question you have to ask is why. The answer is that once this is enacted, single payer will be the only way out of the hole.....

    54. Re:A false choice, of course... by Shotgun · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A system of governance that is based upon "what is good for me personally" is simple anarchy. Forcing an insurance company to pay for a pre-existing condition is simple theft, regardless of how hard that makes your situation.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    55. Re:A false choice, of course... by Zot+Quixote · · Score: 0

      Does Somalia have really awesome healthcare then? Because there are no restrictions there.

      I understand the allure of Fiscal Conservatism. There's something seductive about simplicity. But sometimes the simplest solution is not the correct one.

      I'll tell you what. I'm probably not going to change your mind today. But what I will do is make a gentlemans bet with you. In 5 years, if HCR passes, the country will have better quality of life and a stronger economy. Costs will have gone down, not up. Ridiculous, expensive, medically caused bankruptcies will become far more rare. Communicable diseases will lose a significant vector because the poor will have better access to healthcare.

      If all this isn't true, in 5 years, I'll sit down and really think about becoming a Libertarian (some of my best friends are Libertarians now, including one who ran for Lieutenant Governor of Ohio). Will you consider moving Left if these predictions do come to pass?

    56. Re:A false choice, of course... by ajs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Full bill, but not the final bill. Deals are still being made. Even the CBO says that the numbers are preliminary.
      And frankly, 10 years of taxes and 6 years of benefits means they are cooking the books.

      That's not true at all. If we had no healthcare costs in the U.S., then that would be reasonable. However, what we have is the single most expensive per-capita healthcare system in the world,, right now, so to analyze where we'll be in 10 years after we implement this plan 4 years out is entirely reasonable.

    57. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "do private insurers have better resume?", i would rather think the question should be "why is it necessary for almost anything breathing must absolutely have some sort of health insurance in order to be able to afford to go to the doctor or hospital?"

      If doctors and hospitals have to pay for mounds of income for both government red tape and liability insurance (which, hmm I wonder if it is the same people who provide health insurance...), well suffice it to say they don't pay for it, it gets passed on to you.

      So, wouldn't it be more reasonable to bring down the prices of health care, by both removing red tape restrictions, as well as removing the ability for some dumb asshole to sue a doctor when common sense says hey, erroring is human, the doctor is human, and i'm allowing them to attempt to do something on me, it's my fault if something goes wrong (removing the liability insurance, keeping personal responsibility), than it would be to instead allow the pricing to remain as it is and instead force everyone to pay for it... suffice it to say I would really like to be in the insurance business, collecting from both the liability and the forced health premiums...

      A lot of us in technology field fix an immediate issue and then dig deeper to determine root cause of the problem, but in the case of crap like this all governments ever want to do is pile more bandaids on top of bandaids, instead of attacking and resolving the root cause (of course those who pay the most to the politicians sell the bandaids, the wound must stay open).

    58. Re:A false choice, of course... by raddan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When our government starts taking away our liberties (forcing people to buy health care, taking away private property to give to another private party are just two examples)

      I'm guessing that you chose those two examples because they are hot-button issues, but the reality of it is: you never had those liberties, but because they never affected you, you thought that you did.

      Eminent Domain predates the founding of this country. It sucks, especially when it affects you (my great-grandfather's farm was largely seized to build a school), but there are many, many cases where there is indeed a greater good served by it. The discussion really shouldn't be "should we have it?" but "when should we have it?" Eliminating it is not practical.

      You already pay for health care, but like so many other things (roads, police, schools, car insurance), you don't see those costs directly. If, for instance, you saw an itemized car insurance bill explaining that most of your insurance money goes to paying out drunk driving accidents, or say, minor scratches on someone's Lexus, you would probably be pissed off (fun story: I bumped a Lexus once with my car-- it cost the insurance $1200, for a SCRATCH-- given that my insurance bill for the year is roughly half that, who do you think pays for it? Hint: you). Now there are many, many reasons why health care costs are going up. Medical practitioners are in short supply, medicine and equipment are very expensive (sometimes for good reasons, sometimes not), but most importantly, because the ratio of healthy people to sick (and by sick, I really mean, people needing care) people is swinging rapidly toward more sick people: baby boomers.

      If you're insured, you're paying for them already. Because I work for a large company, and they have good bargainers, we only pay about $300/mo per single employee. I contribute half of that. But ever try to get insurance yourself on the private market? Good luck affording it!

      Now, it can (and should) be argued that health insurance itself is part of the problem, and I agree. Insurance is supposed to be a hedge against catastrophe. You know, brain cancer. The kind of thing where the expense is so astronomical, that it would ruin you. Instead, we have insurers covering viagra (only actually necessary in very rare cases-- I have a friend with a rare pulmonary disorder, and strangely enough, viagra is an effective treatment for her) and elective surgery, because people don't want to pay for them themselves. This abuse has done nothing to control costs. It's a travesty that an out-of-pocket visit to your general practitioner can cost you a week's wages. I had an X-ray done recently-- it was $1000. We're talking about 19th century technology here, people. So anyway, now it covers the routine stuff, but often not the catastrophic stuff. They'll deny you coverage! WTF!

      But hey, this is what we have. Do we:

      • Dive in and fix the problem?
      • Let everyone get increasingly fucked over

      Keep in mind that while there are millions of people who can't get healthcare at all, due to cost, the CEO of United Healthcare recently received a 1 billion dollar (US) bonus. That, my friends, is fucked up. This man could personally pay for doctor visits for hundreds of thousands of people.

      As many people here have said, they're trapped in their bad employment situations because they have a sick spouse or child. Imagine having to go to work someplace where they treat you like dirt for years on end because, without them, your loved one dies? That is slavery, plain and simple.

      Personal health is a prerequisite for a healthy economy. If that guy could leave his job for a better one, without worrying that it would end his wife's leukemia treatments, or

    59. Re:A false choice, of course... by ajs · · Score: 1

      Disclosure: not a U.S. resident.

      As a non-U.S. resident you must have excellent healthcare. That renders your opinion biased and we can't accept what you have to say. ;-)

    60. Re:A false choice, of course... by astar · · Score: 1

      fox is just another mass media thing. These have some common properties.

      The essential property is that two sides out of many are selected to be chosen among. Whatever side you commit to, you lose. but if you are fervent and committed, you get to pat yourself on the back for your efforts when you lose.

      as an aspect of this, every few years I might see something that is both true and relevant on media, even fox. but it somehow pops up and is never seen again.

      in the case of health care, I recall seeing a sort of creepy republican named rove on fox actually spend a few minutes with reilly? talking about how the health bill would actually work. He did not do ideology crap, he did not use perjogatives. devastating, and true, and relevant. and this stuff was never seen again. if you like palin, you would think death panel.

      so what is the real deal. we are in a depression, right on the edge of a breakdown crisis. So if you try to health reform, you get austerity. and people die. when the ... did this, we called it a crime against humanity and hung some doctors on the panel of experts.

      so you also get tyranny, as in the perpetuality clause protect the "panel of experts" section

      you get violations of the constitution all over the place. some states are pissy about about an apparent requirement that everyone buy insurance from private companies. the panel of experts is a violation of separation of powers. killing off constituents is a general welfare violation

      at this point, we are dealing with presidential thuggery

      I guess obama is saying vote for the bill because if it does not pass, his presidency is destroyed. this is, in the end, the best reason to reject the bill.

    61. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Instead of just repeating a talking point, explain in detail how this bill will "socialize" medicine.

    62. Re:A false choice, of course... by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      Actually, after having a newborn spend 26 days in neonatal ICU I'm pretty happy with my insurance company. Oh, and my wife's five back surgeries. Of course I'm only a single data point, I'm sure the vast majority get completely screwed over and I'm the only one with a miraculously good experience.

    63. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It actually does reduce rates but probably not in the ways that you would expect. Right now you are indirectly paying for the many people without insurance. By law, hospitals have to treat people who show up in their emergency rooms with a real emergency. Hospitals often can't reclaim these costs. As a result, they have to regain those fees in other ways, including passing those costs on to you.

    64. Re:A false choice, of course... by operagost · · Score: 4, Insightful

      First, it mandates that everyone buy insurance because apparently, 30 million people go without it merely because someone is not making them. Second, it promises that rates will go down, despite the fact that when governments have mandated insurance before (such as states requiring auto insurance), it only goes UP. Third, the only consumer "protection" in the bill entails the government telling providers what they can change and insurance companies what they have to pay for. Since this will inevitably result in both groups taking losses, they will simply close up shop. This will result in a new health care crisis, at which time the government will swoop in like a false messiah to "fix" the totally unexpected void in health insurance by creating the single payer system, which Obama said was the objective way back in 2007 before he said it wasn't.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    65. Re:A false choice, of course... by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 1

      I'm still trying to understand IF this bill will lower existing rates. If not... then every American is going to be forced by law to pay $1,150 a month for healthcare.

      Thats bizzare. I'm not sure how thats reform.

      Consider it a test of capitalism.

      The insurance companies' are going to gain millions of new, mandated customers. By the economic laws of capitalism, that *should* make everyone's rates drop.

      If the rates do *not* drop, then the health insurance industry is not running by the laws of capitalism -- they are skimming as much money as they can, regardless of the proper price/demand point, and just scamming the system to steal as much as possible.

      What we should do if scenario two comes to pass...well, I'll leave that to your imagination.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    66. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except Fox. Fox is bad for America.

      Just because Fox says the health care reform is bad doesn't mean that we should therefore support the reform. It disappoints me that this is the first comment I saw when I opened up this page. The point of this article is to discuss the reform in a constructive manner, not to bash entire ideologies just because they are not your own.

      I am temporarily residing outside the U.S. at this time, and I haven't been paying attention to the argument. My mind is still malleable on this, so convince me one way or the other!
      Now, let's get back to a real discussion regarding the pros and cons of health care reform!

      You first, or did I miss the secret constructive comment hidden in your rant?

    67. Re:A false choice, of course... by operagost · · Score: 1

      Though on other side, the question all Americans should be asking themselves is: do private insurers have better resume???

      At least they can't make me buy insurance, on pain of imprisonment.

      Every day, the federal government puts more restrictions on our liberty. If this is put in place, it will finally be impossible for anyone to live "off the map" without having to check in with the federal government.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    68. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      I think your $1250 a month number with regards to a universal health care gov run program is incorrect. If we applied such a program to everyone, that $1250 would be much lower. More people paying in, should bring the cost, as the ratio of sick to health should allow quite a bit of savings to everyone.

      The more people in the pool, the lower the rates. Am I wrong on that? If your estimate of $1250 for 2.8m military personal is correct... by adding many millions more in a universal plan for all... rates should be far cheaper than $1250 a month per person.

    69. Re:A false choice, of course... by maxume · · Score: 1

      How is that even possible? The worst case I can possibly imagine is all the entrenched players going bankrupt and disappearing, and a bankruptcy isn't going to rob a doctor of his doctoring skills, so maybe glancing at an ear infection and subscribing some cheap antibiotics will cost less than $100 in this future disaster.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    70. Re:A false choice, of course... by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      It upsets me that Fox and other conservatives concentrate so much on "how much money will I get vs how much will I have to spend." That's pointless and moves the debate to Nancy Pelosi's home turf. The question is, "How much power are we going to concentrate into the hands of the POTUS?" You can't confer responsibility without conferring authority.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    71. Re:A false choice, of course... by jandersen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are talking a lot of sense - yes, I did say SENSE; it seems to me that most people hardly read as far as the end of sentences nowadays, and might have thought I was going to say something else.

      As a non-American it is a deep mystery to me that America doesn't have a universal health-care service. I believe on average in Europe we only spend about half per patient p.a., and I can only speculate about why; but it seems obvious to me that the biggest factor is that in America big pharma is far better able to run rings around the system. Why else would it cost so much? I mean, as opposed to over here, it looks as if your insurance companies don't take care of several of the most expensive kinds of patients, like those with chronic illnesses - as far as I can see, it ought to work out as cheaper per actual patient.

      What does the average American pay for health insurance per month? For comparison, I think I pay about £50 per month, for which I get free health care no matter what the circumstances; and I earn a pretty hefty salary, so I don't think it is bad.

    72. Re:A false choice, of course... by tsstahl · · Score: 1

      A false false false argument, of course...

      The bill is little more than a hefty tax hike with yet more ways to go to jail for exercising personal liberties.

      We sure as heck DON'T need a 2300 page bill to enact the four talking point reforms we are hearing ad nauseum.

    73. Re:A false choice, of course... by Moryath · · Score: 1

      Buying in to Medicare is bad, ok.

      Medicare's full of "hidden" costs. When they say that "only 3%" of Medicare's costs are administrative, this is misleading in two ways.

      The first is that the majority of Medicare's administrative paperwork is done by the doctor/hospital staff. This means that they spend extra money just to keep someone on their staff to do the paperwork, and the cost of having this person is billed out in the form of higher medical costs to non-Medicare patients since Medicare "price controls" everything and doesn't pay nearly enough to cover it.

      The second is that since the majority of Medicare patients are by definition high-risk (elderly, infirm, preexisting congenital/disability conditions, etc), they are more likely than the normal patient pool to be using more expensive care. The end result is that by counting as a "percentage" rather than per-person, Medicare's numbers are naturally skewed. Expressing "percentage of total budget" is a great way of determining whether a charity is ripping you off when you donate between competing charities, but it's a lousy way to determine the "efficiency" of a medical system when used as a standalone metric that doesn't account for differing risk pools and the dishonest way much of Medicare's administrative cost is hidden and charged to everyone else that so much goes in for a doctor's visit.

      Now, do we need reforms in the medical insurance industry in order to get rid of some serious abuses? Damn straight. That's why I was a supporter of the alternative bills put forth by the Republicans (oh, you didn't hear about those? Not surprising, given the jamming of the airwaves with the false "party of no, they have no alternatives" rhetoric). At the same time, do we need an incredibly bloated, insane bill like the Senate one? Sorry, absolutely not.

    74. Re:A false choice, of course... by OzPeter · · Score: 1

      I think the issue the OP has with Fox has nothing to do with the Healthcare bill. A position that I also support.

      maybe not nothing, if Fox raises your blood-pressure that much you might have a personal interest in health care provision.

      Actually I self medicate by only consuming Fox infotainment (TV and radio) until I get to the point where the logical fallacies presented as facts overcome my interest in the topics being discussed. At which point I switch off and spend time in recovery until I have forgotten what triggered my last attack of rationality.

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    75. Re:A false choice, of course... by frdmfghtr · · Score: 0, Troll

      with the truly insane individual thrown in for good measure.

      Which could cover the Anarchist, Libertarian, Democrat, or Republican.

      --
      Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
    76. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Right -- that's why the government, and not private industry, should do it.

      Provision of health care is an important function of a modern state. In the US, we just happened to choose the least efficient way of accomplishing that aim -- i.e. mediating it through a bunch of private insurers.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    77. Re:A false choice, of course... by mikerz · · Score: 1

      A system of governance that is based upon "what is good for me personally" is simple anarchy.

      No, that's actually just the typical form of government. Government is tainted by having government officials, politics, and special interests. Anarchy is the opposite of government, eg: free market.

    78. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are no insane people here you freaking troll whore !!!!

    79. Re:A false choice, of course... by Rich0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Forcing an insurance company to pay for a pre-existing condition is simple theft, regardless of how hard that makes your situation.

      The problem with this is that pre-existing conditions can become very hard to prove, and insurance companies often use them as excuses for denying claims, or even doing post-claim underwriting and retroactively cancelling policies.

      I actually support requiring coverage for pre-existing conditions, when combined with a significant fine for anybody that doesn't buy minimal insurance coverage (with socialized plans available for the poor). By forcing universal coverage you eliminate the issue of pre-existing conditions entirely. Also, universal coverage means that people don't have a financial incentive to neglect preventative care.

      And post-claim underwriting should be banned in all respects. If you want to underwrite a policy, do so before issuing it. Don't let somebody pay in for years, thinking that they are covered, and then pull the rug out after the fact. That's just the same thing as pre-existing conditions but in reverse.

    80. Re:A false choice, of course... by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      Actually if the doctor only ordered a cholesterol test and the lab ran other tests without authorization the insurance company would likely deny the claim. OTOH if the doctor is ordering tests you don't need (your 50 and getting a PSA/DRE test every year) you as a consumer should be putting a stop to it.

    81. Re:A false choice, of course... by b3d · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The insurance companies are far from true capitalism. They have an anti-trust exemption, for crying out load. That's a license to screw the customer, which is what they are doing. If we actually had true competition in the insurance market, I might accept some of your argument. As it is, the government is the only entity large enough to be able to compete with the ginormous health insurance companies.

    82. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the problems of looking at government's track record is that the government can't go bankrupt. The private businesses we compare them to are the best of the best - the ones that have survived. On the other hand, we haven't seen an Enron or Tyco size accounting fraud in the federal government, so that's something. Another problem with the comparison is that government entities last forever. You can't wind down the SEC like you can AIGFP. Eventually any group will make an important series mistake, it is in our nature, but with the government we're stuck with them. You could take this as an argument that the government should do less or that we should be more tolerant of government screw ups. However, I don't think all your examples are unmitigated disasters. The post office actually does pretty well - they don't take federal tax money - given the level of service they offer, the area they cover, and the increasing irrelevance of physical mail. If the USPS wasn't so politically constrained, they'd still be in the green. Medicare & Medicaid are have lower lower per person costs than virtually any private insurer. Social Security is still running a surplus, and could be fixed by adding means testing and raising the retirement age - again if it wasn't such a political issue. All of these services have big problems, especially in the future, but we shouldn't consider them failures just yet.

    83. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      It is funny how if you're uninsured, you can get a significant discount by the doctor. But if you have insurance, they charge the insurance companies quite a bit.

      This is all about profit and no one wants to lose a dime of it. Sadly this nonsense costs people their lives, and their homes.

      A universal single payer system would be not for profit...

      And thats the reason it was never really on the table.

      This country is run by the corporations. The health insurance industry spent 1.4 million dollars a day to lobby our government in its favor.

      As American citizens, we do not have 1.4 million a day for access to our representatives. We're not even heard.

      All we can do is Vote...

      We need to take the money out of politics.

    84. Re:A false choice, of course... by jimicus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Diabetes (along with many serious conditions) is buggery expensive to treat. In the real world, many sufferer's options are realistically:

      • Live in a country which provides at least basic healthcare without you having to sacrifice your first born (or at least regulates insurance companies such that they can't say "Oh, you've got something expensive? Sucks to be you, then.").
      • Be rich.
      • Die.

      Most civilised countries decided that the final option on that list wasn't a particularly desirable one some years ago.

    85. Re:A false choice, of course... by Cornwallis · · Score: 1

      First off, this isn't health care reform. It doesn't change all that much about the health care system. It's health insurance reform.

      Exactly. This has nothing to do with "reforming" anything except who is going to be pocketing money. Here's a reality check for you - and let's not even consider ANY so-called "healthcare" reform bill...

      If every American were taxed at 100% *from now on* that STILL wouldn't be enough to retire the Federal deficit OR pay for all the programs that the Gubmint has instituted. Social Security is FINALLY at that point where what is paid out is greater than what is being taken in.

      If someone can demonstrate a way that this so-called healthcare reform bill will save us money as the promoters suggest I'd love to hear it. I quite frankly am looking forward to the upcoming financial collapse when the Ponzi scheme finally, tragically and inevitably fails.

    86. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Umm, I'm confused by your math. If we've lowered the cost of Medicare by $500Bn in the first decade, the cost of Medicare *stays lowered by $500Bn* in the second decade, doesn't it?

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    87. Re:A false choice, of course... by URL+Scruggs · · Score: 1

      Fox is the mind-killer.
      Fox is the little-death that brings total obliteration.

    88. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      Yup. Playing videos and quotes of current political leaders as they espouse the glories of Mao Tsung and other communist leaders is very bad for us.
      Why is it that instead of actually responding to DISPROVE their claims, people just instead attack them directly with the "you're an idiot" approach?

    89. Re:A false choice, of course... by ajs · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Ah, welcome back to Slashdot. I attempt to formulate a valid debate and am immediately modded down as "flamebait" by someone who disagrees with the points I made. Is rational debate "flamebait?" I guess it is, but isn't that exactly the point of this post? Aren't we trying to elicit a higher quality of debate than the shouting match going on on TV? Is Slashdot so ill equipped to discuss politics?

    90. Re:A false choice, of course... by mysidia · · Score: 1

      If Health care reform gets passed it will lead to thermonuclear war. :)

      I leave figuring out how an exercise to the reader.

    91. Re:A false choice, of course... by MR.Mic · · Score: 5, Funny

      One does not simply walk into Slashdot.

    92. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Additional budget trimming based on rasing the capital gains tax with estimates of increases in tax revenue that are NEVER going to materalize (as they never have in the past when estimates like this were used).

      The revenue increases are never seen because typically they are off set with a tax reduction or an "economic stimulus".

      The only way to see those theoretical increases is going to be to enact them and NOT change the rules in 1-4 years. Inevitably when the next round of elected folks be it from either party come into the office they find it necessary to undo (in whatever way possible) those gains.

    93. Re:A false choice, of course... by mikerz · · Score: 1

      I think this is the crux of healthcare reform! We ought to be freeing up the system and making true competition possible.

    94. Re:A false choice, of course... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      The ONLY good thing to come out of Fox is the Simpsons. And even they make fun of Fox news.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    95. Re:A false choice, of course... by spaanoft · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, despite its flaws, one of the reasons Canada's health care system works at all I believe is because for the most part the provinces run it and the federal government doesn't try to fiddle too much with specifics. Right now in the US you have this mish-mash of federal and state-level regulations that I'd imagine would be an absolute nightmare to administer (like having two bosses, or something like that.)

    96. Re:A false choice, of course... by d3matt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You really think the senate is going to do anything after the house passes their bill verbatim and the President signs it into law? The Senate may be many things, but they are most definitely not the House's lap dogs.

      --
      I am d3matt
    97. Re:A false choice, of course... by northernfrights · · Score: 1

      I don't bash Fox because it's an entire ideology that's not my own, I bash Fox because it's an entire ideology and nothing more. And instead of offering useful insight and practical ideas, they just badmouth people endlessly and put a dramatic "this could be the straw that breaks the camel's back" spin on everything they disagree with. And have you ever clicked on the "US" stories section of their website? I kid you not, it is usually 80 - 90% stories of rape, murder, and other violent crimes from all across the country. As if nothing else important ever happens. They are nothing but mindless scare tactics. I stand against this kind of organization regardless of whether I'm aligned with their ideology.

    98. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      That was my point :) Fox News is not objective. They will not eat their own. They only promote their own at all costs.. and that cost is the well being of our country.

      Fox News is a terrorist organization.

    99. Re:A false choice, of course... by operagost · · Score: 1

      Tax the upper 5% a little heavier, they can certainly afford it, and hey, guess what, once you're done taxing them more heavily /they'll still be rich/

      I would rather believe that toads give you warts than believe this old wives' tale. When you tax the rich too heavily, it reduces their motivation to produce and enhances their motivation to hide their assets. Poor single moms don't create jobs. And Obama has already taxed the little guy... unless you believe that only rich people smoke.

      Basically, you're telling us that people are lazy at some corporations. The thing is, you get too many of those at a company, they have to get fired or the company goes under. If you get too many of those at the government... well, I guess we need to raise taxes and increase funding again.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    100. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      Cheers for you to have the guts to say it. People don't like to hear the truth like that very often.

    101. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      First, true capitalism is democracy (People vote with their money).

      Except in a true democracy, you don't have some people with thousands of times more votes than others.

      "Dollar votes" is a fine concept when applied only to the participants in particular markets that have no externalities. Otherwise capitalism is a pretty poor metaphor for democracy.

      As for nfp insurance, it's probably not around because health care actually is pretty expensive, and a firm that didn't participate in the kind of rampant shenanigans of the insurance companies would be buried under adverse-selection-induced costs within days.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    102. Re:A false choice, of course... by b3d · · Score: 1

      Dude that is an awesome rant!

    103. Re:A false choice, of course... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not even health insurance reform: it's single-payer health insurance (which died on the table months ago quite quickly) but with a different name.

      Furthermore, they're shuffling their deck of money pretty thoroughly on this one, pulling from this and that fund (many of which are close to bankruptcy as it is - like Medicare) to fund this thing and calling it a "savings". Sorry, that doesn't fix anything: you're spreading (supposedly) short funds even shorter. Sure, health care would be 'free' but it'll make any existing services/care even worse.

      The fact that it's not supposed to actually take effect until the next sitting President's term starts (at least in one of its permutations) should be a pretty good indication of what those voting on it think about it. That's a classic "we're pushing this for its power/political benefits, the populace be damned" move. Seems every President has to have one of these doozies. Unfortunately, this doozie is particularly heinous in an already-difficult economic time.

      I feel sorry for the people who expect to get immediate financial/healthcare relief as soon as this bill is passed. They're up for some major disappointment.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    104. Re:A false choice, of course... by aussiedood · · Score: 1

      Thank you!! I have been fighting that misnomer during debates at work, very few people seem to get it.

    105. Re:A false choice, of course... by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Those are concessions to the Republicans. If the Republicans get their way they will screw up the bill so badly that the implementation is doomed to fail. Then they can point back and say 'I told you it will fail!'

      Please explain why ANY concessions would be made to the Republicans when they are universally not voting for this? Sorry, I'm calling bullshit.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    106. Re:A false choice, of course... by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      The government has a bad resume?

      This morning I was awoken by my alarm clock powered by electricity generated by the public power monopoly regulated by the US department of energy. I then took a shower in the clean water provided by the municipal water utility. After that, I turned on the TV to one of the FCC regulated channels to see what the national weather service of the national oceanographic and atmospheric administration determined the weather was going to be like using satellites designed, built, and launched by the national aeronautics and space administration. I watched this while eating my breakfast of US department of agriculture inspected food and taking the drugs which have been determined as safe by the food and drug administration.

      At the appropriate time as regulated by the US congress and kept accurate by the national institute of standards and technology and the US naval observatory, I get into my national highway traffic safety administration approved automobile and set out to work on the roads build by the local, state, and federal departments of transportation, possibly stopping to purchase additional fuel of a quality level determined by the environmental protection agency, using legal tender issed by the federal reserve bank. On the way out the door I deposit any mail I have to be sent out via the US postal service and drop the kids off at the public school.

      After spending another day not being maimed or killed at work thanks to the workplace regulations imposed by the department of labor and the occupational safety and health administration, enjoying another two meals which again do not kill me because of the USDA, I drive my NHTSA car back home on the DOT roads, to ny house which has not burned down in my absence because of the state and local building codes and fire marshal’s inspection, and which has not been plundered of all it’s valuables thanks to the local police department.

      I then log on to the internet which was developed by the defense advanced research projects administration and post on freerepublic.com and fox news forums about how SOCIALISM in medicine is BAD because the government can’t do anything right

      This. You, sir win the internet.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    107. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      Do you really believe that? The only reason that everything is focusing on *insurance* reform now is because they realized how strongly America was opposed to their original plans. So they took a step back and are now trying to get a foot in the door for later expansion.

    108. Re:A false choice, of course... by pnewhook · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Before the advent of Social Security, more than half of all seniors died in poverty, now almost none do.

      And when social security was being debated, Republicans screamed up and down that this was government socialism, and will be the ruin of everything good and democratic.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    109. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      I live in Germany. There is a state insurer - AOK - and unless I have some other insurance, either employer or unemployment office would automatically sign me up with AOK. (AOK is not really a state insurer, but highly regulated.)

      Health insurance is compulsory. Costs quite a lot: I pay around $200 per month for AOK which is one of the most expensive. (Or more precisely: employer pays it automatically from my salary, just like taxes.)

      Private insurance differs in that that one can choose to pay bill himself - instead of getting the higher rates from insurer. And from what I heard private insurers in Germany also allowed to not to cover everything. (With AOK AFAIK everything is covered and rate is flat.)

      Health care here might be not the best, but otherwise it is rather comforting to know that whatever happens I'm covered.

      But do not take my word for it: I'm not a native German and do not know all of the peculiarities. I have to deal with the insurance briefly and only few times when I was changing jobs and moving from one land to another (every land has its own AOK).

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    110. Re:A false choice, of course... by timeOday · · Score: 5, Informative

      Now, let's get back to a real discussion regarding the pros and cons of health care reform!

      This thread, and news coverage at large, are incredibly sparse on what the plan actually is! So here it is:

      INSURANCE MARKET REFORM

      • The legislation would require substantial insurance market reforms that would bar insurers from excluding people for pre-existing conditions and prevent them from arbitrarily dropping policy holders.
      • Insurance exchanges would be created where small businesses and individuals without employer-sponsored coverage would be able to shop for coverage. Plans offered on the exchange would have to meet minimum benefit requirements.
      • The proposed changes would allow dependent children to remain on their parents' health policies until age 26.
      • The Senate bill requires insurers to spend at least 85 cents of every premium dollar on medical care in small group markets and 80 cents in large group markets. The proposed changes also would require Medicare Advantage insurers to spend at least 85 percent of revenues on medical care.

      COVERAGE MANDATES, SUBSIDIES AND MEDICAID

      • Individuals would be required to obtain health insurance. Those who fail to purchase coverage would face fines of up to 2.5 percent of income by 2016.
      • Firms with more than 50 workers who do not offer medical coverage could face fines of $2,000 per full-time employee.
      • Federal subsidies would be provided to help people with incomes up to 400 percent of the poverty level purchase coverage on the exchange. Proposed changes would sweeten those subsidies for lower income people.
      • Medicaid, the government healthcare program for the poor, would be available to everyone with incomes up to 133 percent of the poverty level, which stood at $10,830 for an individual and $22,050, for a family of four. Many states have eligibility requirements below those levels.
      • The proposed changes would get rid of a special deal to help Nebraska pay for the expanded coverage and boost aid to all states.

      FINANCING

      • The final proposal makes some adjustments to the revenue measures in the Senate-passed bill.
      • The Senate bill included a 40 percent excise tax on high-cost health insurance plans. The proposed changes would delay implementation of the tax until 2018 instead of 2013. The tax would kick in on plans costing $10,200 for individuals and $27,500 for family coverage. A higher threshold is allowed for plans covering mostly women, older workers and retirees as well as those in high-risk professions.
      • The bill calls for raising the payroll taxes for Medicare, the government health insurance plan for the elderly, to 2.35 percent from the current 1.45 percent for individuals earning $200,000 or more and for couples earning $250,000 or more. The proposed changes would apply the tax to some investment income as well for those high-income groups.
      • The bill would impose fees on medical device manufacturers, insurance providers and brand name pharmaceuticals. The proposed changes would delay implementation of those fees.

      MEDICARE

      • The legislation would freeze payments to insurers that provide coverage to Medicare patients in 2011 and begin reducing the subsidy in 2012.
      • It would also gradually close the gap in drug coverage for Medicare beneficiaries by 2020. Those who enter the coverage gap, the so-called doughnut hole, in 2010 will get a $250 rebate. In 2011 they would get a 50 percent discount on brand-name drugs.
    111. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Private insurance also imposes big-time administrative costs; perhaps 30% of premiums collected go to admin costs, and that doesn't start to talk about shareholder profits/dividends.

      I have a very nice health plan, subsidized by my employer, for which I pay around $300/month in premiums. I pay $25 for each doctor's visit, and a similar copay on prescriptions, but I don't think I have a deductible, so anything major or any procedures would actually be covered, provided the company can't squirrel out of it. (Many people are not as lucky as me.) To compare that with your situation, you'd need to figure out what NHS funding does to your tax rate, so it's probably not as nice as it seems at first glance, but I think you're still winning on balance...

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    112. Re:A false choice, of course... by insufflate10mg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So people with pre-existing conditions simply can't have the luxury of health care? Ignorance at its best.

    113. Re:A false choice, of course... by aussiedood · · Score: 1

      Please point me to the part of this, or any of the other proposed bills that has government running the health care system.

    114. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      are you concerned about "liberty" or are you concerned about the budget?

      And these are mutually exclusive because...? I'm concerned about both.

      are you concerned about the budget or are you concerned about paying taxes?

      And these are mutually exclusive because...? I'm concerned about both.

      are you concerned about paying taxes or are you concerned that your tax money is going to fight wars from 100 years ago?

      And these are mutually exclusive because...? I'm concerned about both.

      your arguments lack cohesion

      I disagree and with all due respect would suggest your reading and comprehension skills are lacking in something.

      here's the deal: the health care system in this country is broken. to fix it

      If it's broken, why are most Americans happy with their health care? Stop repeating that meme. It's not true.

      I'll agree that it needs REFORM -- but the current bill is not reform and doesn't really attempt to "FIX" (even going on the assumption that it's broken) the current system so much as it's tearing it down and rebuilding it. That's like tearing down my house and rebuilding it because I've got loose floor boards and need a new roof. Waste of money and effort. But to obfuscate the issue, I'd assume you'd ask a silly question like "But are you concerned about reform or are you concerned about wasting money on it?"

      If what you are suggesting is true, there is NO way a Democratic executive with his party having supramajority in the Senate and a huge majority in the lower house would have trouble passing such "reform". Yet there has been MAJOR difficulty addressing this "crisis" by the party in total power. Why? Because the problem is not as bad as you think it is nor as bad as it's being painted by our President. The only "true" bi-partisan support on this issue is the vote AGAINST this particular direction of "reform".

    115. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      But how does it reduce rates?

      If the bill became law, would my rate of $1,150 a month go down, for example to $450 a month?

      Or would it still be $1,150 a month?

      I understand the concept of more people paying in, will lower costs... but what is in this bill that specifically will lower the price burden that every American that pays for private insurance deals with? Such as myself... who pays $1,150 a month. If this bill passes, how will it help me pay that bill? I understand the subsidies may help, especially if i can no longer afford it (which is becoming a reality by the second i must say).

      Again.. I've not been able to find an answer to this question. Will my monthly bill decrease from $1,150 a month? My biggest fear is that now that we'll be locked into private insurance, they could simply raise the rates. I know theres cost control measures in the bill but... The insurance industry could raise the rates TODAY... or 4 more times this year if they wanted...

    116. Re:A false choice, of course... by DarKnyht · · Score: 0

      I never remember the constitution stating that the government was responsible for the health of the populace. Last I checked it said they were just to protect the populace from foreign (and domestic) invaders and make sure trade and commerce is possible (and regulated) between states.

      That is part of the problem, the Federal Government (States and Citizens too) forgot that anything not specified as their responsibility under the Constitution was the responsibility of the State Governments.

      --
      Voting them all out of office, now that's change I can believe in.
    117. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 2, Insightful

      America IS voting for opposition/independent. There hasn't been a poll in months showing public support for Obama's plan. Obama's approval ratings have dropped from being the Messiah to about half. Congress has absolutely horrible approval ratings. The people HAVE spoken. We don't want this.

    118. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 5, Informative

      This bill is the minimum that can be done to remove recission and pre-existing condition clauses without destroying the system.

      The economic logic is as follows: We want to regulate the insurers such that they don't exclude people based on pre-existing conditions. This makes sense.

      However, once you try to apply that in practice, it gets hairier: if you cease to enable insurers to do that, then you get what's called an "adverse selection death spiral", wherein some healthy people drop coverage (since they know they can get it back as soon as they get sick) which worsens the risk pool. Because it's worse, those remaining members left in this new risk pool get charged higher premiums. These higher premiums cause more healthy people to drop coverage (since they're getting less for their money) which causes a repeat of the same cycle. As this goes on, the price of insurance gets so astronomical that only the sickest have it and nobody can afford it because the cost approaches the cost of the procedure you're supposed to be insured for.

      The way we work around this is the unpopular part. We put a mandate on everybody that says "alright, since they can't kick you out anymore, you can't game the system: everyone has to be insured". Whether it's better to do this by putting the mandate on individuals or on employers is debatable, but what's on the table is an individual one.

      Now that we're mandating everyone have insurance, we need to address its affordability, since mandates to buy things that people can't afford don't really work. This is where the subsidies (ie, costs) come in. This package is basically $900bn in subsidies for people who have trouble affording comprehensive insurance--including everyone from the average joe to a reasonable percentage of the slashdot crowd. The latest bill has caps on premiums set as follows: "[f]or people who buy insurance on the exchanges, a family of four making $88,000 would have a cap of 9.5 percent of their income." The penalty for not buying insurance is $695/person/year with exemptions for financial hardship, etc.

      The $900bn comes by way of medicaid as well as direct subsidies.

      The rest, once those things are in place, are to cut costs/cut the deficit and regulate insurers. But the above is by far the bulk of the bill. While I personally wouldn't mind killing the insurance companies so we can institute a single-payer system, if you want pre-existing conditions gone, this is what you get.

    119. Re:A false choice, of course... by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      ..., and the current system is broken.

      No offense but for me it is not, I've had a newborn child in NICU and my wife has had 5 back surgeries and the "system" worked just fine as it does for a large majority of people. Yes there are a number of people that lack health insurance (some of whom do so by choice) and that is a problem that should be addressed but this bill seems to be an awfully expensive way for that 15% (maybe larger now with the economic downturn) of the people without coverage to get coverage.

    120. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We have nothing to fear but Fox itself.

      So true. Because any voice contrary to what we already believe should be feared and silenced!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    121. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      You mean burn the country down? :) I'm all for it, when the revolution comes.

    122. Re:A false choice, of course... by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      Your idea of "the little guy" is progressive status envy masquerading as socialist baloney. Your whole post is about how much this fictional "little guy" has to pay vs how much he gets in return.

      The thing you forget is that if the government is responsible for your healthcare, then they will get to claim authority over your health. It starts with fines for not wearing seat belts. Then they start dictating what foods you may eat. Eventually, there will be edicts dictating what you must wear each day according to how some bureaucrat reads the weather predictions.

      Our ancestors got together and formed a government. They split governance into many separate entities according to what they saw as reasonable based on their experience and understanding of history. They then set down a structure to be followed and held elections to ratify the contract. This is the United States of American, and this is how the country was formed. It is all based on mutual agreement which is codified in a contract.

      One of the key components of that contract is a limitation on the powers of the several governmental entities. Each iteration of concentration of power to the federal government is one iteration to many.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    123. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least one person goes without because he can't buy it on the open market because he has an incurable, chronic illness... Not your problem, you say? Well, that's a bit heartless, no?

    124. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very interested on your thoughts involving the efficiency and capabilities of the US military.
      Warning: any insults to the military means you want the terrorists to win. Conversely if you think the military is well run it eviscerates your hypothesis.

    125. Re:A false choice, of course... by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with people like you asking for an itemized bill and then raising a stink about the shoddy bookkeeping? What does the government need to be involved?

      If people paid for their own rudimentary health care up front, like they pay for their own food, would there be doctors that searched for cheaper solutions?

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    126. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      do private insurers have better resume???

      NO.

      OK, then fix that. How's this:

      No insurance company may deny coverage or treatment based on a preexisting condition.
      Insurance companies may only base prices on the level of coverage received. No insurance company may charge different customers different rates based on any conditions (age, health, race, etc)

      There! I fixed the problem in three sentences. What's the point of the other 2000 pages?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    127. Re:A false choice, of course... by mikerz · · Score: 1

      Somalia is not an anarchy in any form, it is a group of warlords fighting for dominance (and besides which, it's interesting that their current state of affairs is actually much better than it was 10 years ago). I don't understand the vapidity of these Somalia arguments that keep popping up. I'm not talking about some bullshit idealist system where all people are happy and do everything altruistically because they can.

      I will agree to your bet, but you might as well be betting me that America will raise an army of pegasus and successfully conquer the world. For this bet to be honest, we need to decide on what constitutes HCR: if it involves more regulation and more mandates then I can guarantee you it will drive costs up. If it involves destroying the mandates and regulations giving private insurance forms of monopoly, then I will say it drives costs down. Again, I am all for reform if it involves freeing up the insurance market and see this as positive change.

      Also, how about we make it 2 years rather than 5?

    128. Re:A false choice, of course... by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      My mind is still malleable on this, so convince me one way or the other!

      I don't have a dog in this fight, but the Ds are saying that they'll use the "Slaughter Solution" (Louise Slaughter) to make the senate bill pass the house without a vote, or despite the vote. That's despicable enough that I'd rally against them even if the bill they were attempting to pass cut congressmen's salaries to 0 and lowered taxes.

    129. Re:A false choice, of course... by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      Fox has done almost nothing to illustrate what is wrong with health care in terms that a non-conservative can understand. All I hear is paid abortions, socialism, and "really really expensive" without justification or careful explanation of costs.

      Yes, that's still not the same as being WRONG, they could be correct and just verbally incompetent. But it's also not convincing.

    130. Re:A false choice, of course... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Medicare, Medicaid - soon to be bankrupt with horrible overhead. Ponzi scheme.

      Social Security - costly & ineffectual, a Ponzi scheme.

      Postal Service - bankrupt. Rates keep going up despite decreased service and increased funding.

      FCC - a special interest group in disguise (catering to media conglomerates); they're stuck in 1950.

      FDA - another agency which caters to special interests groups and large business, pushing market competition out and encouraging big business food production over localized, sustainable production.

      EPA - mandating ineffectual, costly changes for everyone who deals with oils, whether a single 55 gallon waste veggie oil drum in the barn or large suppliers.

      ATF - a remnant of the Prohibition which seems to do more to affront liberty directly than any other agency.

      FBI - they're law enforcement, so it's a bit harder to tack on ineptitude due to the nature of their work. But consider how much overreach of responsibility they've had, and how increasingly militarized such agencies have become (in no small part due to the Patriot Act and similar legislation).

      IRS - utilizing the ATF's draconian behavior to enforce a tax requirement which is legally questionable.

      Census - continually overspending their budget and increasing in size exponentially since 2000; polling data they've got no right to.

      Border Patrol - unquestionably ineffectual to the point of being useless.

      US Military - how much do we spend on the military's budget, and how awesome are our weapons, yet we're still unable to beat a couple backwater Muslim redneck tyrants? Sounds like a management issue.

      I'm sure there are a lot, lot more, but yeah, here's a good sampling.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    131. Re:A false choice, of course... by mcgrew · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except Fox. Fox is bad for America.
      Just because Fox says the health care reform is bad doesn't mean that we should therefore support the reform. It disappoints me that this is the first comment I saw when I opened up this page.

      A news outlet as slanted as Fox is bad for America, and the summary was correctly comparing the Democrat administration with the neocon-Republican Fox. If there was a news outlet that was as unabashedly left wing as Fox is right wing, instead of "the administration" they could have named the left wingnut news network. But there are no other news organizations in the US with such blatant wingnuts. And if you think Fox is balanced, you're a wingnut, too.

      As to health care deform, well, what I just called it should tell you pretty much what my views on it are. We have the best laws and legislators that money can buy. I'd like to see them just extend Medicare to everyone; that would pretty much fix things, but the insurance industry isn't about to let that happen.

    132. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Yes I read it. Did you? It's the same tax. My point was government, as a rule of thumb, never shrinks. Once something is in place, it's next to impossible to get rid of it.

      Just look at the growth of public sector jobs vs. private sector jobs. All public sector employees are paid with tax money. As private sector employment shrinks, the pool of money available to pay them shrinks. Add the slap in the face that most public sector employees now make a significant percentage more than their private sector counterparts and you may start to understand tax-payer outrage.

    133. Re:A false choice, of course... by joebagodonuts · · Score: 1

      Medicaid & Social Security is very popular. Heck, I'm alright with the Postal Service... While we might disagree with the idea of the welfare state, the majority of US voters disagree the the haters. And we have a ton of boomers, getting older, who now get to take advantage of the welfare state...

      I disagree with your thought that the non-left of the public would support it if it were better run. Mostly because we don't know how well it's run. We don't have a reliable source of information, as well as someone to put it into context. Instead, we have so much data we can't make sense of it. Anyone who does have the resources to go through it is inevitably compromised (by party affiliation, or drive for ratings) to "spin" that information to further their ambitions. In this context, the folks opposed claim mismanagement and program failure due to cost overruns. OK. While I don't disagree, I want to apply that standard everywhere. So lets look at another Government run program though the same lens; is the Iraq war a failure because of cost overruns? I think we have more money lost there through abuse than we do in the social programs.

      As I've gotten older, especially in the last decade, my feelings have shifted. And I'm years away from Social security. Here's my thought; if we can spend the money we do to wage war, I think we can spend to take care of our society as well. Seems only fair. I'd like this bill to get killed. I think it's a mess. But, in return, I want discussion about cost the next time we want to sic our military on someone. "How much will this cost? Can we afford it?"

      Somehow, the voices screaming for fiscal responsibility aren't as loud when munitions are involved.

      Great. I've turned into a hippie.

      --
      "Give a woman two glasses of wine and some pad thai, and they'll agree to just about anything." the Sports Guy
    134. Re:A false choice, of course... by daem0n1x · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Then create a state-managed health care system, like exists in most civilised countries, and spare the poor insurance companies that terrible burden. I weep every time I see an insurance company being thieved.

    135. Re:A false choice, of course... by david_thornley · · Score: 2, Informative

      A system of governance based on "what is good for me personally", applied over the population, is simple democracy. It sucks, but I haven't seen any form of large-scale government that doesn't suck more.

      Forcing a company to do things that aren't in its best immediate financial interests is hardly new, or theft for that matter. Lots of businesses thrive in regulated fields. It's just a cost of doing business.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    136. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      If this is put in place, it will finally be impossible for anyone to live "off the map" without having to check in with the federal government.

      And how many of such "off the map" places left in the USA?

      At least they can't make me buy insurance, on pain of imprisonment.

      If you are living "off the map" alone, have no relatives - or never leave the basement - then it is OK.

      Otherwise let's be honest: nobody wants to be prevented from going to a doctor.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    137. Re:A false choice, of course... by jambarama · · Score: 1

      The public option was a bad idea. This option would've been incredibly expensive for adverse selection, equity, and expertise reasons. It wouldn't drive down prices because cost problems aren't due to insurers choosing not to compete, they're in part due to divorcing real cost from consumers, and in part due to the cost of competing in more than one region. Medicaid & medicare already cover the most unfortunate (crappy systems though they are). Plus, the public option would give private insurers all the profitable customers, and make the feds pick up the tab for those who can't afford insurance or are high need. I do think everyone needs health insurance, but I don't like guaranteeing the health insurance industry's profitability.

      I can't say whether rates will actually fall with this new bill, but here are the ideas.

      * 1st - mandating insurance forces low risk people into the insurance pool. Young healthy individuals often skip expensive insurance because they're low risk. Forcing them to get coverage will lower overall premiums.
      * 2nd - provisions in the bill to permit insurers to follow only one state's requirements - wherever the insurer is headquartered - will reduce administrative costs and encourage greater competition. Complying with 51 state laws is expensive. This change will also diffuse the ability of private interest groups to get state legislatures to mandate certain treatments to be covered.
      * 3rd - prohibiting screening based on pre-existing conditions will reduce information gathering costs.

      What I'd like to have seen would have included
      * Require health care providers to charge the same price to everyone to reduce transaction/bargaining costs. Right now if I go to the hospital, and my insurer pays the bill, uninsured & underinsured individuals would pay much more for the same service because they don't have the bargaining power Blue Cross does.
      * Stop giving employers deductions for offering health insurance. Employer-offered-insurance reduces consumer ability to investigate & pick a policy they want, and it divorces consumers from the true costs. Instead offer deductions for individual spending on health insurance.
      * Permit insurers to offer catastrophic-only insurance. Because of state requirements of what an insurer must cover - which is a honeypot to treatment provider lobbyists - catastrophic only isn't an option. Even better if everyone was covered by the feds for catastrophic only, but that would be a political and logistic nightmare.

    138. Re:A false choice, of course... by RKThoadan · · Score: 1

      Having worked in Medical Billing I can assure you that Medicare is less work for Hospital/Doctor's office staff than nearly any private insurer, and the real difficulty comes in having to keep up with so many different insurers with different policies and submission requirements. Medicare pays crap, but it's very easy to work with and generally pays much quicker than any private insurance, who all tend to push the payment out as far as they can. If Medicare paid half-decent, Hospitals would be thrilled to work with just them. Your point about the percentage vs per-person cost is valid, but I expect Medicare would still beat the private insurers by a significant margin. I suspect that the low Medicare administrative costs are being over-stated, but I have absolutely no doubt that they are still way better than private insurance.

      Overall I really liked the House Bill with the Public Option, which actually did have other aspects beyond just insurance reform. The Senate Bill is far worse for many reasons, but I'll take it over the status quo.

    139. Re:A false choice, of course... by Degrees · · Score: 1

      For what it is worth, when a doctor commits thievery by submitting false claims to the government, the government pays them anyway. Because if we didn't, they wouldn't work for us, and that would eliminate our reason for being....

      Private insurance needs to worry about remaining in business if they give all their cash away to thieves.

      True reform is only possible if we vastly increase the number of doctors. Then the thieves could be left out in the cold, while new just-graduated-from-school doctors compete for the business.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    140. Re:A false choice, of course... by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

      The true it the non-right (centrists, libertarians, independents, left) want the major provisions this bill offers, namely a start at reigning in the parasitic practices of the Health Care Insurance industry. No where else in the world does a developed country let for-profit private interests control the health care of the country, as well as a system that give power into the hands of business to control workers. You need to keep employed in our system to get resaonable health care. A big stick for business, against labor. What sense does it make that business should control health care, either by employment or insurance. We have a wacked system of values in this country. This bill starts the pendulum swinging back away from that perverse application of greed on our lives. Don't get me wrong self interest is good, greed is a form a self interest but not the only form of self interest. We just have to recognize that greed when not moderated is a sin not a 'good'. Profits are good but its the way you get those profits and the tradoffs you make to get those profits that measure you as an ethical moral person. We have too much institutionalized un-ethical, immoral behaviour in this industry and this bill, though a comprimse, strikes at the heart of some of the most blatant practices and is therby a start and worthwhile.

      By the way Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and the Postal Service are fine examples of government run programs that do their jobs, millions rely on them, health care gets done form millions, letters get delivered, and millions of seniors can stay in their homes and keep warm and eat, even though their 401k's were devistated by the recent gutting of the finacial markets by uncontrolled greed and speculation that went wrong. That was their hard earned money, you think that the privatizing Social Security back when Bush and company wanted to would have been a good thing? We would have people cold and hungry now. If you want to compare programs that work, show me a private industry program that has worked as well, as long, with as little overhead and done so much good as the ones you mentioned.

    141. Re:A false choice, of course... by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      do private insurers have better resume?

      Increased premiums
      Reduced payouts (more charged to me as not covered)
      Increased haggling with provider & insurer
      Insurance company stock price has skyrocketed

      So no, I don't trust private any more than I trust public. I trust competition, but I'm not sure we're getting that either.

    142. Re:A false choice, of course... by bendodge · · Score: 1

      Wait a minute, how does that work? Kids these days, going to the trouble to set up a straw man and running right past it...

      --
      The government can't save you.
    143. Re:A false choice, of course... by heckler95 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First, true capitalism is democracy (People vote with their money).

      Democracy is one vote per person, not one vote per dollar, per person. Should Bill Gates' single vote be worth the same as the votes of millions of people?

    144. Re:A false choice, of course... by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > Yeah. Keep saying that. When our government starts taking away our liberties (forcing people to buy health care, taking
      > away private property to give to another private party are just two examples), I'd say that's bad for America.

      Yah, next thing you know they are going to be licensing people to tell you what you can put in your body, stopping you from growing plants like cannabis on your farm and selling them at market value, shit they might even ban the possession of perfectly legal plants an animals just because they came from another country where they were illegal. We can't let that START happening, or next thing you know we will have consenting adults in front of the supreme court arguing why we shouldn't be banned from certain kinds of sex in our bedrooms! Could you imagine people having to do that!

      Of course, once we hit that point, it will be undercover officers infiltrating peoples social organizations, warrantless wiretaps, speed trap cameras, and strip search scanners at the airports! What a fucking police state that will be!

      In case you hadn't noticed, all of this has already been happening for years. I agree with the desire to not live in a police state, and I do think that the "mandate of insurance" tends to smack of police stateism. I would PREFER single payer.

      At least taxes are already being taken by force, if they want to use them to provide a service, thats no worst than taking them in the first place. Mandating that I have to do something with someone else though.... that does bother me. I just don't see why we should reward years of screwing by private insurance with a mandate to buy from them.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    145. Re:A false choice, of course... by Stray7Xi · · Score: 1

      So people with pre-existing conditions simply can't have the luxury of health care

      Yes exactly. I'm for healthcare reform (vs health insurance reform) but this is stupid. If I came up to you for a policy and upfront I told you I'll need $1k a month for treatment and it will only get worse with time, what would you charge me?

      Now repeat that question for $10k a month and $100k a month. There may not be a compassion cutoff point but there is certainly a financial cutoff point that makes the decision for you. Healthcare rationing is a hard requirement and eventually someone will have to be told their treatment is getting cutoff. Which is why it should be ran by government.

    146. Re:A false choice, of course... by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Pharma definitely plays a role, but there's a lot more than that. We do a LOT of stuff that doesn't prolong life (quality-of-life surgeries, cosmetic, Lasik, etc.). And while recission is awful, it's also fairly rare - they do take care of most people with very expensive diseases.

      And I think most people in other countries are a lot more accepting of "well, we're just not going to do that."

    147. Re:A false choice, of course... by edmicman · · Score: 1

      So, does the proprosed health care reform *fix* those issues?

    148. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given the standard assumption of sticky wages, deflation actually increases wages. Inflation decreases wages. If stuff gets cheaper and you're paid the same nominal amount, then you're better off. Also, deflation encourages savings, something the US is still really short on. But deflation also causes unemployment and getting laid off is a huge wage decrease. The GDP contraction is a bitch too.

    149. Re:A false choice, of course... by lupis42 · · Score: 1

      FCC: No respect for the first amendment. Makes up a list of words that are too evil to be seen on TV. Raises a huge flap because a nipple was visible. FAIL

      FDA: How does a slow, ponderous regulatory body that basically achieves nothing more than UL or Consumer Reports for the drug industry, while yanking any product they don't feel like certifying "doing a good job"?

      USDA: They do a pretty good job, partly because so much of their operation is A) voluntary & B) funded by the grower/packer/etc. Like a free market shop would.

      Regulated time: Governments are good at creating standards bodies, and usually have the sense to not meddle with them often.

      Highways: My commute has been increased by an hour every day this week except Monday. Three major roads flooded out on Monday, about 6" under water. Everyone was driving through the water on Monday, so the traffic wasn't too bad. On Tuesday, they closed all those roads, and detoured everyone 15 miles north to an already crowded highway. They still haven't managed to re-open a single one, after 4 days of sunny dry weather.

      EPA: Some good, some bad. When it comes to setting standards (i.e. fuel quality), the government generally does an acceptable job. Don't get me started on the endangered species act.

      OSHA: I've worked at more than one place that managed to consistently get a pass despite terrible safety standards.

      Building codes: Because building a house that was six inches too tall, or had the wrong kind of grass would cause it to burn down, fall over, then sink into the swamp?

    150. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      I didn't read past this sentence:

      Don't raise taxes for the little guy, but the capital gains tax, and the taxes on anyone making over $250,000 a year definitely need to rise

      Why $250,000/yr? Why not $225,000? Surely people that make $225,000/yr can afford to pay more in taxes. Hell, so can people making $200,000. I mean, $200,000 is a LOT of money. Most houses don't cost that much. $150,000/yr is plenty. You would be had pressed to find anyone who punches a time clock making $150,000/yr. $150K will buy you a new car every two months! They don't need $150K/yr. Why do you not tax them more? For that matter, if you are making $100,000/yr, you can buy two new Cadillacs a year and pay CASH for them. Why are you not taxing these fat cats? While we are at it, you can live comfortably on $75,000, especially considering that the majority of the people in the world make less than $100/month and seem to do just fine. Why do these people think that they need more than $75,000/yr? Surely they could survive on $50,000/yr if we were to tax $25,000/yr, especially when you consider the benefits they would receive. They would not longer need a car as we could afford public transportation. There would no longer need health care as it would be provided for them at the new government run health offices we could afford now. They could show up at 5:00am and be processed by noon. That's less than half a day! Everything would be provided and all people would be equal, regardless of how much money they make or how hard they work. True Utopia!

      Anyway, the point is that when you start telling people that $X is enough to live on, someone will find a smaller number that is also enough to live on. Those that say that the rich should pay their fair share may wake up to find that the level that makes you "rich" has dipped below whatever they are making. I laughed at a bunch of students in California who were protesting higher tuition rates. These same students have been screaming for higher taxes on the rich and saying that these fat cats must pay their fair share. Well, guess what? Now those students are "rich" and are being asked to pay their fair share. They are obviously not too happy about it.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    151. Re:A false choice, of course... by santiagoanders · · Score: 1

      Looks like funny business in table 6. Can anybody explain in the CBO analysis how 19.4 billion in education spending equals a reduction of 19.4 billion in the deficit?

      --
      "There can be little doubt that union activities lead to continuous and progressive inflation." F. A. Hayek
    152. Re:A false choice, of course... by zerocool^ · · Score: 0, Troll

      Your talking points are way out of date; please report to Fox News for today's new talking points.

      (the "10 years of taxes, 6 years of benefits in the CBO report" talking point has been conclusively disproven)

      --
      sig?
    153. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have an issue with one thing you said...
      "doctors who prescribe medically needless tests & procedures to make more money..."
      My wife is a doctor and I've heard her complain numerous times about medically needless tests and procedures, but it's not because doctors are looking to make money. Let's say there's a 1 in 100,000 chance that you've got a condition that fits your symptoms and we have a test for, but there are other conditions that are more likely. You're doctor is still going to order that test, even though you probably don't have the condition because of the potential that you could sue your doctor into oblivion if they miss that diagnosis. Being a doctor is one of the few professions where you are allowed exactly 0 mistakes. Every doctor will be sued at some point in their career. It's very hard to not practice defensively.

    154. Re:A false choice, of course... by Crystalmonkey · · Score: 1

      Theft? How exactly is it theft?

      Insurance companies are betting that you'll be healthy, so as a business they dislike when pre-existing conditions get thrown in because it changes the situation without them being aware of it.

      The problem is that medical insurance has become an essential, and I don't mean by law, so to treat it like any other business is foolish.

    155. Re:A false choice, of course... by lupis42 · · Score: 1

      ATF - a remnant of the Prohibition which seems to do more to affront liberty directly than any other agency.

      They have some competition from the DEA, which is also a relic of a pointless prohibition.

    156. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the article you linked: "Although in popular belief the telephone excise tax has been in place continuously since the Spanish-American War, it has actually been repealed and reinstated several times, usually in times of war or economic crisis."

    157. Re:A false choice, of course... by schm0 · · Score: 1

      ...Unless the insurance were really good at taking federal, state and local laws and finding loopholes to every piece of legislation. Then you might need 2300 pages.

    158. Re:A false choice, of course... by DwySteve · · Score: 1

      A system of governance that is based upon "what is good for me personally" is simple anarchy. Forcing an insurance company to pay for a pre-existing condition is simple theft, regardless of how hard that makes your situation.

      In some cases, but in this case it's really a fix for the insurance system. You see, insurance works in most places because of the large large number of people who have signed up, put in money and take a modest amount out (based on what those super-smart actuarials say). What happens now is that some people say 'Well, I don't go to the doctor, so I won't pay for health insurance!' thus depriving the system of healthy payers. Then the insurance company says 'Screw this, there aren't enough people paying in to support the diabetics and cancer patients. We've gotta cut them loose.'

      So the bill does two things: Whoever you are, you MUST buy health insurance (and you get tax breaks for doing it, penalties for not). This brings the healthy people who didn't pay in before back. Then, it forces the insurance companies to actually cover people. Pre-existing conditions? Deathly illness? Doesn't matter - the insurance company now has all of the healthy people it needs to float the sick people, so the bill takes away the ability to perform some of the more dirty tricks.

      The way I see it, the whole bill brings insurance closer back to how it it supposed to work. Health insurance is a necessity in the US today. I want the whole system to get revamped, costs to go down and people to have more choice and technology. But for right now it's inhuman to deny coverage because of preexisting conditions or because you actually got sick. At the same time, it's disingenuous to only buy health insurance when you get sick. This bill ought to head both of those problems in the right direction.

      --
      http://angryee.blogspot.com
    159. Re:A false choice, of course... by deliciousmonster · · Score: 0

      If you don't post this everywhere on the internet, I will.

      --
      I have a plan. Using mainly spoons, we'll tunnel our way out of the city...
    160. Re:A false choice, of course... by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      It's not just drugs that are expensive here. Everything is. My brother had a migraine. The hospital decided it needed to run some tests (CAT scan, I believe) to ensure it was not something more serious.

      Their tests cost $20,000. Just tests--no drugs. Thankfully, he had insurance, so he only had to pay $4,000 out of his own pockets... but he is a student with no income, so $4k was hard to scrape together.

      They perform more tests here, and they charge whatever they please for these tests. That's one reason America spends so much more on healthcare.

      A $20,000 headache... yeesh.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    161. Re:A false choice, of course... by nodrogluap · · Score: 1

      Correct. Health is a provincial jurisdiction. There is the Canada Health Act that sets out minimum standards of care, and the federal government send portions of income taxes receipts to the provinces to spend on health, education, and other provincial affairs as they see fit. There is then naturally some variation between provinces in terms of coverage for procedures and drugs, but in non-core areas (e.g. Quebec is thinking of paying for in vitro fertilization treatments).

      To dispell any myth, we do have extended health coverage in Canada, usually through our employer. This covers eyeglasses, prescriptions, and dental care.

      Also, there is a private health care system in Canada too, but very few people use it. The main reason is that a doctor has to either be part of the public system, or private (can't take gov't money and patients'). You can't buy insurance for the private system, so it's all out of pocket. If people go there at all its for abortions, elective MRIs or skipping the joint replacement queue.

    162. Re:A false choice, of course... by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1

      (just a quick aside, you don't really think the money collected from the telephone excise tax is going to fund an ongoing Spanish-American war, do you?)

      I am not saying that the issues you raised are mutually exclusive. What I am saying is that as they stand they are just a collection nits, not a cohesive argument.

      If it's broken, why are most Americans happy with their health care?

      Most Americans think they are of above-average intelligence. Most Americans thought the Iraq war was a good idea. Most Americans thought the economy was going gangbusters before 2007.

      Most Americans don't believe in evolution.

      Most Americans don't pay for their health insurance directly (though they certainly pay for it in reduced salary).

      What do workers in the health-care industry think? Cause what I hear from friends and family is a universal "The system is broken".

      there is NO way a Democratic executive with his party having supramajority in the Senate and a huge majority in the lower house would have trouble passing such "reform"

      We have a huge and complex health insurance system in this country with countless interested parties. We have an issue that has been building for 20 years.

      We have 40% of the US Congress just adamantly refusing to do anything in the hopes that it will improve their chances in November. Which means that in order to pass a law the other 60% have to be unanimous.

      Requiring a unanimous vote on an incredibly complex issue, it seems reasonable that it would have some difficulty no matter what the situation.

      and secondly, supramajority?

      --
      It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    163. Re:A false choice, of course... by chromakey · · Score: 1

      A system of governance that is based upon "what is good for me personally" is simple anarchy.

      Actually, it's called democracy.

    164. Re:A false choice, of course... by hey! · · Score: 2, Informative

      People might think you're joking when you say "go to reading", but the CBO report is only 25 pages, and the tables are very compact sources of interesting information.

      Here's an interesting fact I gleaned from Table 2. In 2010, 40 million people get their insurance through Medicaid, the government program to provide insurance to the poor. In 2019, despite broadening Medicaid eligibility, that number drops to 35 million.

      At the same time the number of people getting *private* insurance goes from 150 to 162 million.

      So *some* of the savings are due to something that looks very much like *privatizing* some of the services currently provided through Medicaid. On the other hand, the combined cost of Medicaid and CHIP jumps to 29 billion/year in 2014 and 98 billion/year in 2019. The total increase in outlays for Medicaid and CHIP in the next decade will be increased by 434 billion total.

      Alarming, isn't it? But still this bill manages to cut the Federal deficit by 138 billion over the same period. Yet the net increases in program spending are actually quite small, more like 7 billion over the coming decade, most of which goes into bringing provider payments up to market rate. So how do we get from 7 billion to 434 billion?

      What you need to know is that Medicaid and CHIP are jointly funded by states and the Federal government, and that under this legislation the Federal government share of Medicaid goes from 57% to 90%, and of CHIP from 70% to 93%. So the 434 billion represents a 427 billion dollar decrease in *state* deficits, not even counting the effect of a 12.5% reduction in case load.

      The infamous sweetheart deals we've been hearing about (the Cornhusker Kickback and the Louisiana Purchase) amount to something like 1/8 of a percent of this 427 billion. The Cornhusker Kickback has been removed in reconciliation, but Mary Landrieu successfully argued that the "Louisiana Purchase", a Medicaid subsidy that ends in 2016, was necessary to help the state complete its recovery from Katrina. This accounts for 300 million of the 427 billion, less than 1/10 of a percent.

      So to recap, the bill reduces the Federal deficit by 138 billion, and state deficits by well over four hundred billion dollars.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    165. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have nothing to fear but Fox itself.

      Why was that marked funny? Fox news propaganda is a serious problem.

    166. Re:A false choice, of course... by DudeTheMath · · Score: 1

      So your "separate bill" would require insurance companies to cover everyone, regardless of pre-existing conditions. Great! Now I won't even bother getting insurance and paying those pesky premiums until I have a condition that is really unaffordable without it.

      What's that you say? Nobody healthy has insurance, so premiums are skyrocketing? How unfair is that?

      It's a three-legged stool: If you require insurance companies to cover anyone who applies, then you must require even healthy people (yes, everyone) to be in the insured pool (the whole idea of true insurance is to spread risk), and if everyone must buy insurance, then some people are going to require subsidies to help them pay the premiums, because they're too poor to afford them otherwise. (And the penalty for not buying insurance must be at least as great as the least expensive premium, or it's just a cost of not doing business.)

      Take away any leg, and it falls over.

      The rest of the bill is (mostly) working out how to make insurance available, how much the subsidies and penalties are, plus a bunch of programs that will attempt to rein in costs: when we see which ones work (and which ones don't), we'll promote those in the future.

      --
      You save only 59 seconds over 8 miles by going 75 instead of 65. Do you really have to pass that guy? Do the Math!
    167. Re:A false choice, of course... by garcia · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with people like you asking for an itemized bill and then raising a stink about the shoddy bookkeeping? What does the government need to be involved?

      What would you like me to do about it? I can complain, bitch, moan, and whine until I'm blue in the face but when it comes down to it the hospital knows there is nothing I can do about it because they are not held accountable for this. If we're going to have "Healthcare Reform" let's do it right ok?

    168. Re:A false choice, of course... by Stray7Xi · · Score: 1

      Military medical care is very unique. It's hard to say how it would scale. Doctors are officers that have real authority. Active duty can get in legal trouble for not following doctor's orders or missing appointments. It deals with far more amputees and special treatments not seen as commonly in civilian world. But for the whole they are in far better shape (they have to make it 20years passing PT tests and weight standards). It's also pretty common to see marriages of convenience where the spouse couldn't get healthcare any other way then marrying military. I don't think it's fair to use military medical as the example although I can't judge which way it's biased.

    169. Re:A false choice, of course... by rpguru · · Score: 1

      Full bill, but not the final bill. Deals are still being made. Even the CBO says that the numbers are preliminary. And frankly, 10 years of taxes and 6 years of benefits means they are cooking the books.

      If we're not going to go off of what the CBO say's what are we going to go off of??? They don't lean right or left and they said it would reduce the deficit, period.

    170. Re:A false choice, of course... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Find any government agency that's tried to do exceptionally well and you'll find that the smaller the scope of their responsibility the better they did. Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Postal Service, any regulatory agency - you get the picture.

      My elderly parents and their spouses are happy with Medicare and Social Security. The problem with SS is that they've "borrowed" from it for the general fund, and that taxes are capped at $75k per year. Make Microsoft and Bill Gates pay the same 15% of Gates' yearly income (as well as everyone else making more than $75k/yr) that I and my employer do and the SS solvency problem is gone.

      If I mail a letter it costs less than fifty cents and usually gets there in a day or two. What's your problem with the postal service?

      Regulatory agencies also do good jobs, but of course the people they regulate hate them; I'm sure Monsanto hates all the controls on their plants that make the air breathable (and before the Clean Air Act the air around any Monsanto plant was NOT breathable), but anybody who was around before environmental protection who isn't a dirty polluter himself will tell you they've done a fine job.

      The only one you list that is hated by everyone is Medicaid. The poor get abysmal care, their doctors are underpaid and paid late, and the taxpayers pay too much for it.

    171. Re:A false choice, of course... by fredjh · · Score: 1

      Right -- that's why the government, and not private industry, should do it.

      What??? Why is it OK for government theft and not insurance company theft? Because the government has bigger guns?

      I'm sorry, but your illness, as bad as it is, and as much as I hope you can take care of it, does NOT grant you a lien on my property.

      This makes no more sense than asking a car insurance company for insurance AFTER you've been in an accident.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    172. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's the big difference: the American people can voice their disapproval for anything the program does with their votes. Although you can argue that the American people can similarly voice their disapproval of private insurers with their dollars, that becomes virtually impossible if all private insurers are operating the same way.

    173. Re:A false choice, of course... by ubermiester · · Score: 1

      Forcing an insurance company to pay for a pre-existing condition is simple theft, regardless of how hard that makes your situation.

      Not if you require everyone - healthy or otherwise - to carry insurance. By creating a giant pool of healthy and unhealthy people, it increases the total revenue of the insurers tremendously, more than enough to offset the potential losses related to covering people with preexisting conditions.

      The sick get coverage immediately, and the healthy are assured that when/if they get sick, they will not and cannot be dropped. Everyone wins. Including the insurance companies. Why do you think they support the mandate so forcefully? They know they will have to cover preexisting conditions for moral reasons, so they also want the mandate for economic ones. Very simple.

      Understand the whole picture before you make a fool of yourself again.

    174. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThePiMan2003 · · Score: 1

      And that is why we insure groups of people and not individual people. Yes he may have a $1000 a month health issue, but I generally never go above my deductible. The idea with the bill is to force everyone to buy insurance so that us cheap people balance out the expensive people.

      Also, that way we can't just skip getting insurance until something goes wrong with us, so we have to pay into the system during our healthy years.

    175. Re:A false choice, of course... by mikerz · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why you think that the government won't reflect this disparity? It will only cover however much everyone pays for it, and will cost a ton of money to even just administrate. There's a limit on how much money can be spent, exactly like in a private business. The major difference is that government can monetize its debt! If things get too expensive for the government, it will pay the costs via proxy and thereby inflate currency itself.

      I often wonder how many people realize that inflation is a form of taxation, and a sign of poor fiscal policy..

    176. Re:A false choice, of course... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I am opposed to this bill.

      However, Diabetes is a major issue currently and many states require insurance companies to pay for pre-existing conditions after a certain waiting period (in my state it's nine months).

      The issue isn't just that it's expensive to treat. The problem also is that a large number of other expensive ailments can be, in part, caused by it. A heart attack costs a lot of money regardless of whether the individual has diabetes or not, but diabetes can be a contributing factor and hence if you let insurance companies avoid paying for pre-existing conditions, they won't cover things like heart attacks for folks with diabetes.

      I don't know that diabetes that's well controlled is that expensive to treat. However half a million dollars in medical expenses for a heart attack which may or may not be related........

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    177. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially the military. We spend as much money on our military as all the other countries in the world put together, and we still can't get a decent regime change in a couple of 3rd world countries.
      Why do we still pay 40-60% of our tax money on such complete incompetence?

    178. Re:A false choice, of course... by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      This isn't just something you see on slashdot. You actually touched on the issue in your first post. Quite clearly you were moderated by a rabid chicke.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    179. Re:A false choice, of course... by pablomme · · Score: 1

      A system of governance that is based upon "what is good for me personally" is simple anarchy.

      Bollocks. People typically vote for the party that offers what is good for them personally. For instance, voting profiles are typically different among the rich and the poor for the socio-economic policies each party offers. The party that represents the interest of the majority wins. That is called democracy.

      Forcing an insurance company to pay for a pre-existing condition is simple theft, regardless of how hard that makes your situation.

      Really? Do you worry more about whether the profit margins of some corporations are huge or even huger, rather than about the economic well-being and health of individuals (who surely did not ask for nor deserve having a permanent health condition)? Of course, big, wealthy[-er] corporations are what makes a country great. Sure.

      --
      The state you are in while your HEAD is detached... - wait, what?
    180. Re:A false choice, of course... by exes · · Score: 1

      You're right... we do. However we're ranked very low among the rich countries in health care quality, but we take the gold in medical bankruptcy... go USA!

    181. Re:A false choice, of course... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      A quick note about the "individual mandate": The reason that individuals are required to buy insurance is to avoid the so-called "adverse selection problem." Basically, if you are forcing insurers to take all applicants without regard to preexisting condition, then the natural tendency will be for nobody to buy insurance until they are already sick. This would make selling insurance impossible because there would be no healthy people in the risk pool and, thus, the insurer would be guaranteed to lose money. The solution to this problem is to require everyone by law to get insurance.

      The democrats understand, though, that there is a big ick factor involved in requiring people to buy private insurance (particularly given how much everyone hates health insurers). That is one of the big reasons they were pushing the public option. But, unfortunately, the conservatives convinced everyone that the creation of a public option was but a small step away from the creation of death camps, so it's out and we're left with a "giveaway to insurance companies."

    182. Re:A false choice, of course... by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      And if gov't does shitty job, one can always vote for opposition/independent - you rarely if ever have much choice when dealing with health insurers.

      Well, this is sort of backwards to the US situation. While individuals have fairly limited choices in who to get their health insurance from, employers can choose any company they like - and companies can and do get fired by employers for not doing right by their employees. The government in the US, OTOH, is much less like what you see in the rest of the world. We don't have a parliamentary system, and terms are staggered - so replacing the government takes a long time. And even once you do that, the bureaucrats have gone nowhere.

    183. Re:A false choice, of course... by guru42101 · · Score: 1

      Yes some of those areas are mismanaged. However the Postal Service does get you your mail AND is cheaper on a basic letter than the private alternatives.

      Others aren't really that much worse than the real world comparisons. Is Social Security really any worse than AIG, Citi, or other investment / retirement companies. Is Medicare / Medicaid that much worse than normal insurance? Most regulatory agencies are filled with individuals who get paid off (generally indirectly) by those in the areas that they are supposed to be regulating. IMO the regulatory agencies would be better off if the people in charge of regulating them (us, senate, house) were doing a better job.

      However my main choice is that we need to evaluate what are the major factors of our high health costs and work on lowering those first. After that we can evaluate a public heathcare option. Cause atm even with insurance I cannot afford to go to the doctor, although I could arguably say it is more my wife's bad practice at following our budgeting, and I've been regularly having chest pains for years (I'm only 31). Judging by an observation during a checkup at 17 it could be a heart murmur. Going by my family history it could be the beginning of heart disease. According to my general practice doctor it is likely irritated nerves in my spine registering as chest pain. Of course for a real diagnosis I'd have to have tests done. My insurance covers 95% of the cost up to their "maximum cost" Which seems to always be well below what places charge. I had to pay $750 for a biopsy after my wife had an irregular pap and I estimate my costs for tests will be over a grand.

    184. Re:A false choice, of course... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      First, true capitalism is democracy (People vote with their money).

      When you get five hundred million votes per year and I get fifty thousand votes per year, that is NOT by any definition democracy at all in any way, shape, or form.

      In a true democracy, one person gets one vote for anything voted on. Period. What you're describing is plutocracy, not democracy.

    185. Re:A false choice, of course... by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      However half a million dollars in medical expenses for a heart attack which may or may not be related........

      The insurer will probably place the burden of proof on you that your heart attack wasn't related to your diabetes. Meanwhile, you're in the hospital and racking up five-figure bills and, oh yeah, you've just had a heart attack. Have a nice day!

    186. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      "Instead of just repeating a talking point, explain in detail how this bill will "socialize" medicine."

      Well, for one thing, it will create a new entitlement program, funded by increased taxes on people like myself that work. My tax dollars are now going to be raised so the government can subsidize other peoples' healthcare.

      Sounds a bit like socialized medicine to me, no?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    187. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm extremely pleased with the infrastructure (transport, water, electricity, etc), fire-departments, elderly care, pensions, social security, universities, universal healthcare, and all other factions where it's unethical to do it for profit that are mostly handled by my government. Basicly what gives every child a somewhat leveled possibilities in life were they born into a poor or a rich family.*

      Anything else (service based, goods, manufacturing, etc) is better left for private enterprises.

      *I'm the only one who wound up in High Academia in my family history and I'm very grateful for it. It was possible and plausible even in a situation where a single mother had to raise two children, work with what was basically minimum wage and pay off the debts left by a runaway father. My sister had trouble with her sight (rash-like miniscule bumps on her retina) from early ears and needed care that was way above what we could've afforded otherwise. I had severe problems with my skin when I was younger, and after trying many different methods, we had to get an expensive medication to cure it (Roaccutan).

      This was all made possible because Government did its part to ACTUALLY leave no child behind!

      -Thankful Nordic citizen.

    188. Re:A false choice, of course... by McDozer · · Score: 1

      FoxPro? Yeah scary stuff.

    189. Re:A false choice, of course... by demonlapin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And when social security was being debated, Republicans screamed up and down that this was government socialism, and will be the ruin of everything good and democratic.

      The baby boomers are about to test that proposition rather thoroughly.

    190. Re:A false choice, of course... by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      My wife and I recently had our first child. There were mistakes during the epidural phase which required another one to be done about 8 hours after we arrived. Due to this we wanted to see an itemized bill and what we received was right in line with what all the horror stories tell you

      My wife and I recently had our first child. It was a long and difficult labour that eventually resulted in a Cesarean section and post-partum hospital stay. We didn't receive an itemized bill, but then we didn't need one -- we live in Canada and and so everything was covered under the provincial health plan: we showed them my wife's health card when we arrived and never gave a second thought to it after that.

      Now, instead of having a public option--which will just push this burden on to the people while "insuring" those who are currently uninsured, the government should have made it clear that this type of overcharging and clearly obtuse billing charges are unacceptable. But no, instead we're going to pass a bill which costs a trillion dollars (of money which we don't already have) and then it's going to do very little to fix the real problems inherent in the health care industry.

      We don't really have obtuse billing and overcharging since the government can (as the single payer) reign it in very easily -- they have a very strong negotiating position. So yes, my wife and I do pay for health insurance (it's right there in our provincial taxes as an extra levy), but it's not that much compared to what my brother, who lived in the US for some time, was paying, and the government can easily hold overcharging in check. Perhaps a public option isn't such a bad plan after all?

    191. Re:A false choice, of course... by OnlineAlias · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Cadillacs in this case being analogous to a really good health care system, which we don't have. High costs for middling care is not a good thing.

      Being 37th and paying like we're number one...well, at least we're number one at something....

    192. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      Heh I have to throw the irony flag on this one. You say "They have an anti-trust exemption" then say "the government is the only entity large enough to be able to compete". Isn't it the government that gave them the anti-trust exemption? How about getting rid of that?

    193. Re:A false choice, of course... by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Diabetes (along with many serious conditions) is buggery expensive to treat. In the real world, many sufferer's options are realistically:

      • Live in a country which provides at least basic healthcare without you having to sacrifice your first born (or at least regulates insurance companies such that they can't say "Oh, you've got something expensive? Sucks to be you, then.").
      • Be rich.
      • Die.

      Most civilised countries decided that the final option on that list wasn't a particularly desirable one some years ago.

      Or... You could live in a country with programs to help people or you could live in one of the 46 states that require insurance companies to cover diabetes , existing condition or not.

      Why do we need this debt-accelerating new federal bureaucratic boondoggle again?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    194. Re:A false choice, of course... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Nothing is as bad for the future of America as Fox says.

      Except Fox. Fox is bad for America.

      Just because Fox says the health care reform is bad doesn't mean that we should therefore support the reform.

      Your argument is a strawman. No one said we should support health care reform because Fox does not. That was just something you made up to attack.

    195. Re:A false choice, of course... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Forcing an insurance company to pay for a pre-existing condition is simple theft.

      This is the sort of comment that gets us nowhere. "Theft" implies moral wrongfulness. Obviously those in favor of this health insurance reform bill don't think it is morally wrong and, thus, we obviously don't think it is theft. Without an argument for wrongfulness to back up your your claim of theft, then you're just calling the policy names. You will add nothing but noise to the debate this way, let alone convince anybody of anything.

      Now if you could give us your argument as to why this is "theft" as opposed to "a legitimate exercise of federal power under Art I, Sec. 8, Cl. 3 and Art I, Sec. 8, Cl. 18 of the U.S. Constitution" then we would be getting somewhere.

    196. Re:A false choice, of course... by pitdingo · · Score: 1

      So by you, if someone can not pay for life saving treatment they should just die and leave behind their spouse and children. Or get the treatment, have to deal with declaring personal bankruptcy, losing their house, car, etc... and be homeless. YEAH! right on! That is the American way!

    197. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can have health care, you just have to pay for it like everything else in life. It's the entitled mentality that breaks the system with so many moochers thinking that hundreds of people should work for free just so they can have something they want.

    198. Re:A false choice, of course... by xdor · · Score: 1

      If its the insurers you hate: I would rather outlaw medical insurance (private and public) and force everything to cash then to give the government direct power over the bodies of its citizens.

      You are willing to give up your liberty and the liberty of every person in the country: just so you can visit a doctor paid with your tax dollars instead of your take-home pay. You are giving up plurality to a choices (freedom) for a single system (no choice).

    199. Re:A false choice, of course... by Aargau · · Score: 1

      If forcing insurance to pay for preexisting conditions is theft, allowing an insurance company to arbitrarily raise rates to cover inefficiencies is graft. Our current system is not a free market system. I'll tell you the secret of creating a real capitalist health care system: require doctors and hospitals to publish their fees and compete on value and pricing. Till then, you've got a collusive system that removes consumer power.

    200. Re:A false choice, of course... by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      When you tax the rich too heavily, it reduces their motivation to produce and enhances their motivation to hide their assets.

      Yeah, because if I'm only going to make $9 million this year instead of $10 million, there's just no point in my even getting up in the morning.

    201. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      No, it sounds like higher taxes. Socialized Medicine would happen if the government was running the healthcare industry, which it isn't. The government runs a few healthcare PROGRAMS, but it is no where even close to running the whole INDUSTRY.

      Remember kids, regulation != socialism, and taxes != socialism

    202. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      "If we're not going to go off of what the CBO say's what are we going to go off of??? They don't lean right or left and they said it would reduce the deficit, period."

      I think the CBO is a great place to start from...but again, this is a preliminary report they just came out with. I'd rather the congress not rush to try to pass this, till thorough study has been made!! What is the rush? I mean, if this is going to affect roughly 1/6th of our economy, let's study and get it right.

      I'm concerned about the money shuffling congress has done to try to get this to look like it will save money and reduce deficit, I'm seriously concerned they are in some ways counting money twice. I'm also worried about them with regard to the bills to 'fix' the scheduled decrease in Dr's reimbursements for Medicare...they will likely raise those fees back in a separate bill, but really it should be figured into the cost of this one.

      I like a lot of things that are in the bill, but honestly...would it not be easier to get rid for 2000 pages of a bill with God knows what all else is hidden in there...and go with a more basic one that has things most everyone can agree on?

      • Insurance sales across state lines (surely a real interstate commerce item)
      • No pre-existing conditions
      • Allow small business and even individuals to band together to get group insurance rates
      • Allow Medicare to bargain for cheaper drugs with the pharma companies like the VA does

      These would all be popular starters, and I doubt we'd need a Lousiana Purchase or Nebraska deal to pass this through...?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    203. Re:A false choice, of course... by Octorian · · Score: 1

      Someone please mod the parent up! My father is also a doctor, and he's told me about this same exact problem.

      Seriously, this is something that most debaters completely ignore when considering healthcare cost issues and tort reform issues. Its a serious spiral-out-of-control issue. Now just imagine the sheer amount of CYA done at every step of a patent case, and imagine just how much that inflates the overall cost of care.

    204. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if you are sick you then have two choices, bankruptcy or death. Nice. I think the thing that bothers me the most about this whole debate is that it is about right vs. left and monetary issues. Somewhere along the line everyone forgot the real issue is the health, life, and death of ordinary American citizen's. We now have hugely profitable institutions embedded into this country that have their profits directly linked towards NOT extending and / or saving citizen's lives. The only way around this is to take away the profit motive, and I see no other way to do this then to have the government run it, as much as that notion bothers me. Unfortunately this bill does nothing of the sort, and will only increase the insurance company's profits so that they may lobby their way deeper into our government, making true change less and less likely. If things continue like this I wouldn't be surprised if we will see the average life expentancy start to DECREASE in the near future...

    205. Re:A false choice, of course... by uncledrax · · Score: 1

      Why should I?
      The people that vote on it don't ever read the bills.. what would it matter if I do?

      --
      ----- The internet has given everyone the ability to have their voice heard equally as loud.. even if they shouldn't be
    206. Re:A false choice, of course... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      I weep every time I see insurance companies make profit from people's misery. Can't we do this collectively on a not-for-profit basis?

    207. Re:A false choice, of course... by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      1. $14.05 for one 600mg Ibuprofen (people, bring your own bottle of 200mg Advil and take three)

      This is sound advice, but consider what went into providing that one pill: You requested it. Your nurse (who is a college-educated professional that can have only one or two patients at a time on labor and delivery) called the physician. Said physician said, OK, and wrote an order for it. This was then faxed down to the pharmacy, where a pharmacist (six years of post-secondary education) confirmed the order, verified it against your allergies and med list looking for interactions, and put the pill onto your wife's drug profile. The nurse then had to go to the machine, have it dispense the individually-wrapped pill, and take it to your wife with a sip of water. The pill was cheap; the labor was expensive.

    208. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      If every American were taxed at 100% *from now on* that STILL wouldn't be enough to retire the Federal deficit OR pay for all the programs that the Gubmint has instituted.

      ...what are you talking about? The US gross public debt is currently around 80% of GDP (ref), which is certainly lower than the historic peak. It's also shot up recently, not due to public spending increases, but due to a major drop-off in tax revenue from Bush tax cuts and the general drop in GDP over the last few years (ref on GDP levels).

      So, basically, wait for the economy to recover, repeal the tax cuts, and we'll be paying down debt again in no time, just like we were under Clinton.

      Medicare costs are projected to reach around 11% of GDP -- in 2083; at which time Social Security costs will be around 5% of GDP (ref). That situation isn't good, but it's hardly the end of the world; Medicare costs need to be managed, but it seems that any attempt to do that will be demonized by the likes of McCain (and his proposed amendment preventing anyone from ever decreasing Medicare spending levels...)

      These are not mystically insolvable problems. Every advanced country in the world deals with them. They aren't perfect either; they do cost money and it's difficult to manage that cost, but it isn't the disaster scenario you're painting.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    209. Re:A false choice, of course... by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      Please explain why ANY concessions would be made to the Republicans when they are universally not voting for this?

      First of all, have you been living in a cave? Obama spent almost a whole year playing kissy kissy with the GOP because he has a stick up his ass about bipartisnaship.

      Second, just because Repubs aren't voting for it doesn't mean there aren't non-progressive "concessions" in there. Pick a better argument next time.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    210. Re:A false choice, of course... by darkvizier · · Score: 1

      who prescribe medically needless tests & procedures to make more money

      What about those who prescribe medically needless tests to avoid ridiculous litigation? Will they somehow benefit from additional legal oversight?

    211. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      The problem is the immediate departure from the industry by all participants.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    212. Re:A false choice, of course... by JWW · · Score: 1

      Actually, no it doesn't. I agree as simplified as I made the math that would be possible.

      Medicare income will remain/constant or fall as the baby boom retires. So the money really won't be there in the future anyway. Besides, I don't think they'll even come close to saving $500b on medicare in the next 10 years.

    213. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 2, Informative

      Insurance sales across state lines (surely a real interstate commerce item)

      As far as this one point is concerned, I can tell you why this is unlikely to ever happen. The individual state laws regarding insurance companies and what they have to cover/can't cover/etc varies wildly from state to state, even between neighboring states. It would be nigh impossible to do this.

      Say you live in Maryland, and want to buy Insurance A from New Jersey. Say Maryland has a law stating insurance companies have to cover a specific condition, but they DON'T have that law in New Jersey. You will have bought insurance that isn't guaranteed to cover you the way it should because the laws are different in the two states...this is why companies have different "arms" in every state, because every state has vastly different laws. This is a very simplistic example, but they only get worse from there.

      The only way interstate shopping of insurance would happen would be for the federal government to require all states to have the same insurance requirements...and we surely don't want the federal government trampling on states rights, now do we?

      Source: I work in the healthcare industry.

    214. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Right now the US government provides healthcare for about 2.8m military personal (active and retired) and their families for about $40b/year. For $1250/mo that is a pretty efficient program.

      You have obviously never dealt with the military health care program. I have and let me tell you a little about it.

      First, is sick call for active duty. If you are sick, you have to show up at the medical center by 6:00am. Keep in mind this is an hour and a half before you would normally show up for "work", so you better know you are sick the night before so you can wake up early. If you wake up at 7:00am for 7:30 PT and realize you have explosive diarrhea, tough! You better pack a diaper.

      If you are not outside the medical center and standing in line by 6:30am, you are sent back to your unit. Notice I said STANDING and OUTSIDE, regardless of the weather. If you have a cold and it's 10 degrees F and raining, tough. You better be in line by 6:30 or you won't get seen. And by seen, I don't mean by a doctor. In two years that I was in the Army, I never saw an actual doctor for an illness. Regardless of my ailment, I was seen by a medic who gave me over the counter pills and sent me back to work. If I had an injury, like a sprained ankle, I was given a "profile", meaning there were some thing I was not allowed to do, like run or march.

      Next, surgery. I had two wisdom teeth pulled by an Army surgeon. I was given local anesthetic only. I showed up at 6:00am, waited until noon while filling out loads of paper work. I met the doctor who put me in the chair, gave me my shots and after testing the anesthetic by saying, "can you feel this?", he began to pull my teeth. I vividly remember the sound of the drill cutting into my teeth, the vibrations in my skull, smell of the smoke, the sound of the scraping, the feel of his knee on my chest as he grunted to get the teeth out and sound of the "pop" as pulled each tooth out, one half at a tooth at a time. I was given Vicodin and some gauze and was sent back to my unit. I was given a day off and a "profile" from aerobic activity for another two days.

      I had my other two teeth pulled by a civilian dentist after I left the service. I showed up and was given a thorough exam before scheduling the surgery. On surgery day, I walked in, filled out one sheet of paper and took a pill that knocked me out. I woke up a few hours later on a bed at the dentist's office and my wisdom teeth were gone.

      Of course, I won't even go into details on the comparison between military and civilian doctor's offices. But I will say that one has sterile, florescent lighting and white tile floors, visit your local post office of court house for an example. The other has comfortable couches, carpet, TV's and other entertainment while you wait.

      As for military families, I was single, so I didn't have to experience that. However, a buddy of mine did. He unfortunately lost his baby due to a miscarriage. His wife had pains and went in to see the doctors around 6:00am. Around 3:00pm, she saw a doctor's assistant who performed an exam and determined that their baby had died. She was told to come back Monday for a DNC because it was Friday and they wouldn't be able to complete the procedure before "quitting time" of 4:00pm. She had to go home with her dead baby in her belly and carry it around all weekend before someone would remove it on Monday afternoon. SICK!!

      So, please don't even try to tell me how great and efficient military health care is. I know from experience that it sucks and it made up my mind years ago that I will never let the government control my health care. I get much better care now that I ever did in the military and don't pay anywhere near $1250/month for my entire family, much less myself!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    215. Re:A false choice, of course... by slyrat · · Score: 1

      So your "separate bill" would require insurance companies to cover everyone, regardless of pre-existing conditions. Great! Now I won't even bother getting insurance and paying those pesky premiums until I have a condition that is really unaffordable without it.

      Yes I realize this. I was more trying to say that I am horribly biased on this one part of the issue. The only real way for that part to get through is for it to be viable either through insurance (how the bill is now) or through a single payer system (how I would prefer it). Anything else results in what you have already said.

    216. Re:A false choice, of course... by Ocyris · · Score: 1

      Though on other side, the question all Americans should be asking themselves is: do private insurers have better resume???

      Before WWII I say they had a decent record then we got FDR's wage and price controls which set everything in motion.

      One can easily bash gov't - bashing health insurers might backfire (who like all the big businesses have their hand in pretty much everything). And if gov't does shitty job, one can always vote for opposition/independent - you rarely if ever have much choice when dealing with health insurers.

      The problem with this is once you create a hugh new bureaucracy those people employed by it aren't about to vote against their own lively hood.

    217. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you want the bureaucracy that runs health care to be focussed on the interests of the people (and answering to government and by extension the electorate) or do you want the bureaucracy focused on the interests of the stockholders and maximizing profits while answering to no one other than themselves.

    218. Re:A false choice, of course... by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1

      (the "10 years of taxes, 6 years of benefits in the CBO report" talking point has been conclusively disproven) Source, please?

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    219. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      do private insurers have better resume???

      Private insurers have much better resumes than the gov't, federal or otherwise.

      The problem is that people don't want health insurance, they're demanding infinite health procedures at zero cost. Insurance is not the correct provider for infinite health procedures at zero cost. For that goal, the gov't is the only possible provider. However, that runs into the second issue that there is no such thing as "zero cost", and the people eventually forced to pay will not pay for nationwide infinite health procedures at zero cost.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    220. Re:A false choice, of course... by dylan_- · · Score: 1

      Actually, after having a newborn spend 26 days in neonatal ICU I'm pretty happy with my insurance company. Oh, and my wife's five back surgeries.

      Fair enough. How much does that insurance cost you?

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    221. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... (and couples that with Medicare reforms like more careful monitoring of doctors who prescribe medically needless tests...

      As a physician, I never understood what "medically needless tests" are. What does that mean? If a person has a headache, an xray of the foot would probably be medically unnecessary. I just don't see that happening. Every time I have seen a test called "medically unnecessary," I have always seen it as simply a judgment call, where one person disagrees with another. From time to time, I see a diagnosis missed and/or mistreated because a "medically necessary" test was considered, but not done. So, as a society, I think we need to make statues of a few thousand gods to tell us what that definition is, on a case by case basis. That way, if we miss something, we can always just say, "it's god's will," and stay true to the concept of medically unnecessary. (Notice I am not talking about fraud here -- charging for things you didn't do. I'm talking about tests where one person says should be done, but another disagrees - which I think is the definition of medically unnecessary.)

    222. Re:A false choice, of course... by fredjh · · Score: 1

      Way to present a false dichotomy!

      Good for you, dingo.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    223. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      I was a supporter of the alternative bills put forth by the Republicans

      Link please. (I know they're out there, I would just like to read the specific one you were supporting. Feel free to summarize instead.)

      As for the rest, you're talking out of both sides. You complain about how

      Medicare "price controls" everything

      -- but wait, do you want to control health care costs, or don't you?
      You complain that the majority of Medicare paperwork is done by doctors' staff -- right... so's the paperwork for private insurers. You've noticed that they take your card, and fill out forms, and take photocopies, and make all these records when you check in on your non-Medicare insurance? (I'm assuming you aren't on Medicare since you complain about it so much). They aren't doing that for the doctors' benefit... and those staff people? Their salaries come out of, you guessed it, patient-visit and procedure receipts.
      So where's the point?

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    224. Re:A false choice, of course... by psm321 · · Score: 1

      Even though it was already used by the R's 36 times in 2005-2006 and by the D's 49 times in 2007-2008? The media is awfully good at making a routine procedure look exceptional when their masters bid them to do so

    225. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      People vote with their money all the time. They vote their own self interests. They "take their business elsewhere". They "don't leave a tip". If you offer a better (perceived) value then even those people with a "thousand times the votes" will "vote" for you. What we have in the health insurance industry is government implemented monopolies. And, IMHO, monopoly capitalism is really the downfall of capitalism we are seeing today. Too big to fail then becomes the call of all the bad choices the executives make. In the IT world we call this single point of failure. True capitalism made of many small businesses is like having many redundant systems so if one fails others are still around to take up the load.

    226. Re:A false choice, of course... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      We wanted to get away from the private insurance companies, or at the very least force competition and have them lower their ridiculous rates which generate them massive amounts of profit every year.

      Don't get me wrong - there are a lot of scummy insurance practices out there, and I'm all for banning them. Post-claim underwriting is my biggest pet peeve. Pre-existing conditions is actually fair IF IT IS NOT ABUSED (but it is). Mandating insurance is a reasonable way to fairly require coverage for pre-existing conditions - if you didn't mandate the purchase of insurance then people would just wait until they're sick to buy insurance.

      No doubt the insurance companies make profit, and maybe they make too much. However, I don't really think that they're responsible for a bulk of the costs. If anything they have incentive to keep the costs down to keep their profits up. Nevertheless, costs are STILL way up.

      Everybody loves to pick on their favorite demon, and any big company making a profit is easy to point the finger at. However, the medical profession is FULL of people making profits, from the GP who charges $80 for a 15 minute visit to the guy who charges him $1000 for a "medical" scale to the lawyer who sues the GP when you fall off of a scale after it turns out that he tried to save money by buying a $50 model at Walmart.

      There are a LOT of places in the health care system that require reform, and the insurance companies are just the tip of the iceberg. If you got rid of them today and went with a public option unless that public option had the ability to make some tough calls you're not going to lower costs much.

      Now, a public option does allow costs to be socialized so that costs APPEAR to be lower for some people, but that isn't the same thing. You can actually do that with private insurance too by having the government pay some or all of the premiums. Socialism and healthcare reform are actually two different issues but they tend to get muddled.

      My biggest grip with the current legislation is that it is a lot of effort to placate EVERYBODY without a whole lot of real reform. I'm fine with starting out simple, but this legislation is purported to be a big fix, and if all we wanted to do was stop a few insurance industry practices that could be done in a much simpler way.

    227. Re:A false choice, of course... by rhsanborn · · Score: 3, Informative

      Concessions haven't been made simply to appease republicans. They've been made to try and get more of the citizens aboard, and to try and get more support within the democratic party. Things like the taxes on expensive plans have been relaxed to ease the union opposition. Sweet-heart deals have been made to buy reluctant Senators like the Louisiana or Nebraska deals, etc. Removal of the public option from the House bill was an attempt to get Senators on board. Finally, there are a lot of people in the United States, to whom congressmen have to answer in a few months who aren't fond of either the whole bill, or certain provisions. Trust me, with the filibuster proof majority in the Senate, if they didn't have to fight within the Democratic party, we'd already have a bill completed and out the door (They had this majority long enough before they lost Ted Kennedy's seat).

    228. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      "You're right... we do. However we're ranked very low among the rich countries in health care quality, but we take the gold in medical bankruptcy... go USA!"

      Trouble is...I don't think this mammoth of a bill is going to fix that.

      I'm quite worried that they are going to be adding a TON of new people to the medicare roles...a program which is already WAY in the hole. I believe Medicare is already, as is, slated to be many trillions of unfunded entitlement in the next 15 or so years. How are we going to help it by adding millions of new people? Where will the money come from?

      Why can't they do a simple bill, with some main points everyone can agree on...in about 10 pages of simple language everyone can understand and agree on? Start from there and build on it?

      From what I can see...this new thing is an attempt to build a model similar to what Mass. put into place, and from what I understand it is a HUGE financial burden on the state, and not quite working out as it was intended. Anyone from Mass that can comment on this?

      I'm also concerned about what will happen to what is left of this bill after the SCOTUS challenges to it with regard to the Federal Govt. mandating that individual citizens be required to buy health insurance. I really do believe this will be struck down. Already there are laws and the like passed in many states actually banning the state from participating in this program, and I understand some are working on state constitutional amendments to battle what the feds are trying to do. This may turn into a large fight over the 10th amendment...which may not be a bad thing considering it has been largely ignored for years.

      But say the individual insurance mandate is struck down...but the rest of the law exists? What will fund it?

      This bill is serious, and the implications are large...I think much more study is required, however, at this point, it is ONLY about politics IMHO...citizens' be damned as long as one side of the other can claim victory.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    229. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      it's single-payer health insurance (which died on the table months ago quite quickly) but with a different name.

      This is completely 100% incorrect. (I would be much happier with this bill if it were true.) This bill doesn't even have a public insurance option.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    230. Re:A false choice, of course... by slyrat · · Score: 1

      What does the average American pay for health insurance per month? For comparison, I think I pay about £50 per month, for which I get free health care no matter what the circumstances; and I earn a pretty hefty salary, so I don't think it is bad.

      Well since I have always had insurance through group plans at work it has varied. If the company you work for chips in then it is usually any where from $70-$150 a month depending on how good of a plan it is. I currently am paying the full price for a plan that was previously subsidized by my employer for $375 a month. It has a deductible of $1100 a year so that after I have paid that much in healthcare everything is free. This is actually one of the best plans I have had before, mainly because my average healthcare per month cost is $500 or so (prescriptions, dr visits, etc).

    231. Re:A false choice, of course... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      They have an anti-trust exemption specifically because the government regulations surrounding their business mean that in order to survive they have to break pretty much all the anti-trust laws. Otherwise they'd all go bankrupt within the week.

    232. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      If Bill Gates wants to buy 1000 health insurance policies for himself he is welcome to. Most people only buy one. To be honest I don't follow your argument, unless you are saying a person with a zillon dollars is going to prop up a bad business and force others to use it. If that was the case I would think that that person wouldn't have a zillon dollars for long.

    233. Re:A false choice, of course... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      The answer is yes, but you have the substance of the "Slaughter Solution" a bit wrong.

      Basically, there are two bills, the senate bill and the reconciliation bill. The house needs to pass the senate bill (because the dems in the senate no longer have the votes to pass a new bill there). But many house members' votes are contingent on the subsequent passage by both houses of a separate reconciliation bill to make alterations to the spending components of the senate bill to take out some of the special deals, etc. that made the senate bill ugly.

      But the house dems have a problem: they want to pass the bill with fixes, but don't want to be seen as voting for exactly the nasty parts of senate bill that they later want to remove through reconciliation.) But, because of the nature of reconciliation bills, the bill it modifies has to already have been passed before the reconciliation bill can. So the idea is to just vote directly on the reconciliation bill under rules (rules that would also have to be voted on by the house) that would deem the senate bill to have passed upon passage of the reconciliation bill. The rules of the house do allow this, and this "deem and pass" technique has been used pretty frequently by both parties to pass legislation for at least the last 20 years.

      So, there will be a vote. It's just that the vote will result in passage of the Senate bill in a somewhat indirect way. Though in some real sense there is nothing indirect about it; the members will all know what they are voting on and the passage of the bill will require just as many yea votes as it would under a "conventional" vote.

    234. Re:A false choice, of course... by rjolley · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You are a moron.

    235. Re:A false choice, of course... by gothzilla · · Score: 1

      Nothing gets you karma points faster than bashing Fox.

    236. Re:A false choice, of course... by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This entire argument is a total fallacy. It starts with the assumption that health insurance and single payer regulation will somehow control costs. The only way that will work is through rationing, and that's not really controlling costs - it's lowering services.

      The way to control costs is to get consumers to ... watch costs. The reason health care costs have gotten so out of control in the first place is because patients never look at the costs, because the vast majority of health care is paid for by third parties. So patients demand all the best care and all the tests they want and costs be damned. Then they complain when insurance companies want to deny some services that seem unnecessary or reduce coverage.

      So to reduce costs, you force consumers to pay out of pocket for lots of services, and relegate insurance back to just catastrophic coverage, like it used to be. Another useful reform is to un-tie insurance from employment. It's irrational the way the system now is mostly controlled by employer-based insurance, with no reasonable way for individuals to shop for insurance on their own, or to be able to buy it at reasonable costs when then change jobs.

      If you look at the market for the typical services that insurance generally does not cover, like cosmetic surgery, lasic eye surgery, etc. you can see how costs for health services can be greatly reduced when people have to pay the bill themselves. If I had a monthly bill for all my food regardless of what I ate, I'd be demanding steak and lobster all the time. And guess what? If lots of other people had it too, food prices would skyrocket. What then? Government-based, single-payer food?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    237. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      You need to think on a micro scale not macro. By voting with your dollars I'm talking about on any single item. A person with lots of money does not go out and buy lots of insurance policies (though the could). They go out and get one, and they try to get the best value, just like you and I. All that more money does, form the point of view of the consumer, is give you the option to vote on more stuff than someone with less money.

    238. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Why is it OK for government theft and not insurance company theft?

      Because the only way your prior statement made any sense is if you assumed insurance companies paying for pre-existing conditions was theft FROM the insurance companies (not BY them as your later post seems to say). It wouldn't *be* theft from the government; it would be part of what you paid for with your taxes.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    239. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for what I'm paying, roughly $80 USD /month (roughly 52GBP/month) is deducted for Medicare contributions, and my employee mandates an additional 1% (min) of my salary goes to a Retirement Health Savings account.
      Unfortunately the rest of the costs are hidden from me by my employer, which is a self-insured entity, so I don't know what the actual per-employee cost is.

      I'll also point out I have no treatment-required medical conditions and haven't needed to goto any ER or even doc-in-the-box for about 15 years, nor am I using my medical insurance to get happy pills, Viagra, to stock antibiotics, or any other of a large variety of purely elective abuses of the system.

    240. Re:A false choice, of course... by Binestar · · Score: 1

      $200 quite a lot? My family of 4 coverage costs my employer $1100/mo. $254/week. My employer covers 100% of medical. If I didn't have a family I would most definitely NOT have insurance and instead opt for the pay raise. (I will admit that my daughter needed a lot of medical coverage in the first 2 years of her life, to the tune of just shy of $200,000 total, so I can't complain *that* much about premium costs. It was something that was *CURED* though, so her medical bills since then have been all preventative cheapo stuff.)

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    241. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      The problem is the immediate departure from the industry by all participants.

      You are right. There used to be a bunch of restaurants around here that charged people based on how much they ate. Then one day, a buffet opened up that charged everyone the same amount. Then all the restaurants closed all across the country because they refused to stay in business because they insisted on charging their customers on how much they ate as opposed to a flat rate.

      Oh wait. No they didn't. All the restaurants stayed open and even a few new ones opened up along with a few more buffet style restaurants. So... I guess you are wrong when you assumed that the board members of insurance companies would rather loose millions in investments and make thousands of their employees unemployed than simplify their books by charging a flat rate.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    242. Re:A false choice, of course... by rhsanborn · · Score: 1

      The problem I have is that they are trying to sell this to the American people as health reform. They are appealing to rate hikes, and saying that these are the reason people need to get on board with reform. Unfortunately, there is very little in this bill that does anything to control costs and keep said rate hikes from happening. If we, as a country, want to say that health case is a basic right, then we need to actually ... do that. This bill is an entitlement program, much like medicare. It has provisions like forcing all people to have health insurance and forcing insurers to accept people, but generally, it is an entitlement program to subsidize health care costs. Quite frankly, it should be presented as such, because presenting it as reform and cost control is misleading, and will most likely prove itself to be wrong.

    243. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      "Defensive medicine" has its place, but fears of medical malpractice suits are grossly overstated. Something like 10% of doctors account for 80% of malpractice claims; we really just need to get rid of the bad doctors.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    244. Re:A false choice, of course... by JWW · · Score: 1

      That's what really bothers me. Health care doesn't pay any attention at all to cycle times and utilization with respect to their equipment.

      The cost of running a cat scan machine can probably be expressed very easily as a constant $ per year.

      So to recover your cost you need to charge enough to foot the bill. Now, what happens is that for very few patients you have a very large cost per patient. So then costs become an issue, well what do you do to reduce costs, you do less right??! Nope. In this case its counter intuitive. You've already sunk most of the costs on the equipment, you need to recoup them. What you need is MORE patients to use the cat scan machine. Perhaps you would even go so far as to encourage people to have annual scans. Now, lets rethink our covering the cost of the machine. More patients and a fairly constant cost can drastically lower the costs that need to be charged to cover the equipment, the staff, the supplies, everything. Now, admiteddly the radiologist that's reading the scan would have to become more efficient and wouldn't be able to charge the same rate per scan, but he could still get paid the big salary for the time he's working. Oh and reading cat scans is the kind of thing that could easily be distributed and not local to you hospital so you could reap economies of scale.

      Manufacturing, especially automated manufacturing in this country (and in others) have decades of experience minimizing the costs of running machines and maximizing their utilization. Health care always cuts costs by doing less. There is so much cost containment/optimization that could be done in health care, it almost unbelievable...

    245. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, in this itemized bill the nurses' charges and doctors' charges are all listed for their labor. The pill was $14.05, not the labor.

    246. Re:A false choice, of course... by Albanach · · Score: 0, Troll

      Compare like with like.

      US Healthcare has fully loaded Cadillacs that cost 10x that of the very same fully loaded Cadillac in Europe.

      Tell me, why does a child receiving a nebuliser treatment in a Doctor's surgery cost circa $300 on top of the visit cost when the reusable nebuliser costs under $100 and the drugs cost $4 for a month's supply at Walmart?

      Why does an inhailer for asthma cost $100 at Target, yet the NHS in the UK procures them at under $10?

      Why are the self employed all but excluded from healthcare altogether?

    247. Re:A false choice, of course... by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 1

      Thanks, you saved me the trouble of recording my own thoughts. Now that we've institutionalized the idea of maintaining health through the insurance model and essentially codified the existence of value-draining middlemen in the medical system, I can't wait to see the stories of abuse and corruption that come to light over the next decade.

    248. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh? I'd recommend reading The Top Ten Immediate Benefits You'll Get When Health Care Reform Passes:
      http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-john-b-larson/he-top-ten-immediate-bene_b_501748.html

    249. Re:A false choice, of course... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      The federal government simply doesn't have a good resume; you can't blame the unbiased peoples for not loving the idea of the government running yet another program.

      Here's the thing: When the federal government (or state or municipal government, for that matter) does their job well, you usually don't notice (much like sysadmins). So it's not that they have a bad track record so much as their mistakes are noticed more than their successes.

      Some examples of things governments have probably done for you over the last year that you didn't notice or recognize:
      - Kept your tap water running and safe from parasites and other nasties.
      - Cleared snow and ice from the roads you take to and from work each day.
      - Ensured that the food you bought at the grocery store wasn't infected with E. coli.
      - Made sure the kids your child is around at school do not have measles.
      - Kept your home from catching on fire because one person was smoking in bed 3 blocks away.
      - Made sure that the people behind the wheels of the vehicles around you had some clue as to how to drive.
      - As far as the USPS is concerned, think about how much business would completely grind to a halt without them. In particular, people in very rural areas are extremely dependent on the postal service for deliveries, because their private competitors often won't serve those areas.
      - Built a bridge that can last 50 years before getting replaced rather than 15 years.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    250. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How can you call it health insurance? You can't discriminate against unhealthy people... those in high risk groups don't have to pay higher rates... in fact, high risks groups get the greatest benefit. Not insurance imo.

    251. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      And yet, "true capitalism" always winds up becoming that monopolistic capitalism, as one successful firm eats the others. Markets are good tools, for specific purposes, but they need to be managed; they don't just moderate themselves.

      For the rest, like I said, "dollar votes" are a fine concept -- for people participating in the market for a specific good to choose among the firms providing that specific good, when there are no market externalities. It doesn't work nearly so well if you assume you aren't one of the competing firms or one of the customers.

      On the other hand, suppose you have a nice piece of land with a creek running through it where you fish. Now suppose (I'm assuming you're a dude) a tampon company sets up a factory upstream, off your property, and dumps a ton of chemicals in the creek that kill all the fish. How can you boycott the product? You weren't buying it anyway. But you still get screwed. You've been harmed, but your dollar votes leave you no leverage whatsoever.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    252. Re:A false choice, of course... by Willuz · · Score: 1

      There are multiple new agencies being created to enforce these "consumer protections" so they are in effect running it. The IRS will receive 15,000 new employees in a new agency to enforce the rules. Of course we all know the IRS is very reliable and has a great track record of effective public relations. Just look at the business owner who owed 4 cents and was visited by IRS agents with a bill that was over $200. However, the real issue here is how it's being paid for. They prez says it doesn't cost us because it will be paid for with future savings. This sounds a lot like what caused the housing bubble when banks said "oh don't worry about this balloon mortgage, your value will go up and you'll make more money later so it will be ok". Getting in over your head in debt with the hope of saving later is a serious issue with any amount of money and especially with billions of dollars and our health on the line.

    253. Re:A false choice, of course... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Ahhh. Senator Ted. You know, if there's a hell, that man is wishing he had a glass of water right now. Some nice cool Chappaquidick water would really go down nice, don't you think?

      Yeah, I know, that's off subject, but you mentioned the douche first, LOL

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    254. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's what people said when they added the politics section.

      It didn't work out that way.

    255. Re:A false choice, of course... by akboss · · Score: 1

      Well if taxing is ok then why not adopt the Swedish style of take it all and we will take care of you. Give up 75-80% of your income to the government in exchange for socialized everything. Need a place to live, done. Need a vacation for a month, done. Need a heart lung transplant, well hold on a minute, you need to stand in line for that, done. If you truly think you need someone to take care of you from the minute your born until they toss your ashes in a dumpster what in the hell are you still here for?? There are plenty of countries that will take care of you from the cradle to the grave, you dont need to be here. This is like those Cali people that get fed up with the taxes in Cali, move to another state then start changing the laws there because they want it like Cali, then when the taxes are to great they pack up and do it all again.

      --
      "Remember, politicians and diapers should be changed often and for the same reason."
    256. Re:A false choice, of course... by fredjh · · Score: 1

      My prior statement? That was the first statement I made this entire thread.

      If you force insurance companies to accept people with preexisting conditions, then they raise the rates for EVERYBODY.

      In other words, you think a preexisting condition should grant a lien on someone else's property?

      Would you consider it theft against the policy holders of an automobile insurer if someone had an accident, covered it up so that they could buy insurance, then issued a claim... and then rates go higher for everybody? You people don't get it... the insurance companies don't cover costs out of their own pockets, they pay for it out of everyone else's.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    257. Re:A false choice, of course... by heckler95 · · Score: 1

      I was responding to your comment on true capitalism being the same as democracy. You make a good point about Bill Gates not needing more than one health insurance policy, but in a more general sense I don't agree that you can equate a system based on accumulation of money to one based on fair representation for all. Voting with your wallet depends heavily on how big that wallet is. Democracy is meant to be a great equalizer where each person (in theory) has an equal say, regardless of who their father is, what color their skin is, or how much money they make.

      In practice, our system is more of a democratic/capitalistic hybrid. Each person gets one vote, but those with money can afford to hire lobbyists to influence the people for whom the little guys voted. Both are far from perfect, but they certainly can't be considered one and the same.

    258. Re:A false choice, of course... by JWW · · Score: 1

      So, in the US I'd be free to:

      Speak my mind on political matters,
      Attend any church I want,
      Assemble with like minded citizens,
      Be allowed to maintain the privacy of my home,
      Not incriminate myself in any crime,
      Own a gun,

      BUT

      I wouldn't be able to eat a cheesburger???
      I wouldn't be able to smoke (I'm not a smoker, but don't you dare tell me what I can and can't eat without telling all the smokers, Obama included, that they MUST quit)

      I don't think so.

      My personal opinion is that single payer is single payer and that means that the government takes in in taxes enough money to cover the medical services the populace needs. We the taxpayer can save money if we're healthier, but its our choice. Now taxes could be increased on fast food to cover health care and that might not be so bad, but that tax would be heavily regressive, just like the cigarette tax is. Far better and less preachy would be to use payroll and income taxes to cover the costs. But then I'm talking about a country that cares about balanced budgets. Presently, we're just spending whatever we want. So really, I should get to eat cheeseburgers anyway because the government doesn't really care what things cost anyway. At least you could infer that from their actions....

    259. Re:A false choice, of course... by shallot · · Score: 1

      Forcing an insurance company to pay for a pre-existing condition is simple theft.

      This makes no more sense than asking a car insurance company for insurance AFTER you've been in an accident.

      You're implying that car insurance is analogous to health insurance. Where I live, there's mandatory car insurance and mandatory health insurance. So that looks like a decent analogy in favor of that part of this bill. And it's almost a car analogy, too. :)

    260. Re:A false choice, of course... by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      You mentioned "big pharma" as the reason for America's healthcare costs. Certainly, that's part of the issue. Other parts include insurance company and hospital profits. And, I'm certain that your medical systems don't have the legal fees from lawsuits that our system sees.

      You're paying £50/month? What about monies from your taxes that go toward the system? Do your companies also pay into the system? Just as a point of reference, I pay $109.32 every two weeks to cover myself, wife and kid, and am very satisfied with the service I've received. Though the continuing rise in costs is certainly concerning.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    261. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the FAA and FDA are good records on the federal resume. I think when the goal is consuming (food and entertainment) private industry is pretty good. But when the goal is public safety (law enforcement, medicinal drugs, aircraft separation), you'll probably want a democratic government for that. One that can be held accountable when things go wrong, and one that is pseudo-less interested in money (because the people can vote).

      Since this bill puts the money back into the private industry to "keep us healthy", I think it will just result in higher premiums for most of us, prolong expensive treatments, and be more costly. The law doesn't engineer any of the costs of treatment away, and it expands the availability of treatment, so it has to cost more (by the triangle of quality, cost, and schedule).

    262. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree, the government has a long history of exceptionally well run programs. Almost all of the agencies you cite are top-class run institutions that when compared to their analogs in other countries (or even with those in the private sector in the US) come out as shining examples. It is all of the politics around anything run by the government that makes them seem bad. When you actually measure their performance they are doing great.

      Medicare is a great example: even by conservative estimates (ie: those who have a political axe to grind against it) Medicare spends about 3% of the funds it receives on "administrative overhead". That is money that is going to anything that is not directly paying for people's health benefits. In comparison private insurance typically has around 12% (or more). This all makes sense when you realize that the private companies "have to" take out money to pay for their profits (the contractual point of a private company).

      And in the medical field the idea that private companies do a better job for a lower cost is quickly disproven by looking at any of a long list of other countries who have nationalized health care and have demonstrably better health care for the average person (while not having as good on the absolute top end... read: for the rich), while costing a fraction of what we spend in the US. Yes those programs have to make difficult decisions about when it is not worth paying for additional treatment, but so do we... it is just those systems don't base those decisions on what is in your pocketbook, but rather on a rational decision.

      The postal service is another example. For $0.44 you can send a letter anywhere in the United States, including to/from Hawaii. You can expect that it will be there in 2-3 days, and lost mail is virtually non-existant (well within the percentage you would expect from people mis-addressing mail). The comparable price within Germany is 0.55 EURO ($0.75), and that only gets you mailed within Germany (about the size of Montana). A letter to the neighboring Austria (mountains, not kangaroos) costs 0.70 euro ($0.95), and my experience with mail from Austria to Germany usually took about a week, even though the two points were about 200km from each other (granted this experience is more than a decade out-of-date).

      Government services make great political punching bags, but in reality we get really great services in return for our tax money. It is just hard to make a political campaign on that (and thus make it onto TV with that message), so it never gets said.

    263. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      (just a quick aside, you don't really think the money collected from the telephone excise tax is going to fund an ongoing Spanish-American war, do you?)

      Answered here.

      I am not saying that the issues you raised are mutually exclusive.

      You might want to go back and re-read your post. Or perhaps record it and play it back. Or maybe have someone read it out loud to you. I say that because you were in fact saying they were mutually exclusive. Perhaps you didn't intend to -- but you did nonetheless.

      Most Americans think they are of above-average intelligence. Most Americans thought the Iraq war was a good idea. Most Americans thought the economy was going gangbusters before 2007.

      I fail to see your point. Most Americans believe grass is green. Most Americans believe 2+2=4. Most Americans believe the sky is blue. Most Americans are usually right about how the FEEL about something vs. what is factually true or not.

      "Most Americans think they are of above-average intelligence". A little less than half are correct. The rest is wishful thinking.

      "Most Americans thought the Iraq war was a good idea". And based in the intelligence at the time, a strong argument could be made for this.

      "Most Americans thought the economy was going gangbusters before 2007". It sort of was. There were warnings about the "bubble bursting", but it can;t be argued that the economy through 2006 was wasn't pretty damn good (on paper).

      When I say "I'm happy with my health care coverage", I am 100% correct. And I don't want it messed with. I don't trust our governments ability to do better and fully expect them to do much much worse.

      However, when I say "I believe Pi equals 3.15", I'm either right or wrong.

      What do workers in the health-care industry think?

      I've been in the health-care industry for over 20 years now. It needs reform. Fix the broken parts of it. Don't tear it down and rebuild it. I can tell you virtually all my peers (not all) feel the same. My job has me working with many doctors and nurses -- and virtually all feel the same. I've no idea about your "friends and family" and if they all work in the health care industry or not. I *DO* know that *I* do -- as do my co-workers (duh). And the people I interact with daily as part of my job (duh).

      I'll point out a notable exception. One doctor I work directly with is very much in favor of this bill. He is, however, not a practicing physician. He's a teacher. Working at a public university. Doing publicly funded research (of which I'm usually part of collecting data for him). All the doctor's I know who work for a living are scared to death for their practice.

      Requiring a unanimous vote on an incredibly complex issue, it seems reasonable that it would have some difficulty no matter what the situation.

      I would suggest reading "Constitutional Journal" -- it's entertaining and a great layman's introduction to the US Constitution and why our system is set up the way it is. The Senate has a function -- that is quite different from the house. Our founders wanted to make sure "passions" did not cause the speedy passage of legislation. The process is supposed to be slow. Anyone with eyes can see the reason this particular bill is trying to get rammed down our throats is that the more time passes, the more "passions" cool and the less support it has. It's already well in to the negative.

    264. Re:A false choice, of course... by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      Both my children were born in a public hospital.

      The first time, my wife was taking too long to give birth. The doctor ordered a cesarian. The kid was born perfectly well.

      The second was delivered the normal way, but the kid was not breathing very well after birth. The doctors insisted he was admitted for observations, for precaution. A whole lot of sophisticated examinations were performed on him. Fortunately, he was perfectly healthy and was released within a week.

      Total cost: zero euros, nothing, zilch, nada.

      Some people are happy to pay 5.000 euros for a birth in a private hospital. It's all very nice if everything goes smooth. Cesarian is guaranteed, because the private hospitals use other criteria than the medical ones. They have individual nurseries, the public ones are shared. It's like a hotel. But funny thing, if there's any complication, the kid and the mom are immediately dumped in a public hospital to be treated.

    265. Re:A false choice, of course... by fredjh · · Score: 1

      You're implying that car insurance is analogous to health insurance.

      Actually I'm saying ripping off health insurance companies can be done in the same fashion as ripping off auto insurers, only now people will have government telling them it's OK.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    266. Re:A false choice, of course... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      Though on other side, the question all Americans should be asking themselves is: do private insurers have better resume???

      This question is too limited.

      What about: Which is easier to replace, an under-performing private insurer or your government?

      I said it yesterday, but you can close an insurance company. Government programs are forever.

    267. Re:A false choice, of course... by mcgrew · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When our government starts taking away our liberties (forcing people to buy health care

      You're right about that -- it should simply pay for your health care, and when you get sick you're free to not go to the doctor, or go if you wish.

      taking away private property to give to another private party

      So you're against the US Constitution?

      Article 2, section 8:The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States; but all duties, imposts and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

      To borrow money on the credit of the United States;

      16th amendment:

      The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several states, and without regard to any census or enumeration.

      So you think the US Constitution is bad for America? You should be a congresscritter, they all seem to hate the Constitution, too.

      When it continues to spend us into either runaway iflation or economic ruin, I'd say that's bad for America.

      Then work on getting those damned wars stopped. The stagflation in the 1970s was a direct result of paying fo rthe Vietnam war. NOTHING is as expensive as war, and the monetary expense is the smallest of those expenses. We spend far more on the military than anything else.

      Additional budget trimming based on rasing the capital gains tax

      Why should someone who "earns" his money by betting on the stock market pay less of a percentage of his income in taxes than a construction worker, who EARNS his money by working off the sweat of his brow in dangerous situations? I say the capital gains tax is far too low. While we're at it, raise the tax on incomes above $1m/yr. Let those who benefit most from government pay the most for government.

    268. Re:A false choice, of course... by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      People typically vote for the party that offers what is good for them personally.

      Some of us respect the rights of others and don't seek to help ourselves from their pockets.

    269. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and forcing someone to pay horribly artifically high prices to treat that pre-existing condition that may very well be a result of how our healthcare system treats problems (ie throwing more antibotics at things) isnt just theft plain and simple? i mean i agree with you to a point, but you have to look at the other side of this issue. Also currently there's practically nothing to stop a health insurer from classifying "life" as a pre-existing condition, allowing them an out on pretty much anything they want should they decide they dont want to pay!

    270. Re:A false choice, of course... by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Pelosi has said this is only the first bill and that we should expect many more. I would assume that means trying to push for public options, and perhaps eventually build on the populist anger towards private insurance to remove it from most of the market. I think the push for socialized medicine is exactly what a large part of the Democratic party is fighting for, though by no means enough to win the day right now.

      However, aside from that (and I don't think a single payer system in this country would be a good idea for reasons of abuse of power I have seen from administrations of both parties, on both state and federal levels), there is some really bad stuff in this bill. For example:

      The bill empowers the DHHS to waive most of the fines for things like long-term care facilities' employees abusing patients if the facility serves an under-served population, and this is defined as rural areas or ethnic minorities. This is just Jim Crow under a new name: it means that facilities serving ethnic minorities are held to a lower standard, and African-American patients of them are not entitled to the same protections of the laws that white patients are. That's just wrong.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    271. Re:A false choice, of course... by dylan_- · · Score: 1

      To compare that with your situation, you'd need to figure out what NHS funding does to your tax rate, so it's probably not as nice as it seems at first glance, but I think you're still winning on balance...

      Actually, the NHS costs less (per capita) than you pay in taxes for your public healthcare.

      For comparison of private health insurance, try here and see what it says for you.

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    272. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree we should untie it from employers.

      What part of my post is a fallacy, exactly? If you can point out the flaw in my logic given that I never really addressed cost control but simply the revocation of pre-existing condition clauses as a desirable outcome, I'd be glad to address it.

      I'd also make the point that as consumers, we are at the mercy of the procedures that our doctors prescribe for us. We pay them for their knowledge and rely on their diagnoses, and if everyone seeks a second opinion on everything, don't we end up with more doctor appointments and more bills?

      The ability to comparison-shop implies a level informational playing field, and unless consumers go to med school, that doesn't happen.

      People don't want to haggle over their health; not with their physicians and not with their insurance companies. When you're sick, and especially critically so, it's not worth it.

    273. Re:A false choice, of course... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      The problem is that medical insurance has become an essential

      You mean essential... like clothing, food, and housing? Should we get the government involved in mandating the type of food, clothing, and housing you purchase?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    274. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      US' handling of recent financial crisis suggests otherwise.

      And the bill AFAIK doesn't even contain public option - it contains mostly stronger regulations.

      I'm no fan of government programs too, but heck it works somehow with education, police and fire departments...

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    275. Re:A false choice, of course... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      A system of governance that is based upon "what is good for me personally" is simple anarchy.

      Yes, and a system of governance which is based upon "general welfare" (you know, the one from U.S. Constitution) is social democracy - which has been proven to work through experience by pretty much all First World countries today.

    276. Re:A false choice, of course... by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      About the same as the guy in the next cube at work. Approx $600 a month. There is a 20% co-pay with a max of $3,000 per person per year. Still my total out of pocket is not killing me. I will admit my insurance with my previous employer was better but cost more.

    277. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      One more point:

      to fix it, you can pay some extra taxes to the federal government for the rest of your life, or you can pay hefty fees to the insurance companies for the rest of your life.

      This is wrong. If government takes over, I basically have no choice. I will be forced to pay. I would, however like to see LESS government regulation -- particularly in state's disallowing interstate purchasing of insurance.

      Part of the NATURE of the cost of heath care right now is BECAUSE of too much government involvement!

      *I* want the choice of what insurance I'm willing to pay for. Or if I want insurance at all. I want to choose based on my needs. I currently live in a state that forces me to buy insurance that covers pregnancy->birth. Which is fine -- and would (and have) gladly paid for during my "build a family" years. We're done with having children. I'd like the ability to explore coverage which may not include pregnancy->birth. It's not something I need any more and see no need to pay for it.

      That said, I've made sure I've had health insurance since I was 19 years old (well over 20 years). Including 1 year of Cobra (the expensive year). I've also had a friend who made the choice *NOT* to get covered, though he could afford it. He was young (early 20's) and he wanted to save the money for a house. It worked for him. He came out of it with about 100k in savings after 10 years. It would have been more, but he had to cover a nasty accident he had (about $40k in medical bills -- he paid for out of pocket).

    278. Re:A false choice, of course... by magnusrex1280 · · Score: 1

      It's been my observation that people bash FOX NEWS not because they oppose that channel's ideology (far-right conservatism), but because that channel resorts to extreme distortion and obfuscation to A) get their point across, B) make their viewpoint seem better and the progressive's seem worse, and C) reinforce the disinformation that many far-right conservatives (based on random Tea Party members being interviewed, just to name one source) buy into and believe to be true. (sorry about the giant sentence) I'm posting a link that has some of the interviews I mentioned...yes I realize that this link is biased, but the footage is almost entirely Tea Partiers showing how little they know about what's going on. So check it out, at least. http://www.youtube.com/user/NewLeftMedia

    279. Re:A false choice, of course... by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      that was supposed to be "less than 50" but apparently the less than symbol is not welcome here.

    280. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me but where did you learn your math,

      Let me see if I spend less money then I normally would not have spent it is a savings. If I have to live on a balanced budget, then why in the hell doesn't the government have to. It is not possible to spend money without someday paying it back. 100% of all government money comes from "The People", you and I. Any who thinks this is goodness needs to have their head examined.. Fred

    281. Re:A false choice, of course... by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      No, you misunderstood. Think about this:
              health care != health insurance

      Now, read the comment again, and adjust yours accordingly.

      Ignorance indeed.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    282. Re:A false choice, of course... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First, true capitalism is democracy (People vote with their money)

      It's very sad when citizens of a democratic country, especially Americans who did a lot to popularize the whole thing (am I correct in shamelessly assuming that you're one?), do not understand that the fundamental concept of democracy is "one person - one vote".

    283. Re:A false choice, of course... by pablomme · · Score: 1

      People typically vote for the party that offers what is good for them personally.

      Some of us respect the rights of others and don't seek to help ourselves from their pockets.

      I think you are replying to the second part of my comment there, not the bit you quote, else I don't see what (very indirect) connection you are trying to make between voting and helping yourself from somebody else's pocket.

      The point I can see you could be trying to raise is that the money that would be invested by insurance companies in treating people with pre-existing, permanent conditions would increase the insurance prices for everyone. And that's precisely what I think is correct. The extra money you are paying is exactly proportional to the chances that the same may have happened (or may still happen!) to you. Which is fair.

      --
      The state you are in while your HEAD is detached... - wait, what?
    284. Re:A false choice, of course... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      A mandate *is* necessary, though, for insurance-based health reform to work.

      Two things:

      1) Why is a mandate necessary? More detail, please.

      2) Do you suppose there is any other (non-insurance-based) way to reform healthcare? Personally, I think health insurance is expensive because the DRUGS AND PROCEDURES ARE EXPENSIVE. But perhaps that's less-than-obvious to anyone but me. I dunno.

    285. Re:A false choice, of course... by mariox19 · · Score: 1

      The problem with SS is that they've "borrowed" from it for the general fund, and that taxes are capped at $75k per year.

      These are two separate issues, and only the first is a problem.

      As initially sold to the American people, Social Security was meant to be an insurance policy, mainly against indigence in old age for people who had outlived their savings. It was never sold as a scheme to transfer wealth from one segment of the population to another.

      The original retirement age of 65 was set when the life expectancy of the average working man was something like 62. It wasn't expected that most people would collect Social Security. People were expected to finance their own retirement or work until they dropped. In the event that you lived so long that you either blew through your savings or were too old to work anymore and support yourself, Social Security would then kick in.

      Under that original rationale, there is no reason to repeal the cap on taxes. To do so makes Social Security less of an insurance policy and more of a welfare policy.

      The fact that the government has been looting Social Security, and that now most people expect to collect Social Security for a good number of years, is where the problems stem from.

      --

      quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.

    286. Re:A false choice, of course... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      es, the government forcing, and then helping if you are unable to do it yourself with the forcing, you take care of yourself is definitely a bad thing.

      Is there a limit?

      What about brushing your teeth?

      I did not brush my teeth this morning, nor will I after I go eat lunch in a few minutes.

      Should there be a 'Bob-brushing-his-teeth' mandate?

      If so, why / If not, why not?

    287. Re:A false choice, of course... by eldepeche · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are a moron.

      Why rush? they've only been talking about this for a year, let's keep debating it for another goddamn year. We've only talked about universal health care for about 80 years, and we've known how to design a cost-effective system with good results for about 50. There's only tens of thousands of people who die each year because of inadequate access to health care. What's the fucking rush?

      And lord, it's going to affect 1/6 of the economy! Why is health care 1/6 of the economy? Because we've allowed our rate of medical inflation to stay far higher than any other developed country. And we're talking about regulations affecting companies that deal in that 1/6. It's not as if the government is nationalizing 1/6 of the economy.

      Oh no, the bill has a lot of pages! Who gives a shit? First of all, legislative text is triple spaced, with 1.5 inch margins, so the bill is actually 400 pages of normal text. But so what? This is complicated stuff, and legal language is notoriously verbose and dense.

      Let's just do what we can all agree on! OK, no denial of coverage based on preexisting conditions. But what if someone just goes without insurance until they need care? That's just going to make it more expensive for the rest of us. We'll have to mandate that everyone pay in. But what if some people can't afford it? I suppose we'll have to subsidize premiums for the poor. Well, what a coincidence, that pretty well describes the bill that's being debated in Congress! Weird.

      By the way, the deals you're talking about? They're being removed in the packages being voted on in the coming week.

      Take your warmed over Republican talking points and shove them up your disingenuous ass.

    288. Re:A false choice, of course... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      I found that Slashdot is a very nice cross-section of the US in general. As a matter of fact, the way debates pan out here is generally reflected in the mainstream media within a short period of time.

      So no, Slashdot readers aren't "better" than any other group. They're wealthier, have access to more resources, but fundamentally just as rabid as any other segment of the population.

      For what it's worth, I found your post interesting and at least worthy of debate. Shame that you won't get a reasoned response that goes beyond a flamebait mod.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    289. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1
      No--I'm choosing to have payment for my coverage provided by somebody who we can hold electorally accountable, versus a conscience-less corporation.

      And moreover, I would choose the option where the paycheck of person deciding which of my medical bills gets covered does not depend upon their denying my care.

      Tony Benn said it best:

      Choice depends on the freedom to choose, and when you're shackled with debt, you don't have the freedom to choose.

    290. Re:A false choice, of course... by tchdab1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      >>if this is going to affect roughly 1/6th of our economy, let's study and get it right.

      But it's a step in the right direction (while not perfect or even ideal), and we have been trying to address this for decades with no progress.
      The evidence, I think, points to special interests blocking progress in order to maintain profits from the status quo.
      So it's actually better to pass this now and fix as best we can later (if we don't fix anything, it's still better than not passing it).

      And by fix it, I personally mean remove more profit motive - remove profits - from the health care industry itself.
      There is no room for consideration of profit over health care decisions: people die.

      And when I think about it, I have to say the same for the entire rest of the economy: we are here to make things better for all of us, not to create an environment for a few of us to get super-rich.

    291. Re:A false choice, of course... by Myshkin · · Score: 1

      People do NOT vote with their money. They use it on the way to drop lil Suzie off at soccer practice, or what is on sale and will allow them to get an extra treat this week.

      You may feel that people *should* vote with their dollars, but they don't. If you want to go basing an entire system on what YOU feel people *should* do, instead of what they *actually* do, you'll be attacking windmills.

          Maslow's hierarchy of needs is running the show. Simple, immediate concerns have to be met BEFORE you can worry about altruistic concerns, or policy issues. That means you're going to stock your fridge with enough to eat, before you worry about what the farmers are getting paid.

    292. Re:A false choice, of course... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Speak for yourself. "The people" and "we" has no place in this discussion. I'm tired of being lumped in with rabid lunatics who think that the right to not afford health care trumps the right to not get shafted by health care companies.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    293. Re:A false choice, of course... by kingramon0 · · Score: 1

      Though on other side, the question all Americans should be asking themselves is: do private insurers have better resume???

      Considering 83% of people rate the current quality of their health care as either good or excellent, I'd say yes.
      http://www.gallup.com/poll/102934/majority-americans-satisfied-their-own-healthcare.aspx

    294. Re:A false choice, of course... by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      I crushed my finger about a year ago, and I went to the ER to get it sewed up. I gave them my insurance information, at the time, and I asked them how much I would have to pay but they couldn't tell me. I saw one doctor twice, the first time she examined it for a few minutes, the second time she spend about 20 minutes stitching it up. Apart from that, a NP examined it and two x-ray techs came and took an x-ray of it.

      2 months later I got a bill for $2,000 (which claimed it was already past-due, though I'd never received an earlier one). I eventually walked them through submitting the claim properly to my insurance company, but not before they offered to "settle" with me for $1,000 (why would I pay that? I have insurance!). To my thinking, neither cost is acceptable for what was in aggregate about one hour of work (but of course they didn't bill me by the hour, they billed me for the procedures: the examination, x-ray, to "close" my finger, and to "repair" the laceration, I was never clear on how those last two are different from each other and they constituted the bulk of the cost)

      From what I can tell, medical billing is a completely bogus and filled with inconsistencies and carelessness. On the other hand, the care I received was top-notch, and I have no complaints. The follow up care, as well as the billing for it, was completely painless because the doctor I went to seemed to have his ducks in a row.

    295. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 2, Informative

      Pelosi has said this is only the first bill and that we should expect many more. I would assume that means trying to push for public options, and perhaps eventually build on the populist anger towards private insurance to remove it from most of the market. I think the push for socialized medicine is exactly what a large part of the Democratic party is fighting for, though by no means enough to win the day right now.

      Remember though, a single-payer system affects only insurance companies. Private companies would still be building medical equipment, doctors would still run independent practices, and pharmaceutical companies would still exist. You could consider single-payer to be socialized insurance, but not socialized healthcare.

      The bill empowers the DHHS to waive most of the fines for things like long-term care facilities' employees abusing patients if the facility serves an under-served population, and this is defined as rural areas or ethnic minorities. This is just Jim Crow under a new name: it means that facilities serving ethnic minorities are held to a lower standard, and African-American patients of them are not entitled to the same protections of the laws that white patients are. That's just wrong.

      Interesting, I must have missed that part...can you provide me with page/line numbers from the bill? here's a link if you don't have a copy handy: http://www.scribd.com/doc/28572002/Reconciliation-HR-4872-Full-Text

    296. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      ...wow. That's completely insane, how cheap this is. (And this is on top of your NHS care, right?)

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    297. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      In the case that someone damages something of yours you ask to have them repair it (i.e. you sue them). Then the damage to your property is reflected in the cost of their product (because all costs are added to the cost of the product). Then the consumers of that product can choose to buy another company's products that were environmentally responsible. It is common practice today to "call out" companies that do socially unacceptable things and have consumers "vote" for another's product.

    298. Re:A false choice, of course... by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      >> What part of my post is a fallacy, exactly? If you can point out the flaw in my logic given that I never really addressed cost control but simply the revocation of pre-existing condition clauses as a desirable outcome, I'd be glad to address it.

      The fallacy is in the assumption that the problem is health insurance, and that somehow regulating it will solve the problem. The real problem is the cost of health care itself. As the parent poster said, masking the true costs of health care with subsidized health insurance, whether regulated or not, is not going to reduce their costs in the long term.

      Of course, once that assumption is conceded, then your argument stands in support of health insurance regulation and reform. But his point was that taking the assumption as a fact, a priori, is a fallacy.

            -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    299. Re:A false choice, of course... by Adhemar82 · · Score: 1

      Actually, you can have private health insurance companies and still have insurance for everyone. By regulating things a bit more, and using a risk pool. This is how it's done here in the Netherlands: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_in_The_Netherlands

    300. Re:A false choice, of course... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      How do you get that a bill that is over 2,000 pages is "the minimum that can be done" on any issue?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    301. Re:A false choice, of course... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      You're already modded down, but at the risk you're looking for a discussion, let me see if I can relate how I understand it, personally:

      "Liberty" relates to "budget" under the terms of "small government". We can have fewer programs, at least at the Federal level, and that would in itself be good, but it would also cost less. That's not at all incoherent, even if it wasn't explained in detail. Less liberty will basically always mean more spending, because someone has to fund the enforcers, the tracking system, etc. There's just no way to implement a program like that for zero cost. A libertarian sees fewer programs as a win-win in this way.

      "Budget" relates to "taxes" because the government should not have any other income. Taxes are one entire side of the balance sheet that makes up the budget. Ergo, a smaller and/or balanced budget would lead to fewer taxes demanded in the future.

      Again, more wars means more tax needs. This point should, and I underscore should, be completely obvious to anyone, whether you agree with it or not.

      There does exist a framework for running our government. Most of it us under glass at the National Archives Rotunda in DC, I think. Otherwise, I'm sure you can locate a copy online with relative ease.

      Budget neutral is not filler. That's crucial, because the taxes are, again, the only income for this business entity that will be managing a large portion of the economy. Responsibility is paramount, because our children deserve better than 'pay for it somehow tomorrow'. At least they do if we do not wish the USA to follow in Rome's footsteps.

      Abortion is not filler because these are public dollars being spent. If the constituency is not in favor of this type of expenditure, then it shouldn't probably occur. Unless there's some kind of opt-out provision that I'm unaware of...

      The latter of your point is a fine position to take. My only rebuttal there would be that once/if the system is no longer broken, we will see no opportunity to remove this program. It is not a 'fix', it is a retrofit. If we're unhappy with it, due to the entitlement angle, we'll simply suffer under it forever - as we will with Medicare.

    302. Re:A false choice, of course... by davidannis · · Score: 1

      The government can forecast over a ten year period as well as wall street can forecast next quarter or programmers can budget time for large projects. That leaves us with a choice, we can accept that our government (which for all its flaws created the worlds largest middle class) is imperfect like every other human endeavor or become like Somalia where you can defend yourself, educate your own kids, make your own roads, and nobody will ever take a dime of what is yours.

    303. Re:A false choice, of course... by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 1

      Because any voice contrary to what we already believe should be feared and silenced!

      I agree completely, and I hope you will support my position that medical care is a work of the devil since it's god that made us sick, go intends for us to be sick. This makes health care imminently affordable, since we need no treatment because doing so would defy god's will. Furthermore, I'm sure you will agree with my ideas on the geocentric, flat, young earth theory.

      /satire

      The point of the above is that accepting contrary voices just because they're contrary doesn't put you in any better position to identify the truth than "fearing and silencing" contrary opinions. The fact is that Fox is not a useful resource, they're crowd baiting and playing on irrational fears to make a profit.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
    304. Re:A false choice, of course... by alatar_b · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Government is why these things cost so much. And yet we are about to add MORE government into the system?

    305. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Neither party has EVER been interested in bipartisanship, especially not one with a super majority.

    306. Re:A false choice, of course... by dylan_- · · Score: 1

      Ouch! And you're happy with that? Equivalent private healthcare in the UK would cost me about $50 a month, with zero excess (I assume that's what "co-pay" is?). I understand that you may be happy with the treatment, but surely you can't be happy with the price.

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    307. Re:A false choice, of course... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Interesting, I must have missed that part...can you provide me with page/line numbers from the bill? here's a link if you don't have a copy handy: http://www.scribd.com/doc/28572002/Reconciliation-HR-4872-Full-Text

      The US Commission on Civil Rights first flagged this issue. I remember at the time the Senate bill passed, the numbering they used no longer corresponded to the bill but I was able to find the section nonetheless. Unfortunately Scribd isn't playing well with gnash at the moment so I will have to try later from another computer. Stay tuned.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    308. Re:A false choice, of course... by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      The fact that it is contrary isn't the problem. The problem is that they irresponsibly provide a contrary position marketed to a segment of the American population least capable of dividing fact from fiction. Further not only is it contrary but it is often baseless, and sensationalized in order to draw this audience in for the purpose of generating ad revenue. Fox does not report the news, they manufacture a good story in the guise of news to make money off people.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    309. Re:A false choice, of course... by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      sales across sate lines is a ploy to tunr the health insurence industry into what the credit card industry has become.

      They all move to the state with teh lease regulation and get protected from regulations in other states by the interstate commerce clause.

      Repeal the anti-trust exception before sale over state lines, otherwise people will get screwed big time.

    310. Re:A false choice, of course... by eldepeche · · Score: 1

      And a system where health insurance companies operate according to whatever increases their profit margin (actually, they would say whatever decreases the medical loss ration) is disgusting and inhumane and not helpful for anyone.

      If someone has previously been sick, in the current system they can't get medical coverage for anything remotely related to their earlier medical problems without paying through the nose. If we as a society decide that people who have medical problems aren't inherently deserving of medical care, and that it's okay to bankrupt people for having the nerve to get sick, that's one thing.

      So go ahead and call regulation "theft," but first tell me what is the alternative?

    311. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A mandate is necessary because of the nature of insurance, which is a system for distributing risk. The rationale behind all insurance is that it is better to have a small fixed cost rather than the risk of a major one. With health care, this leads to a potential problem known as "adverse selection" in which the only people who purchase insurance are those who have greater-than-average risks; this increases the amount of risk relative to the number of people in the pool, and thus makes every individual obliged to pay more.
      That would be fine, if health care were like fire insurance, and we didn't as a society care about doing anything for people who take losses from it. But it's not. Like it or not, we do not live in a society that is happy for you to die in the street if you've been injured (though we're apparently content to put you in hock for life if you get cancer...) Since that health care will be provided, the public is facing the greatest adverse-selection problem of all -- being the backstop for risks that are uninsured by private insurers anywhere.
      This is over and above the shenanigans that private insurers go through to prevent paying claims, but that's a side issue.
      Anyway, without a mandate, if you simply prevent insurers from shaping their risk pool by denying pre-existing condition coverage, you force them to raise rates -- to the point that you'll wind up de-insuring a lot of people who can no longer afford it. To keep the costs low, the risks must be spread over a wider base which includes healthy people.
      A mandate is not necessary in absolute terms; it's only necessary once you force insurance companies not to shape their risk pools through denying higher-risk people from any access to insurance.

      2) There are non-private-insurance-based ways to reform health care. The correct approach would be a single-payer system in which everyone is in the pool, and thus there is a strong democratic incentive to ensure that benefits are paid appropriately, and in which there is a powerful market presence to lower the price of drugs and to regulate procedures according to evidence-based appraisals of effectiveness, and generally set standards of care. This can also be considered a form of insurance ("social insurance" it's called) where the premiums have been replaced by a taxes, but it more closely resembles the social value that we seem to have adopted that everyone should have access to health care without being bankrupted in the process.

      I am assured that there are a great many opportunities for reducing the cost of medical care itself. Drugs are expensive, as you mention, but the VA pays a lot less for them than Medicare does; the VA is allowed to bargain with pharma companies, while Medicare isn't. Procedures are expensive, but many of them are unnecessary, and are prescribed because doctors are paid for procedures rather than outcomes (so more medicine equals more profits). Similarly, many of them just don't do anything -- like routine prostate cancer screenings, which cost a lot but are pretty slim on actual health benefit -- and could be eliminated based on broad-based industry oversight through a medicare-for-everybody type program. Procedural costs could also be managed by reducing the disparity in incomes between primary-care doctors and specialists, reducing the incentive for over-specialization while at the same time reducing prices.
      Obviously medicine is expensive. But that doesn't mean you can't make it less so. And you know what's even more expensive than medicine? Creating a system that pays for X amount of medicine, and then adds Y percent profit on top.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    312. Re:A false choice, of course... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      I'm no fan of government programs too, but heck it works somehow with education, police and fire departments...

      All of those examples are State/local examples. And these exist for healthcare, today.

      Federal incarnations of those same things have proven less effective.

    313. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, corporations are so much more competent and efficient...at lining the pockets of their executives. Competent or not, the government is at least supposed to represent the well-being of the populace. Companies are not encumbered by such morality. Dropping cancer patients, HIV sufferers, or anyone who is "expensive", while jacking up premiums seems to be their core expertise. Of course, lobbying and sham PR campaigns which manipulate crowds of mindless dolts (OK, all you tea partiers, after me, "Four legs good, two legs bad") seem to be their other concern. If the insurance companies *actually* competed, and *actually* were concerned about their customers, and were *actually* forced to honor their contracts, there wouldn't be such ill will towards them.

      Simply put, it is inefficient to not subsidize preventive medicine, then require hospitals to care for anyone who shows up at the emergency room. People avoid the hospital because they know that they face financial ruin, even if they are insured.

      How many posts on this thread will be from PR flacks?

    314. Re:A false choice, of course... by dylan_- · · Score: 1

      (And this is on top of your NHS care, right?)

      Yes, this provides extras over and above the standard care.

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    315. Re:A false choice, of course... by fredjh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You people don't get it.

      So you begrudge the fractions of a penny that this guy's pre-existing condition will cost you, because you happened to be lucky enough to get insurance before you got sick?

      Fractions of a penny? My favorite charity happens to be Children's Healthcare of Atlanta. I donate a hell of a lot more than fractions of a penny, not that you should believe anyone posting on the internet; but the point is that it's charity: taxes and health insurance aren't charity. I don't buy health insurance for my family out of the goodness of my heart to help other people.

      And it's not fractions of a penny for one guy... it's tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of people who waited too long to buy insurance and want everyone else to pony up for it. And don't fool yourself with the phony "it's only..."

      Income taxes went from 1% on the the highest income of the wealthiest people of the country to everybody paying taxes in brackets approaching 40%, and it was always "it's just a percent more... what's one percent more? Surely you can afford that?"

      Sales taxes... from 1% to 9 and 10% in some places; where does it stop? It's always just "one more penny! Just one more penny for every dollar you spend!"

      Do I think people with preexisting conditions deserve some help? Of course I do - stop pretending the alternative to government take over of 1/6th the economy is people dying in the streets.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    316. Re:A false choice, of course... by j35ter · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yeah, while *some* drive Cadillacs, the rest are walking by foot ... YUGO's for all, YUGOS FOR AAAALLLLL!!!

      --
      Delta-Mike November Bravo Tango
    317. Re:A false choice, of course... by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      No pre-existing conditions

      I agree with everything else you said, but if you to be compensated for "pre-existing conditions" then you're looking for charity, not insurance. The purpose of insurance is to trade low-probability, high-cost risk for high-probability, low-cost premiums, and thus combat uncertainty. It's not meant to be a savings program or a handout. The efficiency of insurance is directly correlated with accurately assessing each client's risk and setting their premiums accordingly.

      If you want to provide charity for those with pre-existing conditions that should be debated and operated as a separate program.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    318. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      That's a valid point to make, but the priority that I'm putting forth is not cost--it's life. And this legislation will save lives, if for nothing other than the removal of pre-existing condition clauses.

      That said, on its current path, the cost is unsustainable. And I agree that this legislation doesn't do enough to curb the costs. For a way to fix the cost problem, I would not suggest throwing the consumer into the middle of it, but putting a regulation in place that says doctors can't be paid by procedure, and that they must be disallowed ownership stakes in the places in which they practice (which would just be a way of ensuring point number one can't be circumvented by proxy). You'll understand what I'm getting at if you read the article I'm linking.

      The best discussion I've seen on our runaway healthcare costs is here. In short, it's an investigation into why, of two cities in the same state with the same demographics, one pays triple.

      Another thing which I'm not sure wound up included or not was the thing that spawned "death panels": we spend something like $30,000 per person in the last month of life. End of life counseling, hospice care, etc. can dramatically lower that cost since family members would know, ideally by living will, what the desires of their loved one were. It would give people the ability to say (e.g.) "if I don't know who I am anymore, just pull the plug." That alone would save a lot.

    319. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pros_n_Cons · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. But were any of those bills past in a back door way that would be a takeover of 1/6th the economy, and something that 70% of the people dont want? I can understand the country being split on something then them pushing it through with dirty tactics, but when we're talking about something that will fundamentally change the country and the majority of people aren't in favor of it.. This is a BIG deal and it should be done the right way?

      --

      -- "of course thats just my opinion, I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller
    320. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      On what grounds can you sue them? They're causing damage to you, but doing just what they want with their own creek.

      Besides, you're already assuming a legal system outside the marketplace that is capable of recognizing certain damages. The dollar votes are no longer relevant, because that system has to be regulated/overseen by real democratic votes.

      It is certainly possible to call for boycotts and agitate against companies. I don't deny that. But again, that's somewhat outside the system of dollar votes -- it's about convincing the minority that does have a vote -- you have to be able to appeal to the consumers of the product. Suppose an executive armored limousine service has a habit of causing damages of some kind to a neighborhood of poor people; you could convince 80% of the population to boycott the service, but it was only selling to a separate 1% anyway. To get real redress -- for the damages in question even to have any legal meaning -- you have to have real democracy, where the non-consumers of the product get a vote, and where the majority counts more than the most wealthy.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    321. Re:A false choice, of course... by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Lose your job for a few months...

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    322. Re:A false choice, of course... by lewiscr · · Score: 1

      Of course not. We have segways for that.

    323. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      I am perfectly aware of the way insurance works.

      I don't think that a pre-existing condition should grant a lien on anyone's property. I think that medical care should be paid for by the state for everyone, as one of its obligations is to provide for the welfare and well-being of its citizens, and that it is perfectly justified to tax in order to do so. I think that a private insurance model is a poor way to distribute health risks.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    324. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have a compelling argument, however, you assume that the legislation at hand will actually fix the things you are mentioning. The simple fact is that it likely won't. The bill as it stands is trying to use a canon where a scalpel would be better suited. And of course, like most bills these days, there's a good couple hundred billion in the bill that has nothing to do with insurance or healthcare, but was just placed there to get the politicians to vote on it. Additionally because the bills magnitude is so large it will take years to have any real effect. Instead they should have worked on smaller parts fixing individual problems with bills that were dozens of pages in length instead of thousands. Then we could start seeing changes in months instead of years.

    325. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      Because it's a law, written in legalese, that incorporates simple regulatory changes, as I mentioned, and then makes a whole bunch more tangentially-related changes in order to pay for itself. The rest is trimming around the edges.

      If you condense it from the large font, huge-margin, triple-spaced nature into something we're more used to (like, say, a book) it ends up being about 500 pages. And much of that is references to other clauses in other laws that it supersedes.

    326. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Awesome, thank you very much! I appreciate it :-)

    327. Re:A false choice, of course... by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      Though on other side, the question all Americans should be asking themselves is: do private insurers have better resume???

      They're not the only option. Ideally, if people want government-managed healthcare it should be handled at the state level. I heard that Maryland actually has something like this implemented.

      On top of that, meaningful reforms can be made piecemeal instead of in some omnibus legislation full of as much bad as good. It shouldn't be hard to pass a bill mandating, for example, that pre-existing conditions can't be a factor in denial of insurance. There isn't a need for the federal government to step in and take over everything.

    328. Re:A false choice, of course... by bendodge · · Score: 1

      here's the deal: the health care system in this country is broken. to fix it, you can pay some extra taxes to the federal government for the rest of your life, or you can pay hefty fees to the insurance companies for the rest of your life.

      This here is what amazes me. We have the best healthcare system in the world. Nobody disputes that. That's why foreign heads of state usually get their procedures done here. Mayo Clinic, Salt Lake Children's Hospital, etc are some of the finest medical institutions in the world. What's broken is paying for healthcare, not the care itself.

      Now, assuming that we've established that point, let's move on to why paying for it is so hard. I really don't know the answers here, but from personal conversations with medical personnel, I understand that their insurance is very expensive. Medical litigation is paid for by patients at large, not some magical fund the hospitals have squirreled away.

      I also understand that unpaid medical bills create enormous overhead. St. Lukes, the largest hospital in my area, writes off sometime to the tune of $3 million a year according to http://74.125.155.132/search?q=cache:lzt_uU6lmigJ:www.saintlukeshospital.com/images/Camerons%2520columns/2007/052907New%2520Policy.doc . And that was back in 2007. I don't know what it is now. Furthermore, St. Lukes is a nonprofit, receives large donations annually, and runs fairly efficiently as hospitals go.

      Another issue is that of advanced technologies and research. As medicine advances, it appear that the cost of research goes up exponentially, but on the other hand, we can keep people "alive" almost indefinitely. My great grandmother was a wealthy woman. She got stomach cancer and decided to simply die in peace rather than spend all her money and undergo all the turmoil of cancer treatment. We had all watched her daughter die slowly, painfully and expensively with cancer and chemo, but my great-grandmother wanted to give her many children, grandchildren and greatgrandchildren an inheritance and live her last few years with her hair and without doctor hassles. I applaud her for that.

      An idea that everyone seems to tout is forcing private companies to adjust their acceptance criteria to accept people with preexisting conditions. I think this is wrong, from a principled standpoint. America was founded on principles and rose to become the most desirable country on earth (that status seems shaky now). I for one am not about to trash our foundational principles just because of some emotional politics and sob stories. Again, do older people really need to have their life extended artificially forever? If they can pay for it that's certainly their privilege, but it's not one of the rights protected or granted by our founding documents. Therefore, the government should not attempt to grant it. Remember, if the government grants anything, it can take it away just as fast.

      And last, but not least, there's the huge bureaucracy surrounding everything medical. Instead of making top-down regulations, why not try to incentivize someone like Google to build a standard system for health documentation?

      --
      The government can't save you.
    329. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Government is why these things cost so much

      You sure those multi-billion dollar profits that all parts of the healthcare industry sees every year doesn't have something to do with it?

    330. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which sidesteps the very issue why they simply didn't make it illegal for insurers to drop anyone or raise rates significantly with existing coverage that got sick. That is, after all, the point of *insurance*.

      Therefore, people who were responsible, get the care they paid for without any ploys after they get sick crap the industry played on them.

      Or why Congress simply didn't have a body that went after bad practices, like how they can shut down and regulate banks. While it may sound strange, approaching this as a health care problem instead of a sheer economics problem was a mistake.

      So while your logical is clear and correct, the description of the original problem is flawed. It wasn't that people were just being denied care, they weren't carrying coverage in the first place so they were denied care then they went to buy it. This bill simply reinforces that bad action of that pool of people, and uses it as an excuse to force *everyone* to buy insurance. It took a combination of bad industry tactics combined with the irresponsible, and rewards both--the insurance groups get the reward of the more customers, the irresponsible get paid for being irresponsible and sick.

      Worse, this also makes more people enter the system. I have problems with the GAO's numbers. While they account for the influx in supply and demand with the likely increase in patient load, they don't seem to adequately account for all demand this will place on the system, and the market play to max out profits based on those areas of demand that will be unregulated. Some people are going to get richer off of this, thus only shifting from what is now insurance to those holding key technologies and markets (hospital trust networks). This reminds me of the dumbing down of our college educational system, with degree seekers instead of learners, and the lack of differentiation, where longevity (those seeking higher degrees) is becoming the only thing that matters in job highers, not true aptitude and determination.

      btw, isn't the story Taco put up also incorrect? This isn't the end all of health insurance mandates. It somehow only covers 30million more, while there are nearly 70million uninsured. Strange how the biggest rise in HMOs coincided with the previous government involvement in the 70s due to ERISA and it's fiduciary clause, and the current costs are enormous due to Medicare, which is primarily bankrupt, being principally funded not by the funds put in by those that are being served by it now, but by the current working population's being drained into it.

      Now we're nearly all in the mix in 2014. We have a crushed labor market, outsourced to hell, and now we are dumping taxes in the form of insurance on all. For now, it's job, no insurance, good health care available out of pocket. Guess the future holds no job, insurance, mediocre health care.

      And this sort of action, will only fuel stock speculation and overselling as people seek the prospective of small profits for the sake of getting any sort of profits whatsoever. Lovely economic downfall all in the guise of health insurance reform.

    331. Re:A false choice, of course... by IICV · · Score: 1

      It's been obvious that we need healthcare reform since Clinton's presidency. It's also been obvious that Republican politicians will do almost anything to stop it (for some weird reason - don't they like their socialized health care?) for just as long. The problem with waiting and studying is that things are simply not going to get better without intervention; even if this isn't the best of all possible worlds, it is at least something, instead of the whole loads of nothing we've had for the last sixteen years. If nothing else, it's a starting point; and if we can't work out actual universal health care coverage somehow with this, it'll be a good sign that it's time to move to a first-world country.

    332. Re:A false choice, of course... by dgatwood · · Score: 0

      I'm also concerned about what will happen to what is left of this bill after the SCOTUS challenges to it with regard to the Federal Govt. mandating that individual citizens be required to buy health insurance. I really do believe this will be struck down.

      I don't, but even if it is (and it probably should be removed form the bill), if they got the tax credits right, it shouldn't matter. The reason people don't get insurance is that they can't pay for it. The parts of the bill that are important are the requirement for businesses to provide health coverage and the tax credits for people who currently can't afford it. I'm honestly not convinced that someone looking at a tax credit that covers his/her medical insurance costs is going to reject the credit and the insurance. Now if the credits are too small, then maybe. That won't be clear until the law is passed and the plans start to materialize....

      Why can't they do a simple bill, with some main points everyone can agree on...in about 10 pages of simple language everyone can understand and agree on?

      That's basically what this bill was. It's so full of compromises to get Republican support that it's watered down to the point of being almost useless, and now that the Democrats have bent to their demands, the Republicans see blood in the water and are continuing to attack it and are acting like they didn't support this exact design before. The Republicans can't be trusted, and the Democrats can only be trusted to cave in to the Republicans at every turn. Every single one of them is a disgrace to his/her office. No one is more deserving of having to beg for change on the streets....

      Unfortunately, the real problems are not in Congress's best interests to fix because its members are almost all lawyers and/or in the pockets of pharmaceutical companies and insurance companies. Some of the big problems with health care are:

      • a need for tort reform and patent reform
      • overcharging for prescription medication (need price caps)
      • fraud by insurance providers---using all sorts of dirty tricks to reject coverage for certain procedures.
      • overcharging by health care providers to make up for the money lost due to the insurance providers fraudulently rejecting legitimate charges
      • the for-profit nature of most insurance providers
      • the for-profit nature of the health care providers themselves
      • lack of sufficient oversight and insufficiently strict medical standards, both in terms of patient care and in terms of finances
      • poor nurse-to-patient ratios
      • massively overpaid executives

      Out of that list, if things are regulated correctly, this bill should help with the fraudulent behavior by insurance companies in that the approved plans won't be allowed to pull those tricks, but the reality is that they'll just come up with other dirty tricks, judging from their history, which is why a public option is so desperately needed. And I have basically zero faith in the government's ability to regulate these things. After all, they've done a bang-up job of it so far, right?

      So in the long term, it's just going to become Medicare/Medicaid all over again, only with an added profit margin for the insurance companies. It's the largest health insurance bailout in the nation's history, at taxpayer expense. Will it get more people insured? Sure. Is this the right way to do it? No. They had it right before they started bending to pressure from their corporate buddies and took out the public option and the prescription drug price caps they were talking about originally. Now, the bill is really just putting lipstick on a pig....

      If the Republicans manage to make this bill fail, the Democrats need to go back to their original plan---price caps on pharmaceuticals, a public option, etc. Then, we'd at least be able to look at the people who voted against it and know precisely which of our Congresspeople are in the back pockets of the insurance and pharmaceutical companies.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    333. Re:A false choice, of course... by toadlife · · Score: 1

      Health insurance is compulsory. Costs quite a lot: I pay around $200 per month for AOK

      Hahahaha!

      You silly Europeans with your efficient health care!

      (My employer and I pay $1200 a month and my premiums are scheduled to go up 30% next year)

      --
      I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
    334. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      I agree with everything else you said, but if you to be compensated for "pre-existing conditions" then you're looking for charity, not insurance. The purpose of insurance is to trade low-probability, high-cost risk for high-probability, low-cost premiums, and thus combat uncertainty. It's not meant to be a savings program or a handout. The efficiency of insurance is directly correlated with accurately assessing each client's risk and setting their premiums accordingly.

      People aren't looking to be compensated, they are looking for their coverage to not be dropped or denied because their health was already fucked when they signed up for insurance.

      That sounds sensible to me.

    335. Re:A false choice, of course... by infinite9 · · Score: 1

      First, it mandates that everyone buy insurance because apparently, 30 million people go without it merely because someone is not making them.

      This is like saying people don't run the heat in their house in the winter because they're free to freeze to death. If those people could afford health insurance, most would buy it.

      It's mandating that everyone have coverage so that the healthy people don't opt of out coverage until they get sick, then join. You need the premiums from healthy people to keep costs down for everyone. That's the entire idea behind insurance int he first place.

      --
      Disconnect your television. Do your own research. Draw your own conclusions. They're probably lying. Don't be a sheep.
    336. Re:A false choice, of course... by fredjh · · Score: 1, Redundant

      I fail to see the difference... you are accomplishing the same thing in a different way: you are making everyone else pay for preexisting conditions.

      I'm not saying I don't have sympathy for people; I'm not saying they shouldn't be helped; people who are supporting this system need to stop the disingenuous rhetoric that those opposed to "obamacare" want people to die in the streets with no help. It's disgusting.

      Ultimately, while I think the government can do things to make insurance more affordable for everyone, I also believe:

      1. the government should NOT be in the business of insuring people.

      2. it is unconstitutional to REQUIRE everyone buy health insurance.

      3. government regulations are part of the reason costs are so high to begin with.

      4. there is no health care "crisis" in the U.S.; our health care is second to NONE. You can cherry pick statistics all you want, but more people come TO the U.S. for life saving surgery than anywhere else for a reason, and statistics don't show the whole picture (including diversity of population, lifestyle choices, and the fact that many of the statistics are not consistently generated country to country).

      5. the middle class will bear the burden of this legislation, not the "evil, greedy" rich people.

      6. people need to stop pretending their Euro-socialist healthcare is "free." It's disingenuous AT BEST.

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    337. Re:A false choice, of course... by anarking · · Score: 1

      $900bn in subsidies, payable directly to the insurance companies based on the pricing structures they dictate. so no matter how much they whine, they're actually only whining about how much profit they're making, and they want more. this is win-win for them, lose-lose for us. mandating insurance for all people is their dream come true. mandated customers, via the government. DISGUSTING.

    338. Re:A false choice, of course... by raddan · · Score: 1

      Now, that is the right kind of question to ask. The basic premise is right: that by forcing everyone to be insured, we expand the "healthy" pool. This should allow insurers to bring health costs down. If they don't, and I'm not sure if the bill requires them to, then in a lot of ways, we are worse off. The key thing is that there are lots of people who can't afford insurance no matter how affordable you make it, so you have to give them an option; you cannot penalize them for something they have no control over. In our system, that means expanding our existing public option, Medicare. That's actually not such a bad option, given that, compared to the private industry, Medicare is actually a fairly well-run system. E.g., administrative costs are very low. It has other problems, though, like the doctor reimbursement rates being low enough for some things that doctors take a loss to see those patients. But those kind of things are easier to fix than someone not having access to a doctor in the first place.

    339. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      Your comparison is poor. Insurance is not a buffet market restaurant. It is a third party, charging its customers a flat rate for all their eating needs. Then you're requiring it, by law, to not refuse heavy eaters, binge eaters, and people who only decide to get coverage when they are hungry and forego coverage when they are not.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    340. Re:A false choice, of course... by trurl7 · · Score: 1

      Nothing is as bad for the future of America as Fox says.

      Well, except Fox itself.

    341. Re:A false choice, of course... by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Fine. Subtract physician and nurse. Still have to pay the pharmacist and pharmacy tech. My point is that while prices are inflated, it's still really expensive to deliver in a hospital.

      Also, the Joint Commission says you can't let patients keep their own meds in their room, as a "safety" issue. They can bring their own meds, but they must be kept in a locked drawer at the nurses' station and dispensed by the nurse. Now, that is a racket.

    342. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I STILL wasn't paying a tax to help support the spanish american war [wikipedia.org], I'd think this was a joke

      Couldn't you at least have read the link you submitted as proof of your argument first?


      "Although in popular belief the telephone excise tax has been in place continuously since the Spanish-American War, it has actually been repealed and reinstated several times, usually in times of war or economic crisis. ... The tax was repealed in 1902, at the end of the Spanish-American related Philippine-American War."

      Posting anonymously because it's slightly off topic.

    343. Re:A false choice, of course... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      I would think the easiest way to completely distribute risk would be to provide free health care to any and all who needed it. Zero-payer, if you will. It isn't as if we pay fee-for-service for our military's operations, for example.

      If this is genuinely a universal need, make the case for that. Bankrupting the existing system on purpose is just slimy. It will also cause a lot of pain along the way.

      Forbidding insurers to calculate risk and adapt to it is a sure way to bankrupt them.

      Again I go back to the beginning, if everyone has to pay for everyone else, and no one is responsible for their own costs, why have anyone pay at all, ever?

      Logical disconnect for the win.

      And you know what's even more expensive than medicine? Creating a system that pays for X amount of medicine, and then adds Y percent profit on top.

      Oh, you have NO idea. Did you know, for example, that billing offices try and scam insurance companies every day? There are multiple layers of double-checking required to make sure that the care end of the spectrum does not overcharge. Many insurance plans forbid back-billing their members, and the provider has to eat the fraud.

      Some (oversimplified) examples would include billing for sewing up a patient alongside billing for the entire surgery, start-to-finish. Or billing for an appendix removal, which wasn't even requested by the patient, during another procedure. This bill, by the way, will present with the full charges for both services. Nevermind that it was the same procedure, with a detour for profit. The bill will state they cut you open, did their thing, sewed you up, bandaged and the like, cut you open again, removed your appendix, sewed you up again, and more bandages. Only your insurance company stands between you and these fees. They're not doing it because they're in love with you, they do it to save themselves their cut of that cost. That's a very natural incentive.

      Single payer will have no such incentive, as it will all be government funds, which are limitless in a socialist system. Google 'Medicare fraud' for some amazing examples of the things our government eventually manages to catch. Now realize that there are many, many, many more drains on the system like this that are going uncaught, simply due to the lack of incentive to do so.

      So, with all the strict controls on the insurance side, what are we planning to do about cost? Because without control it WILL go up. 'Skyrocket' comes to mind. Your premiums may well be controlled, but your percentage is, by definition flexible. Oh, and taxes will be required as well. No one gets anything valuable for free, and any house of such cards will absolutely succumb to gravity at some point.

      When it does, watch for the messianic system to rescue us from the mess. It is coming.

    344. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason Drs order so many tests is to cover their ass. There needs to be medical malpractice reform to help bring down prices.

    345. Re:A false choice, of course... by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      +10 Awesome Funneh.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    346. Re:A false choice, of course... by trurl7 · · Score: 1

      Impassioned, not flamebait.

      Mods, get it together. Feelings will run a little high on this one. Stop being little spoiled opinion nazis.

    347. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      "Why are the self employed all but excluded from healthcare altogether?"

      Where do you get this?

      I'm on a W2 gig right now, but previously working through my own S corp, I was VERY happy with my deal.

      I set up a high deductible BCBS account, for catastrophic problems...and was then qualified to set up a HSA (Health Savings Account) where I could load it up (up to about $3K last year I believe) pre-tax. I used THAT money for my routine medical care. It isn't use it or lose it either like the FSA's they offer at W2 jobs. Why shouldn't everyone save for routine medical care just like you save aside money for house payments, retirement, etc...? I remember when Health Insurance used to be called "Hospitalization"....which was only there for catastrophic emergencies, not for every time Sally got the sniffles.

      Using insurance the wrong way, along with HMOs and all the bean counters has a LOT to do with rising health care costs...I know this because when I was paying my own way, and went to DR's or even for some medical tests (MRI, lab..etc) as soon as I told them I was paying on my own, I got at least 15% knocked right off the top of their billing rate.

      Why is that I wonder?

      One Major trouble with the health care bill they're trying to pass is...that it actually goes in and cut amounts people can load up HSA's and FSA's...this part of it sucks.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    348. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are nowhere near runaway inflation. In fact, there is a substantial risk of a very bad deflationary spiral at present. (see e.g. graph here). Deflation is bad;

      If deflation is so terrible, then how does Keynesian economics explain Panama's rapidly growing economy which has had decades of little inflation and periods of deflation (note the IMF data)? Low inflation and even deflation is not a one way ticket to the economic ash bin as our economic text books would have us believe.

      Keynes' theories create very pretty formulas and charts, but reality is not kind to it.

    349. Re:A false choice, of course... by j35ter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Socializing" - Less profit for health industry investors!
      The "American???" way: The ones who have money may live, the ones who don't die!

      Btw. Americas fear of socialism reminds me of the drowning man's fear of swimming

      --
      Delta-Mike November Bravo Tango
    350. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      The problem is that they irresponsibly provide a contrary position marketed to a segment of the American population least capable of dividing fact from fiction.

      You just described "The Daily Show" to the letter.

      It would be funny if a majority of people didn't get their news from talkshows like Letterman, Leno and even Stewart. I would think Fox News should be the least of your worries. Why are you railing on Fox News and not John Stewart? Oh, that's right. Fox News is the only network that will present the side from the right as well as the left, whereas Stewart only has conservatives on to ridicule them.

      Fox does not report the news, they manufacture a good story in the guise of news to make money off people.

      Like the CNN reporter that went to a Tea Party rally and dried to prove the Tea Partiers wrong by saying things like, "You do realize you paid more in taxes under Reagan, right?" How about the CNN report that called a picture of Obama made to look like Hitler "offensive", but called a statue of Bush with a Hitler mustache and a NAZI uniform a "look alike".

      And CNN is the more moderate of the networks. Don't even get me started on MSNBC. When was the last time you saw a conservative on Olbermann's show? I saw a liberal on O'Reilly every time I watch him and they are almost always given a fair shake.

      Hmmm.. Maybe you should actually WATCH FoxNews instead of just repeating what you heard your GreenPeace friends utter over organic, fair market, open range latte's. You might actually learn what the other side has to say. As of right now, it appears you only know half the story.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    351. Re:A false choice, of course... by pthomann · · Score: 1

      Last word first sentence not only not needed but makes the point more directly.

    352. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      " Why can't they do a simple bill, with some main points everyone can agree on...in about 10 pages of simple language everyone can understand and agree on?

      That's basically what this bill was. It's so full of compromises to get Republican support that it's watered down to the point of being almost useless, and now that the Democrats have bent to their demands, the Republicans see blood in the water and are continuing to attack it and are acting like they didn't support this exact design before. The Republicans can't be trusted, and the Democrats can only be trusted to cave in to the Republicans at every turn. Every single one of them is a disgrace to his/her office. No one is more deserving of having to beg for change on the streets...."

      Err...that Democratic bill has been roughly 2K+ pages long way back last year when they started the thing, which was way before they started "adding things the Republicans" wanted....

      You listed this as a problem not being addressed "the for-profit nature of the health care providers themselves"

      I don't understand this one..should a doctor, after years of training (and debt for that schooling) not be able to hang their shingle out and make a good bit of money on a very highly prized work skills? What about nurses and etc...I don't get why you don't want health providers to make a profit. Why else would anyone go into that profession? I like my fellow man as much as anyone, but hey I wanna make a good living while I'm on this earth!!

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    353. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      The basic premise is right: that by forcing everyone to be insured, we expand the "healthy" pool

      And what gives the federal government the authority to "force" a citizen to purchase anything? You have a strange idea bout what is "right" with this and the powers you think our government should have.

    354. Re:A false choice, of course... by raddan · · Score: 1

      Uh, so what you actually mean is that we went from almost everyone thinking it was a great idea to most? How is that "we don't want this?" Because I sure as hell want it.

      Besides, why listen to the people when it's the right thing to do? The whole reason you don't let the general population run the country is because it's a total clusterfuck when they have direct input. Look at California. The electoral system and our politicians suck, but at least the country functions with them around. Keep in mind how many people were against the minimum wage, universal suffrage, and civil rights. Those things are the right thing to do.

    355. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      I wonder how those who don't have one rate it...

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    356. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You talk like government services are horrible and private ones are great, but that's a false dichotomy. People with private insurance are seeing rates spike, while at the same time insurance companies are posting huge profits. So they're both cutting services and increasing profits at the same time. That is, pretty much, the worst possible scenario for the consumer (though the best scenario for the company, which sort of suggests a pretty fundamental conflict of interest IMNSHO). And I encourage you to ask private health insurance companies to push for the complete abolition of Medicare and have it take on Medicare patients. No one is suggesting this for a very obvious reason - the health insurance companies doesn't want high risk patients, because they aren't going to make a profit off of them! So in a truly private system, Grandma really WOULD be put out to pasture simply because health care would become prohibitively expensive for her or her family to afford, assuming the companies would even consider accepting her at any price at all. Thankfully, we have Medicare, and despite this bleak picture you paint about government, many, many seniors are very thankful for Medicare.

      Also, people complain about things like lines at government supported places like the DMV, post office, etc. although the reason for this is obvious - they're trying to keep costs down. A lot of retailers did this too as the recession hit; I've definitely had to wait in line more while many registers remain unmanned this past year. Private companies provide us with convenience, but only so long as we pay for it. This is simple math. The government would too - if we said, sure, hike my taxes a bit so that I don't have to wait in line so long, they'd be happy to oblige. I encourage you to suggest we have private companies run the DMV and post office. I assure you prices will go up. And as for companies being so great, how many people do you know who are really raving about the service they get from their cell phone provider, or how low their cable bill is, or how great that tech support guy in India was?

      Plus, if we didn't have this government health care and services, Walmart prices would go up too, because then it'd have to start providing more of its employees with health care benefits and paying them actual living wages. :)

      Don't get me wrong, I'm no ideologue, I know there are many places where government could be more efficient and that there are employees with cushy government jobs who do only the bare minimum of work required. And yes, some government rules can be just plain silly / crazy. But because I'm not an ideologue, I know this whole "companies do things good, government does things bad" line of reasoning is hardly the most robust argument in the world. It's more a convenient fiction that ignores any non-supporting arguments to the contrary, and basically gives no credit whatsoever to all the hard working people who make sure we get our mail every day, or that we have roads to drive on, or makes sure our seniors get the health care they need, etc. The reason this argument has any traction at all, in fact, is that so many of us take all those services that Just Work for granted. We don't think about the fact that it costs money to provide them, and what things would be like if we stopped receiving them and suddenly need to look to private companies to provide us with those services instead.

      To the OP and anyone else not sure what to think about all this health care stuff, I would say this. Do not listen to the various heated, in the sense of hot air, rhetoric out there. Seek out the facts. Look at what health insurance costs other countries (almost all of which are government-run, BTW), and check statistics like their life expectancy, child birth mortality rate and such. Actively seek out the unfiltered opinions of people IN those countries, to get a true picture of how people there feel about their health care. Once you find and digest that information, you won't need a bunch of

    357. Re:A false choice, of course... by pthomann · · Score: 1

      We have nothing to fear but Fox itself.

      So true. Because any voice contrary to what we already believe should be feared and silenced!

      Sarcasm noted and agreed with. However there should be reasonable argument whose points don't have to include conspiracy theories.

    358. Re:A false choice, of course... by trurl7 · · Score: 1

      Hm...let me see if I can fix that... let's see if this works for, say, education...

      We have scarce education resources, so we should only educate smart people. Stupid people, and people with disabilities shouldn't be education - that'd be like charity. If you want to educate them, we need a separate bill.

      I think that works. FIFY.
      </sarcasm>

    359. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Say you live in Maryland, and want to buy Insurance A from New Jersey. Say Maryland has a law stating insurance companies have to cover a specific condition, but they DON'T have that law in New Jersey. You will have bought insurance that isn't guaranteed to cover you the way it should because the laws are different in the two states...this is why companies have different "arms" in every state, because every state has vastly different laws. This is a very simplistic example, but they only get worse from there.

      The only way interstate shopping of insurance would happen would be for the federal government to require all states to have the same insurance requirements...and we surely don't want the federal government trampling on states rights, now do we?"

      You know...I've always been pissed at how the Feds have bastardized and used the interstate commerce powers they have. However, this is probably the ONE application of them that I think is actually in the spirit of said enumerated power they do have.

      Yes, I think the feds could trump the states regulations if they indeed hamper the sales of health insurance across state lines. It would actually apply in this RARE case.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    360. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Because any voice contrary to what we already believe should be feared and silenced!

      I agree completely, and I hope you will support my position that medical care is a work of the devil since it's god that made us sick, go intends for us to be sick. This makes health care imminently affordable, since we need no treatment because doing so would defy god's will. Furthermore, I'm sure you will agree with my ideas on the geocentric, flat, young earth theory. /satire

      The point of the above is that accepting contrary voices just because they're contrary doesn't put you in any better position to identify the truth than "fearing and silencing" contrary opinions. The fact is that Fox is not a useful resource, they're crowd baiting and playing on irrational fears to make a profit.

      So, if I disagree with you, my point is "satire"? Are you saying that those that oppose health care don't have valid points worth hearing? Even take it beyond health care, are you saying that anyone with an opinion different than yours or the Democratic party so ridiculous that they must be stricken from the record and banned repeating?

      Also, since we are on health care, can you show me where controlling health care is a power spelled out in the Constitution? If you can't find it, shouldn't that be a power that is reserved to the states of the people" according to the Tenth Amendment?

      Or do you feel that The Constitution and/or The Bill of Rights is "...the work of the devil..."? (yes, more /satire)

      Let me help you out here:

      Amendment X

      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.

      Health Care is NOT delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states. Why is it not reserved to the states respectively, or to the people?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    361. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then create a state-managed health care system, like exists in most civilised countries, and spare the poor insurance companies that terrible burden. I weep every time I see an insurance company being thieved.

      How does requiring an additional 30 million people to buy insurance constitute the insurance companies getting 'theived'? how would creating 50 new sets of insurance regulation save more money then doing it once? I know my state government wastes just as much as the federal one...

    362. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call bullshit on the idea 'that government has a terrible track record'. It is far (far) from perfect, but 'terrible' needs to be in context. Terrible compared to what? The private sector? Are you kidding? I think the track record of the private sector, viewed realistically, could hardly score better than the govt. How many companies fail? A large percentage. Some things, like vital services and infrastructure, just can't be allowed to fail, and being managed 'sub-optimally' is still better than booms and busts. How many examples of incompetence or outright abuse have we seen in non-government? Enron, Halli-Burton, the financial sector... Jesus I mean, I could list so many examples that comparing it to a handful of questionably run government programs and agencies seems silly. Sure there are shining examples of efficiency and innovation in the private sector, and this is what everyone unfairly compares the ho-hum average govt. program and agency too, believing that things would be better if all these services were handed over to the private sector. From the 'track record' of private industry let me tell you what would actually happen: massive fail.

    363. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, it's because Fox is saying something we disagree with that we want them to shut the hell up. It can't possibly be because they knowingly and willingly claim lies as facts and then try and hide behind the 1st amendment as a way to avoid responsibility for their actions. Nope, it's definitely because they do not share our beliefs.

      Moron.

    364. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "sales across sate lines is a ploy to tunr the health insurence industry into what the credit card industry has become."

      I don't believe that.

      I mean..what is the difference with Geico selling me motorcycle/car insurance across state lines vs them selling me health insurance across state lines??

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    365. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cost of Medicare doubled every four years from its inception. The cost of the current health care bill is estimated at right around $900 billion for 10 years. Benefits don't even kick in for four years so most will likely look at this in 2-3 years and say we are sticking to the cost model, "look how right we were." Once the benefits kick in there will likely be a spike in the overall costs because $900 billion is an estimate just like $5 billion was an estimate for the first ten years of medicare (actual was on the order of $12 billion). That is the story of the government's track record. This is an effort to get anything done regardless of quality or cost.

    366. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      In both of your examples you have shown how capitalism and representative governments must work together to ensure a best-case outcome. I don't disagree with you that we need the government, I'm just saying that the "dollar vote" moves many of the mundane choices into the hands of the individuals who are best able to make the decision for themselves.

    367. Re:A false choice, of course... by doug · · Score: 1

      I basically agree with you, but look at it a bit differently: The Feds can only do anything well if expense is not a limit. Who won the cold war? Who went to the moon? The Guv'ment can do this stuff, but only at incredible cost. Since health care is a large fraction of GDP, they have to do it on the cheap in a way that the military never has to do. And therein lies the problem: The US Federal government cannot tie its own shoes when it is having to manage costs.

      - doug

      PS: Full disclosure: I'm one of the non-left American public that you mention, and I trust that if passed, this plan will be a fiasco. I've lived in Europe, and I've seen many of the pluses of Socialised Medicine, and am sure that we can't do it here.

    368. Re:A false choice, of course... by supercrisp · · Score: 1

      Stewart himself points out over and over again that TDS is comedy. Fox News bills itself as, well, news. Then again, why am I saying anything who says O'Reilly gives liberals a fair shake?

    369. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should take a break from hunting caribou in Alaska while driving your 800 horsepower Hummer over baby seals and actually watch "The Daily Show". The interesting thing about what Stewart does is that he hangs these hypocrites with their own words. His specialty is interposing video clips of the random right-wing nutjob du jour making a statement and then contradicting it in a later/earlier clip. Kind of hard to claim he's manufacturing things when he does that.

      Fox has no problem adding a combination of spin and bullshit to everything they "report". And the sad thing is, Stewart's show (which he has said repeatedly is supposed to be comedy) provides a more in-depth view of anything he covers than Faux News would ever dare.

      P.S. When you hear something and think "Wow - that can't be true!", it's usually the case that 1) it's not and 2) you heard it on Fox.

    370. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "No, it sounds like higher taxes. Socialized Medicine would happen if the government was running the healthcare industry, which it isn't. The government runs a few healthcare PROGRAMS, but it is no where even close to running the whole INDUSTRY."

      Well, this is only a first step in the direction of socialized medicine. They wanted a stronger step, with the "Public Option", but that wouldn't fly, so they backed off a bit.

      Look into some of the people behind the scenes of those in power, those that influenced them and even older quotes from those in the administration. They have been put on record saying they want to move to single payer and socialized medicine..but they know it has to come a little at a time.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    371. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Understandable, but then you get into the problem of who gets to decide what every state does or doesn't need? Who gets to choose which model to follow? Different parts of the country have different requirements, depending on environment, local culture/cuisine, local economy, etc. Trying to do that would work as well as trying to put together a universal educational standard accross all 50 states...'cause that has worked out so well for us.

    372. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No problem... We can implement Romania's healthcare system...

      http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/09/world/europe/09bribery.html?_r=1&pagewanted=2

    373. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Your comparison is poor. Insurance is not a buffet market restaurant. It is a third party, charging its customers a flat rate for all their eating needs. Then you're requiring it, by law, to not refuse heavy eaters, binge eaters, and people who only decide to get coverage when they are hungry and forego coverage when they are not.

      Strange. My cell phone provider has found a way to keep me from getting a cell phone only when I need to make a call. It's a shame that the massive legal teams at these insurance companies can't find a way to do the same.

      Oh, and buffet restaurants are not legally allowed to discriminate.

      But even if you drop the restaurant analogy, you can't touch "I guess you are wrong when you assumed that the board members of insurance companies would rather loose millions in investments and make thousands of their employees unemployed than simplify their books by charging a flat rate."

      You would have been better off showing that those that have cheaper rates, like the young and healthy, would probably get higher rates because they would need to be charged the same as the 64-yr-old smoking diabetic who has to wheel around an O2 tank behind their Hoverounds.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    374. Re:A false choice, of course... by DesertBlade · · Score: 2, Informative

      That 15% you got knocked off is still 20-30% higher then what the Insurance companies pay. Still think you got a deal?

      --
      Half of writing history is hiding the truth.
    375. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Though on other side, the question all Americans should be asking themselves is: do private insurers have better resume???

      Yes, they do. Are they perfect? No. Are there improvements that can be made? Yes. However, out of the 2,000 pages of this disastrous bill, only two small things in it are actually improvements from the current system (being able to stay on your parents insurance until you're 26 for college / grad students / graduates looking for a job, and eliminating being denied due to a pre-existing condition). There are many insurance companies and if yours severely displeases you, you can always find another insurance company. However, you can't find another government if government run health care lets you down.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    376. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I weep every time I see an insurance company being thieved.

      Me too. It's like watching one of the economic masterminds of the financial collapse get a parking ticket.

      It feels good for a second, and then the realization hits me, all over again, that their decapitated heads still are not impaled on stakes as a warning to others.

      And a single tear rolls down my cheek.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    377. Re:A false choice, of course... by trurl7 · · Score: 1

      Not a troll! Come on!

    378. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Medicare operates with a 14% administrative overhead above costs. The average administrative costs for insurance companies is 24%. Medicare is more efficient. That's why Republicans hate the idea of expanding Medicare as a public option... it'll put their insurance cronies out of business.

      There's a lot the government does right and well. The part of the govenment that doesn't work well is Congress. For example, the new Health Care bill does NOTHING to reduce the spiraling costs of healthcare. It temporarily reduces the cost of coverage by forcing the cost of coverage on the 30% of people under 30 years of age who CHOOSE not to buy insurance. Since they have little potential to consume as much health care as they are paying for, their excess premiums will be used to force insurance companies to provide coverage for pre-existing considtions.

      There will be several results from this bill. None of them good.

      First, because small employers who can't afford coverage for their employees will be forced to provide it, there will be a huge number of terminations and the employment market will dry up. Just what we need at a time the economy is struggling.

      Second, the medical establishment (doctors groups and hospitals) will jack up their rates like never before to take advantage of the newly deeper pockets (thanks to forced payments) available at the insurance companies.

      The housing market will see a further retrenchment as more people who are middle class find themselves unable to pay their mortgage because Congress has decided for them that health insurance is more important than owning a home.

      All in all, the negative consequences of this bill will have a serious detrimental impact on the U.S. economy and may ultimately drive the U.S. into a full blown Great Depression for the next 20 years.

      But its okay, you might not have money for food, but you'll have insurance to pay the doctor who tells you you're suffering from malnutrition.

    379. Re:A false choice, of course... by loshwomp · · Score: 2, Informative

      One Major trouble with the health care bill they're trying to pass is...that it actually goes in and cut amounts people can load up HSA's and FSA's...this part of it sucks.

      HSAs and FSAs are a poor substitute for what should simply be tax-deductible expenses in the first place. FSAs are needlessly complicated, and screw you by design if you spend more or less than anticipated, which is not surprising, because the rules were written by the very organizations that benefit when you lose.

      Let's nuke HSAs and FSAs and make their eligible expenses tax deductible. There would be no downside whatsoever, except for the employers and account service providers -- overhead we don't need.

    380. Re:A false choice, of course... by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      Somebody should have told Obama this...

      Doesn't matter. They haven't got the votes anyway. Obama'll get his bipartisanship when the bill goes down: Progressives and conservatives will be happy!

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    381. Re:A false choice, of course... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      If I have no dollars I have no vote, and in this economy there are LOTS of people who have no dollars, and even more who don't have enogh dollars. They have no vote at all. That's not democracy; again, it's plutocracy.

    382. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      I think you miss-understand me. I'm not advocating a system of only voting with one's money. I agree that we must go into the polling place an make choices about policy (how can deciding between McD's and BK make any difference in influencing the current war?) I'm saying, in the marketplace when we vote with our dollars we are causing real change. Day-to-day decisions are based on our desires and abilities. Yes we could want more and be jealous of others who have more, but we still purchase what is right for us at that time. When the market is manipulated then choice is removed and our dollar vote is void.

    383. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, this is only a first step in the direction of socialized medicine. They wanted a stronger step, with the "Public Option", but that wouldn't fly, so they backed off a bit.

      Look into some of the people behind the scenes of those in power, those that influenced them and even older quotes from those in the administration. They have been put on record saying they want to move to single payer and socialized medicine..but they know it has to come a little at a time.

      You honestly believe that arguably the largest industry in the country (aside from the oil industry) would allow the United States government to take it over in its entirety and run everything from development to market to treatment?

      Let me guess...you've got a bridge to sell me as well.

    384. Re:A false choice, of course... by pthomann · · Score: 1

      Anyone who has coded rapid development will tell you that:

      Perfection is unattainable and the very good only happens in an iterative manner. So look at this as a start, and I'd much rather have a start to work off of than the status quo.

      Don't know why Republicans have not pushed for these policies:

      1> Any insurance company can sell insurance in any state UNLESS that state finds that they have acted in an illegal manner. This to be established by the state.

      2> Taking away the trust protections in place that are only held by them and major league baseball. Remember Teddie Roosevelt.

    385. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "I actually support requiring coverage for pre-existing conditions, when combined with a significant fine for anybody that doesn't buy minimal insurance coverage (with socialized plans available for the poor). By forcing universal coverage you eliminate the issue of pre-existing conditions entirely. Also, universal coverage means that people don't have a financial incentive to neglect preventative care."

      Trouble is...the Federal Government does NOT have the power to mandate that every individual buy minimal insurance. Right now, there are states atty' among a host of lawyers ready and waiting in the wings the second this is passed, to challenge this. SCOTUS will very likely strike down this provision. Hell, this actually may prove to be a major challenge of the strength of the 10th amendment which has been trampled over for decades. States? Sure, they can force you to buy, but the Feds really don't have that power enumerated to them by the Constitution, I think it would take a constitutional amendment for them to be able to do this..hell, remember...it took one for the Feds to be able to tax your income?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    386. Re:A false choice, of course... by Byzboy · · Score: 1

      I have read many posts over the years and this is the best!!

    387. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on the IRS, the Armed Forces, the FDA, FDIC are all counterexamples to your premise.

      It doesn't refute your conclusion, which I'm inclined to agree with, but your premise sucks.

    388. Re:A false choice, of course... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Nothing is as bad for the future of America as Fox says.

      Heh. And we might also add the reminder that slashdot is an international forum. For the other 95% of the world's population, it would be useful for the summary to mention that this is about American Health Care Reform. Most of the rest of the "developed" world considers it a non-story, because their health care was long ago made more "user friendly" than the bizarre Americans system. (And the parts of the world not called "developed" generally have little hope of having any sort of meaningful health-care system any time soon for anyone but the wealthy few. ;-)

      I've often thought that the /. classification system really should include hints as to what parts of the world a story applies to. There are a lot of stories like this one that are very important to a part of the world, but insignificant to most of the rest. It would be useful if we could filter on such things.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    389. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      Couple of things :-) 1. We are a republic not a democracy. Mob-rule would suck IMHO 2. I'm not advocating replacing the government with anarchy and capitalism, I'm saying they must work together. Letting one overwhelm the other would be bad, very bad. Government should be constrained with checks and balances, and capitalism should be constrained by competition.

    390. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      First, it mandates that everyone buy insurance because apparently, 30 million people go without it merely because someone is not making them. Second, it promises that rates will go down, despite the fact that when governments have mandated insurance before (such as states requiring auto insurance), it only goes UP. Third, the only consumer "protection" in the bill entails the government telling providers what they can change and insurance companies what they have to pay for. Since this will inevitably result in both groups taking losses, they will simply close up shop. This will result in a new health care crisis, at which time the government will swoop in like a false messiah to "fix" the totally unexpected void in health insurance by creating the single payer system, which Obama said was the objective way back in 2007 before he said it wasn't.

      All great points. You also forgot to include that it's unconstitutional for the federal government to force everyone to buy health insurance as well as the fact that the majority of US citizens do not want this to pass. If it was a good bill then over the last year, it would've eventually won the popular support - however this bill started out with a small majority (51%-60% or so) of support and the more people find out, the fewer people support it.

      Also, Idaho recently passed a bill saying that the state will sue the federal government if this law passes (because it's unconstitutional) and 37 other states have similar bills pending. If they all pass, that's 76% of the states banding together to fight it - and apparently Obama and the Democrats in Congress who are so desperate to force this through are forgetting that 76% of states banding together is more than enough to force through a change to the Constitution, meaning that the states could force through an amendment specifically banning the government from getting involved in health care beyond setting levels for safety regulations for providers.

      Even if this bill passes, the fight still isn't over. The American people have voiced their desires loud and clear, even many who voted for Obama are opposed to this bill. Obama, Pelosi, and Reid however are blatantly ignoring the will of the people (the ones who supposedly are controlling the government) and it looks like they're about to start the biggest internal conflict we've had since the Civil War.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    391. Re:A false choice, of course... by Cornwallis · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but you're delusional if you tjhink the economy is going to recover. There was no surplus in the 1990s. Clinton, like the Presidents before and after him (from both sides of the aisle) simply stole the FICA tax receipts, replacing them with non-marketable bonds.

      http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_social_security_ious

    392. Re:A false choice, of course... by zerocool^ · · Score: 1
      --
      sig?
    393. Re:A false choice, of course... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      The first problem is "How can we provide health insurance to people that isn't the same as just paying out of pocket?" Answer: universal coverage by forcing everyone to pay a share. The second problem is: "How do we control cost of that system?" Answer: by making people participate in the cost of the treatment and biasing the participation towards prevention.

      You're addressing the second point. The gp was addressing the first point.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    394. Re:A false choice, of course... by raddan · · Score: 1

      That's also well established. For example, you "purchase" the services of the police, you "purchase" the use of the roads, and you "purchase" the protection of our armed services. It's called "taxation".

      Now, the obvious solution here is to make "health care" a service provided-for by taxes. But people seem to blow a fuse when you say it that way, so instead, you force everybody to "purchase" insurance, and we hope that private insurers shape up. See how much better the public option is?

    395. Re:A false choice, of course... by compro01 · · Score: 1

      You listed this as a problem not being addressed "the for-profit nature of the health care providers themselves"

      I don't understand this one..should a doctor, after years of training (and debt for that schooling) not be able to hang their shingle out and make a good bit of money on a very highly prized work skills? What about nurses and etc...I don't get why you don't want health providers to make a profit. Why else would anyone go into that profession? I like my fellow man as much as anyone, but hey I wanna make a good living while I'm on this earth!!

      We seem to have a disagreement over the definition of "provider". You're stating that the providers are the doctors and nurses. His definition of provider is the company the doctors and nurses are employed by, the company running the hospital/clinic/etc.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    396. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Stewart himself points out over and over again that TDS is comedy.

      True, but for the majority of the audience, it is their primary "news" source.

      Fox News bills itself as, well, news. Then again, why am I saying anything who says O'Reilly gives liberals a fair shake?

      First, Bill O'Reilly is a commentator, not a news anchor. If you want to call Bill O'Reilly or any of the other FNC commentators "news", then shouldn't you do the same for Keith Olbermann, Rachel Maddow and Chris Matthews (who got a tingle up his leg from hearing Obama speak)? Why are not you not here screaming about how unfair MSNBC is?

      Next, I have never, EVER seen a conservative on Olbermann's show. I see several on O'Reilly every night. HERE is a video of a liberal on O'Reilly that, strangely enough, is not shouted down. (That must not be a real video, since you believe that it never happens). Can you find an Olbermann video of a conservative? No? I guess you have to admit that FNC is more "Fair and Balanced" than MSNBC.

      Oh, and HERE is a story about Bill O'Reilly "blasting" Laura Ingraham. Laura is a conservative and O'Reilly was defending Michelle Obama. Have you ever seen Matthews, Olbermann, or Maddow (a feminist) stand up for Laura Bush over the objections of one more liberal than they are?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    397. Re:A false choice, of course... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Otherwise, having used the healthcare in England, I had really hoped that a single payer system could have been gotten through

      I feel sorry for your ill health, and sincerely hope you find an insurance company to take you, and that the "no customer can be denied" provision passes.

      But I am NOT under any obligation to heal (or pay for) your doctor bills. Or your internet. Or your car. Or your house. Or any other product you want. Your diabetes condition, if you were truly honest, is likely the result of being overweight. It is not my fault.

      Therefore it is not my task (or your neighbors' task) to take on the financial burdens for your poor lifestyle choices.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    398. Re:A false choice, of course... by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Government is why these things cost so much. And yet we are about to add MORE government into the system?

      Your point of view makes complete sense to me. Also, I have never heard of other countries in the world besides the United States. Are there any? No? Then since there are no other countries, we'll just have to guess whether involving government in healthcare can work.

      Sorry, sarcasm is sometimes the best remedy. There are other countries in the world, and that makes the world a giant healthcare laboratory. I've lived in a country with actual socialized medicine and it works great. Then again, the silly notion that my sarcasm was about (government controlling healthcare!) doesn't apply here: the reconciliation bill doesn't create a new healthcare system. It does make changes to Medicare and increases doctor payments for Medicaid to bring them in line with Medicare, but I wouldn't call that "more government." The hospitals will still be owned by the organizations that own them now, the insurance companies will still be insurance companies. This is the most right-wing healthcare reform I've ever seen in a modern industrialized nation. And guess which side of the political spectrum is complaining more?

    399. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      Strange. My cell phone provider has found a way to keep me from getting a cell phone only when I need to make a call. It's a shame that the massive legal teams at these insurance companies can't find a way to do the same.

      They have such a way. It's by refusing coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

      Oh, and buffet restaurants are not legally allowed to discriminate.

      They most certainly can discriminate. They will kick out heavy eaters. They will kick out people who spend too much time at the location. Furthermore the restaurant itself sets the menu. Nobody can purchase a buffet entrance fee and then kobe beef.

      But even if you drop the restaurant analogy, you can't touch "I guess you are wrong when you assumed that the board members of insurance companies would rather loose millions in investments and make thousands of their employees unemployed than simplify their books by charging a flat rate."

      Being unable to "deny coverage or treatment based on a preexisting condition" is the way to lose millions in investments. Such a legal requirement without requiring the healthy to be insured - which your short two line proposal does not include - will bankrupt the insurance companies very very fast. Except that the companies would leave the market even quicker.

      You would have been better off showing that those that have cheaper rates, like the young and healthy, would probably get higher rates because they would need to be charged the same as the 64-yr-old smoking diabetic who has to wheel around an O2 tank behind their Hoverounds.

      That doesn't matter, as the healthy will not get coverage.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    400. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      What is the rush? I mean, if this is going to affect roughly 1/6th of our economy, let's study and get it right.

      Exactly. I have a rule to never purchase a 'deal' if the seller says I need to decide today. This bill is being rushed to an insane degree; obviously, they feel that the longer it is debated, the more familiar the public becomes with it, and the more legislators feel the opinion of the public, the less chance the bill has of being passed.

      I can understand different opinions about the bill, and whether it would be good or bad; but I can't understand anybody who would say that the legislative process it is following is reasonable, or even ethical. If a bill is complicated, controversial, and greatly impactful, more debate is the proper response. Not rushing and parliamentary tricks.

    401. Re:A false choice, of course... by zzsmirkzz · · Score: 1

      So to reduce costs, you force consumers to pay out of pocket for lots of services, and relegate insurance back to just catastrophic coverage, like it used to be.

      I completely agree. Insurance is supposed to cover an expensive risk of loss, that could happen. Not for things like routine medical care that will happen. Merging the two concepts was a bad idea and flies in the face of the very concept of insurance.

      Secondly, the only reason doctor's, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies can charge the prices they do is because everyone pools their money in an insurance company. The insurance company is the only one who can actually afford these things. And it's not because they actually need/do cost that much, but because they can charge that much. If it went back to everyone having to pay out of their own pocket, the medical industry would be forced to cut prices, reduce profit-margins, to come back to reality on both what they are worth and what people can afford. People forget the price of an item isn't necessarily linked to its intrinsic cost/value it is also linked to what people are willing to pay for it.

    402. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1
      While I don't have the free processor cycles at the moment to go through every point you've raised, the one thing that sticks out at me as off-track is this:

      It wasn't that people were just being denied care, they weren't carrying coverage in the first place so they were denied care then they went to buy it. This bill simply reinforces that bad action of that pool of people, and uses it as an excuse to force *everyone* to buy insurance. It took a combination of bad industry tactics combined with the irresponsible, and rewards both--the insurance groups get the reward of the more customers, the irresponsible get paid for being irresponsible and sick.

      If you read my reply to a post below this one on the same thread, I linked an article about an insurance company (Assurant, formerly Fortis) revoking policies on anyone who had HIV. They made $150 million off of this arrangement. By disallowing this practice in the future, we are certainly not rewarding them--we're forcing them to change their business model from "let's cover the fewest sick people we can and leave them for our competitors" to "let's provide the best coverage at the least cost so people want to buy from us instead of our competitors". This also explains why they're funneling money to the Chamber of Commerce to undermine reform at the same time they're publicly declaring that they're open to it.

      Basically, the assertion you're hiding in here is that people who are uninsured are uninsured by choice. And at the same time, you're asking why half of them still don't get coverage, even after subsidy. My answer is that the remainder are people who still fall through the cracks--as people who can afford it will be required to be covered under this legislation, those remaining uninsured likely fall under the "financial hardship" exemption.

      In short, I don't buy said assertion: I don't believe that most uninsured are uninsured by irresponsibility. Given the pre-existing condition clauses and rescission policies, anyone who gets sick and is dropped (either because of rescission or because they've lost their job) can no longer be covered anywhere. While there are the young twentysomethings who think they're bulletproof, those aren't the ones likely to get sick. And now they'll be in the risk pool and drive down costs for everyone else.

    403. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "So people with pre-existing conditions simply can't have the luxury of health care? Ignorance at its best."

      So, you're saying it is ok for the government to force me to be my brother's keeper against my will? I should HAVE to support others' health concerns?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    404. Re:A false choice, of course... by JD-1027 · · Score: 1

      We don't want this.

      We don't want what?

      Do these people being polled actually understand exactly what will happen if this bill passes? I know I don't, and I'd suspect I'm more objective than most who are probably getting most of their opinions from screaming media.

      Has anyone on Slashdot done more detailed research into the plan? It sure hasn't come out in any comments on any of the health reform articles (or the articles themselves, most of the time).

      If I haven't taken the time to research the specifics of the plan, I guarantee most people I know have not (local family, friends).

      I agree this comment is anecdotal/generalizing, but it seems like common sense.

    405. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So anyway, now it covers the routine stuff, but often not the catastrophic stuff. They'll deny you coverage! WTF!

      The real fun is when you have a preexisting condition and hence can't get covered for routine stuff, either.

      I had a congenital heart defect, meaning I needed open heart surgery the first day of my life. I had it. It solved the problem, but, as early open heart surgery can often do, it damaged my heart's natural pacemaker, so now I have an artificial one. (Aka, what everyone calls a 'pacemaker', they actually mean 'artificial pacemaker'. Everyone has a 'pacemaker'.)

      Fair enough. It's about $15000 in expenses every eight years or so, and, frankly, I can cover that out of my pocket. I'm not a moron, I know the batteries die, I know roughly the costs, I can save up.

      But now I can't get insurance for anything else. Forget heart conditions, they won't even bother to attempt to cover me for anything. I call them up, inform them I have a pacemaker, and they politely inform me they will not cover me.

      Private insurance is stupid. They simply don't want to actually provide useful insurance. No, everyone needs to pay into a government catastrophic care fund, and whoever needs it can use it. And we should, of course, continue to help subside the care of the poor.

      Likewise, we should probably subside a little preventative maintenance, also. A free checkup a year or something will reduce problems down the road.

      I'm really having a hard time figure out why we shouldn't provide all care, free, like NHS over in England.

      I can vaguely see the argument that costs will be reduced if some people pay for some of their care, but frankly, costs can be just as reduced if the government pays hospitals and doctors set amounts for specific procedures, obviously resulting in them reducing their costs to increase profit.

      But the entire manner we're going about solving this problem is backwards, solving it with 'insurance'. Sadly, we're so fucked up that solving it backwards is also helping solve it, like a car stuck in the mud. If nothing else, it will cut into insurance company profits, thus making it harder for them to fuck with the next reform.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    406. Re:A false choice, of course... by DesertBlade · · Score: 1

      I have a similar plan, and my company subsidizes nearly $1000 a month for me and my family. Over the course of a year the total paid for my Health Insurance is $18,000. Consider the poverty line in the US for a family of 4 is around $25,000 and average family income around $50,000, health care can constitute a majority share of people's expenses.

      --
      Half of writing history is hiding the truth.
    407. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the end of quality healthcare in the last place on earth that still has quality health care and the permanent destruction of our entire economy is a definite step in the right direction.

      Of course, it's not perfect. We might be able to find a way to cause widespread famine too... that would make the race to the bottom even faster!

    408. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mostly I agree with your rant and what you are saying... but...

      When you scratch someones lexus and the bill is more than you put in over the years (why stop at just one?) I am not at all paying for that. I don't have your auto insurance and nobody can force me to get it. I don't even have to have a car and I happen to live somewhere that makes living without a car not a problem. Maybe if I get in accidents all the time and am really paying less over time than the bills I create from accidents someone else is helping out, but that someone else is most certainly someone else paying for insurance from that same insurer. Taxes don't pay for auto insurance claims. Not sure why you think they do, they don't. Don't worry though, insurance companies have figured out how much they need to charge to both pay for the accidents AND make a buttload of money.

    409. Re:A false choice, of course... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Provision of health care is an important function of a modern state.

      Only if you think it's okay to steal money from your neighbors to make them pay for your Doctors' bills (or internet bills, or hybrid car purchase, or whatever). I personally think that's wrong. If you want to buy something then *earn the money yourself*. Don't steal it from your neighbors.

      And I don't mind the concept of a safety net, but only as a last resort. - We already have that safety net - any poor person can walk into any Corporate ER and get free care. Everybody else should pay their own bills with their own money.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    410. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 0

      >>if this is going to affect roughly 1/6th of our economy, let's study and get it right.

      But it's a step in the right direction (while not perfect or even ideal)

      Would you care to give some reasoning as to how it's a step in the right direction?

      And by fix it, I personally mean remove more profit motive - remove profits - from the health care industry itself. There is no room for consideration of profit over health care decisions

      Then kiss all of those new medicines goodbye. Kiss the innovations in things like pacemakers goodbye. If you cut out any profit from just the costs of treating, then there's no money to innovate and improve treatments. If you cap doctors pay at a low amount, you'll see fewer doctors. I know several doctors and med school is one of the worst (and most expensive) things you can imagine. They tough it out though because they know they'll be well rewarded later - if you start eliminating the incentives for people to become doctors, you start cutting down on the number of doctors because they'll say "I can go into another field and make just as much money, while having a less stressful job and less money in student loans".

      Yes, it's a nice sound bite to say "There is no room for consideration of profit over health care decisions", but when you take reality into account, it's actually a bad idea because it harms the very people you're claiming to want to help.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    411. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Insurance against a pre-existing condition is an oxymoron. It's not possible. You want charity. Which is fine, but don't get it confused with insurance.

    412. Re:A false choice, of course... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2, Informative

      We are a republic not a democracy.

      Oh god please, not this crap again. I don't know why they teach you the definitions of the word "democracy" and "republic" that's over 200 years old in schools (or do they?).

      In modern English, a "democracy" is a form of government when all people are involved in the decision making process. When the involvement is direct, we call that a "direct democracy". When representatives are elected to make decisions, it is a "representative democracy". Neither case implies "mob rule" (though neither one precludes it; indeed, there have been many cases of what is effectively mob rule in U.S. history as well).

      "Republic", historically, just means that the country is not a monarchy. To some extent, it also implies some degree of popular rule, though it needs not be a true democracy (e.g. San Marino was a republic in all meanings of the word since its inception, but it is a democracy for much shorter than that).

      U.S. is indeed a republic, and it's also a representative democracy - thus, a democratic republic (federal constitutional democratic republic, to be even more precise). There is no contradiction here.

      I'm not advocating replacing the government with anarchy and capitalism, I'm saying they must work together. Letting one overwhelm the other would be bad, very bad. Government should be constrained with checks and balances, and capitalism should be constrained by competition.

      I agree with that in principle, but, judging by your previous comment in this thread, your perception of the desired balance between the two is rather different.

      By the way, when you say that "capitalism should be constrained by the competition", do you imply that government has the obligation to step in and ensure competitive market, even if that means direct intervention?

    413. Re:A false choice, of course... by guspasho · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > Why can't they do a simple bill, with some main points everyone can agree on...in about 10 pages of simple language everyone can understand and agree on? Start from there and build on it?

      You only think there is something everyone agrees on, but there isn't. Any kind of reform will necessarily step on the toes of the players making money off of it, insurance, pharmaceuticals, and providers. And they have all been involved in trying to water things down. Someone below suggested that everyone agrees on drug reimportation, not the pharmaceutical companies. Removing the insurance companies' anti-trust exemption out to be a no-brainer, but you know the insurance companies will oppose it. Something like 75%+ of the country thinks we ought to have a public option, if not a single payer, but the insurance companies won't allow it.

      And after all that, the GOP has radically different ideas for health care reform than the rest of us. Fundamentally, they don't agree with the very concept of insurance. Collectivized risk? Socialism! They have Godwined the debate a countless number of times over very mundane suggestions. When the Democrats talk about collectivizing risk, they want to individualize it. When the Democrats talk about reducing premiums, they talk about raising them. When the Democrats talk about making health care cheaper, they say it should be more expensive. Their very ideas for reform are the complete antithesis of what the Democrats are trying to do. And even so, if the Democrats were to completely capitulate and implement an idea they loved, right now they are pursuing a scorched earth political strategy of obstructing everything they can, just so they can run on how the Democrats can't get anything done.

    414. Re:A false choice, of course... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree more - but the same argument applies to almost any action the federal government might take on healthcare.

      Hopefully any court that strikes down the insurance mandate will be smart enough to strike down the ban on not covering pre-existing conditions, or pretty soon none of us will have insurance... :)

    415. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      Except for the part where they're now forced to cover the sick and spend that money on healthcare rather than profits. We're telling them they can't drop people and they have to cover everyone, even when they get sick. This will cut into their profit margins, not help them (see the article I linked about Assurant making $150 million based on dropping everyone with HIV). While it may increase their absolute profits, as a percentage of revenues it will go down.

      As I posted below, this forces a change in their business model, to actually *competing* for their customers, and actually working to deliver services more efficiently and with higher quality, instead of just making their risk pool better by weeding out the stragglers.

      I agree that there could/should be more oversight in the cost structure, but as it is that authority is granted to the Secretary of HHS, in conjunction with the states, in the reconciliation bill.

    416. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Not if you require everyone - healthy or otherwise - to carry insurance. By creating a giant pool of healthy and unhealthy people, it increases the total revenue of the insurers tremendously, more than enough to offset the potential losses related to covering people with preexisting conditions. "

      Trouble is...the Federal Govt doesn't have the constitutional power to force all the citizens to by insurance. There are state atty's and loads of other lined up and ready to challenge this all the way to SCOTUS.

      I mean, hell, it took a constitutional amendment to allow the Feds to tax income...surely it requires one to require one to purchase something, no?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    417. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I set up a high deductible BCBS account, for catastrophic problems...and was then qualified to set up a HSA (Health Savings Account) where I could load it up (up to about $3K last year I believe) pre-tax. I used THAT money for my routine medical care. It isn't use it or lose it either like the FSA's they offer at W2 jobs. Why shouldn't everyone save for routine medical care just like you save aside money for house payments, retirement, etc...?

      Being in Canada, that's a foreign concept to me. I pay $54/month and that covers everything from going to the doctor to one time when I spent three days in hospital following an accident which required surgery. Walking in, presenting my government-issued health care card, and walking out days later I never had to sign one piece of paper and didn't pay a dime.

      Yes, it's a tax-funded system and totally socialist... but I can't fathom it being any other way. Hearing stories from the US of people being involved in accidents who didn't have enough money/coverage and being asked by their doctors "You don't have enough money to save both arms. Which one would you like to keep?" is barbaric.

    418. Re:A false choice, of course... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>simple democracy. It sucks, but I haven't seen any form of large-scale government that doesn't suck more.

      A Republic (rule of law) that protects you from tyranny of the majority to rape your wallet (or steal stuff from your home/land, or imprison you, or dictate what you can or can not say)..... is superior to a Democracy.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    419. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      No, what I want is for my MRI to be covered even if I already had back problems before I signed up for insurance. It isn't charity. I pay for a service, and I expect to get it.

      For the obligatory car analogy, just because I got rear ended doesn't mean I should be denied car insurance when I try to change car insurance companies.

    420. Re:A false choice, of course... by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      How about we dive in with a bill that fucks everyone over?

    421. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Politics? They knew the Republicans wouldn't vote for it, but threw in some concessions anyway, to make it seem like the Republicans were being unreasonable? That would also give them some room to blame them later when the consequences of the bill are felt. The Democrats can claim the bill didn't go far enough because of those evil Republicans.

      Certain zealots would eat up those talking points and regurgitate them all over the net.

    422. Re:A false choice, of course... by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 2, Insightful

      People aren't looking to be compensated, they are looking for their coverage to not be dropped or denied because their health was already fucked when they signed up for insurance.

      And the difference is...?

      If you mean that insurance against other medical risks should not be dropped or denied due to some unrelated pre-existing condition, I completely agree. Insurance should pay to treat your broken bone regardless of your chronic immune disorder, for example, provided you didn't commit fraud by deceiving them about it.

      However, if you have a known disorder which makes your bones weak and thus leads you have suffer from broken bones at an above-average rate, then you should expect to be asked about this when signing up for insurance, and should also expect either higher premiums or more limited coverage (or both) due to your heightened risk. If you chose to lie about the disorder the insurer would be perfectly justified in dropping your entire account upon learning the truth.

      Regarding complete unknowns—conditions which you had before signing up, but didn't know about—that is a matter to be specified in the contract between you and the insurer. It would be unreasonable to terminate your coverage for other conditions when you didn't deliberately defraud them, but on the other hand there is nothing inherently reasonable about automatically covering treatment for conditions which existed before you signed up, known or otherwise.

      Finally, once a risk has been realized the original insurer should be the one to cover the cost, possibly contingent on your continued co-pays or whatever the original terms were, even if you switch to another insurer. In no case should the new insurer be expected to pay for a condition which is no longer a matter of unrealized risk. This would naturally eliminate the most common justification for coverage of pre-existing conditions, which is a change in insurers (mostly due to poor policies encouraging employer-funded insurance).

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    423. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Really? Do you worry more about whether the profit margins of some corporations are huge or even huger, rather than about the economic well-being and health of individuals (who surely did not ask for nor deserve having a permanent health condition)? Of course, big, wealthy[-er] corporations are what makes a country great. Sure."

      From what I've read lately, insurance companies are making about 2%-3% profit in recent years. That doesn't strike me a an outrageous percentage of profit?!?!

      And for those individuals you mention, it is sad and it sucks to be them, but why should "I" be forced to take care of them? I like to help and take care of my family and friends, why should they not depend on the same?

      If Joe Sixpack over there spent his life eating crap and McDonald's, smoking 3 packs a day and washing it all down with a quart of vodka...why the hell should I be expected to pay for his dumb asses medical tx.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    424. Re:A false choice, of course... by raddan · · Score: 1

      You're missing the part about how a privately-run system must continue to turn a profit in order to stay in business. You know, the stuff that's left over after costs have been accounted for. By contrast, a government-run single-payer system has no profit requirement. That's money that can be better spent, say, by paying your staff better, or, hey, by not taking it in the first place!

    425. Re:A false choice, of course... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>The problem is that medical insurance has become an essential, and I don't mean by law, so to treat it like any other business is foolish.

      I disagree. I don't have medical insurance and I seem to be making out okay. "It's an essential" is a lie that is repeated-and-repeated, but doesn't have an ounce of truth to it. (Along with other lies like highspeed internet is essential, or a cellphone is essential.)

      And if I get sick & the bills cost too much? Then I die. So what?

      We ALL die eventually, even in places that have "free" taxpayer-supported healthcare. Even in places where the healthcare is limitless, death still happens. The end is always the same.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    426. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Like you said, there are a few worthwhile things in the bill. However, the American people would be much better off if they passed those things as individual laws (parents being allowed to have children on their insurance until they're 26, insurance companies can't revoke your insurance retroactively) instead of trying to force through this monstrosity of a bill.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    427. Re:A false choice, of course... by Convector · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure chickens can't catch rabies.

    428. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason we CAN'T do single-payer right NOW is unemployment. The Government is not going to hire all the people from every Insurance company. So it would drive up unemployment a little, and that would be bad right now.
      What we need to do is move the companies profit margin down from 10-15% to 2-3% (piss off people who own stock, Hint: a lot of retirement plans have stock in Health insurance companies), or make the cost of health lower (cut research, cut number of test you are allowed to get, cut the cost of being a doctor, put off treatment (aka: Doing a Kaiser ), force people to go to the doctor more (some people would not even go if it was free till they get sick or dieing) but not to often (people going because it is free) )

      So, every thing you do will hurt more then "the Rich". No mater what you do you will be hurting the working class and middle class.

      Oh, and for the people singing of how great Medicare is. My grandmother goes to a doctor who cost for treating her is higher then what Medicare sets the price at. He needs non-Medicare to cover the cost of the Medicare people. That is why so many people "cheat" medicare.

    429. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh.. if it only costs $2780/year in penalities for that family of four making $88,000 an insurance companies are allowed to charge up to $8360/year then the smart choice becomes to just forget it and pay the penalty!

    430. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      The way we work around this is the unpopular part. We put a mandate on everybody that says "alright, since they can't kick you out anymore, you can't game the system: everyone has to be insured"

      It's not just unpopular, it's unconstitutional as well.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    431. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 0
      While I agree in untying it from employers,

      It's irrational the way the system now is mostly controlled by employer-based insurance, with no reasonable way for individuals to shop for insurance on their own, or to be able to buy it at reasonable costs when then change jobs.

      is just plain false. There are already easy ways to get insurance at reasonable costs, such as going to www.ehealthinsurance.com - that's where I went when I ended up between jobs and needing insurance. It's a myth that insurance is extremely expensive / impossible to get on your own.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    432. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Yes, and a system of governance which is based upon "general welfare" (you know, the one from U.S. Constitution [wikipedia.org]) is social democracy "

      Trouble is, the welfare spoken of by the framers of the Constitution is not the welfare type of system YOU are speaking about. It is more about the ability of the feds to tax for the management of the resources and defense for the country as an entity, not handing out entitlements to invidual citizens. And if this is wanted, it is supposed to be a responsibility of the states, not the federal govt. Remember the 10th amendment?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    433. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      That's also well established. For example, you "purchase" the services of the police, you "purchase" the use of the roads, and you "purchase" the protection of our armed services. It's called "taxation".

      No it's not well established. You are making that up. Those are "services" provided by my city, county and state through state and local taxes. As far as armed forces go, that *IS* within the authority of the federal government.

      So, I ask again -- hoping that you actually read and comprehend what I type this time:

      And what gives the federal government the authority to "force" a citizen to purchase anything?

    434. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You could consider single-payer to be socialized insurance, but not socialized healthcare.

      Well, yes, but by that logic food stamps are 'socialized food insurance'.

      I mean, you're absolutely right in that it's not 'socialized medicine', no matter what anyone says.

      I'm just saying, we don't really consider the government giving people money to pay for things to be socialized anything. 'Here's your socialized TV, paid for by your tax refund.'

      Likewise, the term is wrong in another direction. Even something like the NHS, where the government owns the hospitals, isn't actually 'socialized medicine'. Socialism is where the government owns and operates the means of production.

      Aka, it's socialism if the government produces goods and sells them.

      Well, probably, it has to be a rather large segment of the market. The government producing postcards and selling them in the capital building is probably not socialism per se, or at least not worth talking about.

      But a government providing services, OTOH, is something that governments have been doing for ages. That is the point of a government, to provide services. It does nothing else.

      Every. Single. Thing. every government, in the entirety of history, has done, is 'pay people to provide services to citizens'. (Often stupid services, often not to all citizens, but whatever.) Socialism is a qualitative change, not a quantitative one. It is a different role of the government, not how much of an existing role the government plays.

      The government producing goods, and selling them, is 'socialism'. That's it.

      The government producing services, and giving them away for free, is 'the government'. It's not 'socialism'. it might be 'outside the bounds of what we want this government to do', it might even be outside the bounds of what the government is allowed to do, but it ain't socialism.

      (Now, astute people will note I said 'goods' and 'selling', was one thing, and 'services' and 'free' was another, and didn't mention the other two combination. 'goods' and 'free' is communism, and 'services' and 'selling' is just a specific form of use tax.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    435. Re:A false choice, of course... by ScottyB · · Score: 2, Interesting

      FYI, the reconciliation package removes all these "sweetheart deals." Filibuster reform will help prevent more of such deals, but considering the fact that most red states (I'm looking at you, Mississippi) get more back from the Federal government than taxes they pay in thanks to such earmarks and deals, I'd say neither party can take the high ground on that issue (the so-called sausage making of legislation).

    436. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      We have nothing to fear but Fox itself.

      So true. Because any voice contrary to what we already believe should be feared and silenced!

      Sarcasm noted and agreed with.
      However there should be reasonable argument whose points don't have to include conspiracy theories.

      I wish I could agree. Read the comment after yours:

      Right, it's because Fox is saying something we disagree with that we want them to shut the hell up. It can't possibly be because they knowingly and willingly claim lies as facts and then try and hide behind the 1st amendment as a way to avoid responsibility for their actions. Nope, it's definitely because they do not share our beliefs.

      Moron.

      Here, the poster claims that FNC is not news. So how far of a stretch is it to say that they don't deserve Bill of Rights protection guaranteeing free press? And since what they are saying are all "lies", they should not get free speech protection either since they can't claim parody since they claim to be a News organization.

      Stretch? Google "fairness doctrine" and imagine how it could apply to Fox News or anyone else who reports something that the party in power disagrees with or simply doesn't want reported. The White House already tried to ban them from WH press events.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    437. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not a U.S. resident but as I understand it the proposed legislation would not create a government run program (at least not government run in the sense of medicare/medicaid). It is a combination of an individual mandate (everyone has to buy insurance), subsidies to people who would have difficulty affording insurance, and rules which make it easier for individuals to buy insurance/restrict certain insurance company practices (e.g. prohibit insurance companies from discriminating against people with pre-existing conditions). It is reasonable to be skeptical about the government's ability to competently administer these three interconnected initiatives but (I think) it is wrong to imply that the government would actually be running a new insurance program.

    438. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only way interstate shopping of insurance would happen would be for the federal government to require all states to have the same insurance requirements...and we surely don't want the federal government trampling on states rights, now do we?

      Mandates need to be eliminated. That will drastically cut costs dramatically.

      --
      "It ain't a war against drugs.it's a war against personal freedom" --Bill Hicks

    439. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Bull. I know many people who are low income and have had diabetes for decades and the cost has never been an issue. You're also ignoring the fact that the US already has government insurance programs for: kids, the poor, and the elderly.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    440. Re:A false choice, of course... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Obviously those in favor of this health insurance reform bill don't think it is morally wrong and, thus, we obviously don't think it is theft.
      >>>

      Taking someone else's money, at gunpoint, is theft. It doesn't matter if you do it yourself, hire the gangster Mr. Soprano, or the government..... it's still depriving a person of their money & the fruit of their labor.

      You are takiing from that person, not for that person's benefit, but for your own benefit to pay your doctors' bills (or buy FCC-installed 100 Mbit internet, or a new hybrid, or whatever). It's old-fashioned theft of another man's property.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    441. Re:A false choice, of course... by yup2000 · · Score: 1

      No they don't have a better resume, but you can switch from one bad insurance company to another. You still have that choice (some might call it a freedom).

      With the government as your provider, you're stuck if you don't like how things are working. You can't just switch to another provider. Allowing many providers and promoting competition is democracy at work. People switch to the ones that are best meeting their needs. You might have to pick between several providers that are not perfect fits for what you need, but at least you have that freedom. This is the whole idea of democracy.

    442. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "You're implying that car insurance is analogous to health insurance. Where I live, there's mandatory car insurance and mandatory health insurance. So that looks like a decent analogy in favor of that part of this bill. And it's almost a car analogy, too. :)"

      Ah, but the difference there is that this is mandated on a state level. They do have the authority to mandate such coverge,the Feds on the other hand...have NO power granted to them by the Constitution to mandate what an individual citizen purchases. That's where this is gonna get knocked off, in court.

      It should be on a state level, where most power is supposed to reside. Not all states mandate car insurance,nor health insurance. That's the nice thing about states rights...if you don't like the rules (and expenses) in one state, you are free to move to one that is more in line with you type of thinking.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    443. Re:A false choice, of course... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I won't argue that such things are much better handled on state level (otherwise, what's the point of having a federation in the first place?). That said, U.S. as a true confederation has been dismantled a long time ago, with states being denied the right to secede (a crucial element in any free association), the Commerce clause giving Feds overarching powers, etc. At this point, the balance is already shifted so far that this law won't really change it in any noticeable way, so it's a bit too late for you Americans to worry about that.

    444. Re:A false choice, of course... by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

      Not flamebait? Re-read the first 4 words.

    445. Re:A false choice, of course... by kwiqsilver · · Score: 1

      Forcing an insurance company to pay for a pre-existing condition is simple theft

      Right -- that's why the government, and not private industry, should do it.

      So are you admitting that the government is nothing but a bunch of thieves?

      Provision of health care [sic] is an important function of a modern state.

      Interesting theory...and exactly why is healthcare any of the government's business? Governments exist (supposedly) to protect the basic rights: life, liberty, and property. If government goes beyond this and starts making up new rights to protect (e.g. a right to education or healthcare), then it has to violate those basic rights (e.g. taxation and inflation).

      Whenever someone makes the bold suggestion that the government should run healthcare, because it's too important to leave to private industry I ask some simple questions:

      What's the most efficient industry (private or public) you can think of? Which one has had the fastest advancements while having reductions in prices? Most people answer something about computers or cell phones. Nobody answers transit systems, the post office, power production or other "essential" services. When you understand that profit drives innovation, this becomes obvious.

      If essential services need to be controlled by the government, because they can't be trusted to the private sector, why are we not trusting them with the most important industry of all: food production and distribution? I don't know about you, but I visit a doctor, at most, once a year, and I could go a lot longer than that. I need food on a regular basis, or I'll die. (I know there are many people who need medical care as regularly as food, but for the vast majority of us, food is far more important). Just think, we could have government controlled food just like the Soviets did. Breadline anyone? When you understand the complexity of centralization, this begins to make sense. Centralized decision making is a horribly complex nightmare. Centralized planners have a harder task than predicting the weather next week (but without the warehouse full of computers to do the modeling), which is why their predictions are so vague, yet they're still wrong more often than next week's weather prediction. Distributed decision making only makes decisions specific to what's at hand, and then that decision combines with others. This is far more adaptable, and in a non-constant world, ends up being superior.

      Now to the topic at hand: the bill in question is not healthcare reform. Like any other bill with strong support, it's a collection of kickbacks for special interest groups, with some handouts to the common people thrown in to make it look tempting. Follow the money, and it becomes clear. Who's paying for all the ads saying that republicans are shills for the insurance industry? Why, the drug industry (incidentally, Obama took more bribe money...I mean campaign contributions...from the drug industry than any other political candidate in US History). Billy Tauzin, head of the pharmaceutical lobby was a key contributor to the bill. Coincidence? Or corporatist whores?

      The reform needed in this country for medical care is to get rid of these corporatist special interest laws:

      • Get rid of the restriction on interstate insurance. The feds made it illegal for you to buy insurance from another state, because that would increase competition and drop the insurance cartel's profits.
      • Get rid of the tax break for employment based insurance. Your insurance is tied to your job, because it saves your employer money. Drop that and implement a 100% tax credit system for medical payments, like Dr. Ron Paul has introduced, and we'd be able to save money, while having better insurance coverage, that wasn't dependent on employm
    446. Re:A false choice, of course... by trurl7 · · Score: 1

      Since when is an insult flamebait?

      Alternatively: are you really that delicately thin-skinned?

      Alternatively: Read beyond the first 4 words.

    447. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The argument is essentially: hey, we're going broke trying to provide healthcare and doing it radically worse with fewer covered than any other developed nation Vs. you're a socialist tyrant who wants to destroy our way of live, kill our elderly relatives and force all of our women to have abortions! That's not an argument, it's a reasoned position vs. a rabid chicken.

      Wow, distorting things from bias much?

      Try "this sounds like a great idea on paper (even though the countries that do it are suffering massive problems due to costs), but we're sure we can make it work" vs. "it's unconstitutional, it violates peoples rights, and it's going to put costs off the chart when our country is already massively in debt".

      I love how you start out complaining about people not having a real debate and then end by slandering anyone who disagrees with you by calling them "a rabid chicken".

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    448. Re:A false choice, of course... by guspasho · · Score: 1

      Because not everyone agrees on them.

      #1) I don't want this reform. It means insurance companies will all flock to the state with the lowest standards, just as has happened with the credit companies. (They're all in Delaware.) And I don't trust Congress to implement this so it doesn't end up screwing me and further enriching the insurance companies.

      #2) No pre-existing conditions: Insurance companies oppose this. It hurts their bottom line if they can't reject potentially expensive customers. The only reason they haven't been more vehement about it is because Congress and Obama used the public option as a bargaining chip to get this (unless it's also been traded away too.)

      #3) Actually, I can't think of a reason any party would be particularly opposed to this. But I've never seen it be a part of the discussion, it always gets eclipsed by other things.

      #4) Cheaper drugs: Pharma already opposes this now. That's why it isn't being considered.

    449. Re:A false choice, of course... by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not particularly interested in hearing what people believe, I'm rather more interested in cold, hard facts and forming my own opinion. Neither Fox or CNN are sufficient for this purpose.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    450. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One excellent way to cut costs is to vastly increase supply while decreasing demand. What the US needs is a vast increase in medical schools in order to increase the number of physicians in the field and ramp up the creation of a truly national health care system. By that you would not only increase supply, which would drive costs down by competition, but also keep both the poorest people covered and drive the market prices yet lower due to cheap competition.

      But in order to achieve that the US citizens must elect politicians who enjoy having a brain and aren't sold out to the health care industry.

    451. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Socialism is simply regulation. Regulating an industry is controlling an industry. The only question is HOW regulated an industry, which is equivalent to HOW socialized an industry? It's not all or nothing, and there is almost no business that is completely free, or completely socialized. The early stages of internet e-commerce is an example of something nearer the free, unregulated, unsocialized end; banking is an example of something on the heavily regulated, socialized extreme.

    452. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the government controls the healthcare industry, they don't actually have to own all of the firms.

      Just the fact that they control where the money comes from, they control where the money goes, and they can with the flick of a pen destroy any individual firm that goes against what they want is sufficient.

      Make no bones about it, the government having complete control over every aspect of healthcare, from who does the paying to who gets the treatment to what treatments are allowed and what denied, and which firms can insure and which can provide the actual health care is socialized medicine.

      The government will be controlling every aspect of this segment of the economy. And, just like with everything else that they control, they'll be doing it to the detriment of those who produce the wealth of our society for the benefit of those who simply drain away resources contributing little or nothing.

      The result is obvious: even fewer people will bother contributing.

      After all, why work all day and be broken by the feds when you can simply do whatever you like and receive in free benefits more than you could possibly earn by working all day?

      I make a decent living, but if you take my income, and subtract out the taxes, fees, and other penalties that I have to pay to the government as punishment for being a productive citizen, and take the result, and then you add up all of the benefits, bonuses, special programs, assistance, and other good stuff that I could get from the government by being a proper, good little waste of space, and put these two numbers together, you would see that, financially, the benefit that I get from working amounts to nothing.

      Now we're talking about taking another few thousand dollars from me, and giving another few thousand in benefits to the person who doesn't work, and pretty soon I'll find that I can't afford to work, because the only way to have enough money to get by would be to be poor so that I could get all of the benefits instead of paying all of the penalties.

    453. Re:A false choice, of course... by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      Of course when you, the self insured pay your bill yourself, you are paying an inflated price, inflated by the stupid inefficiency around you. You are paying the same rate as anyone else which has those who don't pay, the constant fight with insurance companies who try not to pay, etc. Maybe you're a multi millionaire and your doctor knows it. Do you want that full body scan? Insurance companies know better than to cover that shit, but do you? Maybe you've heard of the stupidity of a full body scan. I'm sure your doctor can think of fifty scams like that to suggest to you that you DON'T know better than do.

      --
      ...
    454. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      That doesn't matter, as the healthy will not get coverage.

      I'm healthy and I have coverage. My whole family is healthy and I have the all covered.

      Being unable to "deny coverage or treatment based on a preexisting condition" is the way to lose millions in investments. Such a legal requirement without requiring the healthy to be insured - which your short two line proposal does not include - will bankrupt the insurance companies very very fast. Except that the companies would leave the market even quicker.

      Again, the healthy have coverage today. Over 90% of the population is covered. Are over 90% of the population not healthy?

      People don't pay for insurance because they are not healthy. That's not the point of insurance, by definition. People get insured in case something happens that makes them NOT healthy in the future. So your claim that healthy people won't get coverage falls flat. Sure, some won't. These are most of the less than 10% of the population that is not covered today.

      Adding the "everyone must get coverage" clause without flat rate pricing will cause insurance companies to gouge those in high risk categories, much like auto insurance companies do today. The elderly, the over weight, women of "birthing age", or those with family histories of diabetes, cancer or mental illness could be charged more, MUCH more, and they would be REQUIRED BY LAW to purchase it at any price or face the wrath of the IRS.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    455. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "What does the average American pay for health insurance per month? For comparison, I think I pay about £50 per month, for which I get free health care no matter what the circumstances; and I earn a pretty hefty salary, so I don't think it is bad."

      I pay about $80/month out of my paycheck. I'm quite happy with my coverage and medical care.

      I think it sucks that I'm gonna likely end up with less coverage and pay more if this thing passes.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    456. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      It's fun and pleasing to think that everybody that agrees with you is smart and handsome, and everybody that disagrees with you is foolish and unworthy, isn't it?

      It allows you to avoid all that irritating critical thinking and possibility of self-doubt.

    457. Re:A false choice, of course... by King+Louie · · Score: 1

      One other important point to consider about CBO estimates is that the CBO can only base its estimates on the information the Congress gives it.

      One example in this bill is the contention that Congress will cut Medicaid reimbursements to doctors by 20% per year. This cut has been on the books for a long time and Congress has waived it EVERY TIME. Does anyone really believe Congress will suddenly stop waiving those cuts? But still, CBO must include those cuts in its scoring because that is what Congress told CBO to include.

      As with any process, garbage in == garbage out.

    458. Re:A false choice, of course... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      It was never sold as a scheme to transfer wealth from one segment of the population to another.

      And the Social Security card I was issued in 1968 says "not to be used for identification."

      The original retirement age of 65 was set when the life expectancy of the average working man was something like 62. It wasn't expected that most people would collect Social Security

      Yet my grandmother, who was born in 1903, collected it from the time my grandfather was disabled until she died in 2003. Life expectancy isn't the age most people die; that would be the median death age. Life expectancy is a mean, or average, not median. When SS was started a whole lot more children died from polio, influenza, childbirth, and other diseases; these kids who were averaged in to the life expectancy never paid a dime of SS tax in their lives.

      People were expected to finance their own retirement or work until they dropped.

      That was before SS, and SS was supposed to change this.

      Under that original rationale, there is no reason to repeal the cap on taxes.

      Under the original rationale there is no reason to let you use your SSN as identification.

    459. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      ...which completely ignores the value of having insurance.

    460. Re:A false choice, of course... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>"general welfare" (you know, the one from U.S. Constitution)

      GENERAL is the key word. An army is something everyone benefits from because everyone's home is protected. Ditto a navy. What you are endorsing is SPECIFIC welfare that only benefits the sick, not the general populace. --- Healthy people don't get anything out of it. For example my grandmother was never sick until age 68, and then she had a heart attack and died. She paid paid 10s of thousands of dollars into Medicare and Social Security, and gained nothing from it. That's not general welfare (benefits for all) but specific welfare that only benefits a few.

      If you still have doubts just ask the AUTHOR of that document.
      He knows better than anyone what he meant when he wrote it:

      "With respect to the words general welfare, I have always regarded them as qualified by the detail of powers connected with them. To take them in a literal and unlimited sense would be a metamorphosis of the Constitution into a character, which there is a host of proofs was not contemplated by its creators." - James Madison

      AND: "If Congress can do whatever in their discretion can be done by money, and will promote the General Welfare, the Government is no longer a limited one,possessing enumerated powers, but an indefinite one." [A government without limits is a tyranny, or on the edge of tyranny.]

      AND: "The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite." --James Madison, Federalist No. 45

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    461. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Understandable, but then you get into the problem of who gets to decide what every state does or doesn't need? Who gets to choose which model to follow? Different parts of the country have different requirements, depending on environment, local culture/cuisine, local economy, etc. "

      That's easy...the states themselves get to decide. The state is more responsive to the needs of its people and therefore the people of the state should decide for themselves what they need and want.

      It isn't the business of the federal govt. If the feds took less money from us and got smaller again, the states would have more money to do what they needed/wanted.

      Frankly, I see a major showdown in SCOTUS over the 10th amendment if this thing passes, and I think that is long overdue.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    462. Re:A false choice, of course... by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      Single payer would cost more than medicare/medicaid. Higher taxes. However, it would save the economy of the united states money. That is the amount being paid to insurance companies together with the amount paid by individuals for their own healthcare, together with the amount currently being spent on medicare/medicaid far exceeds what would need to be spent on a single payer health care system. The economy is drained just the same whether it is taxes or spending on healthcare.

      BECAUSE the economy sucks, the US can't afford NOT to have a single payer health care system. What we have now is like a leach sucking an already anemic economy dry.

      --
      ...
    463. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bastardchyld · · Score: 1

      The reason people don't get insurance is that they can't pay for it.

      I could not disagree with you more. The vast majority of these people who "can't pay for insurance" still manage to pay for an iPod or a Cell Phone or a form of reliable transportation (read: new car in most cases 2). The issue is a simple lack of responsibility, most people do not write a budget for the money they spend. Because of that they run out of money before they run out of month (obviously our governments at all levels are doing this - which simply shows how ingrained in our society that this practice is). This is the core of the problem.
      The most offensive thing about this entire argument is that American's have NO IDEA what poverty is (myself included). In America we have "a social safety net" part of which is government provided and part of which is privately provided. The fact is that if you get hit by a bus someone will stitch you up. If you are hungry you can go to a food bank/soup kitchen or enroll in WIC or food stamps or if you have kids we will buy your kids breakfast and lunch at school.
      America does not have a healthcare problem. We do have a health-funding problem. But it is mostly on an individual basis and this cannot be solved at a governmental level.

      --
      $diff terrorists hippies
      $
      $rm -rf *terrorists *hippies
    464. Re:A false choice, of course... by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      We took the public hospital option and spent money on a doula instead -- now that was money well spent.

    465. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      you are making everyone else pay for preexisting conditions.

      No... you're making everyone all together pay for conditions. There's no such thing as "pre-existing" because everyone is always covered.

      To reply to your points:
      1. Insuring people -- reducing risk through collective action and providing economies of scale for things that are not profitable to do on an individual basis -- these are the fundamental functions of all government. Government can no more get out of this business than fish could get out of the swimming business.

      2. Depends on your reading of the Constitution. It's apparently constitutional to mandate auto insurance...

      3. Not really, no.

      4. American health care is great for the rich. It's okay for the middle class, unless you get unlucky. It sucks for the poor. I agree that people who can afford to travel internationally to pay for incredibly expensive treatment out of pocket get wonderful care here, but I'm not sure what that's supposed to prove. (And note that Farah Fawcett, for instance, chose to seek treatment abroad, despite being a rich American. I don't know the precise details, but it's not absolute, is all I'm saying.)
      The real *crisis* is that the American health care spends far more money than the rest of the developed world for mostly equivalent results. That cannot continue. This bill doesn't really address that, and that's something else I'm dissatisfied with it for.

      5. Agreed, and that's why I think this legislation sucks.

      6. It isn't free, it's just paid for with taxes. They pay less than we do for, on average, better care.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    466. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      I'm not particularly interested in hearing what people believe, I'm rather more interested in cold, hard facts and forming my own opinion. Neither Fox or CNN are sufficient for this purpose.

      Omitting bias from a news report is impossible. There is no such things as "just the facts", even in plain text. Consider the following:

      Pelosi wants to raise taxes on anyone who pays taxes

      vs.

      Pelosi wants to eliminate Bush's tax cuts

      Both are facts. Both have a bias.

      The only hope is to get both stories and make up your own mind. No network gives 100% fair coverage. Fox will have two conservatives and a liberal to debate a topic. CNN will have three liberals and one pseudo conservative to debate a given topic. MSNBC will have three liberals and a picture of a conservative's head on a SS uniformed mannequin to discuss a given topic.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    467. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      I think we agree -- markets are a wonderful system to do a specific thing. They're a pretty good way of finding prices and allocating (some kinds of) resources, when they're properly managed. I just think it's a little broad to say that capitalism is by definition democratic, when really it sort of is and it sort of isn't, depending on the circumstance.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    468. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      I'm healthy and I have coverage. My whole family is healthy and I have the all covered.

      That's because, right now, if you become ill without coverage you cannot get coverage. Once again, refer to your two line proposal.

      Again, the healthy have coverage today. Over 90% of the population is covered. Are over 90% of the population not healthy?

      Seriously, do you disassociate yourself so much from the topic at hand that you started that you are so unable to continue with subject context? You created a proposal that changes the system such that people cannot be denied coverage for pre-existing conditions. Thus, why would people without immediate need bother with insurance? If they get ill, -then- they can get insurance. Until then, they won't need it.

      People don't pay for insurance because they are not healthy. That's not the point of insurance, by definition.

      The point of insurance, be it health, automotive, or real estate, is to pay somebody else to assume the risk that bad things will happen to the insured item. When you force, through regulatory laws, the insurance company to pay for events that occurred prior to the start of insurance then there is no reason for the insured to bother getting insurance until they need it. It thus ceases to be insurance, and any attempt at insurance will financially fail.

      This is like telling home insurance carriers that they cannot refuse to cover termite damage for a house that had termites at the time of initial coverage.

      Adding the "everyone must get coverage" clause without flat rate pricing will cause insurance companies to gouge those in high risk categories, much like auto insurance companies do today.

      Such pricing makes sense. Once again, insurance is paying somebody to assume the risk that bad things will happen. When bad things are more likely to happen, you cost more to insure.

      It's become obvious why you chose the buffet restaurant comparison. Such a comparison is still not appropriate, as its not how insurance works.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    469. Re:A false choice, of course... by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1

      Are you familiar with the term Cognitive Dissonance? I am very interested in what you have to say, that's why I am continuing this conversation.

      I would encourage you to try to accept that I am not trying to play gotcha here. I am not trying to win anything. I ask questions because I am trying to explain to you why your arguments aren't convincing to me. In the hope that you will be able to make your point of view clearer to me.

      I fail to see your point. Most Americans believe grass is green.

      You make the argument that the American public is happy with their health insurance. So why change it?

      I make the point that the American public is not always the best judge of what's going on. And so a poll that says they're happy with their health-care doesn't mean much when we're talking about the system collapsing in the near future.

      To further expand on that. I'd say that public opinion is what economists would call a lagging indicator. So it wont be until after collapse of health insurance in this country that public opinion turns from "Gee, my health care is alright." to "Holy CRAP! WHY DIDN'T SOMEONE DO SOMETHING TO AVERT THIS CRISIS!"

      Which I would think my examples of the economy in 2007 and the Iraq War would help elucidate.

      The idea behind health reform is to avoid the crisis by addressing the major systemic problems before they lead to a collapse.

      Now, let's get to this other thing. You read my post and thought, "He's saying I am contradicting myself". But that's not what I am saying. I tried to clarify before, but that didn't work.

      My point is not that your concerns aren't valid. It's that you present a collection of grievances as though they were a cohesive argument.

      I've been in the health-care industry for over 20 years now. It needs reform. Fix the broken parts of it. Don't tear it down and rebuild it. I can tell you virtually all my peers (not all) feel the same. My job has me working with many doctors and nurses -- and virtually all feel the same.

      so here you make an interesting statement that would have been a good place to start a conversation. with a little elaboration you might make a cohesive argument.

      That elaboration should proceed from this statement:

      It needs reform. Fix the broken parts of it

      And you should elaborate on:
      - what are the broken parts?
      - how will fixing them resolve the never-ending spiral of higher medical costs?

      But please do not use Tort Reform as the lynch-pin of your arguments. Knowing what I know, I cannot accept Tort reform as a solution.

      The Congressional Budget Office is now estimating that limits on medical malpractice lawsuits -- reforms favored by many Republicans -- could save the government as much as $54 billion over the next 10 years.

      The government spends about $2.5 trillion on health care every year.

      You could further elaborate to answer these questions:
      -What do your fixes do to reduce government over-spending on health care?
      -What do your fixes do to help small businesses who can no longer afford to provide health-care to their employees?
      -What do your fixes do for individuals who do not get insurance through their employer? And those who have pre-existing conditions?
      -What do your fixes do for the 30 million uninsured (and many times more under-insured) citizens of this country whose numbers are likely to increase as insurance premiums rise?
      -And finally, why is it only now, when major health reform appears possible that these minor changes are being championed? Couldn't these small changes have been implemented any time in the last 20 years? Why weren't they?

      I would suggest reading "Constitutional Journal"

      You work in the medical profession, please do not presume to have a better understanding of

      --
      It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    470. Re:A false choice, of course... by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      Seems like a pretty roundabout way of doing things. Why not just get the single payer system now rather than be the Democrat blamed for making things worse, so that the Republicans can swoop in and save us from socialized insurance?

      That is why Obama was second choice for me after Hillary.

      --
      ...
    471. Re:A false choice, of course... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      This is just a difference of opinion about the scope of government. You could just as easily make the same claim about the fire department, or the protection of the laws. Hey, you could even mandate that a person who wants to bring a lawsuit must pay all of the expenses -- not just legal fees, but the salaries of the judge, the upkeep of the court buildings, etc -- it would be simpler I suppose... but it's stealing money from your neighbors, who most likely won't have to sue anyone ever, in order to get justice for yourself. That's pretty wrong too.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    472. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      They can't be insured against it. It's logically impossible.

      Perhaps some form of program or welfare should be created to pay for their treatment. That could be debated. But SOMEBODY would still have to pay for the luxury of that person's health care. The only question is who; whether it should be the individual, or whether the costs should be distributed across a wider group.

    473. Re:A false choice, of course... by WeirdJohn · · Score: 1

      The problem with your argument is that in other countries it hasn't happened like your doomsayers predict. Here, as long as you can survive that long, after 12 months a medical insurer cannot knock you back for treatment for a pre-existing condition. If they do, the fines are horrendous, and a large part of that fine goes to you (or your estate if you die of your condition). This has been the case for at least 20 years that I know of, and the health insurers are still making profits, people are still buying their shares, people are still buying insurance, and people are still getting their conditions treated.

      As an outsider, the spin that is surrounding this debate is like some kind of sick black comedy. The funniest thing is that so many Americans are buying into the weird agendas that predict the end of civilisation and the resurgence of Stalinism. Look around the rest of the world - these systems can work, which in turn results in a more productive and humane nation.

    474. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      And if you let the states decide, as we are now, then each one will enact different laws, making interstate health insurance nearly impossible.

      Which is one of the reasons we don't have it now.

    475. Re:A false choice, of course... by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Oh God, more laughable scapegoating of the insurance companies. Have you looked at their profit margins? They aren't raking in money hand over fist like the rabble rousers would have us believe.

    476. Re:A false choice, of course... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Simply reiterating the mistake doesn't make it go away. Taking by force is not theft. Wrongful taking by force (or, in fact, without force) is theft.

      Otherwise how do you explain that it is not theft to:

      • Levy taxes for road construction. (Even on people who don't drive, or will never drive on the roads the taxes pay for)
      • Seize the fruits of Bernie Madoff's ponzi scheme.
      • Levy taxes to pay for a judicial system you may never use.
      • Seize enemy property during wartime.
      • The list goes on...

      I think it is obvious that these sorts of examples show that theft requires more than mere "taking by force." I reiterate that that element is wrongfulness. (And, while we're at it, I think the "by force" requirement can be tossed.) I don't mean for this suggestion to be controversial; it really shouldn't be.

      In fact, I'm not even saying that I think you lack a theory of why these sorts of takings are wrongful. All I want is for you to tell me what it is so we can have a productive debate.

    477. Re:A false choice, of course... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      GENERAL is the key word. An army is something everyone benefits from because everyone's home is protected. Ditto a navy. What you are endorsing is SPECIFIC welfare that only benefits the sick, not the general populace. --- Healthy people don't get anything out of it.

      But of course they do. In general, the more sick people around you, the more likely you are to succumb to disease yourself. You know, basic hygiene and sanitation? This goes further along the same lines.

      Anyway, I don't consider myself to be qualified enough to definitely conclude whether social welfare on federal level is constitutional in U.S. or not. My point, in any case, was to respond to GP, who claimed that it is antithetical to freedom in general - which it is not.

      AND: "The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite." --James Madison, Federalist No. 45

      So any kind of welfare, no matter how "socialist", would be fine if it was done on state level rather than federal level?

    478. Re:A false choice, of course... by Fareq · · Score: 1

      Yes.

      If you want the time and property belonging to others, you have to be willing and able to pay for them.

      Otherwise, you really have no right to take those things from another.

    479. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Bollocks. People typically vote for the party that offers what is good for them personally.

      Perhaps. That has often been the reason democracies have been argued to be an unstable form of government. I think you underestimate the number of people that vote based on moral principles, though. I often vote against measures that would benefit me, because it would involve taking from or penalizing other people, or restricting their freedom... and that is wrong.

      When I have discussions about political issues, it resolves into issues of right and wrong far more often than over a question of how it benefits a particular individual. People aren't all that small-minded.

    480. Re:A false choice, of course... by jon3k · · Score: 1

      Because their embarrassingly high tax rate offsets the cost?

    481. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fox is not just a contrary voice, it's a media platform for demagogues and insanity.

    482. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      "Oh god please, not this crap again" sorry I should have not introduced this tangent. "By the way, when you say that "capitalism should be constrained by the competition", do you imply that government has the obligation to step in and ensure competitive market, even if that means direct intervention?" heh, well there is the slippery slope. what do you see as "direct intervention"? Government take over, public option, etc no. Stopping companies from becoming "to big to fail" yes. Stopping "monopoly capitalism" yes.

    483. Re:A false choice, of course... by pablomme · · Score: 1

      Two points:

      1. As I replied to the earlier post,

      the money that would be invested by insurance companies in treating people with pre-existing, permanent conditions would increase the insurance prices for everyone. And that's precisely what I think is correct. The extra money you are paying is exactly proportional to the chances that the same may have happened (or may still happen!) to you. Which is fair.

      2. You say

      smoking 3 packs a day and washing it all down with a quart of vodka

      That's why tobacco and alcoholic products are taxed extra (or at least in other countries where the extra tax goes to health services).

      You are basically saying that it's their fault if people get sick. That is nonsense. I hope you are never in the situation to realize this from first-hand experience.

      --
      The state you are in while your HEAD is detached... - wait, what?
    484. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      This is the sort of comment that gets us nowhere. "Theft" implies moral wrongfulness.

      "Theft" implies taking another's property. Moral wrongfulness is a CONSEQUENCE of that.

    485. Re:A false choice, of course... by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      The way you could make this work is that the federal law would say that whichever state is the one selling the insurance is whose law that applies. I.e. if you live in MD but bought a NJ policy, the federal law would override MD's regulation to say that in this case NJ law applied. And vice versa if you live in NJ and bought a MD policy.

      That presumably should lower the overhead costs of health insurance, because now companies don't need to have different arms of the same company in every state. You could sell all the policies out of one state.

      This would create more competition among insurance companies. It would also increase competition among state governments to have more attractive regulations (from the perspective of the insurers).

      Republicans like this increased competition, thinking it will lead to more effective regulations and lower prices. Democrats fear that it will lead to a "race to the bottom" of insufficient regulation. There's probably some truth to both sides, although I personally think the increased competition would be valuable.

    486. Re:A false choice, of course... by introspekt.i · · Score: 1

      I fly first class.

    487. Re:A false choice, of course... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      sorry I should have not introduced this tangent.

      My apologies for a harsh reply, as well. To my excuse, when it's a hundredth one along those lines that you have to write on Slashdot, one tends to slip into the not-so-polite writing.

      heh, well there is the slippery slope. what do you see as "direct intervention"?

      Any instance where government restricts private entities from taking actions that they would otherwise be able to take in a fully free (laissez-faire) market.

      Example of indirect intervention would be government-run companies entering the market alongside private ones, without restricting what the latter can do; i.e., in general, when state is just another player on the market, and not the rule-setter.

      Government take over, public option, etc no. Stopping companies from becoming "to big to fail" yes. Stopping "monopoly capitalism" yes.

      What about natural monopolies?

    488. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      The way we work around this is the unpopular part. We put a mandate on everybody that says "alright, since they can't kick you out anymore, you can't game the system: everyone has to be insured"

      It's not just unpopular, it's unconstitutional as well.

      Article I, Section 8, Clause 1 of the United States Constitution: "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States; The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    489. Re:A false choice, of course... by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1

      Thanks for replying. I was modded up before I was modded down.

      Far be it for me to denigrate the Constitution. It's a marvelous document. But you cannot run a country with just the Constitution. Perhaps the most marvelous thing about the Constitution is that it is general and flexible enough to allow this country to address the problems of the 21st century without being constrained by a list of solutions from the 18th century.

      Now, to your arguments. I do not accept "Make it smaller" nor "Tax me less" as a cohesive framework for running a government.

      These are not ways of running a government. They are campaign slogans.

      Modern government does things, it fixes potholes, builds parks and schools, enforces the laws, resolves disputes. Actually the list is endless.

      Our's also provides health insurance and subsidies for the poor and elderly. Because before it did that the poor and elderly lived and died out on the streets and it turns out people didn't like that.

      You want to shrink government but you don't have solutions for how to deal with the repercussions of cancelling programs you hate. That is why I say it's not a logical framework for a modern government.

      Every government program, "entitlement" or not, is in a constant state of flux. Medicare and Social Security included. Each successive Congress and administration addresses perceived inequities or inefficiencies in their own way.

      The reason they aren't cancelled is not because they are "entitlements". It's because the people who want to cancel it don't have solutions for how to deal with the repercussions of cancelling it.

      --
      It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    490. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When a choice mandatory . . . it's not longer a choice.

      Name me a government social program that has ever come in on or under budget projections?

      Where's social security?

      How's Medicare and Medicaid looking?

      See where this is heading?

    491. Re:A false choice, of course... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      I don't think you realize how expensive health insurance is. It's like buying a second house. Even so, it would be worth it if you could guarantee that it would be there when I got sick. Right now, you can't, so I won't buy.

      Maybe the Dems are going to improve that, maybe they won't. They say they will.

    492. Re:A false choice, of course... by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      I assume the $50/month private health care is a supplement to the public health care you pay for in your taxes? What does the $50/mo get you on top of the governemnt plan and how much per month of your taxes pays for the government plan?

      Compared to what the price would have been without it, yes I am happy.

    493. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's more like this:

      1. Make the rich pay for your condition

      2. Be rich and pay your own self

      3. If you aren't born with the condition, not waiting till you're sick to try and get insurance

      4. Rack up ER bills and ambulance rides that will never get paid

      5. Die

    494. Re:A false choice, of course... by rhsanborn · · Score: 1

      I won't trust that reconciliation will get rid of all of them until I see the final bill. There is a Fox interview with President Obama that I believe is on tonight. In it he is repeatedly asked about specific sweetheart deals and he won't commit to them being out of the bill.

    495. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Thomas Jefferson explained the latter general welfare clause for the United States: “[T]he laying of taxes is the power, and the general welfare the purpose for which the power is to be exercised. They [Congress] are not to lay taxes ad libitum for any purpose they please; but only to pay the debts or provide for the welfare of the Union. In like manner, they are not to do anything they please to provide for the general welfare, but only to lay taxes for that purpose.”

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    496. Re:A false choice, of course... by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      Actually between the wife's third and fourth surgeries I did lose my job, although I did find new employment before severance ran out from the previous job.

    497. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      No, what I want is for my MRI to be covered even if I already had back problems before I signed up for insurance. It isn't charity. I pay for a service, and I expect to get it.

      That's fine, and maybe even reasonable; but it's not insurance. Words have meanings, and covering a pre-existing condition is the exact opposite of insurance. It is impossible to be insured against something that has already occurred.

    498. Re:A false choice, of course... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Here's another way to get at the point I'm trying to make that you might prefer:

      The U.S. constitution (probably there most restrictive founding document there has ever been) straightforwardly grants the federal government the power to levy taxes and spend the money raised thereby to further the general welfare. Art 1, Sec 8, Cl. 1. This would seem to endorse rampant theft, on your definition of "theft."

      Surely you don't agree with this conclusion. But if not, how do you escape it?

    499. Re:A false choice, of course... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1
    500. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WOH THERE! You just got your categories all mixed up. See there are Republicans and then the are Socialists! Socialists include anarchists, liberals, libertarians (Republican infiltrators), librarians, Hollywood, the gays, the scientists, and anyone decidedly not Republican enough (most tan people). Just want to make sure we're clear here so the arguments start with the same language.

    501. Re:A false choice, of course... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      I'm ok with willy nilly interstate insurance as long as you have tough federal regulation. I'm not ok with the people of Mississippi (or wherever) deciding that it's ok for my insurance company to rip me off.

    502. Re:A false choice, of course... by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      That said, on its current path, the cost is unsustainable. And I agree that this legislation doesn't do enough to curb the costs.

      Why do you think so? The legislation is hundreds of pages long because it contains lots of technical cost reduction measures, most of which I can't hope to understand easily.

      And this legislation will save lives, if for nothing other than the removal of pre-existing condition clauses.

      You're not seeing that removing pre-existing condition clauses and restricting rescission actually helps to align private insurers' interests with preventive care and medical cost reduction. Today, the business model for health insurers is to take money from premium holders, give them as little services as they can get away with, and kick out anybody who starts actually costing them money on any flimsy excuse they can find. By forcing them to, you know, actually pay for the health care of people who get sick, then there's a better chance that they will concentrate on preventing that from happening, taking care of the ones that do happen in a cost-effective manner, and so on.

    503. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      That's because, right now, if you become ill without coverage you cannot get coverage. Once again, refer to your two line proposal. ...
      Seriously, do you disassociate yourself so much from the topic at hand that you started that you are so unable to continue with subject context? You created a proposal that changes the system such that people cannot be denied coverage for pre-existing conditions. Thus, why would people without immediate need bother with insurance? If they get ill, -then- they can get insurance. Until then, they won't need it.

      Well, Gee. I don't work for an insurance company, and I don't have an MBA, and I certainly don't have a law degree or have any experience writing contracts, but since you insist, let me take a whack at it.

      1) New customers with pre-existing conditions will not be denied coverage.
      1a) Insurance company will provide a "loan", with collateral provided such as a car, home, boat... to pay for immediate coverage.
      1b) Loan will be paid forgiven over the course of the first year after the procedure by equal, twelve, monthly installments.
      1c) Once "loan" is forgiven, any liens on the collateral will be null and void.
      1d) If coverage is dropped within before the lien is released, the collateral property will become the property of the insurance company and sold. If there any funds remaining from such sale and the loan is paid off, the remaining funds will be returned to the customer, after appropriate fees and interest is paid.

      There ya go. Is it iron clad? Surely not. However, like I said, I have no experience in such matters. I'm sure those with law degrees and MBA's and such could make something much more iron clad.

      Will any contract prevent someone from skipping town completely? No. But it's no different today. Hospitals may not legally deny coverage to ANYONE, provided they go to the more expensive emergency room. If someone that does not have coverage today and goes to a hospital for treatment and skips town, the hospital is stuck with the bill. Insurance companies are in a much better position to absorb such costs because 90% of the population pays insurance dues. 90% of the population does not to to hospitals.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    504. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The economic logic is as follows: We want to regulate the insurers such that they don't exclude people based on pre-existing conditions. This makes sense.

      Actually it makes no sense at all.

      Can you just wait until you have a wreck to buy car insurance ? No. You can't wait till your house is on fire to get homeowners insurance either.

      If you force insurance companies to accept everyone regardless of pre-existing conditions that will necessarily force the cost of insurance higher for everyone else.

    505. Re:A false choice, of course... by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Ok.

      * Levy taxes for road construction. (Even on people who don't drive, or will never drive on the roads the taxes pay for)

      Theft.

      * Seize the fruits of Bernie Madoff's ponzi scheme.

      Not theft, since the 'fruits' were stolen.

      * Levy taxes to pay for a judicial system you may never use.

      Theft.

      * Seize enemy property during wartime.

      Theft.

      * The list goes on...

      If it's taking somebody's property against their will, it's theft. Moral wrongness is a judgment that one places one that theft, and it may not always be called for. Seizing an enemies' property during wartime is theft, but not wrong; just like killing in self-defense is still killing, but not wrong... or like censoring communications during wartime is still censoring, but may not be wrong.

    506. Re:A false choice, of course... by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

      Social Security has always outperformed its financial forecasts. Also the the A-10 Thunderbolt II, a project actually run by an Air Force officer, outside of the normal private design submission process, came in under budget, on time and with better that expected performance. Those are two that spring to mind anyway.

      But you are right that 10 year economic forecasts, private of government, are rarely accurate. That is part of why SS routinely outperforms long term forecasts, the economy as a whole generally does.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    507. Re:A false choice, of course... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      It's impossible to cover my MRI today because my back was injured 10 years ago? Fuck that.

      I personally have a ton of injuries, mostly due to hiking and car related accidents. L3-L4 vertabrae fusion, left knee is bad (although I still don't know exactly what is wrong with it yet), I've sustained navicular fractures in both my wrists that, after about 3 years, are FINALLY healed...also have a minor rotator cuff tear, on/off again neck problems...and more. I had some minor problems getting insurance when I was a mechanic, but it wasn't too big of a deal. However, in that time is when I sustained the neck problems, knee problems, neck problems, and others.

      After I quite as a mechanic, I started working as a programmer. I didn't want to get insurance through my current company (Cigna is ass), but couldn't find a SINGLE INSURANCE COMPANY that would pick me up on my own. The only reason I was able to even get it through work is because I'm technically in the healthcare industry.

      This is the kind of crap I'm talking about...I know about it, because I've had to deal with it.

    508. Re:A false choice, of course... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      "This bill is being rushed to an insane degree"

      That's so much the opposite of the truth that I have to ask how you can even think it, much less write it.

    509. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      "You're implying that car insurance is analogous to health insurance. Where I live, there's mandatory car insurance and mandatory health insurance. So that looks like a decent analogy in favor of that part of this bill. And it's almost a car analogy, too. :)"

      Ah, but the difference there is that this is mandated on a state level. They do have the authority to mandate such coverge,the Feds on the other hand...have NO power granted to them by the Constitution to mandate what an individual citizen purchases. That's where this is gonna get knocked off, in court.

      It should be on a state level, where most power is supposed to reside. Not all states mandate car insurance,nor health insurance. That's the nice thing about states rights...if you don't like the rules (and expenses) in one state, you are free to move to one that is more in line with you type of thinking.

      Article I, Section 8, Clause 1 of the United States Constitution: "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States; The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    510. Re:A false choice, of course... by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 1

      My apologies for a harsh reply, as well.

      Heh I work in open-source all day. A good flaming is good for my thick skin.

      Any instance where government restricts private entities from taking actions that they would otherwise be able to take in a fully free (laissez-faire) market.

      I think setting rules to keep competition healthy is great, particularly with companies that incorporate. They exist under the law for the benefit of the state in exchange for protection under that same law.

      Example of indirect intervention would be government-run companies entering the market alongside private ones...

      IMHO this is a conflict of interest because they _ARE_ rule setters. They can always change the rules to their benefit.

      What about natural monopolies?

      No choice, you have to regulate natural monopolies. I guess the difficulty here is defining what a natural monopoly is, I think you are talking about utilities and the like.

    511. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Adding the "everyone must get coverage" clause without flat rate pricing will cause insurance companies to gouge those in high risk categories, much like auto insurance companies do today.

      Such pricing makes sense. Once again, insurance is paying somebody to assume the risk that bad things will happen. When bad things are more likely to happen, you cost more to insure.

      Such pricing may make sense for auto insurers, although I disagree, it will certainly not make sense for health insurance companies.

      For a health company insurance company insuring someone with MS, for example, they are on the hook for hundreds of thousands, if not millions of dollars to cover that single person. And you are saying that they should not be allowed to deny a MS patient coverage (I agree), but can base rates on preexisting conditions or risks(I disagree). How much would an insurance company have to charge to break even? What's to stop them from charging that amount or more to either cover the cost of this patient, or force this money loser to move to their competition?

      What about the elderly? How much would you, as an insurer, charge to insure an 85-yr-old man? How about a 64-yr-old woman with a history of heart disease in her family? How about a woman vs. a man? Do you think it's really fair to charge women, who give birth and see the doctor much more often than men more than you would charge men? Is lacking a penis considered a "pre-existing condition"?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    512. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      History didn't start in 1998.

    513. Re:A false choice, of course... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Ok then, explain how the Canadian Government has been successfully doing that and raising the limit on tax free income when its necessary, not decreasing it.

      Oh... you can't? Well... sorry... you'll just have to live with your FUD.

    514. Re:A false choice, of course... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      >> Yeah, because if I'm only going to make $9 million this year instead of $10 million, there's just no point in my even getting up in the morning.

      Exactly.

      Warren Buffet himself has said this.

      People need to get the hell off the stupid pills.

    515. Re:A false choice, of course... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't come to that, however much the sensationalist fools want to make you believe it would.

      However if it is proven that you choose not to practice proper hygiene then certainly denying you the free care that everyone else enjoys because YOU are not being diligent in the basic day to day taking care of yourself certainly isn't out of the question, to me.

      In reality in any modern socialist country you wouldn't be forced to do any of that and you would still be entitled to your health care when something eventually happens because of it.

    516. Re:A false choice, of course... by zeropointburn · · Score: 1

      The problem is that any bill everyone can agree on will be eviscerated by people who willfully disagree with anything Obama. The simple fix-everything bill is a myth. In order for any form of healthcare reform to pass, it must be made palatable to a sufficient number of legislators from both parties. Once the bill is in place, it becomes much easier to change it by degrees. An existing, approved healthcare bill makes it a lot easier to get things like a public option, a prescription drug price cap, tort reform, or any of the dozens of other measures that would actually give this effort some teeth. Trying to shove it all through at once simply won't happen unless we somehow get a democratic supermajority that doesn't infight over pork-spending line items.

      The items you suggest are reasonable. I hope to see some of those reforms eventually.

      --
      -1 raving lunatic; +6 subGenius... Things even out...
    517. Re:A false choice, of course... by dreampod · · Score: 1

      If Fox were actually advocating your "it's unconstitutional, it violates peoples rights, and it's going to put costs off the chart when our country is already massively in debt" line that might be a valid complaint. However a massive quantity of their opinion programs and 'news' programs are focused on false and absurd claims like death panels, abortions, direct bank account access, Marxism, trial lawyer giveaways, imprisonment for not having insurance, refusal of care for the disabled, harm to small business, rationing, and on and on. Until Fox is willing to engage with reality then calling them a 'rabid chicken' is both fair and probably understates the issues since it implies that they can't help themselves rather than being deliberate, manipulative liars.

      There are conservatives out there presenting reasoned arguments and having legitamate debate, however they are not within the republican party or fox news.

    518. Re:A false choice, of course... by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1

      should a doctor, after years of training (and debt for that schooling) not be able to hang their shingle out and make a good bit of money on a very highly prized work skills?

      Doctors don't make good money like they used to. New doctors mostly work for "provider" corporations. The only doctors that make money in medicine now do it by owning provider corporations, pharmacies, medical office buildings, etc. Nobody "hangs their shingle" anymore. The cost of malpractice insurance is far too high.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    519. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very true! All hail the Almighty and All-knowing Obama!

    520. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Ok then, explain how the Canadian Government has been successfully doing that and raising the limit on tax free income when its necessary, not decreasing it.

      Oh... you can't? Well... sorry... you'll just have to live with your FUD.

      The US is doing it to. It's called a graduated income tax. The limit as to what is considered "rich" varies depending on who you ask.

      But since we are already off topic, I'll go on. A sales tax would eliminate any tax loopholes that only accountants know about. Who can afford accountants? The "rich" of course. When the poor try to use an accountant, they usually get ripped off by being given a "refund anticipation loan" at a such an obscene interest that it would be illegal in many countries.

      An added benefit to a sales tax is the government has no way to try to buy votes or control our lives. Sure, they could charge higher taxes on sodas, beer and cigarettes, but there will no longer be the ability to buy a vote from Senator Fleabite of Nebraska by securing funding for a new ice fishing park.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    521. Re:A false choice, of course... by TheSpoom · · Score: 2, Informative

      Why can't they do a simple bill, with some main points everyone can agree on...in about 10 pages of simple language everyone can understand and agree on? Start from there and build on it?

      We already have it; unfortunately it hasn't gotten much attention. H.R. 676 would provide single-payer health care to every American resident, and includes information on how it would be funded, in 26 pages.

      Granted, it's not 10, but it's much closer.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    522. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other than government regulations (Mostly state regulations) that have sold non competition agreements, individuals have (for another 48 hours) the right to pick a difference health provider and different ways of ensuring their health including but not limited to a comprehensive HMO or limiting themselves to catastrophic illness insurance and paying cash for everything else.
       
      "The right of the people", aka the mob to bring the right change for everybody by finally voting in the right person versus ensuring individuals the freedom to make informed decisions that meet their needs.
       
      The counter argument is that people are too stupid, and those not too stupid are too greedy to be trusted with such responsibility. Personally, I find such notion offensive and that while that philosophy may have dominated for a long time I believe we over came such "negativity" with the enlightenment, and that for those that were paying attention, what was once the Great American Experiment proved otherwise.
       
      I see the temptation, and I entertained it myself when I was younger, that government and most of peoples lives could be better managed by panels of experts, helping us with difficult decisions and help mitigate some of the greatest risks that too many people unnecessarily loose their lives simply because they did not understand the risks of their endeavors. Common sense drives us to this conclusion with so many examples of pain that might have been avoided with a little intervention. It is likely why it is not a new idea. Particularly in the last 100 years we have seen example after example of great leaders making promises that in the near future life would be fair and that all we need is to cooperate and give a little bit more. Dissenters are always marked as heartless and uncaring, that they do not know as much as the experts, or just too stupid to understand the bigger picture.
       
      Community is a great thing, but that does not mean that it can be forced upon someone then used as an example of its own greatness.

    523. Re:A false choice, of course... by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Stewart himself points out over and over again that TDS is comedy.

      True, but for the majority of the audience, it is their primary "news" source.

      Which goes to show you, people would rather laugh at comedy and get a little news than watch "news" and have dark laughter that the "news" is presented as something respectable.

      Fox News bills itself as, well, news. Then again, why am I saying anything who says O'Reilly gives liberals a fair shake?

      First, Bill O'Reilly is a commentator, not a news anchor. If you want to call Bill O'Reilly or any of the other FNC commentators "news", then shouldn't you do the same for Keith Olbermann, Rachel Maddow and Chris Matthews (who got a tingle up his leg from hearing Obama speak)? Why are not you not here screaming about how unfair MSNBC is?

      Funny. Plenty of people do. 24/7 news channels are quite horrible precisely because they aren't 24/7 news. They're one to two hours of news and 22 hours of fluff to fill air time. Having said that, MSNBC/CNN both have the same issue as Fox News even when they're covering actual news: sensational focus on fluff news.

      Next, I have never, EVER seen a conservative on Olbermann's show. I see several on O'Reilly every night. HERE is a video of a liberal on O'Reilly that, strangely enough, is not shouted down. (That must not be a real video, since you believe that it never happens). Can you find an Olbermann video of a conservative? No? I guess you have to admit that FNC is more "Fair and Balanced" than MSNBC.

      If FNC has dog *and* cat shows, it's more "Fair and Balanced" than Animal Channel? Well, who the fuck cares. I just want FNC (and MSNBC and CNN) to do decent journalism.

      Oh, and HERE is a story about Bill O'Reilly "blasting" Laura Ingraham. Laura is a conservative and O'Reilly was defending Michelle Obama. Have you ever seen Matthews, Olbermann, or Maddow (a feminist) stand up for Laura Bush over the objections of one more liberal than they are?

      Personally, I wouldn't care if Bill O'Reilly were a saint. Political commentary shows are almost entirely sensational claptrap designed more to anger or energize the watchers than to engage in actual discussion. But, then, that makes perfect sense: discussion that resolves issue is relatively boring while a few people shouting their own personal views, no matter how offensive they might be, is at least interesting from the "traffic accident" aspect of it. They're really no better than daytime talk shows.

      In short, I'd like to see actual news on News Channels.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    524. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Oh, I also forgot in my other response - the 10th Amendment to the US Constitution says "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    525. Re:A false choice, of course... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      I only want to shrink the FEDERAL government, and I apologize if I didn't make that clear.

      There's no reason that 'modern government' has to be neatly organized in one massive engine, unless you're wanting to make a lobbyist's day shorter.

      That being said, the Constitution is very much the perfect thing for a limited Federal government. The States are encouraged to both write their own laws AND solve their own problems.

      As you may know, it is monumentally easier to change the State law than it is the Federal.

    526. Re:A false choice, of course... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      So, if that is a limit, why not health insurance?

    527. Re:A false choice, of course... by lks114 · · Score: 1

      Speaking of extra expenses ... According to various polls I've perused, in the US there are about 25% who are always pro abortion, 25% who are always pro life, and the rest is somewhere in between. The folks in the middle tend to be in the "I would never do it but I can't tell others to not do it" camp. If this bill passes in the form it's in today, no matter how you feel about the issue, you as a tax payer will be paying for someone's abortion coverage. It's one thing to be pro this or pro that, but it's entirely another when everyone is asked to pay for it.

    528. Re:A false choice, of course... by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      Are you stupid or being delibrately obtuse? If I were to pick large agencies that show the government could do healthcare, I'd pick the post office and Medicare. Medicare's margin is something like 99% (that is, 99c on the dollar goes to patients). It's administration costs are tremendously low, and there are essentially no major complaints. In fact, if you were to try and take Medicare away from old folks, they'd kill you (in an election, and perhaps literally). It's called the third rail of politics for a reason.

      In any case, as bad as government can get, they're not in it for the money. Insurance companies are offering insurance in order to make a profit, and I don't actually see how a profit motive can coexist with health insurance.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    529. Re:A false choice, of course... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Sweden is a good example of going a little too far. I like to use Canada as a good example because well... it is one.

      You get the benefits of both worlds for the most part.

      Of course if you want to ride the Libertarian band wagon all the way to the end, you have fun when robots have been created to do nearly every single job on the face of the planet, you've got nothing to fall back on, and the "free market" has actually devolved into those with money playing poker with each other. Which is more or less what happened when a truly free market actually did exist. Anyone that had money, used their money to get more money, restricting the freedoms of everyone around them in the process to do it.

    530. Re:A false choice, of course... by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      Fun fact: If you tell people what's in the healthcare plan without mentioning Congress or Obama, people are overwhelmingly for it (question along the lines of "would you support a healthcare plan that does xyz").

      Now who could've possibly soured the American public on Congress and Obama, to the point where they'd decide based on that instead of the merits of the plan? Oh right...

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    531. Re:A false choice, of course... by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      I said "civilised".

    532. Re:A false choice, of course... by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      There wouldn't be a problem if people didn't keep stealing from the fund. I don't have the statistics in front of me but Medicare was pulling in like 10 times what they needed to pay out. Had they held on to it/invested it, we'd still have it today.

      There's a lot of blame to go around for stealing from medicare, but it's not Medicare's fault. Not even close.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    533. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Are you familiar with the term Cognitive Dissonance? I am very interested in what you have to say, that's why I am continuing this conversation. I would encourage you to try to accept that I am not trying to play gotcha here. I am not trying to win anything. I ask questions because I am trying to explain to you why your arguments aren't convincing to me. In the hope that you will be able to make your point of view clearer to me.

      An interesting statement -- and completely ignores my observation and fails to address your previous posts which claimed several of my views were mutually exclusive. You denied it, but you were wrong. Instead you type the above.

      You make the argument that the American public is happy with their health insurance. So why change it?

      No. Go back up the thread and re-read what I said. You'll see I make the argument that the majority of American's are happy with their health care as an indication that it isn't BROKEN -- and certainly not broken in a way that needs the kind of proposed fixes.

      I make the point that the American public is not always the best judge of what's going on. And so a poll that says they're happy with their health-care doesn't mean much when we're talking about the system collapsing in the near future.

      No. What you did was attempted to do was indicate that "Most Americans" are stupid (in that they believe they are above average intelligence, believed the war was a good idea and the economy was good pre 2007). Then follow it up with a link that most American's don't believe in evolution. None of this is relevant to the discussion that most Americans are happy with their health insurance.

      BTW, had you read your own link, you'd notice you completely misstated your citation -- only 25% do not believe. The rest either believe or have no opinion.

      what are the broken parts? ...how will fixing them resolve the never-ending spiral of higher medical costs?

      The "never-ending" spiral is part of what's broken.

      But please do not use Tort Reform as the lynch-pin of your arguments. Knowing what I know, I cannot accept Tort reform [cnn.com] as a solution.

      And I cannot accept a solution that does not INCLUDE Tort reform.

      Read your citation -- it could save the GOVERNMENT. How much would it save the private sector? How much would it save me as a patient? Tort reform isn't JUST about the malpractice awards, or the malpractice lawsuits (who's costs are huge), but the huge malpractice insurance premiums doctors (read patients -- in the form of increased costs) must pay. And the increased costs of unnecessary tests done so a HX or MD can cover their backside as standard POLICY -- not because the MD believes it to be medically necessary.

      Tort reform wouldn't JUST save $54 billion over the next 10 years. That's just how much the government's estimated share would be from Medicare and Medicaid.

      -What do your fixes do to reduce government over-spending on health care?

      My fixes? What about the current bills fixes. Are there alternatives? That's a discussion I would like to have seen no the hill -- but it didn't happen.

      My opinion is that a combination of tort reform, remove barriers preventing out of state insurance purchases (imposed by state government regulation) and charge a fee (or tax) per emergency room visit for EVERYONE ($50 or something -- payable when you walk in). Use the funds generated by the "tax" (and savings made by note dropping money down the money hole of emergency-room cold visits) to open urgent care clinics for non-emergencies. That would dramatically reduce the cost to both private health care -- and reduce public health care as well.

      My own health provider does something similar. Em

    534. Re:A false choice, of course... by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      I'm not particularly interested in hearing what people believe, I'm rather more interested in cold, hard facts and forming my own opinion. Neither Fox or CNN are sufficient for this purpose.

      Omitting bias from a news report is impossible. There is no such things as "just the facts", even in plain text.

      I believe that you're biased in that presumption.

      Consider the following:

      "Pelosi wants to raise taxes on anyone who pays taxes"

      vs.

      "Pelosi wants to eliminate Bush's tax cuts"

      Both are facts. Both have a bias.

      You left out "Pelosi is a saint" and "Pelosi is the devil". And let's not forget, "Pelosi is neutral".

      The only hope is to get both stories and make up your own mind. No network gives 100% fair coverage.

      Life isn't fair. So? Trying to argue that two sides need to be presented to reach a conclusion is a middle ground logical fallacy. Instead of focusing on the two sides of whether red light has a shorter or longer wavelength than blue light, it is the job of journalists to try to be as factually accurate as possible and to explain where and how their facts may be incomplete. Simple bringing in two people with an opinion is simple laziness and does little to nothing to inform anyone of anything except that those two people have certain views.

      Fox will have two conservatives and a liberal to debate a topic. CNN will have three liberals and one pseudo conservative to debate a given topic. MSNBC will have three liberals and a picture of a conservative's head on a SS uniformed mannequin to discuss a given topic.

      If I heard an actual debate on Fox, CNN, or MSBNC on any topic of real depth I'd be outright amazed. Of course, a real debate would stretch on for hours, so I don't really think they'd be willing to allocate the time. Nah, let's just have a few people talking loudly at, not to, each other over whether violet or blue flowers look better.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    535. Re:A false choice, of course... by Taevin · · Score: 1

      Again, do older people really need to have their life extended artificially forever? If they can pay for it that's certainly their privilege, but it's not one of the rights protected or granted by our founding documents.

      Wait, I thought one of the "big scares" of government-run healthcare was the Death Panels that would decide when to stop paying for the elderly.

      As a side note, why is the solution to every problem "throw in a profit motive!"? In many cases, it certainly can lead to a better product. In others, it necessarily effects a less efficient system by demanding extra resources to be reserved for profit.

    536. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      Have no wage slip with me, but I think my employer pays something too.... Found slip - but nothing listed.

      On other side just found out I pay now 290€/month for the health insurance. So the 200€ figure wasn't accurate.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    537. Re:A false choice, of course... by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      You're missing the part about how a privately-run system must continue to turn a profit in order to stay in business. You know, the stuff that's left over after costs have been accounted for. By contrast, a government-run single-payer system has no profit requirement. That's money that can be better spent, say, by paying your staff better, or, hey, by not taking it in the first place!

      I suspect your response has to do, again, with insurance costs rather the health care costs, which are the root of the problem.

      First, putting government in charge of making payments for care doesn't take out the profitable businesses and doctors providing those services. It just makes it easier to defraud the payer. In fact, it provides the profit-makers even LESS incentive to control costs, because they will just either charge what they want, or the maximum charge allowed.

      Plus, governments DO have a profit requirement! They just don't call it that, they give it different names like "bureaucracy", "fraud", "tribute", "earmarks", "special interest tax credits", "overhead", "no-bid contracts", and various other names.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    538. Re:A false choice, of course... by jayveekay · · Score: 1

      At the point where you get seriously ill and thus become a liability for your for-profit health insurance provider, they are hoping for the following:
      1. They can find some excuse to not pay for your care, ideally a loophole like the "failed to disclose he had measles at age 3 in application form" to drop you entirely, or
      2. You die quickly.

      It's not personal or evil, it's just because they are driven to maximize profit using any/all legal methods available.

      Do you want your health care to be guaranteeed by some entity that would prefer you to just die already?

    539. Re:A false choice, of course... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      You did not characterize Fox as the villain, you said "Fox is the figurehead and spokesman for that rabid chicken". I don't care if you bash Fox (just as long as you're willing to bash other news groups when they're horribly biased as well), but you weren't just bashing Fox - the way you worded your argument, you were bashing anyone who disagrees with you.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    540. Re:A false choice, of course... by ncc74656 · · Score: 1

      A system of governance based on "what is good for me personally", applied over the population, is simple democracy.

      Good thing we're not a democracy, then, isn't it? What you describe sounds more like mob rule than any sort of civilized society.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    541. Re:A false choice, of course... by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Actually no, if Fox says it's bad then there is a good chance it's not. What ever they say is bad will almost certainly be somewhere in between acceptable and awesome.

    542. Re:A false choice, of course... by jayveekay · · Score: 1

      And in the crisis that followed as all the doctors and nurses left the private industry, the government would offer to hire them all back at annual salaries (no more "fee for service" model) in the range of $100k-750k / year in a greatly expanded VA health care system that would then provide health care services to all Americans, while instituting a new consumption tax that would pay for it.

      I can dream...

    543. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      "Yes, and a system of governance which is based upon "general welfare" (you know, the one from U.S. Constitution [wikipedia.org]) is social democracy "

      Trouble is, the welfare spoken of by the framers of the Constitution is not the welfare type of system YOU are speaking about. It is more about the ability of the feds to tax for the management of the resources and defense for the country as an entity, not handing out entitlements to invidual citizens. And if this is wanted, it is supposed to be a responsibility of the states, not the federal govt. Remember the 10th amendment?

      The problem is that that is an interpretation, not an accepted fact. At the end of the day, the Constitution means what the Supreme Court of the United States says it means (and out system of government makes the assumption they make such interpretations based on a hopefully deep reading of the laws themselves).

      These same challenges were made 40 years ago when Social Security was passed, and were rejected by the Supreme Court at that time.

      While it is possible that the Supreme Court might turn around 180 degrees (anything is possible), it isn't very likely.

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    544. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A system of governance based on "what is good for me personally", applied over the population, is simple democracy. It sucks, but I haven't seen any form of large-scale government that doesn't suck more.

      That's why the U.S. is a federal republic. If a state's government sucks too much almost everyone can easily move to another state. This creates competition among states to create an optimal level of regulation.

    545. Re:A false choice, of course... by mikestew · · Score: 1

      The vast majority of these people who "can't pay for insurance" still manage to pay for an iPod or a Cell Phone or a form of reliable transportation (read: new car in most cases

      I'd put something cutesy in my response like "[citation needed]", but let's run with your post for a moment. Even an iPod, cell phone, or a new car pales in comparison to private insurance. For a family of four, the payment on a new Jaguar (having just looked at such things myself) runs less than most private insurance plans I've seen.

      So it isn't necessarily a matter of choice between the new car and the insurance. They weren't getting the insurance regardless, just like they probably aren't buying a Jaguar (even though it might cost less). But they can scrape together enough for a US$15K Scion.

    546. Re:A false choice, of course... by Fareq · · Score: 1

      But, most excellently, inflation is largely a tax on the willing -- since you can always choose to hold your assets in a competing currency or in non-monetary assets.

      It is harder to get your income out of the inflationary currency, but at least once the money is yours, you can take it out.

      For that matter, you can buy hedges, such as currency swap agreements, which could cover future income (for a fee, of course)

    547. Re:A false choice, of course... by toadlife · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure your employer pays half and you pay half.

      290 Euros = $392 US Dollars, so your total health care costs per month are under $800 US dollars, 66% of what mine are.

      That's much better than the U.S. but worse than several other countries with universal health care. The reason, I suspect, is Germany's utilization of private insurance companies as the payers. It could also be that your quality of care is simply superior, and you are paying for it.

      Either way, I envy you.

      Cheers!

      --
      I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
    548. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      GENERAL is the key word. An army is something everyone benefits from because everyone's home is protected. Ditto a navy. What you are endorsing is SPECIFIC welfare that only benefits the sick, not the general populace. --- Healthy people don't get anything out of it.

      But of course they do. In general, the more sick people around you, the more likely you are to succumb to disease yourself. You know, basic hygiene and sanitation? This goes further along the same lines.

      Anyway, I don't consider myself to be qualified enough to definitely conclude whether social welfare on federal level is constitutional in U.S. or not. My point, in any case, was to respond to GP, who claimed that it is antithetical to freedom in general - which it is not.

      AND: "The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite." --James Madison, Federalist No. 45

      So any kind of welfare, no matter how "socialist", would be fine if it was done on state level rather than federal level?

      This is the general problem with everyone who screams "Socialist!" every time the Government passes a social protection they don't agree with. "Socialism" (despite the fact most people have no idea what socialism is) is in no way recognized, acknowledged, rejected, or in any way considered in the United States' Constitution.

      The Constitution doesn't care if something is Capitalist, Communist, Socialist, Federalist, Anarchist, or any other "-ist". The ONLY thing the Constitution cares about is that whatever decisions are made are in general agreement with the will of the people (notice I say general, because all of "the people" will never be completely satisfied with everything done, regardless of who does it with what motives).

      The entire point of the founding of the United States was to get away from foreign dogmas (e.g. "we can't do that because of this") The point was to found a country "for the people, of the people, and by the people". "The people" can choose any damn thing they like so long as the Constitution itself isn't violated (and even then, the Constitution can be changed if the people so choose to enact a law that is currently not supported). This idea that everything has to fit some cookie-cutter "Is it American?!" test is ludicrous.

      ANYTHING AMERICAN'S CHOOSE TO DO IS AUTOMATICALLY "American".

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    549. Re:A false choice, of course... by dreampod · · Score: 1

      1) It is being passed by standard procedures used by the house in order to avoid obstructionist behaviour by republicans. Simply because Fox and repulicans are endlessly complaining and making false claims about how 'unprecedented' these procedures are doesn't make it true, it just illustrates that Fox normally does very shallow one-sided reporting about the legislative process. Nothing about it is 'back door' and republicans have used every procedure being discussed themselves, often more frequently.

      2) If any regulation amounts to a 'government takeover' then the government already took over 99%+ of the economy. Otherwise this is a completely meritless argument, particularly given that the government already runs the medicare program which a majority of americans are extremely fond of and would like expanded.

      3) 70% of people don't want it when asked by Fox and subject to their fear mongering. Asked about all the individual components they are popular and in fact actually less desired than more extreme approaches.

      4) I'm sure that the democrats would prefer to do this in a way less prone to being claimed as undemocratic and unprecedented, but the republican obstructionism prevents them from doing this on a straight forward majority vote. If it is such a big deal and should be done in the right way then look to the republicans to change the approach and tone, they are the ones forcing the 'extreme' measures by being unwilling to compromise in any real way or do anything but use any method or lie in their attempt to derail this.

    550. Re:A false choice, of course... by Fareq · · Score: 1

      This is actually the issue -- the heavy regulations are usually good for the existing companies, because it provides an excellent barrier to entry, creating limited or nonexistent competition, and thus higher costs, lower quality, and dreadful service.

    551. Re:A false choice, of course... by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      I could not disagree with you more. The vast majority of these people who "can't pay for insurance" still manage to pay for an iPod or a Cell Phone or a form of reliable transportation (read: new car in most cases 2).

      First, An iPod costs a couple hundred dollars, once. A cell phone plan costs an average of $635.85 annually, though you can easily find low-cost plans for about half that.. Health insurance, for an average family, will cost you and/or your employer a whopping $13,375 annually (Sources: USA Today, about.com). So even if they gave up all the things you mention, they still don't have the cash to get decent health insurance.

      Second, not everyone really needs health insurance. I've looked at my health care costs and my insurance, and at my age, even with a fairly significant chunk of medical bills late last year, my insurance still didn't pay for what it cost me and my employer. And that's for the cheapest tier of health insurance I can get through my employer. For younger people with no family history of cancer, health insurance is basically subsidizing other people's care. So for many people in that age range, it just doesn't make financial sense. Fortunately, my employer basically pays the entire cost. Were it not for that, I probably would have pocketed the money until at least age 30.

      As for your assertion that individual funding cannot be solved at a governmental level, that's a big part of what this plan does---the government gives tax credits to people who buy insurance for themselves, thus effectively covering the cost of the insurance. If people don't take that health insurance, they don't get the credit. Unlike money that they earn from their employers, the credit can't be used to pay for anything else, eliminating the incentive to skip it. And that was my point.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    552. Re:A false choice, of course... by Fareq · · Score: 1

      OK, I'll bite on that first part.

      It is theft for a very simple reason. It is requiring me, by law (under penalty of, ultimately, imprisonment or death) to give my personal property (my income) to another individual (through a complicated system of intermediaries) whether I wish to do so or not.

      In other words, it is taking my personal property, and disposing of it without my permission and against my will.

      In other words, it is theft.

    553. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America is full of dummies. That is a known fact.

      I say we just try it.. if we don't like it there'll be such an uproar the law will have to be changed.

    554. Re:A false choice, of course... by dachshund · · Score: 1

      If HR 676 were ever to work its way through Congress, and have a chance at getting majority votes (60 in the senate to break a Filibuster), you can be assured that it will swell into a 1000+ page monstrosity. The current HCR bills aren't large because they're supposed to be complicated, they're large because any bill that survives the legislative process is huge (and btw, I'm no advocate of this, just an observer).

      The short, simple nature of HR 676 indicates that nobody even takes it seriously enough to consider, which is perhaps too bad. But it's hardly fair to compare a bill that's a hypothetical moonfart in someone's imagination to one that might actually become law very soon.

    555. Re:A false choice, of course... by Renevith · · Score: 1

      I mean, deflation is wonderful if most of your assets are dollars.

      True. And inflation is wonderful if most of your liabilities are dollars. Let's see, who has an absurdly high dollar liability and no real invested assets... ah yes, the same federal government that has (indirect) control of the money supply. Hm.

      If you own anything of value though, like say a gold stockpile, or a house, or if you like jobs, deflation is very very bad.

      This one's not so true. Deflation and inflation have no particular effect on the value of "real" goods such as gold or housing. After all, regardless of the value of currency, you will still be able to exchange that house for another house, and that gold for a similar amount of food or other goods as you could have before. When people say that gold is a good thing to own during inflation, they only mean that it's relatively good compared to anything dollar-denominated like a CD.

      The effect on jobs is a separate issue, and definitely more complicated, but in short: deflation and job loss as both symptoms of a recession or depression. Neither one is a primary cause (although they can act as secondary causes through a diminishing spiral effect). Many recessions, including the most recent one, are "catch-up" periods where we over-borrowed and over-consumed and then have to pay it back. Obviously consumption will be down during that type of environment, which means there is less demand for goods than money (for investment/debt repayment), which means the prices of goods decreases and the price of investing increases (which is equivalent to the interest rate decreasing).

      Since companies overconsumed in labor by hiring too many workers during boom periods, probably financed with loans since they expected their markets to keep expanding, they now have to cut back to the size they should have been all along (or smaller if they have to devote some of their revenue to paying back those loans), which means job losses.

      This post is getting a bit long-winded already so I won't go into the various causes of the initial overconsumption, except to say that you can't simply stimulate it away because there's still a debt that needs to be paid (figuratively and literally). Stimulus is like taking more drugs to avoid withdrawal symptoms: a short-sighted fix that appears to work great, which is the perfect choice for politicians who just care about the next election. The point is that both deflation and job loss are mostly common results of the same cause; neither one particularly causes the other except (as another poster noted) a smaller job-loss effect due to wage stickiness where companies might respond to 5% deflation with 5% layoffs instead of a 5% "reduction" in wages, even though the wage reduction would leave people with the same purchasing power, because wage reductions look bad to people who don't understand inflation.

      And there is approximately zero chance of Zimbabwe-style inflation in any imaginable non-post-apocalyptic America over the next fifty years.

      This, I agree with. I don't understand why so many who are concerned about inflation seem to go to the extreme and jump on the OMGHYPERINFLATION bandwagon.

      It seems pretty obvious that the significant increase in the money supply that began under Bush/Greenspan and hasn't really slowed with Obama/Bernanke is going to cause huge inflation (as soon as we have paid back our imbalance in consumption through this recession and the demand for consumption comes back). Dollars are not backed by anything, so if there are twice as many dollars in circulation, then those dollars will each be worth half as much. I have a portion of my long-term investments in commodities as protection against this. I can't tell you when it's going to happen, since it's so dependent on government policy, so I don't try to play the market... but the fundamentals of supply and demand say that the dollar is headed for a serious

    556. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "We seem to have a disagreement over the definition of "provider". You're stating that the providers are the doctors and nurses. His definition of provider is the company the doctors and nurses are employed by, the company running the hospital/clinic/etc."

      Hmm...maybe things are different where you live, but MOST all doctors I know and use, all have their own private practice where I use their services. If it is something that required a surgery suite, then sure, I hit the hospital, but I don't go to one of those unless I'm really sick. But a normal dr. visit to me is where they 'hang their shingle'. I've been where a group of doctors own a clinic and they all work with each other (cover for each, etc), but, yes...they are the providers to me.

      Are you talking about going to the ER for any given problem or something? I don't quite understand where you are coming from...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    557. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Doctors don't make good money like they used to. New doctors mostly work for "provider" corporations. The only doctors that make money in medicine now do it by owning provider corporations, pharmacies, medical office buildings, etc. Nobody "hangs their shingle" anymore. The cost of malpractice insurance is far too high."

      Hmm, that's not my experience. Most all doctors I use or know...have either their own private practice, or maybe they have a group of doctors owning the clinic...but I've not been to any type of thing you and another has described with them being 'employees' of someone owning a medical company. Most all doctors I know (some in my family even) still do quite well, determine their own course of practice and business...etc.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    558. Re:A false choice, of course... by vertinox · · Score: 1

      So true. Because any voice contrary to what we already believe should be feared and silenced!

      I don't know.

      If someone advocated that you were to be killed or let to die, then you have legitimate issue with it.

      The key problem I have with people against socialized health-care is that they are indirectly advocating at the most murder and at the least negligible homicide when people are allowed to die because they didn't have insurance.

      That said, this bill does nothing to improve health care to something like the Canada's or the UK.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    559. Re:A false choice, of course... by vertinox · · Score: 1

      Find any government agency that's tried to do exceptionally well and you'll find that the smaller the scope of their responsibility the better they did.

      NASA, DARPA, NSA, and most military branches.

      And secondly... The USPS aint bad these days as it was like the 1980s. I chalk that up to the competition with FedEx, UPS, and email.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    560. Re:A false choice, of course... by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      And if you hadn't found a replacement? How long could you have paid into COBRA to maintain coverage? Nothing short of a miracle would have enabled you to buy your own coverage given your wife's preexisting issues.

      Our system works fine if you're healthy and employed. Find yourself unable to work, esp. for reasons of illness or injury and the ability to maintain coverage evaporates as fast as your income. Medical issues are one of the leading reasons for bankruptcy. Which of course causes hospitals to pass the loss onto everyone else.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    561. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "I don't think you realize how expensive health insurance is. It's like buying a second house. Even so, it would be worth it if you could guarantee that it would be there when I got sick. Right now, you can't, so I won't buy."

      It isn't THAT bad. While working for myself, I got a high deductible health insurance policy (and I'm high risk with high triglycerides) with a $1200 deductible...to be used ONLY for catastrophic needs (heart attack, wreck, etc). That was only about $200/mo or so. I set up a HSA (Health Savings Account) and loaded it up with $3K annually pre-tax. That is what I used for my normal routine medical care. Worked out great. HSA's are great in that they are not use it or lose it...you roll it over annually...you can even invest that money to make it grow faster..and what is left at retirement...is yours for retirement.

      Frankly, I think this is more the model we should move to...make people good health care shoppers...budget for it like anything else.

      Heck, when I went for dr visits or tests and told them I was paying myself...I got an immediate 15% or more discount off their billing rate.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    562. Re:A false choice, of course... by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      Oh God, more laughable scapegoating of the insurance companies. Have you looked at their profit margins? They aren't raking in money hand over fist like the rabble rousers would have us believe.

      Oh, the poor, poor insurance companies! Hey, look, I'm weeping again.

    563. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "We already have it; unfortunately it hasn't gotten much attention. H.R. 676 [wikipedia.org] would provide single-payer health care to every American resident, and includes information on how it would be funded, in 26 pages."

      You missed the part where I said "most everyone could agree on". Most people in this country do NOT want a govt run, single payer system. That's why it was jerked out of this current monstrosity they're trying to pass.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    564. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      You're not seeing that removing pre-existing condition clauses and restricting rescission actually helps to align private insurers' interests with preventive care and medical cost reduction.

      Actually, I am. See my other posts in this same thread, wherein I used that point in different words. :)

      I'm in agreement with you for the most part--I do think we could do better, however, by implementing some controls on payment mechanisms--namely, restricting pay-for-procedure medicine and paying doctors for outcomes, like Mayo does.

    565. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "That's why tobacco and alcoholic products are taxed extra (or at least in other countries where the extra tax goes to health services)."

      But in the US, that is not where that money goes....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    566. Re:A false choice, of course... by iamhigh · · Score: 1

      The thing you forget is that if the government is responsible for your healthcare, then they will get to claim authority over your health. It starts with fines for not wearing seat belts. Then they start dictating what foods you may eat. Eventually, there will be edicts dictating what you must wear each day according to how some bureaucrat reads the weather predictions.

      The thing you forget is that all of this gubment takeover already happens... except for the "based on the weather" part. You currently get fined for not wearing a seatbelt. You currently are dictated as to what you can eat (FDA) and grow (google "filburn interstate commerce clause"). And you can't walk around naked...

      So what are we afraid of happening again?

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    567. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      And from this it is clear that you stopped reading my post at that point. Keep reading.

      But to counter your point nonetheless, if, say, you're born diabetic, that's a preexisting condition. You can have a preexisting condition before you're old enough to know what insurance is. And the insurance companies can fuck you over for life. And then you die.

      As for the cost of insurance getting higher for everyone else, that's not true either in the current context. You're equally forcing those who are healthy to have insurance and widening the risk pool. The bill, as it stands, will likely have a negligible impact on (unsubsidized) premiums.

    568. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      But, welfare in the constitution doesn't mean what people today are trying to make it sounds like..it isn't 'welfare' like the entitlement.

      From another of my posts:

      "Trouble is, the welfare spoken of by the framers of the Constitution is not the welfare type of system YOU are speaking about. It is more about the ability of the feds to tax for the management of the resources and defense for the country as an entity, not handing out entitlements to individual citizens. And if this is wanted, it is supposed to be a responsibility of the states, not the federal govt. Remember the 10th amendment?"

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    569. Re:A false choice, of course... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      Rather, it would cover the Anarliberdempublican.

    570. Re:A false choice, of course... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The Constitution doesn't care if something is Capitalist, Communist, Socialist, Federalist, Anarchist, or any other "-ist". The ONLY thing the Constitution cares about is that whatever decisions are made are in general agreement with the will of the people

      Actually, GP is correct in that the Constitution cares that decisions are made in general agreement with the will of the States, and only indirectly through them, with the will of the people. I would actually concur with him that it is better to have such far-reaching things to be done on state level, so that those states which do not want (i.e. the majority of citizens of which do not want) to be "socialist" for whatever reason, can go their own way.

      (yeah, I'm a pro-federation "socialist")

      Note also that this does not preclude those states which do want decent social welfare programs to collaborate on implementing a single cross-state scheme, so that you can pay taxes in one state, and still be covered in all other states that participate.

      Of course, this would mean that you could be effectively uninsured as soon as you cross the border into a state which does not participate. But I don't see how it's fundamentally any different from e.g. living in a state from no death penalty, and being subject to one if you go to another state which has it. If you would rather not be in a situation where it matters, just don't visit those states.

    571. Re:A false choice, of course... by PunditGuy · · Score: 1

      I have no idea where this idea of "choice" comes from. My employer offers services from a single insurance company. One. I don't like this particular insurance company, but my "choice" is to either pay them $400 a month for middlin' coverage for my family or go without insurance altogether. I had a heart attack two years ago, so the individual market is out of the question. I was excited about the public option until I found out that employed people wouldn't have access to it. That's irrelevant now anyway.

    572. Re:A false choice, of course... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      Individual health problems would most certainly fall under Specific Welfare. General Welfare would be things that cannot be applied to benefit single individuals. Like, sayyyyy, roads.Or the USPS. Or even National fucking Parks.

    573. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Understandable, but then you get into the problem of who gets to decide what every state does or doesn't need? "

      Well, if the state's saying what an insurance would or would not have to cover got in the way of selling across state lines...then they would not get a say.

      The various insurance companies would offer whatever deals they wanted, and the consumer would then have THEIR CHOICE of what they wanted to purchase. Why should even the state (after thinking about this) decide what a citizen can buy with regard to coverage. Look, I'm saying if they can sell motorcycle insurance across state lines why can't health insurance be sold the EXACT same way? Apparently there aren't so many state or federal regulations on what it has to cover...so, set health to be sold and offered in as many flavors as other types of insurance, and let the consumer decide?

      This is also an answer to one of your responses to one of my other posts too.

      Insurance is insurance, let them offer what they want and prices they want, and let the consumer decide what is best with their dollars!

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    574. Re:A false choice, of course... by minion · · Score: 1

      Forcing everyone to buy something is not American. Its some weird sort of Socialism. What American needs to decide: Do we want to be Americans and make our own choices, or do we want to be Socialists, and let someone else make decisions for us?

      --

      -- If we don't stand up for our rights, now, there will be no right to stand up for them later.
    575. Re:A false choice, of course... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      If it is just regulation of insurance companies, what is there to "pay for"?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    576. Re:A false choice, of course... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Ah, well then I suppose we disagree on the definition of "theft," (I would have thought that most would say that wrongness is the difference between taking and theft, just as it is the difference between killing and murder) but that's OK. So you are saying that something can be "theft" but not wrong.

      How then is it a criticism of health insurance reform to call it "theft" if calling it "theft" doesn't mean it is wrong? Why isn't it a kind of "permissable theft" like seizing an enemy's property in wartime?

    577. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      A system of governance that is based upon "what is good for me personally" is simple anarchy.

      Actually, it's called democracy.

      Like the GP said, Anarchy.

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    578. Re:A false choice, of course... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      So far so good. But how then do you reply to this: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1588498&cid=31541828&art_pos=1 ?

    579. Re:A false choice, of course... by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      The point of this article is to discuss the reform in a constructive manner, not to bash entire ideologies just because they are not your own.

      I like to bash ideologies that are plain wrong, regardless if the are not my own.

    580. Re:A false choice, of course... by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      You lose when you repeat the Limbaugh mantra of "taking over 1/6th of the economy". It isn't nationalizing health care--it's writing new laws that regulate how health insurance companies can operate. The government isn't taking over anything.

    581. Re:A false choice, of course... by Albanach · · Score: 1

      Do you have a wife and kids? If so, I'd love to hear about your premiums.

      Have you any guarantee that you'd still be covered next year at an affordable premium if, say, you had a cancer diagnosis? Or would such a diagnosis result in you losing all healthcare?

    582. Re:A false choice, of course... by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      1. The government already has several successful insurance programs (medicare/medicaid/Tri-care for military members)

      2. Is it? Are you a constitutional expert? Is it unconstitutional to collect income taxes? (I see this as the same thing)

      3. Care to elaborate?

      4. Nobody is criticizing the quality of health care in America.

      5. I'll wait and see, and your "evil, greedy" comment is a straw man.

      6. Nobody is saying US government health care will be free either..another straw man argument.

    583. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      Well, Gee. I don't work for an insurance company, and I don't have an MBA, and I certainly don't have a law degree or have any experience writing contracts, but since you insist, let me take a whack at it.

      Nor, clearly, are you very logical or understand the problem.

      Under your proposal, the problem is simple: It is not necessary to purchase insurance when one is not ill, because one one gets ill one may purchase insurance and not be denied. Get diagnosed with cancer? NO problem! Sign up with SoonToBeBankruptHealthInsurance. Pay one month of the flat-fee that doesn't vary! They can't deny you!

      Your above proposal with loans and whatnot is nearly nonsensical and does nothing for the problem. It appears you were trying to solve some other problem, such as canceling insurance shortly after beginning.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    584. Re:A false choice, of course... by minion · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that while there are millions of people who can't get healthcare at all, due to cost, the CEO of United Healthcare recently received a 1 billion dollar (US) bonus [cnn.com]. That, my friends, is fucked up. This man could personally pay for doctor visits for hundreds of thousands of people.

      That my friend is capitalism. And you know what fixes that? Stop buying insurance from United Healthcare. Why on Earth do you think forcing everyone into socialized medicine is the cure for this problem?

      Personal health is a prerequisite for a healthy economy. If that guy could leave his job for a better one, without worrying that it would end his wife's leukemia treatments, or end his child's asthma medication, isn't that a good thing? That's more choice. That is real liberty there, not some abstract "we-are-free-to-fuck-you" kind of liberty. We live in a powerful country, but don't rest on your laurels. If we want to compete with the Chinese and the Indians, who are smart and very, very motivated, we need healthcare as a basic right.

      Bull shit. China has no form of welfare for citizens. Yet they are the fastest growing economy. The average Chinese citizen saves 40% of their earnings, because they are responsible for themselves, if they get sick, lose their job, etc. That is how it should be. When did we get this idea in our heads that our government OWES us a paycheck, owes us a job, owes us healthcare, owes us anything other than what the constitution says.. Perhaps we should look at that, because we know congress sure isn't:

      Section 8 - Powers of Congress

      The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

      To borrow money on the credit of the United States;

      To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;

      To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization, and uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States;

      To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

      To provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States;

      To establish Post Offices and Post Roads;

      To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

      To constitute Tribunals inferior to the supreme Court;

      To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offenses against the Law of Nations;

      To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water;

      To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;

      To provide and maintain a Navy;

      To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;

      To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;

      To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;

      To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature o

      --

      -- If we don't stand up for our rights, now, there will be no right to stand up for them later.
    585. Re:A false choice, of course... by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      No, I actually was replying to the point quoted. Which is to say that not everyone votes only on the basis of what is good for them personally but many just for what is right.

      WRT pre-existing conditions, it's a bit tricky. It would be nice to see something done for people in that situation but allowing them to just get away Scott free with not having insurance previously doesn't seem right either. It would be really nice to have a discussion about it before having this impending bill rammed down our throats.

    586. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      For a health company insurance company insuring someone with MS, for example, they are on the hook for hundreds of thousands, if not millions of dollars to cover that single person. And you are saying that they should not be allowed to deny a MS patient coverage (I agree), but can base rates on preexisting conditions or risks(I disagree).

      Wow. Your reading comprehension is seriously lacking. At no point have I suggested an insurance company should not be allowed to deny new coverage of a person found to be a victim of MS, or any serious disease. At the point they are diagnosed it is a pre-existing condition and should not be covered by anything new. The suggestion that insurance companies should be on he hook for every old disease they have the day they sign up for coverage (which you suggest the insurance company cannot deny) is entirely yours.

      It's simple really: You do not have a right to force a company to pay for your medical coverage, even if that company bills itself as a medical insurance company. If you want that sort of guarantee, do not look to insurance for it. Look to your gov't, because only the gov't has the ability to engage in the kind of force required to demand medical providers (of which insurance companies are -not-) provide such services.

      How much would an insurance company have to charge to break even? What's to stop them from charging that amount or more to either cover the cost of this patient, or force this money loser to move to their competition?

      Actuary tables are very good. When you sign up and are not ill your payments will be based on not being ill. If you sign up and are already ill, your costs will go up because it is a known fact that it will cost much more to cover you. That's assuming you can find somebody willing to assume the absolute certainty that you will require medical services. If you sign up and lie, claiming to not be ill when you are, then when the insurance company finds out they will rightfully discontinue your coverage ab initio, from the outset.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    587. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      No, the industry that would be vacated would be the insurance industry. Not the medical provider one.

      I would hate the be under a gov't control health system like the VA system is. I have VA coverage and never, ever, use it. Neither does my grand-father.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    588. Re:A false choice, of course... by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      The reason health care costs have gotten so out of control in the first place is because patients never look at the costs, because the vast majority of health care is paid for by third parties. So patients demand all the best care and all the tests they want and costs be damned.

      You know, I do see what each doctor visit costs my insurance company by reading the EOMBs. In fact I often read them because my insurance company very often does not pay the entire bill, leaving me to pick up a (sometimes) substantial cost to finish the payment that they have started. Not that I know how much in advance a particular treatment will cost. If you could set up a website where you could show that doctor X charges Y dollars for service Z, I'm sure we would all be grateful! However, you will find that those figures vary widely based on factor W - WHO is being charged for the service. And the people doing that are not the consumers, but the providers and the insurance companies.

      In addition, I do not think I have ever asked my doctor to provide a test or treatment that he (or she) has not recommended. In fact, because most treatments are painful, inconvenient, risky, or expensive to me (see above), I don't actually go around saying, "I must have an MRI!".

      Finally, I do not think that I'm in the minority about this, as most rational people would do the same in my situation of inconsistency and lack of information concerning pricing and downsides of treatment. In short, I think that your story (like those of most conservatives) are fantasies, akin to Reagan's anecdote about the "Cadilac Welfare Queen", which has been roundly debunked. On the other hand, I would be willing to pay a few dollars a month more if it ensured that you received mental health care to bring an end to your delusions. Of course, a cheaper treatment would be to stop watching Fox News. And you wouldn't need to pay anything for that.

      --
      That is all.
    589. Re:A false choice, of course... by bendodge · · Score: 1

      Wait, I thought one of the "big scares" of government-run healthcare was the Death Panels that would decide when to stop paying for the elderly.

      My great-grandma decided for herself. A death panel decides for you.

      Some would say that expensive healthcare is a de-facto death panel between the people with savings and the people in debt. It may be. Remember, healthcare isn't a right in the USA. If you want it to be, you've got some major amending to do.

      As a side note, why is the solution to every problem "throw in a profit motive!"? In many cases, it certainly can lead to a better product. In others, it necessarily effects a less efficient system by demanding extra resources to be reserved for profit.

      A fundamental property of government is that organizations put their own power and existence as top priority. This is not because the people who work there are evil; it's just a property of bureaucracies. When you have a company after a profit, there is more than one way to increase your profits. There are three essential methods:

      1. Raise prices. The supply/demand curve limits this method severely unless you have fixed demand, like people forced to buy healthcare (!).
      2. Lower costs and overhead
      3. Increase demand

      A capitalist owner understands that the demand will be higher if he can adjust margins on his cost back end rather than on his customer front end, so he always prefers to combine 2 and 3. Health insurance does not work this way, because it isn't actually a capitalist market. It's a complex monster grown out of monopolies, government programs, and the murk that always results when end buyers do not see the real costs.

      --
      The government can't save you.
    590. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      Because the regulation necessitates a mandate which necessitates subsidies, which you'd know if you finished reading my first post.

    591. Re:A false choice, of course... by kingramon0 · · Score: 1

      I don't have one, by choice, and I rate it Good! It would be excellent if it were easier for me to get major medical insurance with a health savings account.

      The government wants to force me to get more than I need, and that saves money how?

    592. Re:A false choice, of course... by geezer+nerd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Government is why these things cost so little in other countries. Why can't the US do as well?

    593. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      American is a nationality. Socialism is an ideology. The two are not mutually exclusive. I am an American socialist.

      Besides, do you object to our socialist police force, our socialist fire department, our socialist postal service, our socialist military, our socialist public education system, our socialist health regulatory agencies (which make decisions for us about what food is safe to eat and water is safe to drink and which drugs are safe to take)? How about our socialist public roads? Or our socialist health insurance program for seniors? What about our socialist unemployment insurance?

      Last I heard, those were all American. And last I heard, most Americans liked them.

      Damnant quod non intellegunt.

    594. Re:A false choice, of course... by geezer+nerd · · Score: 1

      Amen.

    595. Re:A false choice, of course... by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      No pre-existing conditions

      I agree with everything else you said, but if you to be compensated for "pre-existing conditions" then you're looking for charity, not insurance. The purpose of insurance is to trade low-probability, high-cost risk for high-probability, low-cost premiums, and thus combat uncertainty. It's not meant to be a savings program or a handout. The efficiency of insurance is directly correlated with accurately assessing each client's risk and setting their premiums accordingly.

      If you want to provide charity for those with pre-existing conditions that should be debated and operated as a separate program.

      I have to agree. If I can buy health insurance after I've been diagnosed with some disease or condition to cover it/them, why can't I buy life insurance for my recently-deceased spouse?

      Both make equal economic/actuarial sense.

      This part of HCR was, IMHO, designed specifically to drive out/kill off private health insurance.

      In the end it won't matter. The majority of people will simply refuse to cooperate with or obey the provisions of this HCR bill if it's passed despite ~70% of citizens wanting to start over.

      It will be unenforceable unless they are willing to declare marshal law and start rounding up everyone into detainment camps at the point of a gun. That attempt will only result in a civil war with a very large portion of the all-volunteer military siding with the people.

      SEIU & other union and "community organization" thugs may be an effective force to bully unarmed individual citizens at townhall meetings, but they won't last long against a company of Marine combat troops and local National Guard augmented with veterans among the civilians that are determined to protect & defend their families at any cost.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    596. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidShor · · Score: 1

      Not really, in the second decade, the bill cuts the deficit by 1.6 trillion. And if the reconciliation component isn't extended, the second decade still cuts the deficit by a huge margin. So no, I wouldn't call that cooking the books. The savings grow over time due to the excise tax, which is the opposite from what you implied.

    597. Re:A false choice, of course... by geezer+nerd · · Score: 1

      Even those doctors who have their own premises and "hang out their shingle" are often associates (perhaps employees) of larger organizations who are the providers of healthcare services. That is certainly true in California.

      Where I live now there is a national health system. Doctors are essentially employees of the government, and their fees are heavily regulated. Each doctor visit has a fee charged to the patient, and then the doctor gets something from the government as well.

      There are specialist doctors who practice privately as well, and they are quite expensive.

      Because the government buys all the pharmaceuticals, they are negotiated to very cheap prices. I pay only $3 per prescription, and that is basically a fee to the pharmacy, not the drug company or the government.

    598. Re:A false choice, of course... by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1

      Because that whole states' rights thing worked great for the Confederates!

      Let's see, weak federal government and super-powerful states... makes me think of the European Union.

      Don't get me wrong, Europe's swell. But I think one of the great advantages this country has over Europe is its strong centralized government. And, I don't know about you, but I get the feeling they kinda think so too.

      --
      It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    599. Re:A false choice, of course... by raddan · · Score: 1

      The people do. We elected the people who represent us now. There's nothing illegal about what our representatives are doing.

      If you're arguing that the role of the federal government is strictly limited to interstate commerce and international diplomacy and defense, well, I hate to break it to you-- you lost that argument a long time ago.

    600. Re:A false choice, of course... by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      You lose when you repeat the Limbaugh mantra of "taking over 1/6th of the economy". It isn't nationalizing health care--it's writing new laws that regulate how health insurance companies can operate.

      I'm certainly no Limbaugh fan, but I believe that a little regulation by government often ends up with far worse consequences for most people than a complete takeover. Often such regulatory schemes are implemented because of abuses that affect some small percentage of consumers, but the rest of us end up suffering because of it.

      Take a look at Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae. Not run by the government, but just enough regulation to make the government liable when things get screwed up. That's the worst possible position for a taxpayer in the equation -- leaving things to private enterprise (who will always act in what they perceive to be the quickest moneymaking schemes), while essentially insuring those enterprises against failure. When things go right, corporations win. When things go wrong, taxpayers lose. Taxpayers rarely win in situations like this.

      Or, for a more recent example of regulation nonsense, consider the credit reform acts that recently regulated credit cards for consumers. The idea was to help people who got abused by credit card companies who raised rates suddenly when credit scores got worse, slapped penalties on people for not paying on time, etc. There was only one thing that needed real reform -- people needed to be able to force those companies to fix errors that could ruin credit. But the rest of it just ended up rewarding people for not following through with the contracts they themselves agreed to when they took the cards.

      Meanwhile, what happened to the average citizen who pays his/her bills on time? They were hit with massive rate increases, the end of low fixed rate cards, more limited rewards, etc. In other words, to help out a few people (some of whom were legitimately abused by corporations), the rest of the population got screwed over. I have a number of friends who were managing credit card debt well, making regular payments, etc., and now they are struggling to keep up since cards doubled or tripled their rates before the reform act when into effect... even for good customers. I don't carry a balance anywhere, but I lost my low fixed rate card and a bunch of rewards, and my credit score is about as high as you can get.

      This is the sort of thing you get when you try to regulate significant portions of the economy. Companies weasel around the regulations to maintain their profit margins, a small minority benefits, while everyone else ends up footing the bill. A little regulation is NOT a good thing.

      Like the GP, I agree that we need a safety net in health insurance, just like we need to provide ways of solving major abuses by credit companies or by mortgage lenders. But a significant but ultimately hands-off amount of regulation by the government is about the worst possible outcome for most taxpayers. Wait a couple years, and you'll see how most people will suffer to pay for this plan, and a new massive bureaucracy will develop to allow insurance companies to get around regulations or actively benefit from them, at the expense of their customers.

      I'd be much happier if they nationalized health care. Or if they left it alone except for restricting a few major abuses. Instead, they're doing just enough to make it far, far worse. And yes, given that this is 1/6 of the economy, tinkering with it is probably a heck of a lot worse than controlling it outright.

    601. Re:A false choice, of course... by raddan · · Score: 2, Informative

      What's up with this strict Constitutionalist shit? Times have changed! Besides, aren't you glossing over the "general Welfare of the United States" part?

      Also, wha? Are you serious? China has no welfare? Well, Jeez, why all the fuss about them being Communist then? China has a huge welfare program, and it's going to get bigger.

      Yeah, sure, stop buying insurance from UHC. And trade in the bargaining power of my company for the bargaining power of just me? Sounds like a good deal.

    602. Re:A false choice, of course... by Rockoon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Make Microsoft and Bill Gates pay the same 15% of Gates' yearly income (as well as everyone else making more than $75k/yr) that I and my employer do and the SS solvency problem is gone.

      The idea that if we raised taxes on the rich then we would have enough money is a lie told by liberals preaching to the poor.

      There is not enough rich people. The size of the predicted (by the CBO) shortfalls we are discussing here is 14+ digit numbers (more than the GNP.) We are talking about sizable percentages of the countries entire net worth.

      You would have to start taxing the assets of the people, not their income, before you would come close. Not that there is much of an alternative.. its either fuck people this way, or fuck people that way.. cause someone is going to get fucked.

      My vote is to fuck the people that made the fucking inevitable, the boomers, which means cancel their social security and their medicare and every other entitlement they arent actually entitled to.

      We should stand there and watch with tears in our eyes, at the horror that will be their future, never lifting a finger to help them on a federal or state level. We can help our family, and our friends, and anyone else we feel deserves it on a personal level.. but they are NOT entitled to the sweat of our brows through mandate.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    603. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      That saves money by preventing health care system extorting money from you.

      Let's face it, in a dire condition one would agree to pay anything and everything to get the health care.

      The point of compulsory health insurance is that .. it is already all paid for.

      And it works both ways: patients are guaranteed access to the care and doctors are guaranteed to be paid for the work. Regardless.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    604. Re:A false choice, of course... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      There are some forms of diabetes which are hard to properly treat, but these are rather rare. Most of the excess costs incurred come from those who do not take care of themselves. Which this will do nothing to change.

    605. Re:A false choice, of course... by ajs · · Score: 1

      That's because it's the best in the world. ... A higher cost per capita is a GOOD thing.

      Um... no. No, in fact that's exactly the opposite of the truth. Remember, it's the cost per capita of U.S. citizens, not COVERED U.S. citizens. That means that in order to cover a small fraction of our population, we're paying far more per taxpayer than other developed nations spend per taxpayer to cover everyone. It's obscene.

      Moreover, it's not better healthcare on the whole. The U.S. has some of the best teaching hospitals and medical research organizations in the world. This is true, but that doesn't affect the overall quality of care as much as you'd think. This is because most healthcare doesn't involve these institutions, and our hospitals are a mess (nursing shortages, monetary problems, consolidation of ownership and many other factors have damaged them horribly).

      Add to that that we consider many covered procedures in other countries to be "elective" here (e.g. in many countries such as Germany "spas" are covered as a periodic cost, allowing people to seek preventative therapies that involve exercise and relaxation).

    606. Re:A false choice, of course... by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      ... However, you will find that those figures vary widely based on factor W - WHO is being charged for the service. And the people doing that are not the consumers, but the providers and the insurance companies.

      Well that was exactly my point. And when it's government-controlled, it will become a system of charging the maximum allowed for everything, and non-covered services will simply be unavailable to all (except congress, of course).

      In short, I think that your story (like those of most conservatives) are fantasies, ... I would be willing to pay a few dollars a month more if it ensured that you received mental health care to bring an end to your delusions.

      Cute. I'm not a conservative, I'm a classic liberal. And your comments just demonstrate that it's actually your OWN viewpoint that is myopic.

      Of course, a cheaper treatment would be to stop watching Fox News.

      Except that I hardly ever watch Fox news, and in fact some of my view on the matter you call "fantasy" came from NPR and my own research from other sources you would consider quite credible.

      I'm sorry that your view of people that you don't agree with is so skewed that you actually think that they all must be dumb and mislead. The world is not black and white like you seem to think it is, and Team D is not full of altruistic white hats battling the villainous Team R for the good of the poor. Politicians all act from self-interest, but you may never be able to see that for yourself.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    607. Re:A false choice, of course... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      Technically Bernie's only crime was that he was not an apparatchik of the State. It's perfectly legal for the government to run Ponzi schemes.

    608. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      Besides, why listen to the people when it's the right thing to do? The whole reason you don't let the general population run the country is because it's a total clusterfuck when they have direct input. Look at California. The electoral system and our politicians suck, but at least the country functions with them around. Keep in mind how many people were against the minimum wage, universal suffrage, and civil rights. Those things are the right thing to do.

      Sooooo what you're saying is people are too stupid to know what is good for them and we need to copy the Soviets and tell them exactly what is good for them?

    609. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      We The People have no place in our government anymore. That makes sense now.

    610. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      As opposed to the uproar now not to try it? They aren't paying any attention to that now, so what makes you think that in 2 years they would?

    611. Re:A false choice, of course... by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Sole proprietorships and small medical clinics are almost always by definition not-for-profit (albeit not 501c(3) non-profit) because all of the money after expenses goes directly to the doctors. So the difference between those facilities and non-profit corporations is mostly a bunch of paperwork and legal pedantry....

      Hospitals, by contrast, are often operated on a for-profit basis as a part of large corporations. In those situations, stockholders who played no useful part whatsoever in patient care are skimming money off the top while cutting the number of nurses to the legal minimum, limiting doctor wages, cutting facility maintenance to the bare minimum, etc., all of which can potentially diminish the quality of patient care. That's what I'm complaining about, not doctors making a living. Indeed, quite the opposite---doctors would likely get paid more if those hospitals were run in a non-profit fashion because they wouldn't have to pinch pennies to make more profit for the shareholders.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    612. Re:A false choice, of course... by kondor6c · · Score: 0

      Some forms of Diabetes are preventable, like being overweight. Despite warnings from doctors people continue to overeat and not exercise.

    613. Re:A false choice, of course... by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1

      What you did was attempted to do was indicate that "Most Americans" are stupid

      Stupid? I never said anything like that. That's an idea you injected into what I was saying.

      What I did was point out that a poll of what Most Americans think is not a particularly good way to understand what's actually happening.

      Most Americans think they are above average intelligence. They also think they are above average drivers. This is obviously not true. But borne out in polls.

      Most Americans thought the war in Iraq was a good idea. They also thought that the war in Afghanistan was a good idea. Whether or not this is the case, most would now say that they were not and are not now a good idea. I certainly don't know and I guess only history can be the judge of that.

      Most Americans thought the economy was in great shape in 2007. The DOW was at 15,000, quants were brilliant. The Web 2.0 was the wave of the future. MySpace was worth a bajillion dollars. Now those views are seen as quaint.

      My point is not that most people are stupid (the bell curve suggests that most people are of about normal intelligence). It's that people (all people -- me, for example) are bad at predicting the future. And that they (once again including me) are REALLY REALLY REALLLY REALLLLLLLLLLY bad at confronting problems in the future. So saying that people like their health-care now is not a convincing argument that their health care future is secure.

      You didn't bother to read the CNN link, did you. It wasn't long.

      A tort reform package that includes caps on jury awards of $500,000 for punitive damages and $250,000 for "pain and suffering" damages would lower liability insurance premiums by about 10 percent...
      Such laws would lower expenditures on government programs like Medicare and Medicaid by roughly $41 billion, according to the report. An additional $13 billion would be gained from taxable wages over 10 years

      so the entirety of the $54 billion in savings is due to lower malpractice premiums.

      And now for a little math. $5 billion is 1/500th of $2.5 trillion. So tort reform, while certainly a useful idea, is not going to have much of an effect on government health-care spending, which seems like a healthy chunk of healthcare spending overall.

      Now, say that the private health care industry is 20 times more affected by tort issues than the public sector. (I can think of no reason for this to be the case, but let's just say.) that means that tort reform would save 1/25th (4%) of private health care spending. not insignificant.

      yet, my insurance premium goes up 15% each year. say that 4% savings went directly to my premium (Feels like I'm making a lot of allowances). You're saying that the other 11% increase is due to people showing up in emergency rooms with colds?

      You can understand why I might be skeptical.

      Speaking of skeptical: tort reform does not do away with malpractice suits altogether so why wont doctors still have the same incentives to order unnecessary tests and procedures? They still have to carry malpractice insurance and will still be penalized by their insurers in the same ways, right? And aren't the patients just as responsible for not trusting the word of their doctor and wanting those extra tests and procedures?

      Many of those 30 million are uninsured by choice

      Until they become sick. And then it turns out that (unless they have $40K in their bank account) everyone else has been insuring them the whole time.

      barriers preventing out of state insurance purchases (imposed by state government regulation)

      why do you think states prevent out-of-state insurers?

      my understanding is that it's to allow the state governments to regulate the industry without worrying that insurers will just pick up and move to a more loosely regulated state.

      why are state governments regulating the insurance indus

      --
      It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    614. Re:A false choice, of course... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      I have no idea where you came up with that idea. I just wish you and everyone like you would stop speaking for me and everyone like me when you say things like "America IS voting for opposition/independent." There is no unified opposition to the Health Care bill, and there certainly is no unified America. Stop pretending there is, because it just means you want to avoid a dialog.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    615. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "The people do" is not a valid answer to my question. I don't think you can point to or cite anything that can show the federal government has the authority to "force" a citizen to purchase anything.

      The problem as I see if is that if the federal government somehow is found to HAVE such authority, it has too much power.

      See Wickard v Filburn -- and more recently US v Lopez and US v Morrison, although Gonzales v Raich might be used to argue otherwise based on affirming that Congress can (at least in the case) assert that a particular act or class of acts fall under the commerce clause -- and that assertion alone makes it so. Scalia, while agreeing with the majority, wrote a separate opinion which distances this from Lopez and Morrison -- and I'd bet money Gonzalez v Raigh wouldn't apply on any challenge here based on prior cases, the dissenting opinions of Raigh and Scalia's opinion.

    616. Re:A false choice, of course... by xdor · · Score: 1

      True, debt reduces your options: but you have an individual choice about going into debt. Taxes are the choices of others: unless overturned you have no choice.

      Electorally accountable! That's every freaking TWO-FOUR YEARS! And that's if you think your one vote is going to make a change in policy. (unlikely)

      Right now you can vote each and every time you chose a medical provider/service

      Look, the "conscience" or motivation of the corporation is purely to make money: if they have a bad product: don't buy it and they will go out of business. (Yes this means you must read the fine print and chose the good over the bad.)
      But right now you get chose every time: once government sets something evil you'll need a lawyer and/or a two-year campaign to get it changed!

      Health-care reform should be about removing any price and service protections afforded the health care industry (by the government) that insulate it from competition. True, insurance companies play some part of that insulation. Don't use evil insurance companies. Heck, don't use insurance: http://www.simplecare.com/
      But keep your right to choose: keep the government out of it.

    617. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Wow. Your reading comprehension is seriously lacking. At no point have I suggested an insurance company should not be allowed to deny new coverage of a person found to be a victim of MS, or any serious disease. At the point they are diagnosed it is a pre-existing condition and should not be covered by anything new. The suggestion that insurance companies should be on he hook for every old disease they have the day they sign up for coverage (which you suggest the insurance company cannot deny) is entirely yours.

      That's in the bill we are discussing. It's actually the one part of the bill I agree with. The part that I think should be added that is not in there is a flat rate. In other words, all customers of a given insurance company on a certain plan should pay the same price. There is nothing that I am aware of in the current bill that prevents insurance companies from gouging customers, or jacking up the prices of the more expensive customers to rates that they can literally not afford. It does, however, force citizens to pay whatever the insurance companies want as it forces everyone to have health insurance.

      Of course, we know that price control does not work. That is not what I'm talking about. Prices are set by the insurance company itself and dictated by market forces. If you want, you get the Cadillac, low deductible, full coverage for more services, gets you the good room and food in the hospital plan, great! Get it. Everyone pays the same high price. The basic plans would probably have a much higher deductible but a lower monthly premium and would be intended for catastrophic coverage only, but have lower premiums that everyone on that particular plan pays. Whichever coverage point the customer chooses will have a set price. That price will be the same no matter if the customer is 18 or if the customer is 64. Basically, the insurance company will not be allowed to different prices for the same product, period. Just like when you go into a store to get a loaf of bread, the checker can not charge you $5 and then charge the next guy $2. You both pay the same price, not matter how hungry you are, or what you intend to do with the bread.

      This will prevent insurance companies from overcharging customers as they become more expensive to cover in an attempt to drive them to the competition. Say, when a female customer gets married (likely to start having babies... childbirth is expensive), or a customer turns 60 (elderly are expensive medically). The sad part is that no matter what the insurance companies charge, EVERYONE will require coverage by law. We are not talking about going to court and "innocent until proven guilty" law either. The current plan will be administered by the IRS.

      The company I work for handed out a price list for the differing levels of coverage from our insurance companies. There was no questionnaire, physical or anything else. It was just "employee--$X.XX/mo, employee + spouse--$Y.YY/mo, employee + spouse + child--$Z.ZZ/mo" and so on. There were three levels of coverage, each with differing benefits and each with a different price. How are they able to do this? Because those that never use the service pay the same as those that go every day. And here you said that insurance companies would leave the business before doing such a thing, and yet, every job provided health insurance plan I ever had came with a set price. I guess the company that insures me and my family must be magic or something. Maybe they are really a tire company that just sells health insurance or something because they obviously are not a health insurance company because you said that they couldn't do that. I wonder what they are...

      Actuary tables are very good. When you sign up and are not ill your payments will be based on not being ill. If you sign up and are already ill, your costs will go up because it is a known fact that it will cost much more to cover you.

      Oh. I get it. So the insurance

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    618. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't stand that line about increasing taxes on individuals "EARNING" $200K a year. It's misleading at best.

      My boss reports her restaurant's earnings on her *personal* return, yet she does not net $200,000 annually.
      Regardless, she will be taxed as though she actually takes home that kind of money.

      IMHO taking more money from business owners, so they can't invest or grow (or whatever else they want to spend the money they have *earned* on), is about the dumbest
      goddamn thing those douches in D.C. advocate.

    619. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      The words of 200-year dead white guys do not impress me nearly as much as they impress you

      and

      Appealing to the text of a document written before electric lighting does not make sense to me.

      I had read through most of your post before I got to the above -- and was considering how to approach your rants and inaccurate statements of my positions. Then I read the above...

      I might as well call the constitutional equivalent to Godwin's law here. It's pointless to argue the Constitution with you or what the role of the federal government is. You obviously have little to no understanding of our Founding -- or of government's role in general and instead use comments and phrases like the above to demean them. To make it "OK" to ignore them or how they've built and hold our society together. Because, they were just words written by some "dead white guys before electric lighting". Got it.

      And you chastise me to "not presume to have a better understanding of the Constitution than [you] do"... What a prat!

      When it turns out that you've chosen to bark at someone who in fact knows FAR more than you, you instead insult the Constitution, our Founders and the foundation of our republican form of government. What does this say about you?

      The rest of your rant essentially continues to re-write what I actually said and then make snide comments on the words you put in my mouth. I should have seen this coming from the way you've done this to a lesser degree further up the thread. You aren't worth my time.

      I'll close by leaving you with two quotes:

      This (from Benjamin Franklin):

      When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.

      And this statement (with questionable attribution, but insightful nonetheless):

      A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government. A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship.

    620. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But ever try to get insurance yourself on the private market? Good luck affording it!

      I recently switched jobs and had to purchase my own insurance. I found a plan for less than half the price of my old one while retaining the same coverage.

      People need to stop assuming insurance is expensive to purchase on your own. Depending on your demographic, age, and needs, it may turn out to be quite a bit cheaper.

    621. Re:A false choice, of course... by libkarl2 · · Score: 1

      Are you implying that "centrists, libertarians, independents, right, etc" are somehow "unbiased peoples"?

      oh, that's right.... you posted AC. How subtle.

      --
      You are where you are at the time you are there.
    622. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not decrease the costs overall, via a tort reform bill to limit malpractice claims, thus limiting many tests and procedures which are ordered primarily to protect the doctor from being sued.

      Also, end the restrictions preventing insurance companies from competing across state lines, thus enabling competition in pricing and services.

      An end to 'mandatory coverage' rules could also help. Currently insurers are required to cover things like prenatal care, child birth, drug rehab, and others. Even if the policy holder doesn't want the coverage, it's required. A lesbian couple, or a retired couple, are covered for pregnancy and childbirth, even though they aren't likely to need it. Let individuals choose the coverage that suits them.

      I'm a single male, un-married. I don't need drug rehab coverage, nor do I need ob/gyn coverage. Why should I have to buy it if I want insurance for things that concern me?

    623. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Far be it for me to denigrate the Constitution. It's a marvelous document

      You are a liar. Does "The words of 200-year dead white guys do not impress me" sound familiar?

    624. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Bob,

      Save yourself the trouble. This guy is a liar. Look up this thread. He claims to respect the constitution, yet he denigrates it when it becomes apparent he really doesn't understand it. He stated:

      "The words of 200-year dead white guys do not impress me"

      He's just a troll. Save your time.

    625. Re:A false choice, of course... by narcberry · · Score: 1

      All that and billion dollar basket-weaving classes for low income canines in Springfield.

      --
      Modding me -1 troll doesn't make me wrong.
    626. Re:A false choice, of course... by narcberry · · Score: 1

      I believe in principals. If your argument is sensible, it will make sense even at radical extremes. So I watch Fox with Msnbc to decide who is less crazy.

      --
      Modding me -1 troll doesn't make me wrong.
    627. Re:A false choice, of course... by greengearbox · · Score: 1

      Uproar? true, some polls have shown widespread opposition to the current bill, but in many (most?) cases the polls don't distinguish the reason for the disapproval. one may oppose the bill because it goes to far, or because it doesn't go far enough. for example here is a poll (admitedly rather old at this point) showing 57% of Americans in favor of a public option.

    628. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      There doesn't have to be a unified opposition. I never gave any reasons for opposing it. People can oppose it for what ever reason they want, and they still oppose it. In the end, the effect is the same. Those supporting the bill FOR ANY REASON are the minority. As such, speaking for THE MAJORITY, the people oppose it.

    629. Re:A false choice, of course... by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      Does it matter why someone disapproves of the current bill? If the majority disapproves (which it does) then it should not be passed and Obama should accept defeat.
      Why even give that link when admitting it is old data? How about something new?
      http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/march_2010/53_remain_opposed_to_health_care_plan
      http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/march_2010/55_say_congress_should_start_over_on_health_care

    630. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      Thomas Jefferson explained the latter general welfare clause for the United States: “[T]he laying of taxes is the power, and the general welfare the purpose for which the power is to be exercised. They [Congress] are not to lay taxes ad libitum for any purpose they please; but only to pay the debts or provide for the welfare of the Union. In like manner, they are not to do anything they please to provide for the general welfare, but only to lay taxes for that purpose.”

      Thomas Jefferson isn't in charge of translating the United States Constitution. That might have been his understand, but, again, his own personal understanding isn't what we rule by.

      The Supreme Court and only the Supreme Court are empowered by the United States Constitution to interpret the United States Constitution.

      The Founders were given no special dispensation simply because they also happened to have been the first legislators.

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    631. Re:A false choice, of course... by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      why not ask the guy who wrote it?

      You mean the Apollo Alliance/Van Jones, SEIU's Andy Stern, and various other Progressives, Communists, and Socialists?

      The reason it's been written in the way it has?

      That's easy.

      They're following the Cloward & Piven strategy using methods outlined in Saul Alinsky's "Rules For Radicals" to collapse the system and replace it with a socialist/communist system.

      I just hope they're ready to reap the whirlwind of blood and death they've sown, because they'll be on the receiving end of it if they are not stopped.

      If you're against this debacle of a "healthcare reform" bill, show up at the House of Representatives in D.C. tomorrow, Sat. March 20th, or at least show up at your local congress-critters' office. Block the hallways so nobody can get in to pass this power-grab.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    632. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      Oh, I also forgot in my other response - the 10th Amendment to the US Constitution says "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

      However in cases brought in later terms, the Supreme Court has all but said that the 10th Amendment in its current form has outlived its original purpose.

      The current arguments against a Healthcare Mandate are almost verbatim to the arguments that were brought against the Civil Rights Act (10th Amendment, etc.) and the Supreme Court struck then all down for the reason above.

      Essentially, it was written for another time.

      Now, could they (as I've said in another post) turn 180 degrees and reverse themselves,...of course. Anything is possible.

      But there's a big difference between "possible" and likely.

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    633. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      But, welfare in the constitution doesn't mean what people today are trying to make it sounds like..it isn't 'welfare' like the entitlement.

      From another of my posts:

      "Trouble is, the welfare spoken of by the framers of the Constitution is not the welfare type of system YOU are speaking about. It is more about the ability of the feds to tax for the management of the resources and defense for the country as an entity, not handing out entitlements to individual citizens. And if this is wanted, it is supposed to be a responsibility of the states, not the federal govt. Remember the 10th amendment?"

      So you say. Everyone is perfectly entitled to have any opinion they choose, but the only opinions that matter when it comes to interpreting the Constitution are those of the Supreme Court.

      If the Supreme Court agrees with you, then you have something. Until then, you have only your opinion (and I have mine).

      Neither of us can claim to hold "the" truth on the matter.

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    634. Re:A false choice, of course... by MJMullinII · · Score: 1

      The Constitution doesn't care if something is Capitalist, Communist, Socialist, Federalist, Anarchist, or any other "-ist". The ONLY thing the Constitution cares about is that whatever decisions are made are in general agreement with the will of the people

      Actually, GP is correct in that the Constitution cares that decisions are made in general agreement with the will of the States, and only indirectly through them, with the will of the people. I would actually concur with him that it is better to have such far-reaching things to be done on state level, so that those states which do not want (i.e. the majority of citizens of which do not want) to be "socialist" for whatever reason, can go their own way.

      (yeah, I'm a pro-federation "socialist")

      Note also that this does not preclude those states which do want decent social welfare programs to collaborate on implementing a single cross-state scheme, so that you can pay taxes in one state, and still be covered in all other states that participate.

      Of course, this would mean that you could be effectively uninsured as soon as you cross the border into a state which does not participate. But I don't see how it's fundamentally any different from e.g. living in a state from no death penalty, and being subject to one if you go to another state which has it. If you would rather not be in a situation where it matters, just don't visit those states.

      I certainly wish the States had done as you suggested, it certainly would have been easier and far less divisive than the current Healthcare Bill has become.

      But some things are too important to wait on.

      We waited for over a century for minorities in the South to be treated equally, the States certainly could have ensured everyone's civil rights were respected in that time. They didn't.

      Therefore, the Federal Government was forced to step in an ensure that the rights of all were respected.

      Again, some things are simply too important to wait for.

      --
      "Don't be a martyr -- BE THE ONE WHO GOT AWAY!"
    635. Re:A false choice, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      NOTHING is as expensive as war, and the monetary expense is the smallest of those expenses. We spend far more on the military than anything else.

      Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and various welfare programs put together accounted for 48% of the 2009 Federal budget. Various defense and war activities accounts for 30%. We spend far more on "social welfare" than anything else.

    636. Re:A false choice, of course... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      The original Senate Bill (HR 3590) to which the reconciliation would be applied has this in it on pages 1813-1814.

      I wasn't able to locate an appropriate amendment in the reconciliation bill.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    637. Re:A false choice, of course... by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1

      I did not think I was being snide, well until the end. Then I was being a little snide. But really I was trying to be funny. You didn't think the baseball thing was funny?

      I did say I have great respect for the founding fathers. To be fair, I had no way of knowing beforehand that you made a study of the Constitution. I feel like I know a great deal about it (though I do not doubt that you know more) and many people on Slashdot lecture about the Constitution without really any understanding of the subject.

      I apologize if you feel that I was impugning you. It was only my intention to stand up for myself.

      In regards to the question, if you consider the relatively short life of this country, I think you'll find that it's marked by a near constant reinterpretation of the meaning of the words of the Constitution.

      everything from a standing army, to a central bank, to abolition and prohibition, to a system of highways, to a social safety net was read into the words of the Constitution.

      And it wasn't because the Founding fathers anticipated that their country would need a highway system 150+ years on. Or that they knew that this country would play a pivotal role in pursuing two global wars. (I doubt they could have conceived of a "World War".)

      These things exist/happened (or not, as in the case of slavery) because the country needed it to continue to function and no other entity could provide it.

      That politicians, judges and lawyers could later shoehorn some justification from the various loose phrases ("general welfare") does not speak so much to the sagacity of the founding fathers as the flexibility of our language.

      And seeing just how different this country is than the one envisioned by the men who wrote the Constitution, what sense does it make to apply their arguments to modern issues? Certainly we can read them like we read other wise men. But we must fashion our arguments so that they can stand on their own merits.

      I leave you with this:

      A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

      What the flippety-flip are we to make of that. Now that (in clear violation of the intent of the founding fathers) we have a enormous standing army, does the right to bear arms still persist?

      Well, let's just say that the first part is just a little fluff. The second part is the important part. The right to bear arms shall not be infringed.

      "Shall not be infringed" is pretty explicit. A private individual should be able to own and bear (and use if necessary) all the tools available to the modern military. If I had the means, there's no constitutional justification for the federal government to prohibit me from owning a bazooka or a tank or a nuclear bomb.

      --
      It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    638. Re:A false choice, of course... by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 1

      I'd like to simply point out that, at least arguably, *access* to health care is a big part of health care itself. "Health insurance" reform and "health care" reform are not so neatly separable.

    639. Re:A false choice, of course... by tgrigsby · · Score: 1

      You forgot what it doesn't have.

      There are no death panels. Never were.

      There is no funding of abortions with public funds. There never were.

      There is no funding of healthcare for illegal immigrants. There never were, and in fact there is an short section that explicitly prevents the use of public funds for that purpose.

      There is no "single payer" option. There was once, and it's a damned shame it's not there now.

      The first three were the completely fabricated crap the foaming-at-the-mouth Republitards and teabaggers dreamed up. The last would have been as easy as extending Medicare to cover everyone.

      --
      *** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
    640. Re:A false choice, of course... by ormondotvos · · Score: 1

      As a recent escapee to Medicare, from the wilderness of the bears and quicksand of American insurance companies, I appreciate finding a sane precis so early in the postings. Yes, it's a long way from Single Payer, but it sets up the base to reach that goal, for the first time since the battle was engaged so many decades ago. That's the reason for the insanely fierce, emotional and tragically stupid firestorm of corporate-instigated rhetoric from the Republican zombies on this. (Does it strike you as ODD that every single member of the Republican party votes in absolute lockstep? That's not representative government, it's blind partisanship. But I digress.) IF this bill passes, the momentum will be unstoppable. The first effect will be that the average citizen will finally look at the actual bill that passes, and will realize that it is no longer necessary to lie in order to get medical care. It will also, I think, stabilize medical pricing and except for some preliminary price skirmishing with Congress, encourage some shy Congresspersons to follow Kucinich to his final goal of Single Payer, which is, strangely, very popular with the citizenry when presented fairly. I'm not concerned about the details. The bones are there to build on. It will take a decade to achieve Single Payer, but we've already got Medicaid, Medicare, TriCare and some popular and massive non-profits (The head of California Kaiser came out for Single Payer years ago.) The finances are obvious and simple. Insure both sick and well, and it averages out to cheaper care, ON AVERAGE. The freeloader wannabes who are healthy now will bitch the loudest when they don't have free medical care. The system will groan for a while as Americans catch up with their neglected items, but in twenty years, we'll be richer in every way. Maybe Americans will be free of a major free-floating security worry without being rich or old. So now we bite fingernails for a few days.

    641. Re:A false choice, of course... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      True...but hopefully, the SCOTUS will try to interpret as closely to the meaning the founding fathers had when they wrote it...

      Back when there was personal responsibility, and no handouts....and let intrusion into citizen's lives by the federal govt.

      Remember, it was set up to where you are a citizen of your state you live in first...THEN, a citizen of the United States...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    642. Re:A false choice, of course... by Bartab · · Score: 1

      And here you said that insurance companies would leave the business before doing such a thing, and yet, every job provided health insurance plan I ever had came with a set price.

      Every job provided health insurance plan covers healthy individuals, which are the bulk of workers. The larger the company, the larger the pool, and thus the smaller effect an ill hire would have on the plan costs. Some states allow employers to pool together.

      At the end of the year, every pool - every single pool! - has its premiums adjusted so that that pool is profitable to the insurance company. If your company consisted of 10 people all with MS and nobody else, then your insurance costs would be astronomical.

      When somebody enters the pool with a pre-existing condition, they are effectively punishing every other member of the pool with higher rates without having paid premiums while not needing care.

      Oh. I get it. So the insurance companies are not allowed to deny coverage based on existing conditions, but there is nothing wrong with them charging premiums, of say, one hundred billion dollars a month ($100,000,000,000/mo).

      That depends on what you're talking about, you keep changing context.

      If your context is your proposal: Clearly not, because being forced to cover all comers regardless of pre-existing conditions or coverage at flat rates while not requiring the cheap-to-cover healthy individuals to pay for coverage would cause rational individuals to delay coverage until needed, requiring insurance companies to charge astronomical rates people like you wouldn't "allow", thus ending the potential for profit and the insurance companies would leave the market.
      If your context is the "Obamacare" reconciliation bill: High cost individuals will be placed into high risk pools that is subsidized by the gov't. The insurance company recoups the value spent by the high risk pool on medical costs, the gov't subsidizes to the level it is willing to, and the balance is billed to individual policy holders.

      Existing state policies for high risk, such as California's Major Risk Pool pools the high risk patients with Cobra and other state sponsored medical coverage, and then subsidizes coverage on top of that. This is the only reason a group of guaranteed cost individuals can be covered without massive premium costs.

      Once again, insurance is a profit making enterprise. If you are intent on eliminating the possibility for profit by requiring low cost coverage to high cost individuals, thus allowing low cost individuals to escape the market due to lack of need, then the insurance providers will be vacated by profit seeking companies.

      See, that way the insurance company, say Humana, can claim that they offered coverage, but the customer refused to pay, which is required by law. They were so kind as to give the number to Cigna. Their rates are half of what Humana's are for preexisting condition customers.

      $50,000,000,000/month is still a profitable enterprise, even for a pre-existing condition. Of course, yearly caps exist - until "Obamacare" is passed, so the actual price point would be much lower.

      See, an understanding of how insurance works is necessary to design reasonable proposals for reform.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    643. Re:A false choice, of course... by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      The economies of scale here pretty much break down at the >1m people mark. 300m people is no cheaper per person than 1m people because duplication is necessary due to physical location of those 300m people, and administrative overhead is going to grow with the size as well. (as we have seen time and time again in national systems).

      You might not like $1250/mo, but that is the best number I have been able to extrapolate. Looking further, it surprisingly roughly matches what people generally put into private insurance for a family + co-pay + deductibles. Which makes me suspect that my napkin math represents something fairly realistic.

      Could you cite some examples where services provided to people on a large scale has real cost savings over a slightly smaller but still very large scale? Some states run public education on per county basis, others run it state wide. In most cases a county is big enough for large orders for food and materials to be placed. I'm not saying one way is better than another, I'm just pointing out that you are assuming a lot when it comes to how these things scale.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    644. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      You can't ban pre-existing conditions without a mandate. You get the insurance death spiral: In order to cover the costs of covering sick people, insurance companies have to raise premiums by a lot. But raising premiums will cause the healthiest people to leave. Because the healthiest people left the pool, this will force insurance companies to raise costs higher, which causes more healthy people to leave... the end result the insurance system totally collapses.

      .

      So if you ban discrimination based on pre-existing conditions, you have no choice but to force everyone to buy insurance. But that's not fair, so you have to get subsidies to help people pay for the insurance you've made them buy.

      To make the market more efficient, the bill also allows small businesses and individuals to and together in the exchanges, and allows insurance companies to form national products to sell across state lines.

      And that's 99% of the bill. There is no bill that could have accomplished those points in a simpler way short of Single-Payer, and I challenge you to show otherwise. This is essentially identical to the Republican Health Care proposal from 1994! The truth is, about 5-10 republicans probably support the idea of this bill, but are following the party policy to obstruct *everything* in order to make the democrats look ineffectual. (That's a rather objective statement, the republicans have posted four times as many fillibusters this congress as any other in history, they've held blanket holds on appointees...)

    645. Re:A false choice, of course... by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      What can be more efficient than a cold heartless healthcare system? All of your examples sound like efficiency to me.

      Is that a healthcare system people would actually want and enjoy? No. But if nice couches raise my premiums then couches be damned. Also the waiting rooms of private offices I've been in have crap chairs that are torn and stained, and the whole place smells weird. But I can afford it at least.

      As for what should have been a malpractice case that you mentioned, that happens in the private sector as well and is not unique to military hospitals. It sounds like you are fortunate to have high quality private healthcare right now, not all of us can afford the good stuff.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    646. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      Big health insurance companies can negotiate far better rates then smaller ones with hospitals and doctors. Because of their lower costs, they can have lower premiums, and so they capture more customers, which allows them to have lower premiums, which gets them more customers...

      .

      The end result is that there are usually only going to be one or two insurance companies active in any particular health care market. So we're looking at a monopoly situation.

      If you allow selling insurance across state lines, then a small state like North Dakota is going gut every insurance regulation in order to get the tax revenue that would occur from insurance companies incorporating in that state. This is exactly what happened in the credit card industry, where their regulation was *literally* written by Citigroup, and the governor of North Dakota publicly admitted as much.

      And so now, the monopoly insurance company is going to move to North Dakota, and there's really nothing consumers will be able to do about it.

      This doesn't hold for motorcycle insurance, because there are no accelerating economies of scale like there is in health insurance. I

    647. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      I don't see how it really increases competition. People are not too familiar with how health care actually works. Insurance companies have a fee schedule and negotiate rates with doctors and hospitals, and doctors are free not to accept them. The reason there isn't much competition in the market place is that if a insurance company has a lot of customers in an area, they can negotiate a better rate with a Hospital, and translate those lower costs into lower premiums which gets them more customers...

      This dynamic leads to consolidation, and so I just don't see how letting someone come from another state accomplishes anything. Any out of state new entrant would be inordinately expensive because they have no customers in the area.

      And as of now, nothing stops a health care company from setting up a plan in another state so long as they comply with it's regulations. So because of these factors, I'd think the race to the bottom would be the main effect.

    648. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      "Would you care to give some reasoning as to how it's a step in the right direction?"

      Cuts the deficit by over a trillion dollars, lowers premium costs paid by familes, leaves 95% of the resident population with health insurance, creates exchanges where insurance companies can bid on standardized plans - making the health care market competitive and efficient, ends discrimination based on pre-existing conditions, steers our country away from bankrupcy, funds experiments in health care innovation to improve quality of care...

      As for your other point: It's entirely irrelevent to this discussion, because this bill doesn't actually do anything to take the profit motive away from health care.

      Still, medical school doesn't have to be expensive. In Israel, the state completely funds the training of doctors. In exchange, they work for the national health care service and make a moderately high flat wage. Since being a doctor is a pretty prestigious job, there are no shortages of doctors. Most of my family has dealt with the Israeli health care system, and it's been pretty good...

      Medical device innovation is another issue. I don't see how you could take away the profit motive from that without effecting innovation. But even in Israel, bio-health companies just market their innovations to the national health service...

    649. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidShor · · Score: 1

      Short answer: Highly accelerating returns to scale in the health insurance market which lead to the formation of natural monopolies in local markets. This does not occur in the car insurance industry. In the presence of monopolies, government regulation is needed to keep markets efficient.

    650. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      That is how insurance works, but it's fucked up and morally bankrupt. Instead of having insurance companies spend billions of dollars estimating the actuarial risk of individuals and preventing people who are high-risk from getting health-care, let's just charge everyone pretty much the same rate (Maybe with stuff like discounts for exercise and penalties for smoking). This raises costs for healthy people a little bit, but really, that's fine with me. It also saves billions on administrative costs.

      It's how they do things in every other developed country in the world. (Before you go on about socialism, I'll say this is a completely orthogonal issue. In Switzerland, the Netherlands, and in Germany, people get their care from private insurance companies. )

    651. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      "Name me a government social program that has ever come in on or under budget projections?"

      .

      SCHIP, Medicare part D, pretty much every healthcare program passed since the CBO came into existence in 74....

    652. Re:A false choice, of course... by AK+Marc · · Score: 0, Troll

      I can vaguely see the argument that costs will be reduced if some people pay for some of their care, but frankly, costs can be just as reduced if the government pays hospitals and doctors set amounts for specific procedures, obviously resulting in them reducing their costs to increase profit.

      The customer doesn't pay. Either they have insurance, and the insurance pays, or they don't have insurance, so they can't afford it and don't pay. Either way, the person using the service isn't cutting the check for it.

      Add to that the litigious nature of the US, and there are liability issues. Oddly enough, they don't come out the "obvious" way. The cost doesn't go to insurance. Though insurance is higher here than most other places (all other places?), it still isn't that much. What it really comes down to is *everything* is tested and treated and tested more. I just had an argument with my wife's grandmother about my wife after the birth of the newest family member. My wife is anemic. Every day. Worse when pregnant. So Grandma asked what they were doing for it. "Nothing." She got mad that they were giving her bad care. My wife isn't dizzy. She isn't tired. She is fine in every way. But because a test came back positive, then she should be given something, even if she doesn't need it. And then she should be tested more to see if it was effective.

      That's the mentality of Americans, and if something goes wrong and you didn't over-test and over-medicate, then you get sued. So all doctors go along with it. And the patients aren't paying for it, so they go along with it.

      I'd welcome "Death Panels." Patients don't know what's in their best interests, and they push for things that actually harm them. The two most popular treatments for anemia would have harmed my wife. So why waste money giving her a treatment that will cause an additional problem that will need treatment, then test for everything repeatedly until the result is negative? The cost should be weighed into the treatment.

      That's the real reason the health care in the US is so expensive compared to everywhere else. And the funny thing is that with the levels of overmedication (see Michal Jackson, and no, it wasn't overly special treatment because of who he is that got him medicated with anything and everything) we aren't any better off. We should be trying to "fix" ourselves, not manage problems for the rest of our lives. Medical care is treating diseases and test results, and forgot there's a person. Not that they all do that, but that it happens enough to drive up the cost and down the level of care. And it's encouraged because it reduces liability and it makes the patient think they are being helped because they get so much attention in the form of tests and prescriptions.

    653. Re:A false choice, of course... by AK+Marc · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      It's been ruled legal to use blackmail, so if this is shot down, they'll just deny funding to states that don't pass a complying law. So complaining they can't, say, set the maximum speed to 55 mph is a useless argument. They can't, and so they didn't, but yet did at the same time. At least this way, they are putting it in one place, even if this and the 55 mph thing are both unconstitutional. I'd rather have one unconstitutional law than 52 of them. I guess that makes me a bad American. I'll take the simple evil over the complicated one. I'd vote for non-evil, but they aren't running and you didn't write my name in for the last election.

    654. Re:A false choice, of course... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Yes, well we all know that Troll is used by Democrat-hating (lets just say Democracy hating) Republicans to stifle other opinions that don't match their own Fox biased agenda.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    655. Re:A false choice, of course... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      1. the government should NOT be in the business of insuring people.

      Why?

      2. it is unconstitutional to REQUIRE everyone buy health insurance

      Really? Which part does it violate?

      3. government regulations are part of the reason costs are so high to begin with.

      Actually it has been shown that half of the cost of US healthcare is in overhead, trying to track and bill every single expense. This is by far the highest of any nation.

      there is no health care "crisis" in the U.S.; our health care is second to NONE

      That's only partially true. A more true statement would be that the US health care is second to non for the 5% of the population that can afford it. The rest of the population received health care no different or in many cases worse than any other industrialized country because the goal of the insurance companies is to pay for the bare minimum standard of care.

      5. the middle class will bear the burden of this legislation, not the "evil, greedy" rich people.

      Conjecture

      6. people need to stop pretending their Euro-socialist healthcare is "free."

      First, its not socialist. Unless you also consider the court system, military, firefighters, police and public schools also to be socialist. You are confusing social programs with socialism. Second, its free at time of use, but its paid for by tax dollars so no of course it is not free in the general sense. If I'm robbed and I call the police, I don't pay for it at the time of the call but that service is not free either.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    656. Re:A false choice, of course... by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      I second the motion.

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    657. Re:A false choice, of course... by Stray7Xi · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why you think that the government won't reflect this disparity?

      I wasn't clear, government runs into same problems. I'd just rather government deciding when someone gets cutoff.

    658. Re:A false choice, of course... by dylan_- · · Score: 1

      I assume the $50/month private health care is a supplement to the public health care you pay for in your taxes?

      Yes, that's correct.

      What does the $50/mo get you on top of the government plan

      It's extras like no waiting lists, private rooms, things like that.

      and how much per month of your taxes pays for the government plan?

      Difficult to say exactly, but less that yours (i.e. Americans pay more for public health care than we do in the UK).

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    659. Re:A false choice, of course... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Every job provided health insurance plan covers healthy individuals, which are the bulk of workers. The larger the company, the larger the pool, and thus the smaller effect an ill hire would have on the plan costs. Some states allow employers to pool together.

      At the end of the year, every pool - every single pool! - has its premiums adjusted so that that pool is profitable to the insurance company. If your company consisted of 10 people all with MS and nobody else, then your insurance costs would be astronomical.

      When somebody enters the pool with a pre-existing condition, they are effectively punishing every other member of the pool with higher rates without having paid premiums while not needing care.

      Awesome! Now you get it. Except, each insurance company will have the same number of pools as plans offered. In other words, all of America would be in the same pool, and it would be even better, because as you said, "The larger the company, the larger the pool, and thus the smaller effect an ill hire would have on the plan costs. Some states allow employers to pool together."

      And yet, it has not caused insurance companies to leave the business. Or as you put it, "The problem is the immediate departure from the industry by all participants". Strange, that doesn't happen because my company is pulled together and it won't happen if all of America is pulled together.

      If your context is your proposal: Clearly not, because being forced to cover all comers regardless of pre-existing conditions or coverage at flat rates while not requiring the cheap-to-cover healthy individuals to pay for coverage would cause rational individuals to delay coverage until needed, requiring insurance companies to charge astronomical rates people like you wouldn't "allow", thus ending the potential for profit and the insurance companies would leave the market.

      Bullshit. That doesn't happen now. Well, it does happen some, but to a much smaller extent. See, you don't need insurance to get covered. You can walk into any emergency room with any problem and get treated. It's the law. And yet, 90% of America still has insurance coverage.

      So, stop saying that if you make everyone pay the same price based on insurance package and ban insurance companies from denying based on health, that people will stop buying insurance. It won't happen because it does not happen so much now.

      And even in some bizaro world where people stopped buying insurance because they could not be turned down, the fix would be quite simple, as I showed in a previous post. Other fixes may include allowing insurance companies to have a ridiculously high deductible for first year of coverage that decreases year to year.

      The whole point is prevent insurance companies from jacking up the rates of "high-risk" customers who have done nothing wrong. My mother, for example, who is 62 and has been with the same insurance company for 30 years has to pay well over $2000/mo for catastrophic only coverage. And no, she has no pre-existing condition other than age. She would change companies, but no one else is offering anything better. If she were allowed to be pooled together, her payments would be less than $500 a month. That's $1500/month she would be saving. Around here, that's a house payment. That would buy, insure and put gas in a Mercedes Benz. But since she is a small business owner (a hair dresser), she doesn't have the option to pool together.

      See, an understanding of how insurance works is necessary to design reasonable proposals for reform.

      Let's see, you think that people will drop their insurance if they suddenly can not be turned down for preexisting conditions in numbers large enough to cause all the insurance companies to leave the business and loose trillions of dollars. Yet, anyone can get treated, insurance or not, today at any hospital in the nation and strangely enough, 90% of Americans still have insurance.

      See, an understanding of how reality works is necessary to design reasonable proposals for reform.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    660. Re:A false choice, of course... by rhook · · Score: 1

      The hell it doesn't, this bill even creates government mandated health care. And tell me this, if this bill is so great why did congress exempt themselves from it?

    661. Re:A false choice, of course... by rhook · · Score: 1

      Private insurers aren't raping the tax payer, this bill however will. Its hijacking 1/6th of our taxes.

    662. Re:A false choice, of course... by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Only rich old people are hurt.... hmmmm

    663. Re:A false choice, of course... by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      First, true capitalism is democracy (People vote with their money).

      That argument is so outrageously flawed that it's ridiculous. How is a democracy possible when some have a huge lot of votes (= money) and others don't have any?

    664. Re:A false choice, of course... by mikerz · · Score: 1

      That would make perfect sense if the government had a set budget that it could never breach.. as it stands, it's in the interest of the government to never cut anyone off -- it gives them political control and votes from those who fear they could not be insured otherwise.

      However, by removing the bottom line it turns the system into a ponzi scheme where everyone loses out (the money just isn't there). The government has the same issues with providing healthcare, but the deficits are masked and passed down in terms of inflation where they would instead lead to bankruptcy.

      I resonate with your humanistic concerns, but believe that lowering prices by increasing natural competition (removing the regulations helping insurance companies establish monopolies) ought to be the immediate concern.

    665. Re:A false choice, of course... by ThatOneSDGuy · · Score: 1

      I have heard this argument for years and it is always made by someone relatively healthy with insurance. Your premise would suggest we might control disaster relief costs by insisting that victims carefully choose among relief providers or that we can control defense costs after an attack by questioning our military provider before we let them into combat. If I'm looking at a provider while I'm healthy, I might be able to choose a less expensive provider, but when My wife miscarries and Hemorrhages, I'm not a smart consumer... and neither are you or anyone else. When you 3 year old cuts her knee, you don't call ahead to see if they will use dental floss instead of those hundred dollar sutures. Some things are not susceptible to consumer pressure. We call them public utilities and ask government to regulate therm, or, in many cases, to provide them. Until there is some analog to the cellphone to compete with the present health care delivery system as cell service has with land lines, market forces are useless. So, if we do away with all but catastrophic coverage and force folks to pay out of pocket, what happens? What would happen if we did that with car insurance. Only pay if your car is totaled? We would see a lot more deferred maintainence and gradually fewer people driving and more rusting hulks on blocks n every yard because of a slow speed collision that disabled but did not total the car.In time, only the very rich would drive and there wouldn't be as many very rich as an economy based on mobility crashed. I am somewhat describing the condition of the uninsured Americans who need, but don't seek, health care now. All that said, this bill is an immoral giveaway to a parasitic industry that has shown itself far to morally challenged to deserve continued existence, let alone an infusion of government dollars as income.

    666. Re:A false choice, of course... by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      As a hardcore libertarian and fiscal conservative, I agree with 75% of this. "No pre-existing conditions" is silly - it costs too much to insure people with terminal illnesses, for instance.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    667. Re:A false choice, of course... by volpe · · Score: 1

      Eminent Domain predates the founding of this country. It sucks, especially when it affects you (my great-grandfather's farm was largely seized to build a school), but there are many, many cases where there is indeed a greater good served by it. The discussion really shouldn't be "should we have it?" but "when should we have it?" Eliminating it is not practical.

      Perhaps, but it should be a little more difficult to impose. Forcing someone to take fair market value for their home is just plain wrong. "Fair market value" is what I get when I choose to sell my house. When I am forced to sell my house, the government should give me triple fair market value.

    668. Re:A false choice, of course... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      Tort reform is not a solution in itself. It's a small piece of a bigger problem. It can help, but results of (e.g.) Texas's reform are mixed.

      Restricting competition across state lines is done because we want to avoid a race to the bottom on consumer protections and other 'mandatory coverage' rules that benefit us collectively--and those are mostly there at the state level. They're there so that, for example, some right-wing nutjob can't claim religion as a reason to avoid letting his daughter see an ob/gyn (say, to get birth control)--or perhaps a better example, he can't claim it as a reason to avoid covering his *employees'* daughters. Since most people get their health coverage through employers, they serve as a way to insulate individual employees from moralistic assertions by their employers.

      And as to what constitutes a race to the bottom, well, see what happened with credit card deregulation: now all of the CC companies are in South Dakota because SD happens to have the fewest consumer protection regulations re: spontaneous rate increases, etc. Or at least they did until the CC Holder's Bill of Rights went into effect last month. I certainly don't want all the health insurance co's moving to the place where they're the least regulated and applying those standards to all of us. If individual states have legislated what their citizens feel ought to be included at a minimum, who are these corporations to circumvent that?

    669. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Further, property should only be taken (and be fairly compensated) for public good and public use. The idea to take private property and give to another private party (on the assumption that it will bring increased tax revenue) is a perversion eminent domain.

    670. Re:A false choice, of course... by raddan · · Score: 1

      I agree completely.

    671. Re:A false choice, of course... by AigariusDebian · · Score: 1

      I have semi-weekly massage therapy and weekly gym membership/class fully covered by the very basic health care plan in a small and poor EU country. The reason for it is that all the basic care is covered by the government automatically, so the health insurance companies need to think on their feet to get any business.

    672. Re:A false choice, of course... by AigariusDebian · · Score: 1

      That is actually a misstatement - most people in the USA have no idea what a single payer system is or how it works and only a vanishing minority actually oppose it. The only people that really oppose single payer are the healthcare companies that make a killing from the current system, because they know that a government run single payer system could obsolete their whole business model and do their job better for fraction of the cost. Just like it is done in the civilized world.

      Even the current polling in the US say that around 50% of people support the current plan, but when actually asked in detail, a large part of those that do *not* support the current health care plan, oppose it because it does not go far enough. Only 20% of people in the US actually oppose of a single payer government run healthcare system called Medicare. If everyone would get an option to automatically enroll into Medicare or even buy into it, absolute majority of US citizens would be for it.

      But that will not happen, because it would hurt the profits of the insurance companies.

    673. Re:A false choice, of course... by AigariusDebian · · Score: 1

      A car is a car (except when one is mandated via regulation to have a full set of air bags and not throw the engine block trough the passenger seats in a crash and the other car ... is not).

      Government regulations setup the baseline of quality control expectations, so that the customers don't have to check every line of fine print and might actually have some confidence in the safety of their choice.

    674. Re:A false choice, of course... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      I didn't think you did based on your statements further up the this thread.

    675. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      The customer doesn't pay. Either they have insurance, and the insurance pays, or they don't have insurance, so they can't afford it and don't pay. Either way, the person using the service isn't cutting the check for it.

      While I understand your point, perhaps you should read what I wrote more carefully before going off on a rant.

      You see, there are those of us who do pay. Like me. No insurance, but we pay our bills.

      I get very annoyed when people act like we don't exist, especially as, at this point, we're keeping the entire fucking medical system afloat, as insurance continually extorts lower and lower prices from hospitals, under the threat of taking all their patients elsewhere. As in most states insurance is a monopoly or possible a duolopy, it's a pretty serious threat. If one of the large insurance companies removes a hospital, it has lost 80% of their business.

      This is called 'negotiating rates', and is seem by total fucking retards as a good thing, despite the fact that no one seen to ask 'Hey, wait a minute, if insurance is paying less...doesn't everyone else have to make up the difference?'. (In any other industry this is would be seen as anti-trust behavior, but health insurance magically gets an exemption from that law.)

      Anyway, as to what you're talking about, it's not exactly what you say.

      I mean, you're close, but you missed the reason that lack of liability is considered so important, and hence why we have all these automated tests and crap.

      It's because hospitals have been running on such thin margins for so long that they've cut costs, and especially staff, to the bone. So, instead of simply having twice as many doctors so the doctors can spend more time with the patient...well, the cost of the visit got capped, so doctors have to rush to see twice as many patients to make the same amount of money.

      Which resulted in errors, a lot more errors. And resulted in hospitals, as they don't actually have the manpower to stop errors, attempted to fix said errors via process. I.e, testing this, testing that, etc. (Stuff they can still bill insurance for.)

      I.e., the medical industry has been turned into a penny-pinching bureaucracy. Because their staff is almost nonexistence. Because they can't pay them. Because insurance has stripped them down to the bare bones.

      Hospitals are being operated like a Taco Bell, 'How to make a burrito' on the wall because they don't want to actually train people. (Please note, I have no problem with Taco Bell.) Or, in this cause, because they have one damn trained person (a doctor) being shuffled between patients as fast as humanly possible and a bunch of gruntwork LP nurses and lab techs everywhere else.

      Where it used to be 'RN comes in to get blood, doctor comes in with RN, gets medical history, etc', now it's 'LP runs in, gets medical history and blood,lab tech tests, doctor manages to glance at history and test, runs in, prescribes, runs out'.

      Hospitals, because they can't actually pay for trained humans, are attempted to use said trained humans as little as possible, and instead attempting to run an assembly line where you maybe use of 3 minutes of an actual doctor's time.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    676. Re:A false choice, of course... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I get very annoyed when people act like we don't exist, especially as, at this point, we're keeping the entire fucking medical system afloat, as insurance continually extorts lower and lower prices from hospitals, under the threat of taking all their patients elsewhere.

      Uh, no you aren't. You are a minority. You are ignored because you can be safely ignored. The number of people with "medical bills" (not the occasional well-doctor visit, but actual problems requiring surgery or $10,000 a year in medication) who are uninsured and pay those bills on time is so close to zero it is considered zero for all the discussions.

      I don't care if you exist. You are such a small minority that making a national policy for the two of you would be irresponsible. There is no policy that is best for everyone, so some people will feel slighted. Get used to it. It's a democracy, not a consensusocracy or unamimousacricy. People get screwed, and this time you think it's you. So sad. Move on.

      It's because hospitals have been running on such thin margins for so long that they've cut costs, and especially staff, to the bone. So, instead of simply having twice as many doctors so the doctors can spend more time with the patient...well, the cost of the visit got capped, so doctors have to rush to see twice as many patients to make the same amount of money.

      Where is this downward pressure for costs? Why don't they just up the cost to cover competent care? Why are these hospitals, in the free market, giving sub-standard care? Wouldn't the free market fix all that? I agree that there are doctors seeing too many people, but that's because there are too few doctors. There are lots that go out of the country to get the degree, then they have to do the insane thing, they have to get an internship outside the US to get full MD status so it's covered in the US, then they have to go through residency again. I actually know an American that left the country to do this because she couldn't get into med school. And it wasn't that she wasn't capable. But that the AMA artificially restricts doctors in order to keep the pay high. Sure, they claim it's about the standard of care, but someone is willing to go outside the US to become a doctor and do two residencies, they can come back and be a doctor, even if a med school in the US wouldn't take them. So it's not about keeping them out, but about creating hurdles to reduce the number of doctors.

      That and the AMA worked to get PAs because they were tired of nurses pretending they worked for a living. They invented the position of PAs to hurt the nurses and because of the real doctor shortage so that care could still be provided with the artificial shortage they were pressing for. I'm actually a pro-union kind of guy. They wouldn't exist if the workers weren't treated like appliances to be killed and replaced on a whim. But the AMA is a "union" that exists for the sole reason of protecting doctors, even if that harms the patients, the government, and the nation as a whole. Bust up the AMA (or make it into a federal position under the FDA) and get rid of an organization that works to make doctors more important, even if that results in worse care.

      Hospitals, because they can't actually pay for trained humans, are attempted to use said trained humans as little as possible, and instead attempting to run an assembly line where you maybe use of 3 minutes of an actual doctor's time.

      I don't think enough "trained" humans exist (trained in the AMA approved manner, that is). When you have more positions for doctors than there are doctors, you will have to have empty positions and people will have to give sub-standard care to cover for it. And paying more won't help, as the bodies aren't there to fill the positions, and the AMA artificially restricts the number of doctors so that you can't just train more or offer more money.

    677. Re:A false choice, of course... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      There is [sic] not enough rich people.

      5% of the population hold 95% of the nation's wealth. Taxing the working man (who actually creates the wealth that 5% hold) isn't going to solve the deficit, either. You can start by making the lazy bastards who "earn" their money by playing the stock market pay the same percentage as the roofer who actually works, and works a dirty, dangerous job. The capital gains tax is far too low, income tax on the rich is far too low, and the taxes on the working man are far too high.

      My vote is to fuck the people that made the fucking inevitable, the boomers, which means cancel their social security and their medicare and every other entitlement they arent actually entitled to.

      Look, kid, I've been paying social security and medicare taxes for thirty years and you're telling me that when I reach retirement age I'm not entitled to the money I've spent for that thirty years? I am entitled to it; I've paid for it; it's mine. The only reason Social security won't be solvent is because the rich bastards who run things have been stealing it for the "general fund", to pay for wars that benefit the rich and nobody else. It's the sweat of MY brow, not yours. "Oh, you think you're entitled to the interest on that money you put in the bank? Sucker!!"

    678. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      The number of people with "medical bills" (not the occasional well-doctor visit, but actual problems requiring surgery or $10,000 a year in medication) who are uninsured and pay those bills on time is so close to zero it is considered zero for all the discussions.

      This is incorrect. Approximately 15% of all health care is paid for out-of-pocket, which is roughly the same percentage as the uninsured, which is somewhere between 15%-20%.

      Of course, some of the out-of-pocket stuff is paid by technically insured people with shitty insurance. Although as they're paying the same high rate I was talking about, it's probably fair to lump 'People who have insurance but have to for their own care' together with 'People who don't have insurance who pay for their own care' in this instance.

      And, of course, like I said, that 15% of spending, because they're paying at a higher rate, is probably only actually paying for 10% of the care.

      Private insurance, by comparison, pays 36% of health care expenditures. Slightly more than twice as much. And probably paying for 40% of the care.

      Perhaps if you raised the amount to $100,000 a year, you'd be correct.

      Why are these hospitals, in the free market, giving sub-standard care? Wouldn't the free market fix all that?

      Hospitals don't operate in a free market. They operate behind the gatekeeper of insurance.

      If the medical field actually operated in a free market environment, costs for 90% of the stuff would be actually competitive.

      Emergency care and whatnot might still be expensive, because they'd hold a functional monopoly on that. (In most places, you can't plausibly make it to another emergency room.) But in general, they'd compete.

      But if the insurance company that holds 70% of private insurance in the state says 'You will charge X for this procedure', and then Medicare comes along and demands the same price...well...that's what you've got to charge the insured.

      You can make up a tiny amount of costs by upping the rates on the uninsured, but that, of course, can backfire as less of them pay the higher the bill is.

      Why don't they just up the cost to cover competent care?

      Because The Insurance Companies Have Near Monopolies And Threaten To Take Half Their Customers Elsewhere If They Don't Lower Their Rates For That Insurance Company.

      Didn't you read what I said? It's called 'negotiating rates', and total morons think it's a good thing for insurance companies to do. Total goddamn morons looking at the problem backwards, thinking, essentially 'Hey, if the railroad that purchased all train lines near here demands to get coal sold to them at half price or they won't buy it here or ship it, that lowers the cost of coal, and this country is spending too much on coal!'

      Um, no, dumbasses, that's a monopoly extorting another industry, which results in higher costs for everyone else as the second industry tries to make up the profit. Yes the railroad might resell you some coal cheaper, but, um, it's not a good thing in general. Free markets are good things for customers, abusive monopoly behavior is not good for them at all.

      And, strangely enough, it's near impossible to find statistics on 'How much money is actually given to medical facilities and personal', vs. 'How much is given to insurance companies'.

      The US does not spend 17% of its GDP on health care. It spends like 10% of its GDP on health care, and another 7% paying insurance company to stand there and pay health care bills. It's really inane.

      And, hilariously, some of the actual increase in actual medical expenses is due to what you pointed out: Hospitals are rearranging care based on what they get paid by insurance for. Before, they'd charge X dollars to talk to a doctor, but insurance only pays X/2...but it will pay for testing which costs 3X, so if they can do that for every fourth patient...

      But that the AMA artificially restricts doctors in order to keep t

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    679. Re:A false choice, of course... by soren202 · · Score: 1

      Nice tinfoil hat you've got there.

      Does that honestly not seem just a teensey bit too elaborate to be realistic to you?

    680. Re:A false choice, of course... by soren202 · · Score: 1

      you realize, of course, that they paid into it to, right?

      Maybe not as much, but that's due to a number of factors beyond them simply not paying into the social security fund, so it's not entirely justified to say that they're stealing from the sweat of our brows.

    681. Re:A false choice, of course... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      This is incorrect. Approximately 15% of all health care is paid for out-of-pocket, which is roughly the same percentage as the uninsured, which is somewhere between 15%-20%.

      You didn't refute my statement. The number of uninsured with bills greater than $10k in a year must be a subset of those without insurance. Those that pay their bills on time is a subset of that. Coming up with how much is paid out-of-pocket is irrelevant. I want the percentage that are uninsured with costs greater than $10,000 who pay on time.

      Of course, some of the out-of-pocket stuff is paid by technically insured people with shitty insurance.

      "In fact, a person with employer-based coverage paid an average of $1,522 on health care (not including premiums) in 2006" (from a random Google search) Those who buy "open market" insurance pay more out of pocket. By your definition, everyone has shitty insurance. But it goes to my point, that the on-time payments by uninsured for expensive things is so small as to be ignorable. And you've posted nothing that addresses that point, other than you disagree on principle. That out of pocket number could account for the vast majority of your 15% out of pocket number.

      I agree that medical schools are doing that, but I don't see how that's the AMA doing that.

      I may have been mistaken, but I thought that the AMA had oversight into the certification process for medical schools, and thus does have power over the number of new doctors.

    682. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      By your definition, everyone has shitty insurance.

      Heh. You said it, not me. I just thought it really loud. By definition, everyone on average has shitty insurance, as, on average, they have to be paying in more than they get from it. ;)

      But, seriously. You want to assert that people who have medical bills totaling over $10,000 who pay them are a 'minority', find something that says that.

      Well, strictly speaking, of course they are, as uninsured people themselves are a minority. As are people who have private insurance and people who have government insurance. None of those groups are over 50% of the population.

      But I assert that uninsured people pay the amount of the medical bills in this country roughly equivalent to their use of medical care. (This is a default assumption of proportionality, so I don't need to prove that.)

      And I'm not letting you get away with that $10,000. I'm talking about on average, the entire thing. Oh, and you don't get to insert 'on time' in there. You know who else doesn't pay on time? Insurance companies. Except they usually demand the right to not pay any penalties.

      I suspect, statistically, that the uninsured are less likely to pay, but pay much more when they do, and it does balance out. If you've got some evidence otherwise, I'd love to see it.

      And good luck finding those statistics. For some public discussion-distorting reasons, almost all discussion about the cost of health care in this country pretends that paying for health insurance is somehow paying for health care, and no one actually calls up hospitals and say 'How much money did you collect from private individuals vs. insurance companies last year for how many patients?'

      I may have been mistaken, but I thought that the AMA had oversight into the certification process for medical schools, and thus does have power over the number of new doctors.

      I honestly don't know much about this, but checking, yes, the AMA does have half control over the LCME, who is in charge of accreditation of medical schools.

      The rest of the control, however, is the hands of the Association of American Medical Colleges, which seems a much more logical group to blame for restricting openings into the medical field.

      While doctors might vaguely benefit from not having as much competition in their field, at this point it's almost moot. They're still working the same amount and being paid the same amount...they're just seeing thrice as many patients, and nurses are doing the rest of the work.

      It's hard to imagine they actually want this, or that a doctor's union would actually see 'providing almost no qualified people, so people have rig the system to use as much non-union workers as possible' as a good idea. (In fact, they clearly don't see it as a good idea, as the creation of PAs indicate.) At some point, 'union scarcity' turns into 'We're going to have to figure out how to do without those workers as much as possible'...and we hit that point around 1995. If it's the AMA doing it, it's mindbogglingly stupid.

      Medical schools, OTOH, can keep upping their price if they don't have competitor schools. If there are 10,000 slots, and you have 1500 of them, you can charge a lot more than if there are 60,000 slots and you have 1500. Medical schools have no downsides, or at least not until they blow up the entire system.

      So I have to blame the restrictions on medical schools.

      But the reason I disagreed, I thought you were blaming them for restricting the number of doctors via their union, which didn't make any sense and is standard anti-union nonsense. But I was incorrect, you were asserting they are leaning on the accreditation committee, that makes more sense and is possible, although I'll keep blaming schools instead, or at least some combination of the two.

      We both agree that the number of doctors is being kept criminally low by reducing the number of medical schools, and size of said schools. And, be i

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    683. Re:A false choice, of course... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You want to assert that people who have medical bills totaling over $10,000 who pay them are a 'minority', find something that says that.

      I can't. I think there is a conscious effort to not report such numbers because they are "bad" numbers. I can't find anything about the default rates for uninsured, or what size the average bill is for uninsured who pay vs those that default. Either the numbers are so small that those that would care don't care, or people who could collect those numbers don't want them collected.

      So I'll hold my opinion about uninsured. You are free to think the opposite. If you can prove me right or wrong, please do so, but I haven't found anything useful either way in skimming through a number of searches and their results. Perhaps it's just such a hot topic that the results I want are pushed down lower on the list than I looked.

    684. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I don't know what the numbers are either.

      All I know is that the uninsured, like me, end up paying three times as much as the insured do when we do pay, and it rather pisses me off that everyone pretend the 'paying uninsured' don't exist, when we're the buttmonkeys of the entire system.

      Perhaps the uninsured in total are a net drain on the system, as you said, it's amazingly difficult to find actual stats about 'Who actually pays what percentage, and how much health care do they use?'. I don't know.

      But let's do some math. Let's say a hospital wished to charge $100,000 on average for a specific operation. Let's say they do 100 a year, so need ten million. And let's have 80 having insurance that covers it. (Yes, yes, people will insist the 'uninsured' rate is 16%, but at least another 5% is under insured and don't actually have functional 'health insurance' in any sense. It's probably closer to another 10%, in fact, but let's just go with 20% in total. Or, if you don't like that, 20% actually is the rate in my state anyway.)

      80 of those people are insured, and 18 are uninsured and won't pay, and 2 are uninsured and will pay. I.e., 10% of the uninsured will pay.

      So, 82 people paying, that comes out to $122k each.

      Except no, the uninsured pay three times as much. So that's averaged over '86' people, or 116k for each insured, and three times as much for the uninsured.

      Does it really seem worth it to even have different amounts? I mean, it saved the insurance companies 6k each, or 480k total or 5%...erm, wait. I can see that being worth it.

      Now I'm not even sure what I'm trying to prove. I expected your assumption that almost no one uninsured pays to show it wasn't worthwhile charge different prices....but, um, it really is, even if only 10% of people at all are paying them.

      If there are 'almost no' uninsured people who pay the bills, if it's 10% of the uninsured, less about 2% of the population, a microscopic fraction...they are covering 5% of all medical costs.

      And 10% is a very low number. It's impossibly, unreasonably low. If 33% of uninsured people are paying, it's covering the cost of all the uninsured.

      If more than 33%, or more than 6% of the population, the uninsured are helping cover the cost of the insured.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    685. Re:A false choice, of course... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Here's one: "Uninsured Americans don't get their health care for free. In 2008 they will have paid $30 billion out of pocket for health care, Jack Hadley, PhD, and colleagues at George Mason University note in the Aug. 25 issue of Health Affairs. Moreover, Hadley and colleagues calculate, the government will have paid $56 billion to cover these uncompensated health care costs."

      So, from those numbers, the uninsured pay about 1/3 of the actual collected cost of their bills. However, that leaves out billed and not collected (if the government doesn't pay) and doesn't indicate if there are any "discounts" for differing payment type. As you've noted, there are different rates depending on how you pay. So would the government pay the inflated cost, or at something like a lower Medicare rate? I don't know.

      15% of people are uninsured, and the collected cost from them is $86 billion, and total health care costs are about 2.2 trillion, which means uninsured accounts for less than 4% of the total paid (numbers taken from different sources, so it's possible they are measuring different things, but it's all I have). Less than 2% of health care costs are uninsured people paying for their own treatment, and 15% of people are uninsured. If all of them paid 13% of their costs, that works out, or if 13% of them pay 100%. Since that's the "worst case" for my example, I'll take that, no more than 13% of the 15% pay their bills in full. So the number of uninsured people paying their bills in full is less than 2% of the population.

      Again, no matter how I look at it, the number of uninsured people paying their bills in full is small. It must, by definition, be less than 15% of the population, and is estimated here to be less than 2% of the population. If you take exception to their numbers or my methods, let me know. But everything I've found leans towards the uninsured being ignorable for the discussion on health care costs. And no, I have no explanation why it seems this bill will cost more than just paying for all the services rendered to the uninsured and still leave at least 5% of the population uninsured.

      I understand why you are annoyed at being irrelevant, but that will not change the fact that you are, for the health care debate, considered irrelevant.

    686. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      15% of people are uninsured, and the collected cost from them is $86 billion, and total health care costs are about 2.2 trillion

      Nononono. This is an example of the crappy statistics I was talking about before, how it's impossible to actually find useful ones.

      The 2.2 trillion (That was in 2007, it's higher now) on 'health care' is what exits people's pockets for 'health care'.

      However, as about 75% of health care is purchased through an insurance company or the government selling insurance, it has a non-insignificant amount of that removed by them. (Even Medicare has overhead.) I don't know how much private insurance removes, but the health insurance bill just passed requires them to spend no more than 15% (Or at least one of the earlier bills did.) on things besides health care, so the implication is at least that much is currently removed.

      All the 'pundits' likes to quote context free stats, and it's incredibly annoying to actually try to figure out what's going on...but the 15% uninsured people are not purchasing just 4% of services from doctors and hospitals. Sure, they use less medical services...but a fourth less than their proportion should be? Really?

      Half the problem is pretending that insurance companies are actual integral parts of providing health care, which is total, utter, complete nonsense that insurance companies like to promote.

      You know those graphs that show 'spending vs. life expectancy', showing the US near the bottom? I wonder how much they'd change if, for medical spending, we just had actual medical spending on a chart, and then compared it to the current 'medical and insurance spending' chart. I suspect we'd do bad, but nowhere near as bad as before.

      Again, no matter how I look at it, the number of uninsured people paying their bills in full is small. It must, by definition, be less than 15% of the population, and is estimated here to be less than 2% of the population.

      Actually, your math makes it worse than that. If 2% of the cost of medical services was being paid out of pocket, it would be less than 1% of the population paying them, as they're paying at least twice, and probably three times, as much as the insured.

      And, this has a very surreal conclusion: Uninsured people who pay for their own medical care, despite only being 13% of the uninsured population, are getting 25% of the uninsured care, and paying half the total cost! (When we already know only a third of the total cost is paid at all!)

      I don't really know how your numbers are even supposed to make sense, but they don't really work in any logical way.

      It's not you, it's the insane manipulation of facts by the insurance companies. You will never see an 'insurance overhead' wedge on a pie chart. Everyone is required to pretend, at all times, that paying insurance companies is part of the cost of 'health care', which we try to 'lower', but never actually look around and say 'Um, wait. This isn't health care. Health care is over there, at the hospital'.

      And no, I have no explanation why it seems this bill will cost more than just paying for all the services rendered to the uninsured and still leave at least 5% of the population uninsured.

      I suspect you mean you have no reasonable explanation, or no explanation that the voters would like.

      I, too, have been unable to find anyone who can explain to me what services insurance companies actually provide that the government could not do better. They are not road construction crews, they do not operate cereal factories, and the government isn't even purchasing anything from them. They are handing out money, and, last I checked, the government can do that just fine. In fact, the government is going to hand us money (subsidies) to hand to them (purchasing insurance) to hand back to us to hand to the hospitals.

      But there's a really good actual explanation for all that. It's just people don't like saying it out loud.

      And I think it was very clearly demonstrated when the public option mysteriously did not come back even though the Democrats had to use reconciliation.

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      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    687. Re:A false choice, of course... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      And I think it was very clearly demonstrated when the public option mysteriously did not come back even though the Democrats had to use reconciliation.

      I don't understand this sentence. I'm currently outside the US, so I don't hear much of the intermediate steps and debate, but have paying attention to what gets passed.

      In fact, the government is going to hand us money (subsidies) to hand to them (purchasing insurance) to hand back to us to hand to the hospitals.


      That's the best summary of the situation I've seen. I don't know why people aren't picking up on that. I guess the Democrats don't want to because it makes their bill look stupid, and the Republicans don't want to because it makes the obvious point that insurance agencies are leaches, not "value added" services, and they get lots of money from them.

      If the government is going to pay, they should cut out everyone and pay the hospitals directly. And if they do that, they should treat the government as the customer and do the pricing directly. That will cut costs 20% or more, and since the government is the "provider" if we eliminate lawsuits for mistakes (and get criminal laws to put people who kill from negligence in jail where they belong) we'll cut another 30% or more out. Actual malpractice insurance isn't that bad (and could be eliminated anyway), but the fear of being sued (which could get your malpractice insurance canceled and keep you from ever practicing again) is the main driver of cost waste. Multiple tests when one would do. Treating terminal patients with treatments that can't work. Overprescribing medications because that's what people want and will sue if you don't and something goes wrong (and if you do give them what they ask for, you kill Michael Jackson).

      The treatments in the US have lost perspective. The US treats diseases, not people, and does so with someone else's money. Because of that, we get worse care and pay more for it.

    688. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I don't understand this sentence. I'm currently outside the US, so I don't hear much of the intermediate steps and debate, but have paying attention to what gets passed.

      I don't want to explain the long and stupid story, but let's just say we could have added the public option with 50 Senates on board, and, tada, 50 Senators had signed up to add just that.

      Magically, the public option didn't turn up in the reconciliation bill sent from the House to the Senate. (Even though it was actually in the original House bill.)

      Senators had an out until the last second...they could assert they didn't want to make changes to the reconciliation bill because they didn't want to modify the bill and make the House pass it again. Sadly for them, they did have to make a change to the bill, an entirely unrelated bill, where upon it went back to the House.

      They had the chance to pass it, with 50 (Plus VP) votes. 50+ Senators had signed a statement saying they would pass it. The House, of course, doialready had passed a public option,and it would presumably have no problem with doing that again. Obama had stated he liked it, in fact, the public option was part of his platform.

      The stars had magically aligned where all the procedural nonsense that supposedly stopped the Senate Democrats from pushing the public option had vanished. No more '60 votes', no more 'we have to leave it out to pass health care' (This was the fix bill, the actual health care bill had already become law, or at least sent to the president.)

      ...and they didn't do it. Didn't put it in the bill. And they literally could not explain why they were not doing that. None of them can.

      So, at this point, the Democrats in the Senate has been exposed as entirely unscrupulous, flat out, complete liars. Period. They were lying about 'wanting the public option but unable to do it'.

      It's not often the veil comes off the process like that, where it's provable that people were pushing for things they didn't intend to have passed. Usually there's some excuse, some reason 'We couldn't pass it'.

      And now Reid's running around 'Oh, we'll have a separate vote on that in a month or two'. Yes. A handy dandy 'requires 60 votes' vote so all you Democratic assholes can vote yes and pretend it was the mean old Republicans who stopped you.

      The American public aren't total fucking morons, Reid. We understand what just happened. You're a soccer player who accidentally ended up alone, with the ball, and no goalie, in front of their goal, and didn't try for the kick. Yeah, we just noticed you're throwing the fucking game.

      That's the best summary of the situation I've seen. I don't know why people aren't picking up on that. I guess the Democrats don't want to because it makes their bill look stupid, and the Republicans don't want to because it makes the obvious point that insurance agencies are leaches, not "value added" services, and they get lots of money from them.

      I suspect it's both parties doing the later.

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      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    689. Re:A false choice, of course... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I just now found the perfect explanation of what I was talking about with the public: The Death of the Public Option: After Parade of Lies, Democratic Leadership Now Stands Naked

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      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    690. Re:A false choice, of course... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The American public aren't total fucking morons, Reid.

      That's the only thing you've said that I disagree with. Perhaps, instead of "moron" we could substitute "incredibly short sited voters who will polarize on abortion, gay marriage, gun rights, global warming, or whatever else they are told to care about, and they'll ignore the intellectual issue of health care for the emotional issues of "freedom" with both parties falling on different sides of "freedom" depending on the issue, but with no real change for either because if the problems were fixed, they couldn't bring them up next election.

      You can screw the voters on economics, health care, foreign policy, wiretaps, etc. But as long as you promise to be on their side for abortion, you'll always be better than the other guy and get their vote. The only fix is to change the ballot. When 3rd party votes aren't "lost votes" then people will be able to vote on issues other than what the two tell them are the only choices.

  2. It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Bos20k · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you really want to fix healthcare, do tort reform first. Then break up the AMA cartel. Then look at other things that may need to be changed.

    Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

    1. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This argument has already been beaten to death. Tort reform wouldn't make much of an impact at all on costs, and it definitely wouldn't solve the bigger problem of millions of Americans without access to health care.

    2. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US Postal Service

    3. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 4, Informative

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Is there anything about the proposed act that is government-run? If there is, I'd missed it. It mandates a bunch of things that private insurance companies are required to do, but it doesn't set up a public option (aka government-run health care).

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      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    4. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Um, the US Postal Service is always in the red and is currently unsustainable. That's the way you want healthcare?

    5. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Bos20k · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It certainly would improve access to health care by reducing costs. So would breaking up the AMA cartel.

      Government run health care may make it more accessible to more people but it would do so at a huge cost. The quality of care is also very likely to be reduced.

    6. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by dorre · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The most important thing is not if the government is able run health as efficiently as possible. The important question is who earns money on what. In case of 100% private health care, everybody (even insurance companies!) earns money when someone is sick. In the case of government run health care the government loses money if people are sick. So they have an incentive to keep people well and only recommend useful medications. I think that's the important incentive here to take into consideration. Do people really want a system where the doctor earns more money if you're more sick and so on?

    7. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wouldn't? The fact that a LARGE portion of healthcare expenditures are due to malpractice insurance won't impact costs much (My cousin is an MD, and nearly 70% of his gross income goes to malpractice)? And if you do cut the cost significantly, you don't think that millions more will be able to afford it? So rather than fixing a part of the system that's KNOWN to be broken, you're saying to ignore the broken part, and then add on other band-aids to make it all better... It's like putting a band-aid on a gunshot wound...

    8. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US Postal Service

      I'm not sure where you come from, but in my hometown, forecasting a $238 billion shortfall in 10 years is not considered "correct" nor "efficient".

    9. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by sageres · · Score: 1

      /Agree, tort reform would curb frivolous lawsuits, and would help reduce insurance costs that make health-care so unaffordable. Once the cost is cut, only then we are ready for the nationalized health-care. Otherwise we are in a long-haul tax-based system where the government will keep increasing taxes each year as the cost of the health-care and the lawsuits (which would make Government responsible) would go up, and up and up.

    10. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From the CBO: http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=4968&type=0

      Savings of that magnitude would not have a significant impact on total health care costs, however. Malpractice costs amounted to an estimated $24 billion in 2002, but that figure represents less than 2 percent of overall health care spending

    11. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Is there anything about the proposed act that is government-run? If there is, I'd missed it. It mandates a bunch of things that private insurance companies are required to do, but it doesn't set up a public option (aka government-run health care).

      And, yet, it still costs $960,000,000,000 to manage. Which, BTW, doesn't include the cost of the mandates.

      Remember, kids, if you require company A to pay you X to provide service C, it is a "tax".
      But if you require company A to pay X to company B for service C, it is a "mandate", and thus "doesn't count".

    12. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      The military?

    13. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, I knew malpractice insurance was very expensive - but who knew it was 70% of the gross. The weird thing here is that I pay about 50% of my gross income in various taxes (federal, state, medicare, property, vehicle, etc.). I'm glad I am not a physician because with that and malpractice insurance I would be going negative very fast. Perhaps you mean 70% of his net after taxes?

    14. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Um, if it doesn't initially have a single payer setup, it eventually will.

      And that will be a different debate. When that debate's being had, your point will be germane (although still not helpful). That's not the debate that we're having today.

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    15. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Jhon · · Score: 1

      That's misleading.

      It doesn't factor in the cost of malpractice INSURANCE, nor does it appear to include court costs. Just monenies lost to malpractice lawsuits.

      From your same citation:

      The available evidence suggests that premiums have risen both because insurance companies have faced increased costs to pay claims (from growth in malpractice awards) and because of reduced income from their investments and short-term factors in the insurance market. Some observers fear that rising malpractice premiums will cause physicians to stop practicing medicine, thus reducing the availability of health care in some parts of the country.

    16. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      The postal service, the military...

    17. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Mister+Mudge · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you really want to fix healthcare, do tort reform first. Then break up the AMA cartel. Then look at other things that may need to be changed.

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Dude - you really need to stop reading World News Daily and watching Sean Hannity - they've made you innumerate.

      The only people who talk about tort reform and aren't full of shit are the people who have never looked at any numbers. Malpractice claims amount to somewhere between 0.5% and 4% of total healthcare costs - i.e. if you eliminated all malpractice and other tort costs from healthcare bills, within a month you wouldn't even be able to notice the difference.

      As for AMA - only about 25% of the nation's MDs are members.

      The government used to do lots of things really well - until Ronald Reagan and his corporatists successors dismantled everything, sold it off to campaign contributors, and bought your votes with your own money.

      --
      Mudge

      In theory, theory and practice are the same.
      In practice, they're not.

    18. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Texas passed tort reform so why aren't my rates cheaper?

    19. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by dc29A · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Post office?

    20. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by pandaman9000 · · Score: 1

      Never trust the figures of a salesman to be fact. Remember that ALL of congress and the President are selling this to us. Also remember that raw numbers don't lie, but statistics can.

    21. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by dammy · · Score: 1

      AMA only represents ~18% of the total number of doctors, and most of those still with AMA are administrators. AMA got a sweet deal for billing codes which Drs have to buy from AMA. AMA is a business and clearly does not represent Drs in the USA.

    22. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Is there anything about the proposed act that is government-run? If there is, I'd missed it. It mandates a bunch of things that private insurance companies are required to do, but it doesn't set up a public option (aka government-run health care).

      The bill requires insurances to include specific items of coverage, decided by the government, which essentially means that the government is going to dictate what your insurance products are in the marketplace. Further, the bill calls for setting up "insurance exchanges" which, while not providing for a public option per se, will wind up being a de facto one, since the insurances in those plans will be regulated on a Federal level as to what coverages they contain, what their price points are, and who is eligible for them.

      So, yeah, the Feds are going to be running LOTS of stuff in this scheme. And all the gubmint can ever do is increase costs.

      Not to mention, for all of you folks who think you're going to magically going to get health insurance now when you didn't have it before, all that's going to happen is you're now going to be mandated to BUY health insurance -- from a Federally-regulated exchange market (for an example of how well those work, I direct you to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) -- at your own cost, or face a fine.

      So, ultimately, this comes down to "Uninsured? Buy health insurance, at the price we tell you to, or we'll fine you."

      Meanwhile, there is essentially no cost-limiting at all in these plans. The CBO itself says that premiums are going to go up.

      Brilliant plan there, Obama. Pure genius. Let's help the uninsured by FORCING THEM TO BUY SOMETHING THEY CAN'T AFFORD IN THE FIRST PLACE.

    23. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by the_fat_kid · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      has your house burned down lately?
      how about the neighbors?
      did it take the whole town with it?
      drive any where out of state?
      clean water?

      troll.

      --
      -- Sig under construction...
    24. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by orthancstone · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Tort reform is good, but it is only so good. Look at Texas: Doctors in Texas have been helped a lot by tort reform, but consumers are still getting royally fucked by the insurance companies. The solution to HC needs to encompass everyone, and tort reform alone does not do that.

    25. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by GiveBenADollar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In the case of government run health care the government loses money when it treats people who are sick.

      Fixed that for you.

    26. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by snsr · · Score: 1

      The military?

      The question was regarding US government institutions run efficiently.

    27. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Postal service has been outsourced. The military functioning correctly/efficiently? thats a farce. I've been dealing with the military my whole life, both as a son of a serviceman and as a civilian employee. There is hardly anything less efficient than the military.

    28. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you really want to fix health care, do tort reform first.

      That won't really accomplish much. Even the quickest search reveals that the cost of medical malpractice is less than 2% - a rounding error compared to total costs.:

      • Q. But critics of the current system say that 10 to 15 percent of medical costs are due to medical malpractice.
      • A. That's wildly exaggerated. According to the actuarial consulting firm Towers Perrin, medical malpractice tort costs were $30.4 billion in 2007, the last year for which data are available. We have a more than a $2 trillion health care system. That puts litigation costs and malpractice insurance at 1 to 1.5 percent of total medical costs. That's a rounding error. Liability isn't even the tail on the cost dog. It's the hair on the end of the tail.

      (Tort Reform) "It's really just a distraction," said Tom Baker, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and author of "The Medical Malpractice Myth." "If you were to eliminate medical malpractice liability, even forgetting the negative consequences that would have for safety, accountability, and responsiveness, maybe we'd be talking about 1.5 percent of health care costs. So we're not talking about real money. It's small relative to the out-of-control cost of health care."

      Annual jury awards and legal settlements involving doctors amounts to "a drop in the bucket" in a country that spends $2.3 trillion annually on health care, Amitabh Chandra, another Harvard University economist, recently told Bloomberg News. Chandra estimated the cost of jury awards at about $12 per person in the U.S., or about $3.6 billion. Insurer WellPoint Inc. has also said that liability awards are not what's driving premiums.

      So, please stop listening to Republicans and/or watching Fox News and learn some real facts.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    29. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by dammy · · Score: 1

      This is what Obama claims as the first phase of health care reform. There are more phases to come including government run health insurance which will kill off the 13,000 health insurance companies. As a former Federal employee (and I do miss my benefits), the idea of the Feds controlling health care from womb to tomb has me very scared.

      Let me put it to you this way, if your employer had a choice of paying 8% tax to cover your health care to Medicaid or paying more to pay for your current health care insurance, what do you think they are going to decide on? That will be their choice in the coming years under Obamacare. Worse yet, more GPs are looking to exit the health care field if this goes through because they will not be making the money they are use to. Is it a bluff or are they telling us the truth of what will happen?
       

    30. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Post office?

      Is a semi independent organization, not really part of the government.

    31. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by ShadowFlyP · · Score: 2, Informative

      You must go to a mechanic that regularly pokes holes in your radiator too.

    32. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      The government does not run the post office, it merely protects its monopoly.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    33. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Watter · · Score: 1

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Is there anything about the proposed act that is government-run? If there is, I'd missed it. It mandates a bunch of things that private insurance companies are required to do, but it doesn't set up a public option (aka government-run health care).

      "mandates a bunch of things that xxxx must do" Ummm.... I'm not sure about you, but when one entity mandates what another can do, that's running it. All regulation of any kind is "running" the thing that is being regulated. Not fully, of course, but the original poster's position about nothing the govt runs functioning correctly or efficiently is completely appropriate. Those entities that lend money aren't fully government run (well most of them; those that are fully govt run are an even better example), but govt mandates regarding loose monetary policy and regulation encouraging lending to unqualified consumers played a big role in the economic crisis we're still facing. Bottom line: that vast majority of the time when the govt sticks it's fingers in something, it's not a good thing. There are some places where a fiscally inefficient govt is still warranted (national defense, possibly education), but those are the exception, not the rule.

    34. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought we had the best military on the planet as well? And if you don't support the troops, you can git out.

    35. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by s122604 · · Score: 1

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      It's been shown, over and over again, that government run healthcare institutions like the VA and Medicare spend more dollars they collect on actual patient care than any private insurance company. They also have consistently higher customer patient satisfaction ratings...

      The government run systems in Germany and France spend half as much money (in terms of GDP) then we do, cover everyone, and have similar (or in many cases better) health outcomes

      I know all of this clashes with some world views, and some "this I know to be always true" axioms, but reality does that sometimes

    36. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by omnichad · · Score: 1

      They simply don't understand what it really means to not be able to afford something. And yet they are trying and trying to offer tax breaks, like the stupid Making Work Pay. I can't imagine how they came up with that one. "Let's decrease withholding for a year so that they have more money. Oh, and let's just assume all married couples are single-income. Then, at the end of the year, they can write us a big check for all the extra money we gave them." I, for one, can't afford insurance. Most of the time, I can't even afford a doctor visit

    37. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Snyper1000 · · Score: 0

      AMEN! Precisely the Moderate view right there. Why can't idealists on the left and right understand this one axiom IDEALISM NEVER WORKS! No, I don't want to see people bankrupt from medical bills, or people choose do I eat this month, or do I get the medicines I need, either way I'm screwed. Not even the extreme right wants to see that. However, Government run? Seriously? You think that sterile needle is expensive now, soon they'll be billing it out at $10 when the suppliers make buddy buddy with this president, or the next, or the next, the point is it is inevitable.

      (And before someone calls me conservative, let me also say free market capitalism doesn't work. A simple study of the industrial revolution proves this. If that wern't enough, look at all the bubbles. Markets MUST be regulated. Comes down to the reason why idealism will never work, and that is that at least one person (and in this day and age, tons of people) will ALWAYS do the wrong thing. I could go on...)

      Don't you love the political posts? I don't!

    38. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Grizzley9 · · Score: 1

      I didn't know my local fire department or my municipal water was administered by the Federal Government.

    39. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by diskofish · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're right about this. There are a few doctors and medical professionals in my family. It's really expensive to go to medical school and there is a big shortage of primary care physicians because it doesn't pay enough to recoup the investment of med school. If you go to med school, you're going to end up with 500k in loans, at least. That part needs to be resolved first. This is how to bring down the cost of medical care. Simple supply and demand.

    40. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True. But in the case of private health care, the insurance companies lose money when they treat people who are sick. And insurance companies hate losing money.

      The government, all evidence suggests, doesn't mind so much.

    41. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      You don't support the troops? You're a... a commie terrorist sympathizer!

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    42. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Bos20k · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The actual damages awarded may or may not amount to that much. It is a fact that doctors often order many more tests than may really be required to cover their asses though and that definitely adds up, probably to quite a lot.

    43. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by SWPadnos · · Score: 1

      In the case of government run health care the government loses money when it treats people who are sick.

      Fixed that for you.

      Actually, this is the case with private insurance as well.

      In the course of debate, people have talked about how the insurance companies are necessary to keep the cost of medical care low. In fact, it makes no real difference what the actual caregivers receive, it only matters how much the insurance company pays out.

      Profit = income - expenses.

      The insurance companies lower expenses by not approving treatments, as well as contracting lower payments for treatment. There was a recent report (I don't have a link) discussing the effect of low insurance contract rates on the rates for everyone else. The gist of it was that the low rates the insurance companies pay for services are subsidized by the much higher rates others pay. When everyone has insurance the rates will have to increase, because there will no longer be a pool of high-paying uninsured.

      I think what people keep forgetting is that we have a system that rewards companies (hospitals, doctors, insurance) for not making people well. In my view, hospitals shouldn't be for-profit institutions. I'd generalize that actually, any business that isn't necessary in the ideal case should not be for profit. (think fire departments - the best case for a fire department is if they can educate people and prevent fires) There's an incentive to create or prolong problems when your business is based on treating those problems.

      --
      - The Sigless Wonder
    44. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Snyper1000 · · Score: 0

      Just remember, lawyers run the government, and lawyers stand to benefit most from frivolous lawsuits (and lawsuits in general). Not even everyone's favorite supposed idealist Obama is going to take money away from his peers' pockets! Thus this will never happen!

    45. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government doesn't lose money. It never loses money. The government's money is MY money. If something gets expensive, the government either stops spending my money on some other program or, more likely, it cranks up my success-penalty-fees, or taxes.

      When something is expensive for "the government", that's you and me. That's not "the man" who's like "Aw shit, I can't buy that new TV now."

    46. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, flat out wrong. Insurance companies lose money if people are sick too, hence the whole controversy of companies dropping people with really bad health issues. It's vastly more expensive for insurance companies to treat sick patients than to provide preventative care. Technically if someone is really sick, like they have some long term ongoing problem, then the premiums raise so they bring in more revenue, but their expenses also raise so they have greater costs.

      I have an HMO, Kaiser Permanente, out here on the west coast. Kaiser has done a tremendous job in cutting costs with a tremendous focus on preventitive care. Through my company at least if you and any of your family do their annual checkup not only is there no co-pay, they give you a $25 gift card just for going and a chance to win a TV every quarter. That's because Kaiser figured out, just like most other HMOs where the insurance company runs the facilities you go to, that preventitive care is vastly cheaper than treatment care.

      Considering my company also is a government contractor and I am very familiar with how the government operates, frankly this whole obamacare mess scares the living hell out of me. It doesn't matter if they're running it or regulating it. The fed broke up AT&T in the 70s-80s and look at the mess the telecom industry went through. They broke up ALCOA a few decades back and totally screwed up the metals industry in the US which has never recovered. Nearly every defense program is vastly overbudget and behind schedule. Excuse me for my conservative/libertarian views, but I'd vastly prefer that the government just shut the hell up, go back to what it should do such as security (military, police), and with everything else including healthcare is go back to Teddy Roosevelt's policy of "walk softly and carry a big stick"; they should just stay out of people's way and lurk in the shadows, ready to jump out and whack anyone getting too far out of line, but otherwise stay put.

      Sorry for the rant, but seriously. Too much empire building in this administration. What they should have done, as others have pointed out above, is break up the small monopolies on health insurance that exist since many states allow only one or a small number of companies to provide health insurance, tort reform (never going to happen, Trial Lawyers lobby is a huge Democrat supporter), and in particular somehow find a way to take healthcare providing away from employers and move it to an individual purchase, which if you know how insurance inherintly works this is probably the most difficult, but not impossible, fix.

    47. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by moose076 · · Score: 1

      AMA cartel? You got to be kidding. The AMA represents less than 20% of doctors and is no longer in touch.

    48. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Texas capped medical malpractice suits at like 20k (which is chump change for a lawsuit) and Texas is like #3 in total healthcare cost per patient. Clearly tort reform didn't bring down the cost of healthcare in Texas.

    49. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See I disagree about the AMA first. In the interest of full disclosure, my dad is a practicing MD (although he's know with the VA system and only owns part of a private practice where he used to practice). The private practice has over HALF THEIR COSTS in dealing with insurance. Right there, I saw we reform insurance and we could potentially half their costs. Let's say we only get them down 25%, that's still 25% they can pass on to patients.

      Granted, Dr. need reform. My dad is in a small town and things are VERY different there. My fiancee doesn't have health insurance and no dr will tell her an estimate of how much a well-check would be up front. THey said she has to come in, have the visit, and then pay. I think that needs to be changed.

      Overall, I'm really disappointed to what we're getting. I"m hesitant to support it as I think this is one of the things you need to take a big leap and do right. I'm afraid that this will set back healthcare reform in general as I'm not sure it has enough changes to be effective. I'm already paying a family right (due to children) for my health insurance, so if we were married we'd be fine. Without being married, my fiancee was laid off; how can she afford insurance and providing for two kids on $250 a week?

    50. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by BeardedChimp · · Score: 1

      Except that ill people cost any economy huge sums of money through missing work or lowering performance.
      Just look at the numbers thrown around that the cost of a flu pandemic could have to world GDP.

      In the UK, the NHS aims to treat patients as early as possible because the later in a disease that you treat it the more expensive it becomes.
      Men are particularly bad at attending their GP early and as a result women cost the NHS more through usage than men below an age of something like 40 or 50. After that the cost for men sky rockets as health problems ignored such as prostate cancer explode and the NHS has to pay for hospital beds, chemotherapy etc. all of which are very costly.

    51. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      USPS

    52. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by mikerz · · Score: 1

      There's nothing wrong with making money helping people get well. You're missing something important in your argument - people have choices, and are not corn being raised in the fields. If your doctor sucks, you find another and get educated about health (you might find that pharmaceuticals are mostly treatment rather than cure and going to the doctor is overrated by today's society).

      If you also think that the government will help people stay healthy, just look at its record with the pharmaceutical industry(in case you did not know, they are very good pals and help each other profit). It is completely in the ethos and history of government to recommend pharmaceuticals above exercise and good diet, because they make money with pharmaceuticals! They stand to gain nothing when people take care of themselves.

      Please, keep in mind that government wants to secure its own importance and money, and to grow as if it were actually creating something new.

    53. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by osgeek · · Score: 1

      Why does it cost almost a trillion dollars to set up mandates and some oversight?

    54. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by ajs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Is there anything about the proposed act that is government-run? If there is, I'd missed it.

      That's right, you missed it. Medicare and medicaid (the largest expense our government has today, costing more per-citizen (not per covered citizen) than any healthcare system in the developed world, will be expanded to cover something like 15-20 million additional Americans. Everyone else gets mandated employer insurance. I'm not sure what the un- or self-employed get, but I believe that this is modeled on the Massachusetts option, and here in Mass. we are required to buy our own insurance unless our incomes are below the poverty line. In some of those cases, the government then provides subsidies for a private plan

    55. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Page 116. Read the damn bill.

    56. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I would be very skeptical of this 70% gross number.

      I know doctors that don't pay nearly that amount. Sure it's big. But they're doctors so all of the numbers are big including their student loan payments.

      For certain specialities there's also the problem of hospitals causing the bulk of the problems and the MD being left holding the bag.

      I have personally been a witness to two such occurences of malpractice where if we would have persued the matter, the wrong party would likely have been left to pay the tab (namely the attending MD). I've also witnessed a 3rd where the MD was dangerously clueless regarding what he was prescribing.

      It's a real shame that a doctor can't lose his license as easy as an airline pilot.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    57. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Jawn98685 · · Score: 1

      Wrong on tort reform. It is an inconsequential expense, compared to many other things that could be addressed by real reform.
      Wrong on "the AMA cartel". It doesn't exist, at least not in any fashion that drives rates for services. There is no simple illustration of this than a personal experience of mine. Wife visits emergency room, at a hospital that is "in plan" with our insurance, however the doctor who sees her is not "in plan". Insurance pays ER bill, doesn't pay the doctor's bill. We complain. Dr. reduces bill by 70%. So her healthcare would have cost 70% more if the insurance had paid for it.
      A system that has a built in overhead of 70% is seriously broken and it's not because of the physicians. It is caused by a system where profit is derived from the very process of paying for healthcare. The insurance company takes a piece of the action, a percentage. Obviously, it's in their interest to make that percentage as large as possible and they spend a great deal of time doing just that, by making it hard for vendors (doctors, hospitals, labs, etc) to get their money, but more importantly, much more importantly, it is in the insurance companies' interest to make the whole process cost as as much as possible. Sure, a 10% cut of the action is better than 5%, as long as the percentage is positive, more action (money flowing through the system) = more profit. That's rather antithetical to the whole concept of "cost control", don't you think?
      And, as is typical of people who only listen to Faux News, wrong on the notion that the government is always less efficient. "Government run healthcare", or more precisely, government run healthcare compensation - Medicare, is far, far more efficient than the private insurance industry, for the very reasons outlined above. Don't believe me? Look it up. The figures vary, depending on whose you're reading, but every single study has shown that the private insurance industry's overhead is at least twice, and usually several times that of Medicare's. Then again there's that pesky fact that of all the industrialized western nations, all of whom have (to at least some extent) socialized healthcare, the U.S. ranks dead last in value derived versus money spent on healthcare. How is it, exactly, that all these other countries, which spend less and have better outcomes, are less efficient at delivering healthcare?

    58. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you actually read it or are you going by what Barry's shills are saying?

    59. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Yes. But eventually someone has to pay the bill.

      Those healthcare costs don't just evaporate into the ether.

      No one seems interested in actual cost containment or even analysis. No one seems interested in knowing where it is all going. They just want to play shell games and engage in mental masturbation like the financial industry did with bad mortgages.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    60. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's easy to run efficiently when you have a lawful monopoly on letter processing. There's a reason it costs more to ship a package than a letter, just as it's more expensive to ship a pallet than a package.

      I'm so sick and tired of USPS being trumpeted as an example. You are comparing apples to oranges. If you gave UPS and FedEx access to letter processing services, you'd see the USPS in a world of hurt because they could use the bulk processing capabilities of letters to pad their shipping costs as well.

      Mark my words, as more people stop sending letters, the package costs in the USPS will level out with UPS/Fedex rates.

    61. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by maxume · · Score: 1

      He is talking about the number of slots available to become an M.D.:

      http://www.lcme.org/faqlcme.htm

      (The first two questions talk about how LCME accredits medical schools and how the AMA is one of the sponsors of the LCME)

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    62. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by bored_lurker · · Score: 1

      Well, kind of - but you have to stop reading the slanted news from Fox, MSNBC, CNN, NPR and the BBC and start going to the horse's mouth. Go to the actual proposal on whitehouse.gov and read it for yourself.

      In it you will see that there is an expansion of Medicaid and Medicare (both government run insurance last I checked), a tax on those who are uninsured to cover then when they need public health care, and funding for "community health centers".

      I am not commenting on whether this is good or bad (I think it has some of both) but you should know what is being proposed and to say there is nothing "government run" means you don't know what is in the proposal.

      --
      --- Tolerance is the axiomatic "virtue" of those without convictions ---
    63. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by guyfawkes-11-5 · · Score: 1

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Post office?

      LOL. I never understood the animus against the USPS. I have been shipping between the US and EU for years, and in my experience the price you pay to mail a letter in the US typically costs less, travels further, and arrives faster than any other post service in Europe. Don't even get me started about the post in Italy and Spain. The level of service in Germany and the UK are generally equivalent to the US, but at twice the cost. Just as a FYI, the Post Office partners with Fedex and UPS as well: http://www.upsmailinnovations.com/support/frequentlyaskedquestions.html That is all.

    64. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the case of government run health care the citizens lose money.

      Fixed that for you

    65. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 1

      Medicare and medicaid ... will be expanded to cover something like 15-20 million additional Americans

      Do you have a source for that?

      Everyone else gets mandated employer insurance

      There's an individual mandate, but nobody has said that it has to be via your employer.

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    66. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rubbish, healthy people contribute to the economy far more than sick people, so the government stands to gain money when it treats people who are sick. Unlike private insurers.

    67. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just restating what you had said previously doesn't provide any evidence or in any way help your argument. Provide evidence instead of talking points. This is the reason that so many people are down on news organizations right now: "If I say it hard enough, it will be true."

      So please, identify for me, the ignorant reader, what the AMA cartel is and what they do to make costs so high. Also, show me studies that have concluded that the AMA or the tort system is the cause for the high prices and convince me that those studies are more valid than studies that have shown the opposite, or at least that it was a trivial effect.

    68. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by dorre · · Score: 1

      There is no government, only people who wants to be reelected.

      And if they can make the government spend less on health care, they can lower taxes and maybe be reelected? You see?

      This of could of course induce a fair amount of short sightedness into the system, but there a ways to take this into consideration as well.

    69. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      The US postal service is outsourced?

    70. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I'm a little hard pressed to think of things the government runs that don't work.

      In the US, I have experience with these:
        Post office: It's amazing that they can reliably deliver an envelope across the country in two days for under 50 cents. Even with the relatively small amount of subsidies it gets, it's cheap.
        Social Security, medicare, medicaid: The overhead is amazingly low. Much lower than any insurance company. And people I know who've dealt with medicare/medicaid have had much better experiences than private insurance companies (on the same patient with the same illness, where some things were covered by one and some by the other).
        Amtrak: it works pretty well considering how low it is funded.
        The highway system: I would guess it's been the main engine for economic growth over the past 50 years.
        Airline regulation and air traffic control: Since deregulation the customer experience has gotten worse (but also cheaper). That's probably a wash. The safety record is amazing.
        The military: it's a lot of money, and I have no idea how to evaluate it, but the official language isn't german or japanese. I don't know how you would even begin to privatize it.
        The National Science Foundation: I think they do a good job. Research gets done. And there doesn't seem to be a way to privatize basic research that provides a common good.
        The USPTO: it's a profit center for the government, and many of its problems can be traced to insufficient funding. Essentially on a too-limited budget they bring in money that goes into the treasury.
        The courts: they seem to work reasonably well.

      In many states, the registry of motor vehicles gets a bad reputation. I've lived in KS, CT, and MA, and they all seem pretty well run. I haven't had to wait in a line for years.

      In contrast, one might ask if there is anything in the private sector that really functions correctly/effiiently. Starbucks can get me coffee, but it's just tough to run big projects: oil companies, car makers, steel companies, airlines, software companies, phone companies, cable companies, and newspapers (to name a few) seem to have problems.

       

    71. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by b3d · · Score: 1

      Original post said is there anything that the Government does right. Local government is still government. There is plenty of examples of the government getting things right. Only when the government screws up do you hear about in the media. The rest of the time, the government is just working correctly in the background.

    72. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Low+Ranked+Craig · · Score: 1

      DARPA is about it as far as I can tell...

      --
      I still cannot find the droids I am looking for...
    73. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by nschubach · · Score: 1

      They partner because it costs much more to ship a package than it does a letter. Is that really a surprise? UPS/FedEx get to dip into that letter delivery service a little bit to gain volume benefits and USPS can offshoot packages through the parcel services so they don't have to hire the people to process all those packages.

      It's much more cost effective when you can shove millions of letters through a sorting machine than it is to have a person physically read a label and pass it down the right slide. How is that surprising to you?

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    74. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by SeNtM · · Score: 1

      And, yet, it still costs $960,000,000,000 to manage. Which, BTW, doesn't include the cost of the mandates.

      And, yet, we can spend $1,000,000,000,000 on the occupation of Iraq that has been proven to be instigated by the lie of WMD.

      So, it is fine to spend untold sums of money in the pursuit of an Imperialistic Dictatorship, but spend that same amount of money on Democratic Social assistance and we become evil.

      Bottom line, the money is irrelevant, both parties have shown us that it will be spent regardless of which one is in power. It might as well go to the more altruistic cause.

      --
      "There ought to be limits to freedom." -George W. Bush
    75. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by dorre · · Score: 1

      EXACTLY!

      I did not think of bringing this forward in my post, but this another good reason for connecting governments and health care.

      If they spend too little now, they will face larger costs later. There is also a incentive to improve preventive health care, because the government in the end pays when someone's sick.

    76. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Low+Ranked+Craig · · Score: 1
      In the case of government run health care the taxpayers inevitably pay higher taxes when it treats people who are sick.

      re-fixed that for you.

      --
      I still cannot find the droids I am looking for...
    77. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      The VA has higher "customer satisfaction" than private medicine?

      Surely you must be joking? What are you on? It's rude to not share with the rest of us.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    78. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you look on an absolute basis at the volume of material moved by the USPS (enormous) and the cost at which they move it (low), the USPS does a pretty good job.

    79. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why, hello troll! In France we have government run health care, and we sure get treated well. It's much cheaper to actually treat sick people than deal with the economic disruption of no health care at all.

    80. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by mybecq · · Score: 1

      In the case of government run health care the government raises taxes after it treats people who are sick.

      Fixed that for you.

    81. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the case of government run health care the people lose money because the government raises taxes again and again when it treats people who are sick.

      Fixed that for you.

    82. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by TBone · · Score: 1

      Yes, the US Government will spend $960,000,000,000 ($960B for the comma-deficient) to manage existing and new health care costs in the U.S.

      The other option is that this bill does NOT pass, and we spend 1,090,000,000,000 ($1.09T) to provide exactly the same health care services we have now, to what ends up being a smaller population. (That's the cost you outline, plus the CBO's estimate of $130B savings over 10 years. That does not include the CBO's savings estimate of an additional $1.2T over the second 10).

      Yes, they're big numbers. The question isn't if they're big, the question is which is more cost effective. Unless math has changed since I learned it, there is no argument to be presented that shows that providing health insurance for an additional ~32M people at $130B less money than would be spent anyway is not more cost effective than what we're doing now.

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      This space for rent. Call 1-800-STEAK4U

    83. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They lose taxes when people are too sick to work or go out and purchase goods and services...

    84. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

      Bollocks with bird droppings on top.

      Do you know who loses money when people are sick? The government that doesn't get tax income and has to pay social security. Only time they don't lose money is for end-of-life treatment and that doesn't really deserve all the resources some want spent on it anyway.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    85. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 1

      Page 116:

              TITLE II—EDUCATION AND
              2 HEALTH
              3 Subtitle A—Education
              4 SEC. 2001. SHORT TITLE; REFERENCES.
              5 (a) SHORT TITLE.—This subtitle may be cited as the
              6 ‘‘SAFRA Act’’.

      Perhaps you ought to read through a newer version of the bill.

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    86. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      I don't know - tell me who you think does a better job with nuclear submarines.

      Naval Reactors. Look it up, fool. Read about some history before you make yourself look silly. Not only do they design, build, repair, and retire nuclear submarines, they also train crews to safely operate the nuclear propulsion plants. BTW - NR developed the shipboard nuclear powerplant to launch ex-USS Nautilus in 1953, eight years after the atomic bomb was invented.

    87. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by illumin8 · · Score: 1

      If you really want to fix healthcare, do tort reform first. Then break up the AMA cartel. Then look at other things that may need to be changed.

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      First of all, tort reform would only provide a 3% reduction in costs to the healthcare system. It sounds nice, but it's just a diversionary tactic and doesn't really solve the problems causing spiraling high insurance costs. The main issue causing insurance increases is that more healthy young people are opting not to be insured, whether it's because they lost their job, or for whatever reason, couldn't afford it and aren't that sick. This leaves only an older generation of rapidly aging baby boomers, which means the insurance companies can't spread the risk around sufficiently, so rates go up. The healthcare bill, which mandates coverage for all, aims to solve this problem by creating a larger risk pool so hopefully more healthy young people can subsidize older unhealthy people.

      You seem to be under the mistaken impression that the government is taking over healthcare, which couldn't be further from the truth.

      --
      "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
    88. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by jambarama · · Score: 1

      AMA licensing forces doctors to meet some minimal standard. It raises prices because we have fewer doctors, but I think most of us would gladly pay a little more for a doctor that is a little more competent. Tort reform is attractive, but the savings aren't as big as you'd think - $54B over 10 years. That isn't nothing, but these changes would make it harder to sue incompetent doctors who cause legitimate harm to others. So if we're going to break up the AMA licensing cartel, and rely on the free market to sift through good & bad doctors, then we'd want tort enhancement rather than limits.

    89. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by s122604 · · Score: 1

      Surely, I'm not joking. Yes they do.. I guess this is just another case of facts having a well-established liberal bias.. http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=14560 http://gateway.nlm.nih.gov/MeetingAbstracts/ma?f=103625013.html

    90. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      In the case of government run health care the government loses money if people are sick. So they have an incentive to keep people well and only recommend useful medications.

      So, what you're saying is that with government run health care, there will be an incentive for the government to order your life such that you stay healthy? Since they are footing the bill, they will have the right to determine what activities you may participate in, how often you exercise, and what you eat?

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    91. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -when the FDIC dismantles a failed bank.
      -the ability to mail a letter across the country for $0.43 cents(?) (compare this with private companies for the same shipping time).

    92. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 1

      Go to the actual proposal on whitehouse.gov [whitehouse.gov] and read it for yourself.

      I don't see anything about an expansion of Medicare there - it proposes closing the donut hole and other tightening. You're right that it expands Medicaid - but more in the nature of a tweak than anything significant.

      You may prefer to look at the current text of the bill.

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    93. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 1

      Did you, or are you going by what Glenn Beck is saying?

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    94. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by HaZardman27 · · Score: 1

      There is hardly anything less efficient than the military.

      Which you're obviously helping by posting on Slashdot on a Friday morning.

      --
      Apparently wizard is not a legitimate career path, so I chose programmer instead.
    95. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Bauguss · · Score: 1

      one reason: because they will be forcing ~40million uninsured to become insured. A lot of those people however simply can not afford insurance. So the government will subsidize them. That will be a major cost each year.

    96. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 1

      All regulation of any kind is "running" the thing that is being regulated.

      OK, so the person who writes the RFC on SMTP, saying what SMTP servers can and can't do, is then running all of the world's SMTP servers? You don't think you might be approaching this from a somewhat.. hardline perspective?

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    97. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Is there anything about the proposed act that is government-run? . . . It [the government] mandates a bunch of things that private insurance companies are required to do. . .."

      I guess you didn't pass that logic class, did you? I'm glad you cleared that up for me.

    98. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 1

      It costs money to get people health insurance. That doesn't mean that the government's going to be providing that insurance.

      Where do you get a trillion dollars from? The CBO has this to say:

      CBO and JCT estimate that enacting both pieces of legislation—H.R. 3590 and the
      reconciliation proposal— would produce a net reduction in federal deficits of $138
      billion over the 2010–2019 period as result of changes in direct spending and revenue
      (see the top panel of Table 1 and subtitle A of title II on Table 5).

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    99. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by fredjh · · Score: 1

      Why people keep ignoring this, when Obama (and Reid and Pelosi) have stated repeatedly in the past that this is just a first step, is really beyond me.

      Obama, over the past years, during the election:

      "It is my belief that not just politically but economically it is better for us to start getting a system in place, a universal healthcare system, signed into law by the end of my first term as president and build off that system to make it more rational ..."

      "By the way, Canada did not start off immediately with a single-payer system, they had a similar transition step ..."

      "Transitioning a system is a very difficult and costly and lengthy enterprise. It's not like you can turn on a switch and go from one system to another ..."

      "But I don't think that we are going to be able to eliminate employer coverage immediately, there's going to be potentially some transition process ..."

      And miss Nancy, when "Obamacare" passes: "Kick open that door, and there will be other legislation to follow ... We'll take the country in a new direction."

      Can't wait! We'll be out of debt in no time!

      --
      Stupid, sexy Flanders.
    100. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the case of government run health care, the government wastes our money.

      Fixed that for you.

    101. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by TBone · · Score: 1

      In addition, since Texas capped malpractice damages, there has been an explosion in actual complaints of doctors performing inadequately. Tort reform seems to have had the effect of making doctors sloppier, not freeing them from the overhanging axe of malpractice suits.

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      This space for rent. Call 1-800-STEAK4U

    102. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by zorro-z · · Score: 1

      Yes: healthcare.

      The US currently has a limited single-payer system, Medicare. Medicare functions w/a 3% overhead, as opposed to a ~30% overhead for private insurance. And customer satisfaction w/Medicare is markedly higher than that w/private insurance.

      Executive summary: the government does health care better than the private sector.

      --
      -Z
    103. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Bos20k · · Score: 1

      Sorry to burst your bubble but I can't be pigeon holed that easily. I never read WND. I used to listed to Hannity when I had Sirius in my vehicle. I disagreed with him a lot. He is too right wing for me. He does make some valid points sometimes though.

      As I mentioned in another post, the actual damages may not be that much. Thing is though that doctors order more tests than may really be necessary to cover their asses out of fear. Those extra tests add up, probably to quite a lot.

      The AMA may only represent 25% of doctors once they are practicing (which says something to me) but 100% of medical degree programs at schools are AMA certified. The number of schools offering AMA certified degree programs has DECREASED over the years, not increased. Having less doctors available who had to go through more costly schooling to get their degree certainly can't reduce the cost of health care.

      My vote is one that certainly can't be bought. Sometimes I am tempted to not vote in protest but then people like you remind me that if I don't, you still will...

    104. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by TBone · · Score: 1

      He's on "facts".

      http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=14560

      As of 2006, VA care was on a 6-year run of outperforming private health care in customer satisfaction. In 2006, it was 10% higher in satisfaction, so this isn't a sampling error.

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      This space for rent. Call 1-800-STEAK4U

    105. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by bored_lurker · · Score: 1

      While the White House did not use the term "expansion" there will be additional funds applied to cover the Medicare hole. Again, I am not saying it is good or bad, merely that there is additional funding going to a government run plan. My parents are getting up in years and I don't want them to miss meds because they can't afford them either, but let's be honest, it's not there is no government run anything, even if it is just an expansion of the current system.

      --
      --- Tolerance is the axiomatic "virtue" of those without convictions ---
    106. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by chuck+lejeune · · Score: 1

      I would like to respond to this, as we have had Tort reform here in Texas for 10 years. All medical lawsuits are capped at $250,000. 2 things happened that they said would not happen. 1. Medical malpractice insurance did not go down. I rose at the exact same rate as all other states. 2. Insurance premiums did not go down. Some would argue that Texas has the highest insurance rates in the country, mostly due to the obesity epidemic. There is only one way to fix the system. Set prices on medical services and premiums and then force insurance companies to pay 100% of the cost of those services. This bill does not address that. What it does do, is subsidize health care for the poor and brings some much needed regulatory reform to the medical insurance industry. Its not what I want, but I will take it over what we have today. Hell, its only monopoly money the government is playing with anyway.

    107. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by kurt555gs · · Score: 1

      The ONE thing I really wanted was the public option. I would have switched from the evil Humana in an instant! Private health insurance is one of the main reason nothing the US makes can compete in the world. It is greed to an extreme. I also do not by the Fox news mantra that our government can't serve us. We still elect our representatives (unless we vote on Diebold machines). What say do we have in health insurance company's?

      I really want government single payer care, but a public option would have gone a long way to keeping the evil greedy health insurance companies a little more honest.

      --
      * Carthago Delenda Est *
    108. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by assaultriflesforfree · · Score: 1

      What is with all the focus on tort reform? This is complete nonsense. Tort reform will do nothing to reduce long-term cost growth and next-to-nothing to reduce current costs. Malpractice insurance premiums amount to less than 1% of all medical spending. Thus, there is no way that tort reform could reduce current medical spending by more than 1%. Likewise, there is no way that the costs associated with malpractice insurance are responsible for the consistently large annual increases in health insurance premiums. There's a full order of magnitude separating the two! The tort reform battle cry is a masterpiece of propaganda. It serves only to satisfy the greed of already wealthy doctors by appealing to common American sensibilities that abhor the "greed" of malpractice victims!

      The principles of the health bill in congress are fairly straightforward, but for some reason nobody here seems to get them. It's a three-legged stool, and you just can't remove one leg without the plan failing:
      1) Outlaw rescission practices and coverage denial for pre-existing conditions.
      2) Decrease risk by increasing the risk pool through an insurance mandate, else part 1) will lead to people gaming the system by waiting until they get sick to sign up.
      3) Subsidize insurance for the poorest Americans so that they can pay for insurance, otherwise part 2) falls apart.

      If you have insurance, the only thing that changes is the cost to you goes down, and so you may elect to get even better coverage than you have now! If you don't have insurance, chances are that the reason you don't is because it isn't affordable, not because you don't want it. Well, this bill fixes that.

      From above:

      - Streamline the regulatory environments so that insurance can be bought across state lines.

      If you believe that allowing insurance to be purchased across state lines will reduce costs instead of just allowing the worst insurance company behaviors to become more prevalent, well, I have some beach-front property in a state with lax consumer protection laws to sell you.

    109. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there anything about the proposed act that is government-run?

      The bill includes dozens of federal regulatory bodies, so you did miss it.

    110. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although one could say the Government has a much bigger incentive to keep you healthy and paying taxes since your potential revenue to the government will always be more than your insurance premiums.

    111. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      I think you failed math.

      Current costs + new costs = bigger number
      Current costs = smaller number than above

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    112. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      No, because RFCs are optional and only implemented for interoperability. This will not be optional.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    113. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      If the government isn't running anything, what is it spending $960 billion on?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    114. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same post office that is running a multi-billion dollar deficit, and is thus seeking to cut services on Saturdays, and raise postage (again)?

    115. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Post office?

      Yes, yes, but apart from better sanitation, medicine, education, irrigation, public health, roads, a freshwater system, and baths and public order... what have the Romans ever done for us? Oh, wait.

    116. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by toporok · · Score: 1

      I have to say you are either full of shit yourself or ignorant. I have several friends that are doctors and single biggest expense ( not counting the $250K + in student loans ) that they have is malpractice insurance. Some even had to close their shop and go work for a hospital because they could not afford it while still charging acceptable fees to their patients.

    117. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tort reform is a minor problem that republican/conservative physicians always argue will fix everything because they'll be more willing to be "charitable." I don't think that's the case, as they're not especially "charitable" now, regardless of the legality of their services.

      The government runs Medicare and Medicaid correctly and efficiently. Per dollar spent, Medicaid has one of the highest efficiency numbers of any government program (outcome per dollar spent, and administrative costs per percent of claims paid [4-6% for Medicaid vs. 15-20% for private insurers and 8-12% for HMOs).

      Breaking up the AMA is useless, since it's already broken up (anti-trust laws preempted the AMA having the power to control its members), and holds little weight over current physicians (under 29%, http://mediamatters.org/research/200906150005 )

    118. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by noidentity · · Score: 1

      In the case of government run health care the government loses money if people are sick. So they have an incentive to redefine what sick means.

      There, fixed that for you (see CPI for similar example).

    119. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by doug · · Score: 1

      If you really want to fix healthcare, do tort reform first. Then break up the AMA cartel. Then look at other things that may need to be changed.

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      I don't think that would be enough, but it would be a wonderful start. Why does this have to be big bang, all-chips-in major plan? Why can't we go for the low hanging fruit first?

      - doug

    120. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      If you really want to fix healthcare, do tort reform first.

      How would you reform it? If your child dies because a drunken surgeon leaves a rag in her belly, what's that worth to you? If your left leg needs amputated and the surgeon amputates the right one, what's the ability to walk worth to you? If you're supposed to get cataract surgery and the surgeon does a double enucleation, what are your eyes worth?

      Doctors are human. They make mistakes. Most are competent and professional, but like any other profession there are incompetents, alcoholice, drug addicts, and just general fuckups. I'm no surgeon, but if I screw up and run over you with my car you don't think you should get renumerated in some way?

      A physician is not likely to lose a malpractice suit unless he fucks up.

      Then break up the AMA cartel.

      Why? I assume you're against all professional organizations?

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      When was the last time you mailed a letter? Have you ever been in the military? Were you alive before the Clean Air Act? Are you grandparents on Social Security and Medicare? All the elderly people I know are fine with Social Security and Medicare, it's only the heartless whiney youngsters that complain about it.

    121. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by doug · · Score: 1

      The US Postal Service

      In the 18th century, there was no other means of delivering mail everywhere. It was a huge investment, and losing money was worth it because it was a big deal. Now days, not so much. I think I'd rather that the USPS subsidy went to building out our broadband footprint in rural areas.

      - doug

    122. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      eh? The government REQUIRES you to buy insurance. It fines you if you don't. Sounds like a government run system to me.

    123. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      In the case of private insurance the insurance company loses money when it treats people who are sick.

      Fixed that for you.

    124. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you really knew what you were talking about, you would know that tort reform has been accomplished in 38 states, having very little impact on the overall cost of health insurance. If you knew what you were talking about, you would know that tort reform would amount to less than 5% of the actual increase in insurance premiums. If you knew what you were talking about, you would know that Texas just recently passed tort reform, and health insurance premiums have still gone up by astronomical numbers. But, of course, big business is never wrong and government is always evil, right?

    125. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems like good motivation to support preventative care then.

    126. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really believe this is the end all for Democrat's health care reform? Get your head out of your ass, this is the first step to the public option.

    127. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Actually, given that Obama and many other prominent Democrats have said in interviews "this is the first step towards single-payer health care", it is relevant. So saying that their goal of single-payer health care is irrelevant to the debate is like saying that you shouldn't worry about the foundation of a house until the whole house is built.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    128. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      If I'm sick I want the doctor to oder tests to cover his ass, because he's covering mine as well. I stand to lose a whole lot more than she does, and I say that as someone who has had three surgeries in the last ten years.

    129. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by guyfawkes-11-5 · · Score: 1

      They partner because it costs much more to ship a package than it does a letter. Is that really a surprise? UPS/FedEx get to dip into that letter delivery service a little bit to gain volume benefits and USPS can offshoot packages through the parcel services so they don't have to hire the people to process all those packages.

      It's much more cost effective when you can shove millions of letters through a sorting machine than it is to have a person physically read a label and pass it down the right slide. How is that surprising to you?

      You have the premise wrong; Fedex Smart Post (http://www.fedex.com/us/smartpost/approach/index.html) and UPS use the USPS for last mile delivery, not via versa.
      I've used both services and in my experience, it worked well and saved $$. By the way, sorting hasn't been done mechanically for quite some time. If you have any other questions about logistics or shipping, im here until 5.

    130. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I hope your cousin never operates on me, just like I hope I never ride in a taxi driven by someone with high auto insurance. Like driving, the worse you are at it the higher your insurance premiums.

      I don't want a doctor who has ever been sued for malpractice.

    131. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's crazy when people blame something responsible for such a small part of the problem, right? Like rabble rousers who blather on about the big insurance companies that pull in like a 3-4% profit margin. Oh My God! 3-4% - they're milking the system and contributing greatly to the cost of health care, amiright?!!!

      Good luck finding a government system that works with overhead in that range.

    132. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by robotkid · · Score: 1

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Well, the postal service and the IRS are both pretty efficient :-) And, unlike in many other government agencies, the NIH actually does have many of the best and brightest in their field on the federal payroll. But this is the wrong question, isn't it?

      The government was never intended to be efficient, nor should that ever it's primary goal. I mean, checks and balances inherently mean lots of duplication of effort, and some amount of inefficiency is inevitable. Even the most die-hard Libertarian would agree that police and military should not be run by private corporations, even if they would cost less, and then after that most people would agree that things like environmental protection and Food/Drug regulation cannot possibly be entrusted to "self-regulation", even if we are unhappy with the way things are currently run.

      So the real question is, where is the dividing line between things we would rather have done "efficiently" through a free-market system, vs things that we would rather pay a collective price as a society in terms of efficiency because the stakes are too high?? And why aren't politicians honest that this is the actual thing that is up for debate??

    133. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the case of government run health care the government loses money when people who are sick because they work fewer hours and generate lower tax revenue.

      Fixed that for you.

    134. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by thewils · · Score: 1

      Yes, I believe the state-run healthcare system for the armed services works really well.

      --
      Once I was a four stone apology. Now I am two separate gorillas.
    135. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by clustermonkey · · Score: 1

      In case of 100% private health care, everybody (even insurance companies!) earns money when someone is sick. In the case of government run health care the government loses money if people are sick.

      So where exactly do you think the "government" money goes? Er, to the doctors (and possibly insurers) of course - the ones the government pays to treat the sick people. And where does the government get "it's" money? That's right, the government HAS NO MONEY. It's all the taxpayer's money, paid by the taxpayers (not to be confused with the group consisting of all American citizens). So the doctors still make a profit (via the government), and the people still pay that profit (via taxes), and the government sits in the middle taking money out of the system to fund the shuttling of money around. Adding another party as a paid middleman, and disguising the true cost of healthcare through taxes doesn't (can't) make it any cheaper.

    136. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by bdenton42 · · Score: 1

      So her healthcare would have cost 70% more if the insurance had paid for it.

      No most likely it wouldn't. Insurance pays a "negotiated rate" which in all likelyhood would have been about the same as the 70% discount you received. The first step toward true health care reform would be to make it illegal for a health care provider to charge an individual a different rate than they accept from insurance.

      Medicare, is far, far more efficient than the private insurance industry, for the very reasons outlined above. Don't believe me? Look it up. The figures vary, depending on whose you're reading, but every single study has shown that the private insurance industry's overhead is at least twice, and usually several times that of Medicare's.

      No it's not more efficient, it's about the same or worse. The figures which quote Medicare as being so efficient all give administrative costs as a percentage of claims. Since Medicare only treats people ~65 and older they tend to have more expensive claims, so the administrative costs as a percentage of claims is lower.

      If you compare costs per subscriber Medicare's administrative costs are actually higher, and they don't even have sales/marketing people or the need to generate a profit for shareholders like most insurers. Look it up.

    137. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      As a citizen I'd be willing to pay for any primary physician's education who would (a) agree to go to an under-served community for 7 years and (b) agreed to have their salary capped at an annual rate of $175K per annum (inflation adjusted, of course) until retirement at age 55. Of course, you will now say that item (a) is slavery and item (b) is immoral because how dare I have the nerve to ask that anyone's capability of making income be limited? Of course, I just see this as the terms of a loan. Which makes it seem like it's not really the loan that's the issue.

      And, BTW, I have several medical professionals in my family. One, my father, lived in a rural community in downstate Illinois where he occasionally got paid in meat and vegetables. And he made house calls, too. And you know what? He managed to put six kids through college, buy a multi-million dollar farm, and live a reasonable life where he was a very well respected member of the community. Worked (on average) four ten-twelve hour days a week, and drove thirty miles each way every day to do rounds in the local hospital. And I never heard him complain about what he had to pay to go to medical school.

      You know what's the real problem with doctors these days? They're wusses.

      --
      That is all.
    138. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by ajs · · Score: 1

      Medicare and medicaid ... will be expanded to cover something like 15-20 million additional Americans

      Do you have a source for that?

      Yep See the section labeled "Medicaid Expansion." I thought there was also a provision that would lower the age that Medicare and Medicaid automatically kicked in, but I don't see that here.

      Everyone else gets mandated employer insurance

      There's an individual mandate, but nobody has said that it has to be via your employer.

      That's not correct, but neither was my original statement. The truth is between the two. All employers over 50 employees would be required to provide insurance for their employees or pay a substantial fine per employee over 30 ($8,200 x (# of employees - 30)).

      Most people will be required to get insurance if they don't get it from their company, BUT, there will be exceptions (those now covered by Medicaid, those who file a waiver for religious reasons, etc.)

      The religious reasons exemption kind of bothers me. I understand that there are those who don't want to seek medical care because they feel that their deity of choice doesn't approve. That's fine, but I don't get to opt out of paying for highways because I don't have a license... and I'm fine with that. It's just one of those infrastructure costs. If the fees for not getting insurance were about the same as the cost of insurance, then I wouldn't see any problem with removing the religious exemption.

    139. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Anpheus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The government foots the bill for people who can't pay already because we, society, have deemed it completely immoral to deny someone vital care merely because they can't afford it. To top it off, Republicans since Reagan have considered it their goal to prove that social programs can't work, and so they intentionally hamstring them. See: Medicare's inability to properly negotiate drug prices, or the fact that the federal government can't step into impoverished communities and directly provide health care and help people live healthier (and ultimately cost the government less money.)

      Right now the insurance companies have a pretty sweet deal. Healthy people they cover, and they tend to not cost much. With few restrictions on denying or rescinding coverage under current law, anyone that becomes truly expensive (and could hurt their bottom line) is shunted off into the public system. The public system is hamstrung by Republicans who don't want it to truly succeed, and as a result the very ill go into a downward spiral of debt and shame from being a burden on society, wherein they may even have to decide whether their dignity is more valuable than being well. Eventually many quit their jobs to finally be able to take advantage of medicaid or SSDI or whatever, and now they can't make any payments on anything else because they have no real income. So now they're broke, truly a burden on society, and on the fast track to homelessness and poverty for the rest of their now drastically shortened (due to spotty and infrequent health care since losing coverage) and probably less than happy life.

      What I'm saying has been backed up by countless studies showing the hundreds of thousands of people every year who go bankrupt not due to a bad bet, not due to a failed entrepreneurial venture, not due to gambling or risky behavior... but because they got sick and either didn't have coverage or hit their cap or had it taken from them. These people are then forced to be covered in the most expensive way possible because that is the only way the Republicans have allowed public health care to work. It's pathetic, it's disgusting, it's sick and it turns my stomach knowing that according to the Republican leadership in Congress, the system is working by design.

    140. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by osgeek · · Score: 1

      I saw George Stephansnufalufagous mentioning it on GMA this morning. The context was that the bill proponents were happy that the cost was under a trillion dollars... but that was only by about 80 billion.

    141. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by rhook · · Score: 1

      Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

      Possibly the IRS.

    142. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by rhook · · Score: 1
      What makes you think there isn't? Did you not hear what Nancy Pelosi said about the bill? http://www.speaker.gov/newsroom/pressreleases?id=1576

      But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it

      This is very shady legislation.

    143. Re:It is bad, wrong way to go about it by Sircus · · Score: 1

      The US government spends a lot of money on foreign aid (although not nearly as much as most Americans think it does). That doesn't mean it's running foreign countries.

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
  3. This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It is a desperate grab for tax revenue to shore up a faltering budget.

    Real health care reform would either include a single payer system or a rational free-market plan. Nether party is willing to do this, however. I wonder why...

    1. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      You're right.

      I'm surprised Congressman Kucinich caved and decided to vote "yes". I don't agree with his "let the government treat citizens as children," but I could always count on him to stand by his principles (like Congressman Paul stands by his), and now it looks like Kucinich sold out on a bill that fixes nothing.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    2. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Pojut · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Kucinich is a politician. The dude knew that in the end, as a Democrat, he would have no future if he didn't vote for this bill; he was just blowing smoke. It is my opinion that he always intended to vote for it, and after the CBO analysis, he would be completely stupid (from a political standpoint) to still refuse to vote for it.

    3. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't even like single payer, but it would definitely be better than the Senate bill, which is a disaster.

    4. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Cimexus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You know, you're right. And I say this as an Australian living with our wonderful (and I'm not being sarcastic) universal, single-payer health care system here.

      In the past on Slashdot, when the issue of US healthcare reform has come up, you inevitably get all the Canadians/Europeans/Australians/New Zealanders on here going "OMG of course you should reform - your system sucks, and ours works pretty well". It seems like a no-brainer ... why would you not want to move to a system like ours. It's cheaper, more efficient, everyone is covered, health insurance is not tied to your employer, and the health outcomes returned are better. I was one of those people ... it seemed absolutely crazy (as in, literally mind-bendingly insane) that someone would want to oppose moving from the overpriced, inefficient and inequitable system you currently have to a system like most of the rest of the world employs.

      BUT... ...now that I actually ~read~ something about the proposal itself, I see why Americans are debating it so much. It isn't really giving you guys a system like that in CA/EU/AU at all! Rather, it's just modifying the current system somewhat. It isn't really a fresh, new or particularly efficient system. It's tacking something onto what's already there ... giving it a coat of paint if you will, but not really addressing the underlying problems. It's not introducing a single payer system like in most other developed countries. And although I would personally still support it on balance, had I been an American, I would agree that it's not really a straightforward decision and it does have some significant flaws.

      So to non-Americans mystified at the opposition to this, take a read of the actual proposal. It's not a stark choice between "the system they have now" and "a system like in other countries". Rather the proposal is for something kinda inbetween, which runs the risk that it may not work as well as ~either~.

    5. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by commodore64_love · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What CBO analysis? They said they have not had time to review the new revised bill, so there is NO analysis.

      And Kucinich is a politician, yes, but he also has to explain himself to the people who voted for him as a Socialist. He's already on record as saying he will never vote for a bill that does not include a Governement-run Option, and now he's flipped. That won't please the people back home.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    6. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Pojut · · Score: 1

      What CBO analysis? They said they have not had time to review the new revised bill, so there is NO analysis.

      Uh...this analysis:

      http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/113xx/doc11355/hr4872.pdf

      Where the hell have you been?

    7. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Never mind, I see what you are looking for, and no the analysis I linked to is not it. Still, preliminary findings are better than no findings, don't you think?

    8. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by commodore64_love · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes prelim findings are great. Except those findings are for the OLD bill, not the one coming-up for vote today or Saturday, so they are *irrelevant* except as interesting historical/obsoleted data.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    9. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Except those findings are for the OLD bill

      Not quite. Taken from the very first paragraph of the .pdf I linked to:

      "The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the staff of the Joint Committee on
      Taxation (JCT) have completed a preliminary estimate of the direct spending and revenue
      effects of an amendment in the nature of a substitute to H.R. 4872, the Reconciliation Act
      of 2010; that amendment (hereafter called "the reconciliation proposal") was made public
      on March 18, 2010. The estimate is presented in three ways:

        An estimate of the budgetary effects of the reconciliation proposal, in combination
      with the effects of H.R. 3590, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
      (PPACA), as passed by the Senate;

        An estimate of the incremental effects of the reconciliation proposal, over and
      above the effects of enacting H.R. 3590 by itself;

        An estimate of the budgetary impact of the reconciliation proposal under the
      assumption that H.R. 3590 is not enacted (that is, an estimate of the bill's impact
      relative to current law as of today)."

    10. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If public systems in Canada work so well, why do I know so many who have come from Canada to get treatment for things in the US, that they can't get in Canada in a reasonable time?

      That's what scares me.

      Health care is not a one-size-fits-all. Some people rarely go to the doctor, others seem to take their kids to the doctor every time they seem to sniffle a little. Why would we expect both of them to pay the same? Some people would be happy to just have catastrophic coverage, while others want prescription medication plan, doctor visit co-pays, etc. Just like there’s no one-size-fits-all computer, or cell phone or even a cell phone plan. I don’t like the idea of the Government telling us how much or what kinds of things are covered by insurance.

    11. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by inthealpine · · Score: 1, Troll

      Once Canadians/Europeans/Australians/New Zealanders stop coming to the US so they can get care they couldn't get in their respective countries wonderful single payer systems (I am being sarcastic), then maybe we will consider it. No US citizens leave the US for care they need, but cannot get in the US. With single payer systems in other countries that's not the case, they come to the US in droves.

      That being said I agree there needs to be reform of insurance, pay structures for care and how US citizens get care.
      The reason our insurance is tied to an employer is because of past government caps on what employees could get paid. Offering insurance as a benefit added value without breaking government caps on pay. So our entire system is born out of government involvement, that is why people don't trust government to fix it.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    12. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by osgeek · · Score: 1

      I just read through that "rational free-market plan". That sums up a good number of the common sense approaches I've read.

      Amazingly, it's just a few simple rules and laws to make that happen. Even congress wouldn't need more than a hundred pages to describe those measures, but they would turn the health care industry in this country on its collective ear - forcing competition and a dramatic drop in prices.

      That this kind of system isn't even under consideration is a direct indicator of the corruption and incompetence of government and the stupidity of voters who keep putting these jerks into office.

    13. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but the 'debate' is not coming from people who think the reforms don't go far enough. People who might support single payer or a public option have been mostly demoralized into silence.

      The debate comes from right wingers who are idealogically opposed to "government telling us what to do"

    14. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The opposition feeds on the fact that there exists change AT ALL. A total overhaul of the system would be impossible. The government is in bed with the insurance companies, the right is too busy fear mongering against Obama, and the left is too scared of upsetting people to push any real change through. This is probably the best we are going to do, for now. My hope is that one small change leads to another. That this bill will show that health care is something worth continuing to improve, leading to more reform in the future.

    15. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      Amazing how no matter who is in control of Congress, Republican or Democrat, the only bills that get passed favor the banking and insurance industries, isn't it?

    16. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by J.+T.+MacLeod · · Score: 1

      I think it's important to note that what the US has now is really an in between, itself.

      The "grand capitalist health care system" that the US supposedly has doesn't exist. Varying levels of the sort of "reform" that we're seeing now have brought the US from its previous "could use some tweaking" system to its current state.

    17. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its because our politicians here in the USA are stupid

    18. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No... Most of us already know that they're getting a half-assed health reform bill since it's been mentioned enough times in the international media.

      We just realize something is better than nothing, and that the US will never get its fingers out of the insurance companies collective asses.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    19. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Anonymous+Struct · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Only the absurdly rich come to the US for care, and they come here for absurdly expensive care that most Americans don't have access to. You're only making an argument that the very best care in the US is better than the very best care in these other countries while ignoring the fact that 99% of Americans don't care, because they aren't able to buy the very best care anyway. The average citizens in these nations do better than the average citizens in our own, and from a public policy perspective, that means a whole lot more than 'but the Prime Minister of X flies his private jet to the US when he needs surgery!'.

    20. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

      Rather the proposal is for something kinda inbetween, which runs the risk that it may not work as well as ~either~.

      For one thing, nothing, and I do mean nothing, could possibly be worse than what we have now, which is fiscally unsustainable and leaves like a quarter of the country with no coverage at all. Secondly, while I agree that single payer is better, it's far from the only successful model. Germany, for example, uses a somewhat similar model to this, and it seems to be working acceptably well for them.

    21. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 1

      Yes, you are quite correct. We have a lot of problems here in America. I say this as an American citizen, but one who has actually traveled to more than a dozen countries around the world. Most Americans know nothing about other countries. I have plenty of friends who have never left North America.

      One of the problems we have is that our population is pretty stupid. The average American is a complete and utter moron. But this is nothing new. We have some of the smartest people in the world but probably more than our fair share of idiots as well. What I will call "the idiot factor" means that all you have to do is utter a few magic words and minds close and rational debate ends. These include:
      Socialism - Almost nobody understands it, but almost everyone thinks it is some evil, Commie thing. Socialism has been vilified for over 100 years in this country and equated with evil for almost as long. There's no real way to get rid of this thinking. Once you equate something to socialism, it's "game over" for most Americans.
      Cut and run - Once you frame any US military action as being "cut and run", it becomes impossible to assess rationally whether staying in the situation even makes sense as opposed to pulling out.

      Actually, this is probably the best we can do unless there is some sort of massive change in the thinking of Americans. I don't see that happening.

      One of the things that greatly amuses me, and another post touches on this a little, is how the right wing (Republicans) holds out private industry as the solution to all problems. "Privatize it" the call goes. "Everything is better in private industry. Private industry can always do it cheaper than the government." Yet none of these people want the government to offer a government run health insurance plan because "Private industry can't compete with the government". But wait - you guys have been saying that private industry is always cheaper and better and if so, they'll get more people than any government run insurance. What's the fear? It just shows you how polarized politics are here. It sucks.

    22. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Eskarel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have Australian and American citizenship, I have lived in both countries and experienced both health care systems.

      The US bill is not single payer public health insurance, it would be better for the American people if it was, but the reality of the situation is that such a system cannot pass in the US as things stand. The Republicans are against anything the Democrats do, more than half the Democrats are in the pockets of big corporations and the Libertarians are always up in arms about anything at all which costs them money no matter how large a benefit it might provide society at large. That's not even taking into account the Tea Party and all the crazies that have come out of the woodwork because Dick Cheney proved to the American people that the government was out to get them and made every right wing conspiracy theorist and Militia member seem sane.

      That's not even counting the Americans of all political persuasions who are irate because Obama can't magic more than 11 million jobs out of his ass to fix unemployment. I mean presuming an average salary of 40k a year that'd involve finding 440 billion dollars a year somewhere, but never mind.

      Single payer health insurance cannot pass in that environment it's too radical, too different, too much like the government actually doing something useful with the tax dollars. Never mind the fact that the US pays almost twice as much in terms of percentage of GDP than any other western nation, has poorer health outcomes, and leaves more than 10% of its population uninsured, it just won't pass.

      As such this bill, which is very much imperfect is the best the American people can really hope for. Yes it leaves the insurance companies intact, yes it's full of corruption, pork, and special interest anti-abortion clauses, and yes it will probably mean that individuals who believe that they can cover the couple of grand a night for a hospital bed if they get sick might have to take on some of the burden of minimizing the insurance risk pool to keep down costs.

      On the other hand it will give 30 million Americans insurance, require insurance companies to insure people with preexisting illnesses, and remove the bonds forcing people to keep a job at any cost to keep their insurance when they need it. It would also save the insurance companies from their current death spirals by bringing healthy people back into the risk pool which would in turn reduce over all costs. It would do this while, at least according to projections, actually lowering the deficit.

      This is an ugly bill, and there are things about it which will need to be fixed, sections which are almost unconscionable. It will also require tort reform, medical practice reform, and educational reform to along with it to give it its greatest potential. Despite all that it is miles ahead of the current situation, and the best we can hope for. If Republicans had been more willing to vote yes, or there was more cost to minority filibusters we might have had a better one, with less pork, lower costs, and better results, but that's not the reality of the situation. This bill is the best the American people are likely to get under the current circumstances, and while it doesn't affect me personally I have a lot of family and friends who would be helped out tremendously by its passage.

    23. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by bazaarsoft · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Once Canadians/Europeans/Australians/New Zealanders stop coming to the US so they can get care they couldn't get in their respective countries wonderful single payer systems (I am being sarcastic), then maybe we will consider it. No US citizens leave the US for care they need, but cannot get in the US. With single payer systems in other countries that's not the case, they come to the US in droves.

      Please source this ridiculous claim. What % of people from countries with single payer systems come here for treatment and why? I've never read any credible source that has facts around this claim.

    24. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      No. Not if they're completely wrong.

      "We thought the pill was going to cure your husband's snoring, but our preliminary numbers were off. Please accept these flowers as our condolence."

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    25. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Pojut · · Score: 1

      As others have said, the CBO numbers are all we have to go off of for now. Both sides of the aisle have touted CBO findings to support their arguments in the past, so I see no reason to write them off now just because you don't like the results.

    26. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      .Rather the proposal is for something kinda inbetween, which runs the risk that it may not work as well as ~either~.

      And that is the fault of the other side!

    27. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by dziban303 · · Score: 1
      Sure, sure. Australia has nice healthcare, nice beaches, some weird opera house thing and, like, the outback.

      But in the States, we can buy violent video games and have unfettered access to pr0n. So nyah.

    28. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by zerocool^ · · Score: 1

      The first proposal was one of those.

      The insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies, and right wing policy groups organized astroturf campaigns to scream and yell and basically banish it out of existence.

      The bill we have now is sort of a consolation prize. It doesn't go NEARLY far enough, but it's at least something.

      The thing that no one will acknowledge is that THE GOVERNMENT ALREADY PAYS OVER TWO THIRDS of the health care cost in this country, between medicaid, medicare, government employees, social security benefits, and other programs. This wouldn't be a monumental step - it would just be opening up medicaid as an OPTION to people who would choose to use it over private insurance. Namely, people who currently are un- or under-insured.

      Sheesh. I really fear for this country sometimes.

      --
      sig?
    29. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      You are an optimist. Bailing out the private insurance industry will make things worse. As I understand the German system, most people are covered by non-profit insurance entities, which is not what is being proposed in the US.

    30. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by columbus · · Score: 1

      Or as the old fable goes 'He who tries to please everybody ends up pleasing nobody at all'. This bill is trying to be all things to all people, and in the end, I predict, it will be nothing to no one.

      The major problem as I see it is right at the center: insurance. We're using the same system to pay for your house burning down as we are for getting your teeth cleaned. It makes no sense at all.

      There is an administrative overhead of $500 per person per year for medical insurance. With some back of the envelope calculations based on the population of the US & the number of uninsured people here, I get $125,000,000,000 per annum as the cost of paying for medicine through an insurance system. 125 billion: now that is a big number. That would be a good place to eliminate inefficiencies and drive down the cost of medicine. But are we doing that?

      No, not at all. Essentially, we're taking one of the worst systems anyone has devised, one through which we pay more and get less, and we're doubling down on it. "Insurance didn't work when we had 262 million people in the system. Maybe it will work when we have 307 million in the system instead". No, it won't. It's madness. It makes as much sense as a compulsive gambler getting money from a loan shark to double down on a bad hand of poker.

      --
      friends don't let friends teleport drunk
    31. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      If public systems in Canada work so well, why do I know so many who have come from Canada to get treatment for things in the US, that they can't get in Canada in a reasonable time?

      Canadian healthcare system has one major (IMO) flaw in it - it restricts what private insurance can cover. In general (this is oversimplified, but good enough to explain the point), if it's covered by public system, you can't get separate private coverage. So you can't pay extra to get better quality / less waiting times.

      The supposed rationale is that, if such private insurance is available, it will be higher-priced, and therefore better specialists would move into hospitals working for such a system, leaving the public system understaffed and with lower-skilled people.

      Personally, despite considering myself a lefty, I do think that this is bullshit, for two reasons.

      First is an ethical one. Universal healthcare is one thing, but this goes beyond that, and effectively forces people in a certain profession to work in specific conditions and for a specific pay. At that point, the infringement on basic freedoms is significantly bigger than utilitarian benefit gained from it.

      Second one is purely practical. So long as you can go "healthcare shopping" to U.S., all that such restrictions do is 1) ensures that prices for such services are higher than they could have been otherwise, and 2) funnels money away from Canada and into U.S.

      Note, however, this is not how universal healthcare works in most other countries which implement it.

    32. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by IICV · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's not even counting the Americans of all political persuasions who are irate because Obama can't magic more than 11 million jobs out of his ass to fix unemployment. I mean presuming an average salary of 40k a year that'd involve finding 440 billion dollars a year somewhere, but never mind.

      Heeeeey... you know, that's about half of what the Iraq War costs per year. Maybe if we hadn't had a complete moron for president twice in a row in the last decade, we could actually magic those jobs out of someone's ass! And instead of spending all that money blowing shit up and killing people in a foreign country, we could spend it improving our goddamn infrastructure so we don't have any more bridge collapses, or building a long, high-speed transcontinental rail line so we have a workforce that can compete with China in the mass transit area, or laying more fiber optic cables so we don't have stone-age Internet access, or hell just sending all those 11 million people to college so we'll actually have an educated workforce (and solve the problems with university funding at the same time!)

      Pity that would all be socialist though, not good and republican like a nice big war.

    33. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Chakra5 · · Score: 1

      BUT... ...now that I actually ~read~ something about the proposal itself, I see why Americans are debating it so much. It isn't really giving you guys a system like that in CA/EU/AU at all!

      Yes, but the assumption that this legislation represents the Dem/Obama-admin's best wishes for Health care reform is not correct. Ask yourself what we would be looking at if the Conservative obstruction, and unprecedented propaganda was pealed away. It's important to recognize that this is the best option that can be voted up in this ridiculously self-destructive political climate.

      --
      Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please.--Mark Twain
    34. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      That would be nice unfortunately your plan presumes those millions of unemployed all have the skills for those projects which they don't and that people with those skills are available fo my specified 40k which they aren't and forgets that as expensive as Iraq is it will end whereas those people will need employment for a long time.

      The American economy is in serious trouble and it's not going to recover without a lot of pain a lot of time and a lot if systemic change.

    35. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by IICV · · Score: 1

      That would be nice unfortunately your plan presumes those millions of unemployed all have the skills for those projects which they don't...

      Yeah, because the millions of unemployed in America are untrainable monkeys who are cannot learn anything at all, and it's totally not worth our time to train them because there's no good that would come of a skilled national workforce.

    36. Re:This bill has nothing to do with health care. by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that, I said that the current government cannot magically fix the massive unemployment currently affecting the US tomorrow. Even if there were any money to do it, you cannot magically make an office worker into a structural engineer overnight. Most of the people who can be rehired by temporary government infrastructure programs already have been.

      The reality of the situation is that in all likelihood Obama will not be president when the US economy returns to where it was before the crash. Not because he's incompetent, but because he's got less than 7 years left even if he wins the election. The best thing he or any other president could do right now is to try and mitigate the pain somewhat and try to fix the core problems which led to this situation in the first place.

  4. Somewhere in between. by FlyingBishop · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But then everyone knew that already.

    I expect it will at least mitigate my issues getting health insurance after getting kicked off my parents' plan, so there's that.

    As for the Republicans' complaints, I'm not really clear on what there is in this bill the Republicans didn't argue for. If the left had written the bill, it would dismantle the insurance industry and set up single payer. The only thing it's missing is tort reform, and the fact is that tort reform is a red herring. It accounts for 1-2% of healthcare expenditures, and that sounds about right. There should be a process for handling legitimate malpractice claims, and it's never going to be free.

    1. Re:Somewhere in between. by Covalent · · Score: 1

      I agree with you on this one. The current system is a mismanaged hodgepodge of bureaucracy and regulation. The new plan would be a mismanaged hodgepodge of bureaucracy and regulation. The real question is whether this new system will be marginally better or marginally cheaper than what we currently have. I think one of those two things is probably the best we can hope for.

      --
      Great warrior...hrmph! Wars not make one great.
    2. Re:Somewhere in between. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      "Insurance companies may not reject customers," (like you) is the ONLY part of the bill I support, and that only needed to be 1-2 pages long. The rest of the bill is filled with nonsense like fines against poor and middle income citizens, shortchanging Medicare by about 500 billion, increasing our national debt another 1/2 trillion per year, and so on.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    3. Re:Somewhere in between. by osgeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't understand how someone could say that tort reform is a red herring.

      In terms of the direct financial impact of malpractice insurance and litigation costs, tort reform doesn't help more than a few percent or so. But in terms of the hundreds of billions of dollars wasted on unnecessary treatment because doctors are paralyzed to do anything besides order the extra tests and procedures, tort reform would make a HUGE difference.

      Unnecessary treatment should have been dealt with head on, and tort reform is a key part of it since being sued is the excuse that doctors give for ordering all of that and the excuse that insurance companies give for allowing it. In reality, they LOVE it. Doctors get paid extra per procedure, and insurance companies just pass the costs on through premiums, making sure to collect their extra percentages.

      Law suits are like terrorism. They affect the whole system in an extremely disproportionate measure beyond their direct impact due to the way that people change their behavior.

    4. Re:Somewhere in between. by bguiz · · Score: 1

      shortchanging Medicare by about 500 billion, increasing our national debt another 1/2 trillion per year, and so on.

      Isn't 1 trillion = 100 billion?

      So 500 billion = 1/2 trillion... I am onto something!

    5. Re:Somewhere in between. by jimbolauski · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The bill has many problems, one it takes money from medicare in order to appear budget neutral, doctors will no longer get reimbursed very much for medicare because of the budget shortfall and will drop those patients. Two health benefits will not start for 4 years but the taxes will start right away again so it will appear budget neutral for 10 years. Three forcing insurance companies to take people with preexisting conditions means there is no reason to have insurance except for a fine which is much cheaper then paying for insurance. People will wait until they get cancer and then get insurance, since people will not pay into insurance until they are sick insurance companies will have two options one lose money and go out of business or two raise their rates so high to cover their loses either way this is a huge problem and will lead to the demise of insurance companies. Tort reform has other implications not only in lower premiums for doctors but many test procedures would not be needed because the doctor would not be worrying about covering their ass with unnecessary tests. Also HSA accounts which let people put money into accounts to pay for health care tax free will be eliminated, if this bill was really about making health care more affordable a program that gives people a 30%-40% savings in health care costs would not be eliminated. Luckely there are so many things in this bill that are unconstitutional (slaughter rule, forcing people to buy insurance, trumping states regulations, ...) that this will not go into effect until the republicans can get this nightmare repealed.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    6. Re:Somewhere in between. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't understand how someone could say that tort reform is a red herring.

      Probably because every actual *expert* (ie, not random slashbot) who has examined the issue has concluded that the savings are there, are real, and are pretty small relative to annual healthcare cost increases.

      IOW, while tort reform is a good idea, and really should be done at some point, it most certainly is *not* the silver bullet that the republicans would have people believe, and leaving it out is a relatively minor issue given the size of the problem.

      Hell, really, you should be happy tort reform isn't being addressed in this bill. The right has been bitching and complaining that the bill is simply too big! But now you want to make it bigger by adding tort reform to the mix? Why not just do that in a separate bill? It's not like it wouldn't get bipartisan support.

    7. Re:Somewhere in between. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Not really. 500 billion is being subtracted from Medicare to fund this new program (if the bill pases). So Medicare will race towards bankruptcy even faster. It's a destructive program.

      Meanwhile the increased expenditures to support the new Pelosicare means they'll be increasing the U.S. debt by about 500 billion more each year, or 4 trillion between now and 2020.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    8. Re:Somewhere in between. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have tort reform for auto insurance here in NJ. We also have some of the most expensive insurance costs in the country. It is a red herring...

    9. Re:Somewhere in between. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I expect it will at least mitigate my issues getting health insurance after getting kicked off my parents' plan

      Of course, there is an alternative way to get health care if you get kicked off your parent's plan. Go out, earn money, and get health coverage from your employer or buy it yourself. The problem there is getting a job. Congress should be focusing on the economy and getting people back to work. That would mitigate quite a few issues with healthcare and not require such a drastic overhaul of the system (although some reform is still necessary).

    10. Re:Somewhere in between. by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      One could argue that Medicare and Medicaid benefits are too generous and cost too much, and that Obama should be acknowledged for being strong enough to reduce those benefits to a saner level despite the political fallout. Also, the individual mandate that requires people to buy health insurance will prevent freeloaders caused by the elimination of the preexisting conditions exclusion. Tort reform only accounts for a small percentage of medical costs. Doctors and hospitals prefer procedures because they are paid fees for services, not for prevention. Doctors make money when they do stuff; they do them, pocket the money, then blame the trial lawyers for forcing them to order unnecessary procedures. Proof: the biggest factor on determining whether or not a doctor admits a patient (other things being the same) is how many beds the hospital has available. Overbuilt hospitals with many free beds will try to admit as many patients as possible to fill those spaces.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    11. Re:Somewhere in between. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're absolutely right about the demise of insurance companies. People may laugh at that, but that is exactly what the government has done before. About twenty years ago, just about every county had a regional credit bureau whose job it was to provide credit reports for lenders so they could get a good idea of the creditworthiness of the buyer. The credit bureaus did indepth research on an applicant. Then, 20 years ago, the government made it so Fannie Mae, who underwrites a bulk of the homeloans out there, only needed 3 independent sources of data, from whatever source. Almost overnight, all the credit bureaus in the country, except for 3, went out of business or shifted into collections. The industry was transformed and we got huge amounts of impersonal, bad loans on the books. This kind of effect people do not foresee;

    12. Re:Somewhere in between. by FlyingBishop · · Score: 1

      I've been picking up some decent work as a contractor, but that still doesn't get me health care. The current system is simply broken, and getting people jobs will not fix it.

    13. Re:Somewhere in between. by ddeplonty · · Score: 1

      Also HSA accounts which let people put money into accounts to pay for health care tax free will be eliminated, if this bill was really about making health care more affordable a program that gives people a 30%-40% savings in health care costs would not be eliminated.

      Where do you get your information that HSA's will be eliminated?

    14. Re:Somewhere in between. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "....Also HSA accounts which let people put money into accounts to pay for health care tax free will be eliminated...."

      Where are your getting this information? The only thing I see that the bill changes for HSA is that for drug coverage: only prescriptions and insulin are going to be qualified medical expenses. This means that you can't purchase vitamins, tylenol, or other "over-the-counter" medications through your HSA. Everything else stays exactly the same.

      I can find no mention that HSA will be eliminated, as you claim. Can you provide a link where someone of authority is stating that?

      Perhaps you watch to much Faux?

      Captcha: Superior

    15. Re:Somewhere in between. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've got this upside down ...

      Insurance companies only account for a small percentage of healthcare expenditures. Malpractice lawsuits (and the fear of them) account for a huge percentage of healthcare cost increases (and loss of doctors).

      And by the way, without this healthcare bill you can still get insurance once your parents "kick" you off of their policy. It's called the free market ... You may not want to spend your money for insurance because you're a healthy, young person, but that's your (real) right - not to spend my money for your health insurance (that you don't want anyway).

    16. Re:Somewhere in between. by FlyingBishop · · Score: 1

      I know you're trolling, but just a bit of perspective shows that tort reform is 1-2%, while overall administrative costs (most of which are claims adjusters, evidenced by Medicare's superior administrative margins.

      I'm paying for healthcare. It was a pain in the ass to get, and I still don't have anything resembling what I would have if I had a full-time job.

      Furthermore, I'm paying into Social Security and medicare, money that I will never see back (unlike you.)

    17. Re:Somewhere in between. by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      I'm actually a fan of having lots of smaller reforms.

      As far as tort reform not saving more than a few percent goes - I'm not sure that any single change will save us more than a few percent. Everybody likes to demonize one entity or another, but from what I can see there are a lot of things that each boost cost, often in a synergistic manner, but there are no silver bullets in this puzzle.

      We have a system that has created some perverse incentives, and then everybody is just doing the greedy thing to make the most of a messed up situation. That is everybody from doctors to lawyers to insurers to vendors to patients (what patient WOULDN'T want one more test/procedure when the risk is lower than the benefits and the cost is paid by somebody else?).

    18. Re:Somewhere in between. by jimbolauski · · Score: 1
      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    19. Re:Somewhere in between. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      I'm actually a fan of having lots of smaller reforms.

      Yeah, the only downside to this is that the Republicans would fight tooth-and-nail on every single bill, and we'd be old and gray by the time real reform was passed. The all-or-nothing approach the dems are taking has it's problems, but it gets a lot of reform done *now*, as opposed to dicking around with hundreds of separate bills.

      Everybody likes to demonize one entity or another, but from what I can see there are a lot of things that each boost cost, often in a synergistic manner, but there are no silver bullets in this puzzle.

      Totally agreed. But you wouldn't know that listening to a Republican go on and on about "tort reform" and "defensive medicine".

    20. Re:Somewhere in between. by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      The only analysis I've seen done by the experts have been on comparing the actual cost of settlements from tort to the total cost of health care. That has consistently been in the 1.5%-2% range. The argument is that the true savings would be much greater. How many doctors would be willing to admit to an official type inquisitor that they are doing procedures based upon perceived liability vs actual need? Considering that many of these decisions do not have clear answers in the first place, how many tests would be committed to if not for the looming specter of a malpractice suit in the second place? How do the conflicting drivers of cost, need, liability, and who actually pays all play into the decision making? How do How would you even reliably measure such a thing?

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    21. Re:Somewhere in between. by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      How long have you had the tort reform? Consider also that it is NJ we're talking about.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    22. Re:Somewhere in between. by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately the seniors that made this country great were sold a bill of goods that said that if they paid into the system that their health care would be taken care of when their older. If people refuse to get the mandated insurance there is a fine that is much lower then their premiums so there is no motivation to get health insurance since they have to cover you. I don't know where you live that the doctors perform unnecessary procedures to line their pockets but that is not the case in most places.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    23. Re:Somewhere in between. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      It's over 2,000 pages. That is longer than War & Peace. It isn't finished, that means that nobody knows what will be in it when it is finished, assuming anybody knows what is in it now. With the size of this bill, there is no way that anyone understands how the different parts of it will interact. Why not take it apart and pass it as a bunch of separate bills that are small enough that people can understand what they do?
      Obviously, because there are things in there that people would never accept.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    24. Re:Somewhere in between. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      The argument is that the true savings would be much greater.

      Ah, I see, so the republicans feel tort reform is a magical silver bullet because, well, they say so, even though there's no numbers to prove it, but makes sense in your gut, right?

      Okay, well, I suppose that's one way to run a country (who needs the CBO, anyway)...

      How would you even reliably measure such a thing?

      You don't. You try it in a state and see how much insurance costs go down (kinda like how Obama wants to start pilot projects for various types of reform, to see how it goes). Luckily, Texas did just that in 2003! And, drum roll please...

      Texas has had the highest rate of uninsured citizens in the nation. That rate has continued to rise since 2003, and at times it has risen even faster than the rate of uninsured in the rest of the nation. In 2008, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation found that Texas health insurance premiums increased by 40 percent from 2001 to 2005, which was the third fastest increase in the nation.

      Citation (the article itself contains citations for those claims, so really, it's a citation-by-proxy).

      So, there you go, cold hard facts from a state that experimented with tort reform. But I'm sure you can find a reason to dismiss those results.

    25. Re:Somewhere in between. by FlyingBishop · · Score: 1

      The seniors that "made this country great" have put us over 10 trillion in debt. It's only fair that have their retirement docked until that's paid down.

    26. Re:Somewhere in between. by FlyingBishop · · Score: 1

      That's how democracy functions. You have tradeoffs to get different competing groups on board. You don't like it, go build a banana republic. I'll take consensus any day of the week.

    27. Re:Somewhere in between. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      You are saying that democracy functions by passing bills that are so large that nobody knows everything that is in them?
      I expect my representative to know what is in a bill before he or she votes to make it law. If you don't know everything that is in the bill, how do you know if the clause that is important to you will actually take affect? Maybe some other clause will make it null?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    28. Re:Somewhere in between. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing it's missing is tort reform, and the fact is that tort reform is a red herring. It accounts for 1-2% of healthcare expenditures, and that sounds about right. There should be a process for handling legitimate malpractice claims, and it's never going to be free.

      I think this statement is a little bit disingenuous. It's not the lawsuits that add so much to the cost. It's the unneeded tests and procedures that doctors feel the need to do, in order to try to protect themselves from those suits.

    29. Re:Somewhere in between. by bguiz · · Score: 1

      So 500 billion = 1/2 trillion... I am onto something!

      I've obviously failed at being funny!

    30. Re:Somewhere in between. by sowth · · Score: 1

      You are not distinguishing between generations. The baby boomers put us in debt. The "everybody has to live in mansions and have 6 cars" and "I should be an instant millionaire rockstar without doing any work" attitude, along with trying to achieve this by not saving, living off of credit, and doing any psychopathic thing to extract money from people--frivolous lawsuits, selling the cheapest shoddy products for high prices (often moving jobs overseas in the process), focusing everything on brainwashing with advertising and PR rather than making decent products, and so on. They screwed up the US. Unfortunately many of their children think this is how things are supposed to be run, so copy their behavior.

      The generation before (known as the "greatest generation") are the ones who made this country great. They built this country into a superpower. The wealth, technology and most of what the United States has today was from their hard work.

  5. News for nerds. Stuff that matters by Yvanhoe · · Score: 0, Troll

    What is so hard to understand in slashdot's slogan ?

    Plus, insensitive clod, not everybody cares about this purely US-centric news. A lot of us live in developed countries and our birth were covered by a national healthcare.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    1. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by commodore64_love · · Score: 0

      Ezxcept in the UK where people are apparently dying of thirst and/or left sitting in their own shit (due to government neglect): http://www.google.com/search?q=UK+patients+die+of+thirst - Or dying of cancer because they are denied the right of preventative care (PAP smears). http://www.google.com/search?q=UK+NHS+refused+pap+smear - Or hospitalization/drugs are rationed by an organization called NICE that is now nicknamed "nasty" - http://www.google.com/search?q=UK+NHS+NICE

      How about Canada? There people get put on 6-9 month waiting lists. This is why Tom Green flew from Canada to the U.S. when he developed testicular cancer..... better to get instant care than risk dying while on the waiting list. ----- Many parts of Canada have no doctor whatsoever, so the towns hold lotteries to decide who gets to see the Circuit Doctor when he finally comes to visit. Didn't win the lottery this year? Too bad... maybe next year you'll get to see somebody.

      Or the Soviet Union where healthcare was "free" but the hospitals were literally falling apart and many patients died in their rooms.

      For all its flaws the U.S. is still superior to government-run hospitals. People can get free care simply by walking into the ER, with the cost borne by the megarich corporations (who can easily afford it). I think that's a good system, and certainly better than if Uncle Sam Care was run like Uncle Sam Amtrak or Uncle Sam Postal Service (both nearly-bankrupt).

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    2. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't click on it, then, christ.

      Shut up.

    3. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by e2d2 · · Score: 1

      This is covered in the FAQ. Also, you can remove categories from the front page by personalizing it in your settings. Not trying to be snide, it helps me avoid topics I don't care about.

      That being said the summary was a complete troll. They make it seem as if logical intelligent people will automatically want this bill to pass. But anyone with that intelligence realizes it's much more complicated than the black and white issue it's been spun as in the media. If they were paying attention they'd realize that the Republicans, and Fox News and their Libertarian base along with them, are sitting on the side lines watching the real fight happen inside the Democratic party as they fight over the bill. This is why "deem and pass" procedure is such a big deal. The Democrats want to move the bill forward and go into election mode because they see this bill as sapping their political energy and really pissing off the public in the meantime.

    4. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by cervo · · Score: 1

      I think this matters for when you your internet enabled sex toy gets stuck and you need the emergency room to get it off you...after making a hasty retreat from your parents' basement of course without being seen....

      But seriously geeks get sick. Some have chronic illnesses which is what gives them so much time to lay in bed and read/play with the computer. It's not uncommon to see geeks with glasses (although I'm not sure the bill covers eye care...but anyway). Or geeks with asthma. Also look at Stephen Hawking. He needs a lot of medical care and he is an uber geek... Look at Steve Jobs, he needed an organ. What happens if you don't run apple. Although his geek status is a question. But a reality distortion field is very geeky :)

    5. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by Feef+Lovecraft · · Score: 1

      What you will find is what you always find however, the extremes. I personally know a few friends in the States that are doing really not so well just now because they have pre-exisiting conditions and can't get insurance so they don't mind that they have fingers falling off because they can't afford to do anything about it. But again that's at the extreme, obviously for you the system of health care is working quite well, I believe that one of the main purposes of this bill is to extend that system to those who it isn't working out so well for.

    6. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by Cimexus · · Score: 1

      You do realise that in countries with universal health care systems, there are still private hospitals, right? Just because there is a public option, does not mean that there is not still a private option.

      FWIW in my country, there's about a 50/50 split of private vs public hospitals.

      Also don't confused government-PAID healthcare (i.e. single payer, but doctors themselves are still private businesses free to do what they want), with government-RUN healthcare (where the government actually runs the clinics/treatments themselves). Most countries have the former, not the latter. So comparisons with the Soviet Union etc are a bit ... wrong.

    7. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Funny, I don't remember any slashdot mod that caused giant mechanical arms to reach out of your keyboard and compel you to read every article. ...I mean, maybe it's part of that 2.0 thing everybody's talking about...?

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    8. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      There are only 7-8 million U.S. citizens (key word) that are chronically uninsured. i.e. Not covered by an existing government program (SCHIP, medicare, SS), or their own private insurance (like me).

      That's less than 3% of our citizens. All we need to do is extend existing programs to help those persons in need, not screw the other 97% by forcing them to adopt something they don't want.

      LINK - http://www.google.com/search?q=%22chronically+uninsured%22

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    9. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      In France, we call the country you quote as "anglo-saxon". We use them as scarecrows of the kind of practice we don't want to see...
      Why don't you just use life expectancy as a metrics for evaluating countries practice in healthcare ?

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    10. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>there are still private hospitals, right?

      Yes just like we have private schools here in the U.S. Too bad most citizens can't afford them, unless they are wealthy, so essentially you're stuck with what the government provides (or does not provide, due to neglect).

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    11. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by Custard+Horse · · Score: 1

      The UK system works very well but is not perfect. If you want a quicker service you can use private healthcare.

      My previous boss had to had a triple heart by-pass which he had on his firms private health insurance. The consultant said that the treatment was 95% effective if treated straight away yet under NHS cover his condition would have been treated with medication until it got so serious that the by-pass was necessary to prevent death at which point it would be only 60% effective. Incidentally, the procedure is carried out by the same consultant in either case as he works for NHS and private healthcare firms.

      What is apparent is that you *will* get treatment no matter what your financial position - this includes all all types of treatment rather than emergency procedure only. This can only be a good thing.

      I would welcome the US to lead the way and implement a system from the ground up. The UKs NHS system is antiquated and one of the most inefficient systems around. It is bloated with many tiers of overpaid management which leads to underpayment of important people such as nurses. It employs around 1.3 million people for a population of around 65 milion yet still has no unified computer system despite allocating billons to this task (the budget was quadrupled and the time estimate tripled with no sign of conclusion).

    12. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Why don't you just use life expectancy as a metrics

      Because life expectancy is a correlation, not a causation. Yes Americans have lower expectancy, but the cause is not lack of government care. The cause is hard living (dangerous jobs like farming/logging with premature deaths, and/or simply being fat slobs).

      If you think U.S. life expectancy would suddenly rise if healthcare was provided "free" by the government, then you're thinking wrong. We would still have a deathage that is earlier than Europeans due to how we live.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    13. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by zehaeva · · Score: 1

      The free care that Americans get is billed to the patient, If they can not pay they go into bankruptcy. Then the costs are absorbed by the corporations. Except the corporation will see a drag on their bottom line, and increase the prices to their products (Insurance, cost of medicines and care). And as an end user I have to perform a cost/benefit analysis when said megarich corporation raises my rates, and if I am the breaking point I will drop my coverage or decline service and I doubt that I would be alone.

      Now the corporations will see that less people are purchasing their services and will have to raise their prices a bit more to cover their costs.

      And now that there are just a few more people who are out of the system they will get sick and go to the ER, and be billed for the services incurred. Being unable to pay they will, eventually, file for bankruptcy and leave the corporation with the vast majority of the bill.

      If this were a flow chart I would say go back to the point where the corporation has to raise rates.

      This is a feed back loop with the main cause being the law that was signed in the 1986 ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Medical_Treatment_and_Active_Labor_Act ).

      Now really, as a good capitalist, should we really be providing free care to so many people? They should be required to pay, or demonstrate the ability to pay, ER's before they, the ER, treats them. Should we really let people shrug off their financial obligations upon the rest of us unwillingly?

      Shouldn't you only receive services that you are able to pay for? If I have not saved for those chemo treatments, should I receive them? If I do not have to ability to pay for, either through insurance or my private finances, should I receive the services of an ER after a car accident? Remember if I can't pay for it, then eventually you will pay for it through higher insurance premiums and higher hospital costs.

      If I buy insurance I am volunteering to share the cost burden with those who I am pooling my money together with. But to be forced to cover people who do not contribute anything is a horrible idea. It leads only to the products that my insurance should cover increasing in price. It essentially gives insurance to those who have not paid for it.

      This is unfair for the 250 Million (it's more depending on who you ask) Americans who pay for their insurance.

      ~Zehaeva

    14. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Because life expectancy is a correlation, not a causation.

      But the correlation is not only between America and France. The trend is between countries with healthcare against countries without.

      Yes Americans have lower expectancy, but the cause is not lack of government care. The cause is hard living (dangerous jobs like farming/logging with premature deaths, and/or simply being fat slobs).

      Don't forget gun violence.
      I stand corrected anyway. I looked at stats about premature death and that is right, US ranks fairly bad. I tend to think that the fact that farming (we do that a lot here too, comparatively more) is more harmful in the richer US than in other countries says a lot about health policies.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    15. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Except in the UK where people are apparently dying of thirst and/or left sitting in their own shit (due to government neglect): http://www.google.com/search?q=UK+patients+die+of+thirst

      That's reported badly in the Daily Mail (which has been copied by lots of US Republican/whatever websites) and different case is reported in The TImes. Neither case is anything like as simple as dying of thirst -- both have complicated medical problems. Both say a coroner is to investigate what happened, but the result didn't seem to make the news. Don't you think that's strange?

      Or dying of cancer because they are denied the right of preventative care (PAP smears).

      Maybe read this (in the results of your search). You'll see she refused the treatment (the person that died), and the doctors decided screening very low risk people did more harm than good.

      Or hospitalization/drugs are rationed by an organization called NICE that is now nicknamed "nasty" - http://www.google.com/search?q=UK+NHS+NICE

      And? You can't provide everything unless you're willing to pay for everything. I think you'll find your health insurer does the same, except it's decisions aren't open for debate.

      Anyway, what happened to the American we-can-always-do-better attitude?

      Also, what happened to actually being aware of the issue, and realising that the NHS is nothing like any of the systems that have been proposed (or even advocated) in the USA, and is mostly irrelevant to your argument?

      People can get free care simply by walking into the ER

      Oh? Including follow-up care? Preventative care? A check-up, and an investigation by the appropriate medical specialist? There's more to public health than sticking people back together.

      I think that's a good system, and certainly better than if Uncle Sam Care was run like Uncle Sam Amtrak or Uncle Sam Postal Service (both nearly-bankrupt).

      Why should a public service make a profit?

    16. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

      You've been here for about 10 years - are you seriously just now realizing that there are some US-centric articles on here?

    17. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by tbannist · · Score: 1

      For all its flaws the U.S. is still superior to government-run hospitals. People can get free care simply by walking into the ER, with the cost borne by the megarich corporations (who can easily afford it). I think that's a good system, and certainly better than if Uncle Sam Care was run like Uncle Sam Amtrak or Uncle Sam Postal Service (both nearly-bankrupt).

      Actually, according to every study that I've ever head of, the U.S. (like http://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/RL34175_20070917.pdf for example) has middling to poor outcomes compared to other developed nations and pays more than any other country in the world for average, at best, results.

      Canada and the U.K. actually get better results than the U.S. for less money. There are certainly horror stories that can be told about every health care system, like the ones linked above. But the pural of anecdotes is not data. When you look at the whole system the most (if not all) of world's government run health care systems are more effective and cheaper than the U.S. system.

      The best systems both on results and cost tend to be mixed public/private systems, but for some reason Americans seem to be afraid of such systems.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    18. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by tbannist · · Score: 1

      I used your search and what I found was some different numbers depending on which of the links I clicked on, and no links back to original source for this information. Where's it is credited, it's attributed to the census. On some of the pages they claim it was 7-8 million on others they claimed 10-14 million who had no insurance for the entire year and would have paid for it if they could.

      Of course, this doesn't address the other large group of people who are sometimes referred to as "underinsured", and no I'm not talking about the so-called "Invicibles" who don't want to "waste money" on health insurance for themselves. I'm talking about a large and rarely discussed group of Americans who have health insurance but can't afford to actually use it because the deductibles and co-pays are too high and they risk having their rates raised and their insurance cancelled if they do.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    19. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Americans who have health insurance but can't afford to actually use it because the deductibles and co-pays are too high

      I have no idea what you're talking about. I don't belong to an HMO now but when I did the copays were only $10-30 per visit. Hardly excessive.

      I guess if they can't afford those, then they truly are "chronically uninsured" and would be the 3% of citizens I said need help (perhaps via Welfare). That requires a TWEAK of the current system, not a wholesale takeover by government.

      And finally there's the matter of "freedom of choice". A monopoly by government is no better than a monopoly by Microsoft or Comcast sucking ~$100 out of your wallet every month (even if you use neither product).

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    20. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by tbannist · · Score: 1

      I'm not an American, but I saw an episode of Real Time with Bill Maher where they showcased a "Health Care Bazaar" where thousands of Americans (some who had health insurance) were lining up at 4:00 am to use the free services being provided by a charity that normally operates in third world countries.

      According to the people there, many of them had health insurance but wouldn't be able to afford the services otherwise.

      From what I understand, about 50,000 Americans die every year because they don't have health insurance or don't have enough insurance.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    21. Re:News for nerds. Stuff that matters by Xonstantine · · Score: 1

      Because life expectancy is a poor metric for evaluating a country's performance in health care. A number of reasons for this, but demographic differences play a large part in the differences in any number of statistics in America and European countries.

      Cost is a poor metric as well. Spending in health care is directly related to discretionary income, and increases at the margin.

      Another problem with comparing a country like the UK to a country like the US is the scale difference. The UK has 61 million people (France has 62 million). The US has 307 million. We also span a continent, while you could fit the UK or France inside of Texas. It takes 10 hours to drive from the top of the UK to the bottom of the UK, it takes 14 hours to drive from the north of Texas down to the southern tip. The US is a large country with a fairly distributed population. Our medical servicing needs are a little bit different and costs are generally going to be higher for the same service because of the distribution problem.

  6. Wrong forum by Chemisor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Slashdot is packed with the entitlement generation and you're asking if they approve of the government creating another entitlement? Might as well go to Hell and ask the Devil if sinning is bad.

    1. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot is packed with the entitlement generation and you're asking if they approve of the government creating another entitlement? Might as well go to Hell and ask the Devil if sinning is bad.

      lol So true. Me me me me - that is all anyone care about in this country now. In the end just ride the wave to this countries downfall. Nothing we can do. To many people lack any comprehension on what this bill and others will do to this country. Enjoy the bread lines

    2. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Entitlement generation? You mean baby boomers, right? The first generation, who through their profligate ways, are leaving the country worse off for their children. The ones who voted in large numbers for the vanguards of the 'Me First' principle?

      Just wanted to make sure we were all in agreement on exactly who the entitlement generation is.

    3. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We" can start with basic writing skills. Maybe then "we" can have an opinion about more complex issues.

    4. Re:Wrong forum by Zerth · · Score: 1

      Might as well go to Hell and ask the Devil if sinning is bad.

      Do you know how crowded it is down there? If you saw the labor requirements for just the inprocessing facility, you'd know the Devil would prefer more virtuous behavior from the world.

    5. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said, good Sirs! A good combination of personalities to describe our current population is Oliver Twist and Chip Diller from Animal House!

      '"Please, Sir, I want some more."' . Oliver, asking the cook at the workhouse for more gruel.

      Chip: [being spanked as part of Omega's initiation] Thank you, sir! May I have another?

    6. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Original post was deleted. Odd.

      By entitlement generation, I am assuming you are discussing the baby boomers, correct? Because it is the boomer generation, as a result of their profligate spending, That is the first in American history to be leaving things worse off for their children. This is the same generation that voted in large numbers for the leaders of the "me" first principles?

      Just want to make sure we are all talking about the same entitlement generation.

    7. Re:Wrong forum by Alarindris · · Score: 0

      Well then you must be from the asshole generation where you don't want to share with your neighbor and everyone has to have a hard life to be a good person.

    8. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very Well Said !

    9. Re:Wrong forum by linzeal · · Score: 1

      He is pry from the generation that is going to bankrupt Medicare and social security while all of us " entitlement generation " folk are left holding his colostomy bag.

    10. Re:Wrong forum by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Troll

      >>>the entitlement generation

      Nobody is entitled to take YOUR money that you earned with Your labor and your body. We killed-off slavery 150 years ago - why are we trying to revive it?

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    11. Re:Wrong forum by gclef · · Score: 1

      Care to define who the "entitlement generation" is? According to this recent study, the average age of slashdot readers is 40.4. Are you implying that aging boomers/Gen X-ers are that "entitlement generation?"

      (Or are you just trolling?)

    12. Re:Wrong forum by sageres · · Score: 5, Funny

      /agree mod the parent :-)
      obligatory welfare joke:
      A guy walks into the local welfare office, marches straight up to the counter and says, "Hi . . . You know, I just HATE drawing welfare. I'd really rather have a job".

      The social worker behind the counter says, "Your timing is excellent. We just got a job opening from a very wealthy old man who wants a chauffeur/bodyguard for his nymphomaniac daughter. You'll have to drive
      around in his Mercedes, but he'll supply all of your clothes. Because of the long hours, meals will be provided. You'll be expected to escort her on her overseas holiday trips. You'll have a two-bedroom apartment above the garage. The starting salary is $200,000 a year".

      The guy says, "You're bullshitting me!"

      The social worker says, "Yeah, well, you started it."

    13. Re:Wrong forum by sageres · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Typical progressive counter-argument. Argue the bad delivery of the message or a character of the messenger when you can't argue the message itself. Sad.

    14. Re:Wrong forum by squinty_s · · Score: 1

      Bad analogy since the Devil doesn't exist.

    15. Re:Wrong forum by geekmux · · Score: 1

      Original post was deleted. Odd.

      By entitlement generation, I am assuming you are discussing the baby boomers, correct? Because it is the boomer generation, as a result of their profligate spending, That is the first in American history to be leaving things worse off for their children. This is the same generation that voted in large numbers for the leaders of the "me" first principles?

      Just want to make sure we are all talking about the same entitlement generation.

      Nice comeback. Might as well just summed it up with a childish "he started it". Who gives a shit where issues with entitlement started when you've got a shitload of 20-somethings swimming in obscene amounts of debt due to entitlement. Like the newer generation has proven any better? They are the byproduct of the generation you accuse, don't sit here and act like they've learned their parents lesson.

    16. Re:Wrong forum by rj4x · · Score: 1

      Well i can tell you that as a commie canadian, we enjoy the entitlement to not be financially crippled randomly for some medical emergency beyond our control. Multiply that security by the whole population and you have a higher standard of living and a happier population. Costs can be managed by preemptively treating diseases and disorders earlier on (you americans like preemptive strikes right?) and this reduces longer-term costs. But yeah, Slashdot IS packed with knee jerk reactionary dicks who think they have all the angles covered, especially the kind that make arguments appeal to fiscal matters or some charming and illusory reference to responsibility while simultaneously ignoring people in his own country who are falling between the cracks.

    17. Re:Wrong forum by moosesocks · · Score: 1

      As others have pointed out, the current generation are not the ones bleeding the Medicare and Social Security systems dry (after repeatedly voting to cut funding so that those systems would collapse once the baby boomer generation passed through). Cut me a break -- I'm 22, and expect to be working until the day I die because of my parents' generation's stupidity.

      I don't expect any entitlements, and have received virtually none over the course of my life. However, I'm going to vote to support them, because I readily recognize just how much better they would have made my life.

      That said, I'm failing to see how the healthcare bill sets up any entitlements for anybody except for the desperately poor (who already receive free emergency care under most state laws).

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    18. Re:Wrong forum by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 0

      It's our tax dollars. I think we're entitled to demand how they're being used... and if they're being used... our tax dollars should benefit us.

    19. Re:Wrong forum by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Can you give specific examples of how this bill will lead to bread lines? Or are you just throwing bullshit around?

    20. Re:Wrong forum by linzeal · · Score: 1

      Um, I did. I'm 32 years old. I have a 1200 ft^2 house that will be paid for next year. My parents had a 3000 ft^2 house that they never finished paying off. I have less than 12,000 left on my student loan debt. My dad finished paying off his student loans in his early 40's. So your generalization is not working, learn to internet.

    21. Re:Wrong forum by organgtool · · Score: 1

      WHAT ENTITLEMENT???!! This bill has NOTHING to do with entitlement. This bill was supposed to prevent insurance companies from collecting tens of thousands of dollars over the course of years from someone and then drop their coverage as soon as that person gets sick. This bill was supposed to provide a public option that someone can afford to PAY for their own health care plan in the event that they get laid off or are too sick to work. But you'll be happy to know that that those provisions have been watered down or removed completely so we can continue to enjoy our freedom - freedom to be poor if we get sick or laid off. We're the richest country in the world, but we can't even bother to do these two things to bring up the standard of health care coverage to that of nations that have a fraction of our resources.

    22. Re:Wrong forum by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      Might as well go to Hell and ask the Devil if sinning is bad.

      Cute, that almost makes it sound like you added meaningful information to the discussion.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    23. Re:Wrong forum by AP31R0N · · Score: 1

      That's not a progressive/regressive matter... that's just how some people are on fora. i can't reach through the screen to choke you, so you say stupid shit like "typical progressive".

      Using progressive as a dismissive pejorative is just as childish, Mr. Kettle.

      --
      Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
    24. Re:Wrong forum by SBrach · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't you rather be crippled financially (for the short while before you declare bankruptcy) than crippled physically because you were stuck on a waiting list for 6 months while some disease rampaged through your body.

    25. Re:Wrong forum by jdigriz · · Score: 1

      When you print your own money, with your name on it, perhaps I'll agree. In the meantime, the money in my pocket says United States of America on it, and the Constitution of said country says that the Government *is* entitled to take it when a simple majority of both houses of congress levies a tax and the President signs the bill allowing the tax. They printed it, on our behalf, it's their money. They just let us use it to trade amongst ourselves.

    26. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen. What's wrong with everyone paying their own way in a system that gives everyone a fighting chance?

      Also- WTF is wrong with all the people from outside the US trying to dictate what is right for us? Why don't they leave us the hell alone and focus on their own problems.

    27. Re:Wrong forum by Dunega · · Score: 1

      Just wanted to make sure we were all in agreement on exactly who the entitlement generation is.

      You say that as if there is only one.

    28. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong forum -- how in the world did the US healthcare system ever become "News for nerds"?

      There are endless places on the web where this topic should be (and is being) discussed. Slashdot is not one of them.

    29. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second that. There's some real silver-spooners around here.

      I would argue that liberal equalization (socialist) programs have been at the very core of the decline of this country beginning decades ago. It's a slow bleed but once a program is in place it never stop draining. The handout flow only increases as people's sensitive little feelers demand more.

      Government run anything is not a better solution. It never has been and never will be. If you want a European style government please move to a European country.

      Once you give a power to a government it's theirs forever. You cannot take it back. "The People" don't run a government, politicians do and they are in it for themselves (politician health care is the BEST - for LIFE - at our expense). I don't care if it's Reps or Dems, you don't want to give government new powers. Why on one hand is government saying we need government to control health care because they can do it better while saying they don't need to control space flight because commercial companies can do it better? Space flight won't buy them votes...

      This isn't a video game and soon enough many of you liberals will move out of your parent's houses and figure out how all this crap is paid for.

    30. Re:Wrong forum by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      The entitlement generation? How about all the old people on Medicare, Social Security, and Medicaid who get pissed when we try to lower their benefits or when they don't get a cost of living adjustment? We spend a huge portion of our budget on these programs. Many of the current recipients are receiving more money than they put into the system, and that burden is being carried by the young of our generation.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    31. Re:Wrong forum by hey! · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is packed with the entitlement generation...

      You mean, people born since 1935? Wow, that's a mind-bender.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    32. Re:Wrong forum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This cohort shares characteristics like higher rates of participation in higher education than previous generations and an assumption of lifelong prosperity and entitlement developed during their childhood in the 1950s."

      From the wikipedia article on the baby boomers. I would say you nailed who the "entitlement generation" is.

    33. Re:Wrong forum by HaZardman27 · · Score: 1

      I don't think he's referring to this bill exclusively; he's referring to the general mindset in the US that it's fine to let other people take care of you.

      --
      Apparently wizard is not a legitimate career path, so I chose programmer instead.
    34. Re:Wrong forum by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      As a 43 year old Slashdotter, my answer to your second question is "yes".

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    35. Re:Wrong forum by scottv67 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >I'm 32 years old. I have a 1200 ft^2 house that will be paid for next year. My parents had a 3000 ft^2 house that they never finished paying off.

      You need to include a little background on the houses for the comparison to be worth anything. The square footage is not enough to compare two different houses. For example, if I limited my search to the Milwaukee area, I could probably find a 1200 sq ft house (probably withing walking distance of Northridge) that I could purchase with my Visa card. I could also find a 3000 sq ft house (Brookfield, Whitefolks Bay, something with a view of Lake Michigan, etc.) that would be outside of my price range even though I make good money for this corner of the state and have no debt other than my current home.

      If you and your parents did not reside in the same area, then your comparison holds very little water.

    36. Re:Wrong forum by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I always thought SlashDot was kind of Libertarian leaning, maybe it used to be but it's all about Free Shit now. And they like to couch it in terms that make them so reasonable. Like comparing a country with the US's demographics to countries with populations smaller than California. "See, Australia has single payer - it works!". Or making boogey men out of the insurance industry, which actually has a tiny profit margin.

    37. Re:Wrong forum by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      The entitlement generation is a silly term, you're right. There are actually 4-5 of them. Anyone born after about 1950 is part of the entitlement generation. Actually, considering the Social Security pyramid scheme, even some older people are being dragged into being honorary members of the entitlement generation.

    38. Re:Wrong forum by rj4x · · Score: 1

      Also- WTF is wrong with all the people from outside the US trying to dictate what is right for us? Why don't they leave us the hell alone and focus on their own problems.
      Dunno, ask Iraq. Or Iran. Or Vietnam. Or Grenada.

    39. Re:Wrong forum by Ichido · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is packed with the entitlement generation and you're asking if they approve of the government creating another entitlement? Might as well go to Hell and ask the Devil if sinning is bad.

      Amen to that!

      I'm almost 60 years old and I believe that if you want something, then go out and earn it!

      Expecting something for nothing is just pure and simple Greed, Envy and selfishness, IMO.

  7. Single payer system by TyFoN · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Americans really need a single payer system like the rest of the world, so no this is not the correct way. However it think it appears a lot better than the current mess they have.

    1. Re:Single payer system by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Americans really need a single payer system like the rest of the world

      You haven't been paying attention to the balance sheet shenanigans going on in Greece, have you? Does anyone really know how expensive these programs are or if any government in the developed world is actually solvent or not?

    2. Re:Single payer system by TyFoN · · Score: 5, Informative

      The US spends more money in percent of GDP in health care than any other country in the world. The Greece debacle is more about a government that increased wages and welfare to a point that the economy could not sustain, but it has nothing to do about health care specifically.

    3. Re:Single payer system by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      You're not paying attention to the Greece debacle, specifically how large financial institutions helped the country use exotic instruments (fraud) to hide their true debt levels. Then, with full knowledge of the actual financial condition of the country, they bought Greek bonds. If and/or when Greece gets bailed out the money will go to these same banks.

      How many other countries have they done this to? Does anyone really know how sustainable Europe's social welfare programs are?

    4. Re:Single payer system by forgot_my_username · · Score: 1

      WOW!

      How do you get that? I am Greek, and our health system is kind of messed up... but, the US system is a disaster.
      The problems with Greece have to do, at least in a large part, with the Government futzing around so that they can be and remain part of the EU
      Picking out Greece and saying the US shouldn't have a single payer system because Greece has one, and is suffering is like
      saying that drinking causes lung cancer. There is an association, but it is only because drinkers have a higher percentage of smokers than
      non-smokers.
      Pick another example please... like how messed up it is in France, Germany, England, Italy.... oh wait, it actually sort of works in those places,
      at least it works better than it does in the states.

    5. Re:Single payer system by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      Pick another example please... like how messed up it is in France, Germany, England, Italy.... oh wait, it actually sort of works in those places,

      What is the actual financial condition of these government? Are they really solvent or are they playing the same "hide the debt" games that Greece was?

    6. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wtf is solvent? who gives a shit? when you're living on the street, bankrupted because you couln't afford treatments, will you worry about solvency?

    7. Re:Single payer system by tweek · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You should do a little more research. One reason that other countries have such lower health-care costs is because they don't have the associated R&D costs associated with it. Essentially we spend so much on health care because we also shoulder the burden of new medicine and treatment research. When was the last time something revolutionary in medicine came out of anywhere but the U.S.?

      The biggest problem in this country with medicine is the tying of health care to employment. Just like we have no impetus to develop alternate fuel standards. Gas in this country is heavily subsidized in this country. No one EVER pays the real cost of gas. With health care, you don't have any other option.

      As an individual, you can't shop around. You can't buy health insurance across state lines. Look at BC/BS (blue cross/blue shield). Imagine if your company had to essentially operate 50 different companies, one for each state? The administrative costs ALONE would kill you.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    8. Re:Single payer system by ahankinson · · Score: 1

      Canada's not doing too bad, financially or medically.

    9. Re:Single payer system by moosesocks · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Americans really need a single payer system like the rest of the world

      You haven't been paying attention to the balance sheet shenanigans going on in Greece, have you? Does anyone really know how expensive these programs are or if any government in the developed world is actually solvent or not?

      If you haven't noticed, we're not doing so well ourselves.

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    10. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you fucking stupid? If these kind of programs aren't sustainable then it will bankrupt the entire country. Is that what you want?

    11. Re:Single payer system by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      That's what I meant by "any government in the developed world"

    12. Re:Single payer system by c0mpliant · · Score: 1

      Can't agree more. American's have some bizarre opposition to it based what appears to be nonsense reasons. The single biggest, sane, argument I've heard is the question of how would you pay for it? That it a very good question and one worthy of asking, but there is so much crap flying around that people are stuck talking about the wrong question.

      For me and for large parts of the world, healthcare is a right, not a privilege. I believe everyone is entitled to the same healthcare possibilities, personal wealth should not be an influencing factor in someone making a health related decision. How primitive is a society if who gets proper medical care is based on who is the strongest financially? I hate to make this personal for Americans, but if you can't think of the poorest among your nation, if you can't be that selfless that you can think of the homeless, the unemployed or the downtrodden of your society then think of it like this, how can you personally afford the costs of your healthcare when the number one reason for declaring bankruptcy in America is medical costs and 78% of those HAD insurance.

      For me the question is not about me personally. In Ireland, where I am from, I can get insurance which will cover me for almost every eventuality. But I don't. Not because I can't afford it, not because I don't want to pay it, because believe me I would like to have the comfort of knowing I'm cover in all eventualities, but the reason I choose not to get insurance, is because I don't want to put myself in front of anyone else. Why should I be put ahead in a waiting line simply because I can afford. The person who can't afford it is no worse than I am, nor is the person who has insurance who skips the line better than I.

      This brings me back to the question at the start. How can we afford it? If the humanitarian argument doesn't sit well with you, think about this economic, financial angle. When you consider the lost money involved in bankruptcy, the lost income generated by the person while they suffer from inadequate healthcare and potentially death because of it, the costs of this lack luster healthcare system add up. When you combine that with preventative measures that could be taken if people were not concerned with how much it would cost them, the long term costs of medicine drops dramatically.

      The question then becomes, how can we afford not to...

      --
      There is no -1 disagree
    13. Re:Single payer system by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Except that in the rest of the world there are countries that are doing better than single payer. Germany even UK, I am not certain about France, they allow private insurance coverage if you can afford it. It's like a private option and a public option. Both.

      US could have it with its 'public option' or with Medicare at cost buy in for all, but that's not going to happen, because that would introduce actual competition into the system. Can't have that.

    14. Re:Single payer system by linzeal · · Score: 1

      NHS has been running for over 50 years and looks to remain solvent for another 20 at least. Medicare will be lucky to get through 2019.

    15. Re:Single payer system by TyFoN · · Score: 3, Informative

      There are a lot of drug companies doing research in other countries than Europe.
      Maybe you should do a bit of research ;)

      If you look at this list you can see that some of the biggest pharmaceuticals are based outside of the US. There is a lot of research going on in medicine in the universities around here as well.

      Another wikipedia article states:
      "In terms of pharmaceutical R&D spending, Europe spends a little less that the United States (22.50bn compared to 27.05bn in 2006) and there is less growth in European R&D spending."

      So the research argument doesn't really bite.

    16. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you expect anyone who watches fox to know the difference.

      After all, fox is always right and if they say Greece is stuffed because of their health system - well - that must be the reason.

    17. Re:Single payer system by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      Social Security "looks to be solvent" until 2038, but when you eliminate the funny accounting tricks it's actually in the red right now.

      Given the amount of fraud that's been uncovered practically everywhere you look what reason is there to believe anyone's balance sheet, public or private?

    18. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No R&D? Have you heard of GlaxoSmithKline?

      GlaxoSmithKline plc (LSE: GSK NYSE: GSK) is a British pharmaceutical, biological, and healthcare company. GSK is the world's second largest pharmaceutical company, by employees;

      By the way, the American government spends more per head on healthcare than the British government. Yet most Americans (or their employers) still have to pay for their own healthcare. How does that work?

    19. Re:Single payer system by TyFoN · · Score: 1

      This is true, even in "socialist Norway" we have the option of buying private insurance if we want to and there are even some privately run hospitals. However almost nobody are using them because they are not better than the government run hospitals.

    20. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When the Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador (both in Canada) goes to the United States for Heart Surgery and is completely unapologetic about it saying quote "I did not sign away my right to get the best possible health care for myself when I entered politics" that should really tell you that the Single Payer system isn't all that it's cracked up to be considering Canada is the place that everyone enjoys propping up as the "best" example of a Single-Payer system.

    21. Re:Single payer system by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      It's not even about a government that increased wages -- the government doesn't set wages. The problem was that the economy got really hot, wages increased, and the government set its spending based on tax revenue from the higher wage levels. Normally a country would see its currency fluctuate to mitigate this on the way up and moderate it on the way down, but thanks to the Euro, Greece has no control whatsoever over its own monetary policy, and so it can't do the normal things to increase jobs and help support its private-sector implosion.

      Meanwhile the only problems with Greece's debt levels are that some creditors will use this as a chance to claim Greece can't pay its debts and use it as an excuse to jack interest rates through the roof -- which is what is technically known as a "self-fulfilling prophecy."

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    22. Re:Single payer system by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      No R&D? Have you heard of GlaxoSmithKline?

      Sure, but GSK does most of its research here in the US, in western PA and in the Research Triangle in NC.

      Their other research facility is in southeast England, and employs fewer people than either the PA or NC facilities.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    23. Re:Single payer system by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Oh yea? Mind that the way in which GDP is calculated is not the same in every country in the world, so your comparison is teh fail...

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    24. Re:Single payer system by TyFoN · · Score: 1

      Here is another article that lists spending in USD pr capita and the US is still far ahead of the rest ;)

    25. Re:Single payer system by master_p · · Score: 1

      The Greece debacle is more about a government that increased wages and welfare to a point that the economy could not sustain, but it has nothing to do about health care specifically

      Actually, the Greece debacle is not about that either. It is about lenders denying decreasing the interest rates. Lenders are willing to lend money to Greece, but only with a 6.5% interest rate or higher. If Greece truly had a problem, then the lenders wouldn't risk losing their money. You don't lend money to someone who is not going to play his debt.
      Furthermore, Greece's deficit is not higher than other countries' debt. In fact, it's similar or lower to the deficit of Italy and UK. The real reason Greece is attacked it's because it is the easiest path to bringing the US capitalistic system to EU. European and US banks that lend money to Greece (Deutche Bank and Goldman Sachs) use Greece as a testbed for doing social changes in favor of the capitalistic system.
      For example, did you know that the EU presses Greece to suppress the two extra paychecks each year in the *private* sector? in Greece, we get 14 paychecks each year, although our wages are much less than those in the rest of EU and US. Why do they want to do that in the private sector? the private sector is not funded by their money. It's because they want to lower the cost of labor so as that they can move their private businesses there. I've read in the newspaper that MGM wants to invest 2 billion dollars in building a movie studio in Greece, for example.
      In short, the EU and US capitalists want Greece to become a 3rd world country in order to run their businesses there. That's why they are doing the current pressure to Greece, and that's why they are allowing lots of immigrants there from Asia and Africa. It's cheap labor, right in the doorstep of Europe.

    26. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Americans really need a single payer system like the rest of the world, so no this is not the correct way. However it think it appears a lot better than the current mess they have.

      We do NOT need a single payer system like the rest of the world. America is the last of its kind and I'd prefer to keep it that way. Personal responsibility and minimal government (debatable if this is still true though) and a free enterprise system. The world has plenty of socialist republics.

    27. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is strange.. i don't hear about a lot of americans running off to canada for treatment. I do however, hear about canadians coming to the usa for care.

    28. Re:Single payer system by Corbets · · Score: 1

      The Swiss healthcare system, which in my opinion after 4 years exposure, is absolutely excellent, does not use a single payer system. Perhaps you care to redefine "the rest of the world"?

    29. Re:Single payer system by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Canada ran budget surpluses for something like THIRTEEN consecutive years. (It ended a few years into a Conservative government. Hmm.)

      We have a single payer system. It's not perfect, but I've never been refused service. Our taxes are a bit higher, too. But our overall debt-load is much lower, so the interest payments on the debt aren't crushing us. Even now, when we're on the cusp of having the worst budget deficit in history, our debt is only 53% of GDP. Britain: 103%. USA: 122%. The per-capita debt burden of a Canadian is HALF that of an American.

      It's not a perfect system, but I submit that it is a BETTER system. It's a more CONSERVATIVE system. Ultimately, it's a freer system, too. You don't worry about losing your coverage when you leave a job; that keeps your workforce mobile and in control of their own fate. You don't have to worry about your family. People don't worry about going to the doctor and getting treatment instead of wandering around the office spreading disease.

      In the American system, a few people get really rich on the backs of people that don't deserve to be treated poorly, and some people can't get or can't afford coverage, so they get sick and end up a burden on their families and a drag on the economy. It is in everyone's best interest to have a healthy populace.

      In any case, I hope you guys work it out. I'm sick of worrying about my American friends.

    30. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, ignore Canada, Ausrailia, U.K., Sweden, Norway, Finland, Germany, France, and almost every other developed country in the world. Look at the mess in GREECE!

    31. Re:Single payer system by bonch · · Score: 0

      The opposition isn't "bizarre." Government-run healthcare costs money, creates bureaucracy, and requires cuts in Medicare. The nation is too large to centralize something like healthcare. People on Slashdot often mock the experience of working in companies with a lot of bloat and middle-management. Well, governments are the ultimate example of that. People are also opposed to the backroom deals that were made to secure votes for the bill.

      Besides that, I'm not sure why the submitter thinks today is "end of a very long road." Democrats have been saying they were close to passing this for the last nine months. It's just posturing. Apparently, they're still six votes short, and the public disapproval over both the legislation and the unconstitutional methods used to force it on everyone means I highly doubt it will ever pass.

      Doing this huge, expensive overhaul in the middle of an economic recession always seemed totally nuts to me. If they had passed small, modular pieces over time, it would have been more accepted and probably less bloated as well. However, Nancy Pelosi seems to have forgotten that we live in a democracy and that what the public wants should matter. She thinks the ends justify the means.

      I'll be defiantly voting Republican in the fall. Watching Democrats become enormous hypocrites, from Obama's constant broken campaign promises to reporting citizens to "flag@whitehouse.gov" to guys like Democrat Harry Reid getting away with his "negro dialect" comment despite what happened to Republican Trent Lott before him, has made me realize they are arrogant and out of touch. The nation was founded on the idea of separate states united under a limited government infrastructure, not some all-powerful, centralized entity.

    32. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Americans really need a single payer system like the rest of the world

      You haven't been paying attention to the balance sheet shenanigans going on in Greece, have you? Does anyone really know how expensive these programs are or if any government in the developed world is actually solvent or not?

      The balance sheet problems in greece were caused by US investment bank Goldman Sachs manipulating the currency to hide debt. It had nothing to do with health care.

      Single payer systems are far more cost effective per capita than the what is sued in the US.

    33. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USA has the highest debt level on the planet, despite constantly telling everyone they're the richest. What's your point?

    34. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder. Does anyone in the countries with single payer systems know where the money for the new cutting edge medical machines comes from? You know, the ones that take billions of dollars and a decade to develop? Oh right, the countries, like the US, with private health care have been paying for them. Can't wait to see what happens to medical advancements when the whole world is on a single payer system. ...oh wait, the advancements will take so long I'll be dead before the next one comes out.

    35. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, people know how expensive these systems are. And now, without Google, the Chinese population is going to have to spend more then 20 seconds to figure it out.

      http://wolafen.wordpress.com/2009/01/11/life-expectancy-versus-health-care-cost-per-capita/

      Also, as an American I am offended by just how hard Cuba is kicking our ass.

    36. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm just waiting for the next entitlement program to come along: universal single-payer hunger care. Then it'll be universal single-payer home care. Eventually the only thing our salaries will be useful for will be forms of entertainment... assuming they aren't completely consumed by taxation, and eventually even that might be subsidized so everyone can enjoy things like "free" internet, tv, cellphones, booze, and even hookers (certified "clean and healthy" by the universal single-payer health care system no less). Of course at that point, nobody will be productive (except maybe the hookers) and the economy just crashes down around our ears when someone looks inside the treasury and realizes that we have nothing but a vault full of IOU's.

    37. Re:Single payer system by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      and the economy just crashes down around our ears

      What are you talking about? If we want something all we need to do is pass a law saying that we have a right to it!
      Declaring that we have a right to food makes it magically appear in the supermarket, after all.

    38. Re:Single payer system by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Oh Bullshit. Come on. Who do you think pays the highest prices for pharmaceuticals? The US. We are bankrolling all that research, either directly or by being willing to pay the built-in research prices they include in drugs that sell in the US.

    39. Re:Single payer system by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1, Troll

      Why should I be put ahead in a waiting line simply because I can afford. The person who can't afford it is no worse than I am, nor is the person who has insurance who skips the line better than I.

      Congratulations, you've just posted some of the hippiest, most internally inconsistent bullshit I've read in this whole thread full of hippie, inconsistent bullshit.

      I tell you what - if you feel that way there are people starving in Africa right now because you choose to own a computer, because you live in something nicer than a tent resting on dirt, etc... I strongly suggest you move to bare minimum existence right now and give all your money to the needy because you are living a ridiculously better life than about 1 billion people just because you "can afford" it.

      Seriously, that's some weak, sniveling bullshit.

    40. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely, we do, but with the idiots and conspiracy theorists out there screaming "socialism" sadly we'll never get it. At least we have *something* now that will hopefully eventually lead to a civilized health system like the rest of the world has.

    41. Re:Single payer system by Ichido · · Score: 1

      1st place; The "Health Care Bill" is not even written yet! How do you vote for a bill which is Not in writing? 2nd Place: The US Government is one of the Worst Fiscally Responsible Entity on this Planet. Who has not heard stories about $400.00 for Hammers and $2,000.00 for Toilet Seats? 3rd: I had relatives, who lived in Canada, until they were told to wait a long time, due to their 60+ age, so they moved back to Europe so their relatives could help them out getting medical care. 4th: Why should non-citizens be covered, when citizens are not? 5: Why should those who do not work and/or do not pay taxes, be given free health care? 6: Why should I, who believes that All human life is God given and that all have the "Inalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness", be forced to pay for the killing of pre-born humans ( abortions ) when it is Federal Crime to destroy a pre-born American Eagle (egg)? Inalienable; That which cannot be given to nor taken away from anyone.

    42. Re:Single payer system by compro01 · · Score: 1

      Yes, we have private insurance available here in Canada also.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    43. Re:Single payer system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes! A monopoly! We need a monopoly!! But not just any monopoly... One that isn't subject to market pressures to be efficient and keep costs low!

      WHY DOES NO ONE UNDERSTAND?!?

      idiots

    44. Re:Single payer system by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Well, I am actually a Canadian, what we have in Canada is nothing like what I am using in Germany right now. Compared to German system, Canada doesn't even have health care, but never mind that.

      In Canada it is supplementary insurance, you could have that to cover a more expensive drug or to cover extra cost for a separate room in a hospital or something to that order, but you don't have a fully functioning system of private health care. That's the stuff I am talking about.

  8. Health care: break the MD cartel by Kludge · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Nothing will improve in health care in the US until we have more doctors. Prices are high because demand is high and supply is low. Unfortunately the AMA carefully controls how many new MDs are granted every year, and purposely keep the number low to keep their salaries high.
    Requiring people to buy health insurance will only make our problems worse. It will drive up prices higher. Until the MD cartel is broken, health care will be a big mess.

    1. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by wjousts · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You know the AMA only represents about 20% of physicians right? And they are actually usually very conservative and have blocked health care reform in the past? Which is one of the reasons they don't have more doctors as members.

    2. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Your supply is high. In the UK we have 1.5 doctors per 1,000 people, in the USA, 2.4. Of course, we treat our doctors like crap.

      The USA spends more per head on medical care than the rest of the world but gets poorer service. Either your efficiency is really low, or too much is getting creamed off the top as profit.

      Part of the efficiency problem is that due to your liability culture you throw too many tests and treatments at things.

      Part of the profit problem is that your medical system is run like a business that considers 15% a low profit margin.

    3. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      the AMA carefully controls how many new MDs are granted every year

      Have you looked at your local medical school lately? Many medical schools are at or extremely close to capacity. We can't just start certifying more doctors this afternoon just because we need them - at least not if we want qualified doctors - we need more schools for training those doctors. The closest medical school to where I live has an auditorium that seats over 100 students, and is used for many of their first-year-MD classes. We cannot expect to arbitrarily increase the enrollment numbers and not have the quality of education suffer when the student-teacher ratio changes.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    4. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Pojut · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Part of the problem is a McDonalds on every fucking street corner.

    5. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Kludge · · Score: 1

      In the UK we have 1.5 doctors per 1,000 people,

      Where did you get that? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_system says 2.5 per 1000. UK has more doctors per capita than US. France has 3.4 per 1000. Sweden 3.6. The reality is greater supply leads to lower prices of anything period.

      Also liability would be much less of a problem if doctors in the US made less money. #1 rule of lawsuits: Only sue people who have money. Half of all doctors in the US are millionaires.

    6. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Kludge · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And what part of your comment contradicts mine?
      The number of physicians in the US is controlled, and kept artificially low. That was the point of my post. You said nothing to contradict that.

    7. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by OzPeter · · Score: 1

      The USA spends more per head on medical care than the rest of the world but gets poorer service. Either your efficiency is really low, or too much is getting creamed off the top as profit.

      I discussed this with my (Australian) doctor once and his opinion was that the US spends most of its big $$ supporting very expensive procedures for a few people, compared with other places spending the $$ for more basic health care for many people. After having seen the treatment in the US I would tend to agree. You get excellent big ticket treatment, but absolutely shit GP appointments.

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    8. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "too much is getting creamed off the top as profit"

      It's called capitalism and Americans love it, even if it kills them.

    9. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by spazimodo · · Score: 1

      Actually, primary care docs get paid like crap which is why you see very few people willing to go into family medicine and categorical internal medicine. After 4 years of med school, 3-4 years of residency, for an extra year or two of fellowship you can easily double or triple your annual salary.

      The AMA isn't a cartel so much as a part of the overall government regulation of health care that distorts attempts to use the market to provide better care. A truly market-based approach might work, and a fully government controlled approach might work, but what we have right now is the worst of both worlds.

      Also, speaking as an IT guy, I grudgingly wish we had something like the AMA to set professional standards because the current free-for-all is awful. Not that there aren't stupid/bad doctors who manage to slip through the system (and are kept around because everyone is so overwhelmed that they're loathe to get rid of another set of hands.)

      --

      Fsck the millennium, we want it now.
      Millennium Crisis Line: 0890 900 2000 [calls cost 50p/min]
    10. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by hibiki_r · · Score: 1

      Then I guess the UK is a complete straggler in that respect, because most of Continental Europe still treats their doctors like crap, and they have over 3 doctors per 1000. Heck, often enough they don't train enough doctors locally, and they have to bring amounts of immigrants covering specialists positions, if just because those specialists leave due to how much better they get paid in the US.

    11. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by dmr001 · · Score: 1
      Medical school enrollment IS increasing (with several new allopathic schools opening in the next few years - in Florida, Pennsylvania) and new osteopathic schools as well. This is unlikely to lower costs, as areas in the US with more doctors tend to have higher spending on physicians services - more doctors simply do more stuff. The same seems to be true of hospital beds - see the reports on supply sensitivity in the Dartmouth Health Atlas. So long as doctors get paid principally for doing stuff, and not for keeping people healthy, you can expect increased costs as a side effect.

      The organization you are looking to blame is the AAMC by the way, which licenses medical schools, not the AMA, who spend their time making press releases and filling my mailbox with "Renewal invoices" despite the fact I haven't been a member for 10 years.

      Sorry about your proposition, but it's really very manifestly wrong.

    12. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Malc · · Score: 4, Informative

      In 1999, administration cost $1,059 per capita in the US, versus $307 per capita in Canada, per New England Journal of Medicine. So much for private businesses being better than the government. I've lived in Cyprus, UK, Canada, USA, Australia and China, and my experience, the UK has the most encompassing system, and Canada (Ontario at least) the most proactive and efficient. I totally hated the American system, and I can't say I'm much of a fan of what I saw in Melbourne. China was great as an expat because it was so bloody affordable, but that's not what we're discussing here.

    13. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Part of the efficiency problem is that due to your liability culture you throw too many tests and treatments at things.

      I'm an Australian, medicare has been around longer than I can remember so I don't have any other experience to compare it to. My sister-in-law died of cancer a bit over a year ago. She had been going to the doctor about headaches for about 2 years, then suddenly had to go to hospital one day and a couple of months later was dead.

      I don't have an axe to grind over health care systems, but a culture of "too many tests" would no doubt have saved her life. I know my brother-in-law would happily have paid for a 15% profit margin to have his wife alive.

    14. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by wonkavader · · Score: 1

      Because GP appointments are less profitable. The more money we spend on healthcare in a private system, the more people profit -- even the insurers (counter-intuitively), since they can justify higher rates based on the increase in costs, which gives them a larger capital pool to play with.

      We talk and talk about providing basic health-care so that big ticket fix-it-at-the-end procedures aren't necessary and as a method of saving money. (A dollar on prenatal care saves X dollars on treating premature babies through life, etc. etc.) But why would we want to save money? That only benefits the consumer. Since when has he mattered? All the people who matter are getting rich, here, thank you very much.

      And after all, so long as the consumer keeps buying it, it must be perfect for him. That's free enterprise. If American health care didn't work, consumers wouldn't buy it. RIGHT?

      So let's not change anything, because that would inconvenience the important people.

    15. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by nolfox · · Score: 1

      The AMA controls the state funding for universities? That is interesting.

      Lots of specialties are high paying, but as we are talking about this specific bill, which is an attempt to bring insurance to more people it would make sense to look at those specific specialties that will see these new patients (the primary care docs).

      Pediatricians: they are on the low end of the scale. More specialized pediatricians like developmental pediatricians cannot even practice because the medicaid billing rates are so low they do not even cover office costs. So most dev. peds. have to do general peds.

      Child and adolescent psychiatrists: in canada they make 3 times what they do in the US

      psychiatrists: make about twice in canada.

      GP: in canada they make 2-3 times what they make in the US.

      If the mighty AMA is keeping salaries artificially high, then why are the salaries so low compared to other countries?

    16. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      moving from USA to Europe I have to say the European system is not better.
      I really think the american health system was very good; maybe I was lucky to live in a good place and to work in OK places.

      In Europe the offer/demand ratio for healthcare is too small; with realitively long waiting and little time for patients
      What irks me the most is that even if I have money I can not get treatment.
      Moreover, here the health insurance costs me (tax+deductible+own contribution+company contribution) more than what I paid in the US. But most people do not realize how much they are paying since it is deducted from your paycheck as a generic "tax"

      Small things like having a wart removed take weeks, if not months and due to the lack of offer of services more complicated stuff is even worse.
      One of my colleagues had his gallbladder removed; but had to wait 8-12 weeks for a doctor to be available. No life threatening in principle but stil is a long wait.

    17. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by tpjunkie · · Score: 1

      The number of physicians in the United States has bugger-all to do with the AMA. The AMA is a lobbying body that any med student or physician can join if they choose. They have absolutely nothing to do with medical school admission numbers, residency matching, or anything else that would affect the number of physicians in the country. The fact is, there are a LOT of people who would like to be physicians. Providing a medical education requires considerable resources, you need to get AAMC approval of your curriculum, extensive faculty, labs for histology, anatomy, and microbiology. There are about 150 medical schools in the US, with about a dozen more set to open in the next few years. Class sizes range from about 40 to around 250. If anything, many schools have faced some over-enrollment in the past few years, as more people have taken acceptances as the number of applicants has risen. There is no artificial supply shortage. There may be a shortage but it is due to lack of an adequate number of schools to meet demand (although one could argue that it is intentionally difficult to get in to medical school, as they do want only the best and brightest). Matching rates in US residency programs are still high. I have no idea why you think the AMA has anything to do with the physician supply. I am a medical student, by the way.

    18. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think people have failed to see the actual problem with health care, it simply comes down to the excessive costs of services provided, for example my mother was in the hospital for 1 night and was charged over $800 just for the room, then on the next bill the insurance came along and readjusted the amount down to about $300 for a night. Can you see an issue here? The insurance companies pay less than half what an individual would be responsible for with out insurance. This is the same issue all over the medical field, why do you have to pay $200 dollars to go to the doctors office just for the doctor to say yes you are stick here is a prescription for which I get paid by the drug company on the side to write. What the American heath system needs is regulation, and not an insurance package that will only make the problem larger, heath care is something people should be able to afford on their normal salary and not something so expensive you need to have insurance for. As for you euros and Canadians, bugger off I don't want my government to tell me I must pay into a heath care system, which I consider to be 1 step above leech attaching / head drilling to remove evil spirits witch doctors of yesterday.

    19. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How long does it take to get an MRI in the UK?
      I could get one today five minutes from house in the U.S..... I know a few people that have waited close to a year there.
      Good luck with your brain tumor.
      The answer is more competition which means LESS government involvement. Federal rules which restrict me from choosing an insurance provider from outside my own State drive up costs.
      ALSO... moving everybody to an HSA system, as previously mentioned, will greatly reduce cost.

    20. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by maxume · · Score: 1

      The AMA works together with the AAMC:

      http://www.lcme.org/faqlcme.htm

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    21. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by wjousts · · Score: 1

      And what part of your comment contradicts mine?

      The part where I point out that the AMA isn't a cartel and, as such, doesn't have any power over the number of doctors.

      tpjunkie gave you a much longer and more detailed response which is very good.

    22. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by JTsyo · · Score: 1

      One of the major reasons sited for growth in cost has new new technologies. "Our new Life Extender Machine can keep your 84yr old grandma alive for six more months for a mere 10K/day. There's no price on love."

    23. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 0, Troll

      Personally, i think TVs are more a problem than McDonalds. In other words, people would still be unhealthy without fast food, if they still sit and consume TV for a zillion hours a week, rather than being active.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    24. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Pojut · · Score: 1

      The fact that we play video games so frequently in our house ("we" and "our" meaning my fiancee and I), we have a recumbent bike in front of the TV and take turns.

      Works out great for those streaming netflix/civilization revolution DS marathons :-)

    25. Re:Health care: break the MD cartel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who has been through the healthcare system in the US and the UK, believe me... US gets WAY better service.

      I will agree, though, that liability is an issue. But then, this bill has no tort reform. :/

  9. I don't have health insurance. by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I have catastrophic insurance, so if I get cancer and my bills go over $20,000 then THEY will cover the cost. Like a safety net.

    But most of the time I pay CASH (about $200 a year), which means I deal *directly* with my doctor. I like it that way because it makes the doctor attentive to MY needs not some insurance bureacrat or congressional politician or HMO.

    If this Pelosicare Bill forces me to abandon my system of paying cash for product (or else be fined by the government), then I will be very very angry. I will also be concerned what else "they" might force down my throat. "Buy a Prius or other hybrid, else we'll fine you $1000."

    This is not freedom. This is like a return to 1770 when Parliament dictated to citizens as if they were Serfs.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    1. Re:I don't have health insurance. by schon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      most of the time I pay CASH (about $200 a year), which means I deal *directly* with my doctor.

      I live in a country that has government-run universal insurance, and I deal *directly* with my doctor, too. I'm not sure why you believe this isn't possible.

    2. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Ihlosi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I have catastrophic insurance, so if I get cancer and my bills go over $20,000 then THEY will cover the cost.

      That's what they want you to think. Of course, fighting a lawsuit when you're the one who has cancer and five-figure bills to pay, while the other side has a large legal department specialized on just that kind of case, is going to be fun.

      Catastrophic health insurance is a scam.

    3. Re:I don't have health insurance. by KDN · · Score: 1

      Its worse, its not that they fine you, THEY CAN THROW YOU INTO JAIL FOR FIVE YEARS for not having what they feel is sufficient health insurance. It makes not having sufficient health care A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

    4. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check your cap on the catastrophic insurance before you deliver a verdict. Some of them cap at half a million, or typically a million if you're lucky as a lifetime cap. Which you will get to within months of getting something 'catastrophic'.

    5. Re:I don't have health insurance. by linzeal · · Score: 2, Informative

      Good luck on getting them to pay the bills because most of them deny over half of the claims if not more. Go Google your provider, I'll wait here.

      I have heard nothing but bad things about catastrophic insurance from college students I know who used it to register for classes and you should pry read your policy right now to see if you can even litigate them if they deny you coverage, I doubt it. Who is going to end up paying your health care costs if you get sick? Oh yeah, that's right everyone but you. You are no better than the welfare moms you bitch about.

      Your paranoid delusions about this being some left-wing conspiracy to force you into some politically correct lifestyle would be funny if it was not so pitiful.

    6. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As in my situation, you are missing the middle ground, the one that is actually likely to bankrupt you or put you in the ground early.

      The one where you get a (any) chronic disease, genetically programmed, the one where you must go on decade(s) of expensive medication, tests, or treatments that cost just under your catastrophic limits. The one where when you get older and may or may not have a career or employer that will take care of your costs. The one that will bankrupt you before you can take advantage of Medicare. The one where if you cannot make a payment just once you can never get health insurance again. Remember this as you age, and Good (literally) Luck on your health care plan.

    7. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You'll change your tune once you have a family, assuming you're not gay. You're obviously not having any annual checkups or medical tests if you only pay $200/year. More often than not, doctors will charge double what they do with insurance companies for cash / self-pay people. It would appear you are avoiding health services, because just walking into a door will give you at least a $100 for a 3 minute consultation. Had your eyes checked lately? Dental care? Don't be fooled into thinking because you don't feel anything you are in great health.

    8. Re:I don't have health insurance. by MartinSchou · · Score: 5, Funny

      I live in a country that has government-run universal insurance, and I deal *directly* with my doctor, too. I'm not sure why you believe this isn't possible.

      Brain-washing and indoctrination.

      Listen. Just because the person you meet and discuss intimate details with at the "doctor's" office is wearing a lab coat and a stethescope, it doesn't mean he or she is a doctor. They are actually just civil servants who have hidden microphones and very discrete ear pieces, that allows what you're telling them to be heard by a 13-person death-panel, who will then instruct the "doctor" what to do.

      The death-panel consists of:

      • 3 lawyers
      • 5 bean counters
      • 1 veterinarian (there are no real doctors outside the US)
      • 3 politicians
      • 1 organ broker (whose job is to sell your organs)

      This is how socialized "medicine" works. The only medicine involved with it, is making sure your body is sold off in parts to raise money for the party leaders! WAKE UP AND SMELL THE ROSES! Actually, those aren't roses but the perfumes used to cover up the stench of rotting corpses in the streets.
      </sarcasm>

    9. Re:I don't have health insurance. by photozz · · Score: 1

      The moment you come down with diabetes or another life changing illness and no insurance company will cover you because of a pre-existing condition, I want you to imagine me pointing at you and laughing, you giant idiot.

      --


      Dirty Pirate Hooker
    10. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mmmm that kool-aid sure is sweet. You realize that isn't how it actually works, right? You've been manipulated.

      You say: "I'm healthy now. I'm young and fit and don't NEED or CARE about health insurance, especially since I don't have any sort of preexisting condition!"

      That may not be the case in ten years. Or for someone else in your family. Or for other people around you. Have some vision and foresight. Short-term decision making is deadly.

    11. Re:I don't have health insurance. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Its worse, its not that they fine you, THEY CAN THROW YOU INTO JAIL FOR FIVE YEARS

      [citation needed]

    12. Re:I don't have health insurance. by s122604 · · Score: 1

      I have catastrophic insurance, so if I get cancer and my bills go over $20,000 then THEY will cover the cost. Like a safety net.

      Thats what you hope at least...

      http://crooksandliars.com/nicole-belle/health-insurer-targets-hiv-patients-d

      You are probably happy with the setup because you are are probably young and without a doubt, healthy, and because you are young and healthy, you've never had to use it...

    13. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      I will also be concerned what else "they" might force down my throat.

      So, how does it feel being a republican mouthpiece? Is it fun parroting lines straight from Fox News? OTOH, at least you don't have to think for yourself...

    14. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      I tend to agree with this, but I am in favor of a Single Payer Not for Profit system.

      The reason I agree with what you said is... that this bill will force everyone to buy private insurance from one of the major companies.

      Thats a strange way to reform an industry... ie: send everyone to the enemy for massive profits.

      They want to tax soda here in NY... and now they want to tax Pizza...

      Whats next? They will start taxing anything they do not want you to participate in. Which may be America as a whole.

      Freedom is dead, especially when you're being taxed and not represented. In this case... we're being taxed and by law we're now going to be forced into making a deal with the devil (the insurance industry). We elected the democrats to contain and control the insurance industry... not feed us to them.

    15. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's an interesting side of America : in health as in education, American feel like they have to give money to receive attention :
      "I like it that way because it makes the doctor attentive to MY needs".
      That's not all bad, of course, but everything is a transaction, everything is business, everything is a product. And health as a business feels wrong, no matter how you justify it ("freedom", really ?).

      Coming from a country where health and education is free (for *everyone*, even illegal immigrants), I can say that free, universal health care is not a blow on freedom, but ensure that a basic equality of chance (to *live*), and mutual respect (because we don't let each other die). Yes, we all take care of each-others medical costs. And I'd like to think that it makes us just a bit stronger as a country. And I have yet to meet someone that feels it's a breach in their basic freedom.

      By the way "Buy a Prius or other hybrid, else we'll fine you $1000" is not a bad idea. Why should the right to pollute the planet more than other people should be free ? Freedom *does not* mean freedom to do evil. Freedom means freedom to do anything as long as it does not hurt others.

    16. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      Good luck on getting them to pay the bills because most of them deny over half of the claims if not more.

      And why shouldn't they? They're in a position with much, much better leverage than your standard insurer, because by the time one of their customers needs his "catastrophic" insurance, the situation is already "catastrophic" and he's an easy victim in a lawsuit.

    17. Re:I don't have health insurance. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I have catastrophic insurance, so if I get cancer and my bills go over $20,000 then THEY will cover the cost. Like a safety net.

      You mean like a safety net not everyone can afford, not available to everyone who can afford a reasonable price if they've had illness in the past, and a safety net which has huge holes in it because it's provided by a company whose best financial interest is it to fail. Getting catastrophic insurance to pay out is difficult. Trying to do it while very ill is more so. I've been through all this with the insurance company. Needless paperwork and delays and requirements and mistakes and hassles, all while you're very ill. In most cases, you end up paying yourself and then, if you survive, suing them.

      But most of the time I pay CASH (about $200 a year), which means I deal *directly* with my doctor.

      In places with universal single payer healthcare, you deal directly with your doctor as well. The difference being, your doctor is not motivated to cut costs, is motivated to provide preventative treatments, and is not profiting or working for people profiting the more the longer you are ill.

      If this Pelosicare Bill forces me to abandon my system of paying cash for product (or else be fined by the government), then I will be very very angry.

      You're probably going to be very angry then. But a lot of people will get to keep their homes and get their insulin and fresh needles for it, and fewer children will die needlessly and fewer people will go blind from preventable causes (the US is the worst in the first world on this now). So you'll forgive me if I don't value your stress levels all that highly. Oh, and as a side bonus, we'll finally be reducing the deficit so maybe, in the conceivable future, we could lower taxes overall, and not just for the ultra wealthy.

      I will also be concerned what else "they" might force down my throat.

      This is called the "slippery slope" logical fallacy.

      This is not freedom. This is like a return to 1770 when Parliament dictated to citizens as if they were Serfs.

      Why is it the people electing representatives who tax us and provide the service of health insurance is "not freedom" but people electing representatives who tax us and provide the service of arresting serial killers is? Both directly work to protect the lives of the citizenry. Sensationalist pseudo journalists like to spin healthcare reform in the US as though it were fundamentally a new concept, evil socialism or some such nonsense. It's no more socialist than the FBI and our socialist police force and it's just an extension of our current, partially socialist healthcare system that already provides socialized healthcare to the very poor, the elderly, military veterans, and members of congress. It's an incremental change. Of course these are the same sensationalist pseudo journalists that claim setting tax levels/disparity to the same as they were in the early eighties and significantly less than they were in the 50's-70's is some sort of radical measure, instead of what it actually is, a conservative move back towards our historical system and away from the current radically unbalanced level of taxation.

    18. Re:I don't have health insurance. by linzeal · · Score: 1

      Cited from the voices inside Glenn Beck's head.

    19. Re:I don't have health insurance. by KDN · · Score: 0
    20. Re:I don't have health insurance. by osgeek · · Score: 1

      The best thing that a health care bill could do is to open up competition and transparency.

      If only you could buy health care insurance as an individual from anywhere in the US. If only doctors and hospitals would be forced to give health care consumers basic pricing information that applied equally whether I was paying with insurance or cash. These games they play with the insurance companies to increase revenue for both is ridiculous.

      For example, I was planning to have a minor routine procedure this year; so last year I was considering carefully how much money to put into my FSA. My doctor had done thousands of this procedure, but his office could not give me a price or even a good ballpark. As a developer, if I couldn't give a customer a price ahead of time for something routine that I had specialized in and been doing for years, I wouldn't expect that customer to work with me.

    21. Re:I don't have health insurance. by LittleKing · · Score: 1

      Another problem with the proposal is that since insurance companies must cover pre-existing conditions is that one could choose to pay the fine (which could cost less than insurance) and then when a major medical bill arises apply for insurance. Doesn't quite seem fair to have someone not paying for coverage until they need it.

      --
      Art by Mindy Herman, my wife.
    22. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in France
      I can pick whoever I want as my GP, anywhere in France. hell I could even pick a specialist as a GP if it would make me feel better (but he would get GP price tho)
      I can switch GPs whenever I wish too.

    23. Re:I don't have health insurance. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just one, I'm sure there are more: http://www.aolnews.com/opinion/article/opinion-obamas-health-care-myths-exposed/19402359 [aolnews.com]

      Umm, that linked article is an opinion piece that says it would "threaten people with jail time" but provides no citation. He doesn't even use the correct term since jail would be for a local offense and prison for a federal crime. You'll have to do a lot better than that, like a citation in the bill, perhaps. I searched the text of it and there were no matches for "prison," "imprisonment," or "jail". I can give you a hundred references and cite the portion of the bill where is says you can be fined up to $750 per uninsured adult in a household. I can't find anything about a prison sentence. I'm calling bullshit on this one, unless you can provide a real citation.

    24. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      most of the time I pay CASH (about $200 a year), which means I deal *directly* with my doctor.

      I live in a country that has government-run universal insurance, and I deal *directly* with my doctor, too. I'm not sure why you believe this isn't possible.

      I think he confused doctor with drug dealer.

    25. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he is referring to the (rumor of a?) part that says that anyone not having insurance would be taxed extra to account for what the government assumes would be the cost of insuring them anyway.

      So yes he still has the 'choice' to keep his system, but (if this provision is in the bill) he will be penalized for it.

      I just wish the thing were small enough (and in layman's terms) to be able to read and understand, and to form opinions based on the actual content of the bill instead of the hearsay of pundits.

    26. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also live in a country that doesn't force people to choose between solvency and their children. The mere fact that the US thinks it's okay to have a system that bankrupts individuals so they or their family members can continue to *live* is one of the reasons the rest of the civilized world thinks the USA is full of lunatics.

    27. Re:I don't have health insurance. by MarkGriz · · Score: 1

      Its worse, its not that they fine you, THEY CAN THROW YOU INTO JAIL FOR FIVE YEARS...

      Not a bad deal really.

      Then you'll get free room, board AND healthcare.

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
    28. Re:I don't have health insurance. by htdrifter · · Score: 1

      I also pay cash and usually get a 50% discount. The amount I pay is about the same as my share would have been if I still had insurance. If I had done that since I started working my 401K would be much larger today.

      Who do you get your catastrophic insurance from?
      There are too many players between you and the person that provides your medical services. That's where the big cost is.

    29. Re:I don't have health insurance. by fropenn · · Score: 1

      $200 per year? You're clearly talking about a Ph.D. doctor, not an M.D. doctor, right? One set of immunizations for a child (usually young children get these several times a year) can cost over $600 just for the shots. A single night in the hospital can easily top $2000. Heck, even a couple of stitches in the emergency room easily breaks $500.

    30. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No kidding. This kid was lucky but thousands are not. Got Sick? Goodbye!

      Dropped for contracting HIV

    31. Re:I don't have health insurance. by kehren77 · · Score: 1

      [citation needed that isn't an OPINION column]

    32. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your ideas intrigue me. Do you by chance have a newsletter? Or a time slot on Fox News?

    33. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just wait until you get salivary gland cancer and your insurance decides that it was a pre-existing condition (that laid dormant since before you purchased your catastrophic insurance) because you don't have the financial records to proved you'd had a dental check up every 6 months (again, extending 12 months before your purchase of insurance) and you have to make a real decision.

      A decision like trying to figure out if watching your child go to their first day kindergarten is worth the projected 2.5 million dollars it will take to keep you alive and in crippling pain that long. According to most of the people unwilling to pay their taxes, I wonder if you will have the decency to pull the trigger instead of burdening your children with debt.

      Put the gun in your hand and I doubt you'd be so brazen.

    34. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Price per day for lawyers fighting against claim = A
      Number of days you can live without treatment = B
      Number of days you can live with treatment = C
      Cost of treatment per day = D

      if A*B > C*D guess how well your insurance is going to work?

    35. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might want to talk to the college student who got kicked off of his plan after he contracted HIV.

      http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE62G2DO20100317

      See how well his insurance company took care of him.

    36. Re:I don't have health insurance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree, I've been in that scenario and had zero problems with my catastrophic insurance policy. Actually, they were much easier to deal with than the usual HMO/PPO type of insurance company. Of course, if you have no point of reference or no idea what you're talking about, the easiest solution is to "do what you can with what you have and clothe it with moral arguments."

    37. Re:I don't have health insurance. by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      More often than not, doctors will charge double what they do with insurance companies for cash / self-pay people.

      Yeah, I was just baffled at his idea he was somehow saving money.

      Well, yes, if he only gets $200 worth of medical services a year, it's cheaper than insurance...but if he had insurance, and used it, and insurance paid for that visit, it'd pay like $50.

      Incidentally, who here thinks that people who've never had any actual medical problem (And $200 a year is, essentially, a sinus infection.) should have their kneecaps broken before being allowed to comment on what they imagine their 'insurance' will cover?

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    38. Re:I don't have health insurance. by izomiac · · Score: 1

      More often than not, doctors will charge double what they do with insurance companies for cash / self-pay people.

      They'll often bill everyone identically, which means that insurance companies negotiate it down to about half. This is a carry-over from when insurance companies would pay a fixed portion (e.g. 100%) of the bill, so doctors would bill more in hopes of getting paid more. If you speak with your doctor then there's a pretty good chance they'll reduce the bill to whatever the insurance companies pay (or less, many doctors are charitable if you're uninsured due to economic hardship).

      A couple years ago I heard a presentation about the intricacies of healthcare and the Amish. Apparently they (as in the local ones) don't believe in using insurance (no clue about how that'll fly if this bill passes). Instead, they pool their money and pay collectively whenever a member of the colony gets sick (they also use a lot of herbal medicine and don't go to "extremes" to keep people alive). One issue that came up was that they paid 100% of their bills, which was about twice that of what insurance companies paid. It became cheaper for them to pay for someone to drive them to another hospital a couple hours aways. Obviously the local hospital thought this was ridiculous and changed their policy. The problem was that nobody at the hospital really noticed until the Amish stopped showing up.

  10. I hope it's rushed through by ircmaxell · · Score: 0, Troll
    I hope it's rushed through, because then it may give ammo for the Supreme Court to rule the action as unconstitutional/illegal... Not to mention that Fed healthcare as it stands is unconstitutional... Amendment 10 of the constitution states:

    The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people

    So explain to me how the US government has the power/right to do this?

    --
    If a man isn't willing to take some risk for his opinions, either his opinions are no good or he's no good
    1. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't you know? The fact that they're constitutionally allowed to make laws gives them the power to do /anything/. Alternately: Didn't you know? The fact that they're supposed to protect the country gives them the power to do /anything/.

    2. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better yet, explain to me how Obama is qualified to run MY healthcare, what with the STELLAR job he is doing with Freddie / Fannie, The United States Postal Service, and AMTRAK. Not to mention the utter readability of the United States Tax Code.

    3. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The federal government is doing it through the tax code. They have the power/right to impose taxes and distribute funds. Similar to how the No child left behind act gives the federal government the power to influence education.

    4. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You voted, and you're a people; therefore, you delegated the power to them.

    5. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Wolvenhaven · · Score: 1

      Can I sign up for your newsletter? I argue the 10th amendment pretty much every time a debate like this comes up and people dismiss it because they only know the first 2-3. Here at college I have seen a disgusting trend towards "the constitution is broken so let's just ignore it" among both students and teachers and I can't wrap my mind around how they came up with such a idiotic idea.

      Government intrusion into healthcare caused the cost to go up, restricting the number of doctors, requiring cookie cutter instead of modular health insurance plans, "oversight" and "control" which create bureaucratic empire building jobs, all increasing the cost while doing little to help.
      Even if it were constitutional, the public wanted it, and it got signed into law, does anyone really want the people who can't manage the programs already there? Medicare is billions of dollars in debt, the Post Office is as well, and the VA hospital is one of the most poorly run, inefficient, and costly medical service there is. If they cannot even give affordable, quality healthcare to our veterans, how well do you think it will work for everyone?
      (Note, "you" is not referring to parent, it's a plural argumentative "you")

      --
      Orwell was an optimist.
    6. Re:I hope it's rushed through by tweek · · Score: 2, Informative

      Other people have said it but essentially, a very LOOSE intepretation of allows for this kind of thing:

      1) Wrap it up in tax code
      2) Commerce Clause
      3) General Welfare Clause

      Do you remember when Sonia Sotomayor was being grilled during her confirmation hearings? It was either Diane Fienstien or some other person explicity asked about how loosely she interpreted the Commerce Clause because they use it as the basis for so many laws and that overly strict interpretation would make their job harder or somesuch nonsense.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    7. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But this isn't about distributing funds. It's about setting up an entity to oversee and manage health insurance. There's a HUGE difference...

    8. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Commerce Clause. Do some research -- you might also want to focus on Justice Marshall's view of this clause.

      Do they not teach Civics in schools anymore?

    9. Re:I hope it's rushed through by gclef · · Score: 1

      Between the general welfare clause and the commerce clause (insurance being an interstate commerce issue) of the constitution, their constitutional authority is pretty strong.

    10. Re:I hope it's rushed through by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>the Supreme Court to rule the action as unconstitutional/illegal

      They won't. The Supreme Court serves the same master as the Congress and the President - the United States Government. Just as they rammed through the unconstitutional rationing of farmers' *privately-owned* crops (Wickard v. Filburn), so too will the uphold this Pelosicare bill. And then all three branches will all go have a party to celebrate.

      The only hope we have is that the independent States, not having to rely on the U.S. Government for a paycheck, will nullify the bill as violating amendments 9 and 10.

      "But the Chief Justice says, 'There must be an ultimate arbiter somewhere.' True, there must; but does that prove it is either party? The ultimate arbiter is the people of the Union, assembled by their deputies in convention, at the call of Congress or of two-thirds of the States. Let them decide to which they mean to give an authority claimed by two of their organs. And it has been the peculiar wisdom and felicity of our Constitution, to have provided this peaceable appeal, where that of other nations is at once to force."

            --Thomas Jefferson to William Johnson, 1823

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    11. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      They won't. The Supreme Court serves the same master as the Congress and the President - the United States Government.

      Then they should be executed for treason. They swore an oath to the Constitution, not the Government. Not their party. Not the President. Not the people. To the Constitution. So if they don't live up to it, they should be held accountable to it...

    12. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Wickard v. Filburn dealt with a poorly written law that should have set limits on sales, instead set limits on crop growth, with the intention of setting limits on sales.

      If this was today, Filburn would run 2 companies, one would run a livestock farm with a wheat field and the other would grow wheat for market. Heck, he would most likely get a grant too.

    13. Re:I hope it's rushed through by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      I hope it's rushed through, because then it may give ammo for the Supreme Court to rule the action as unconstitutional/illegal... Not to mention that Fed healthcare as it stands is unconstitutional... Amendment 10 of the constitution states:

      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people

      So explain to me how the US government has the power/right to do this?

      It's in the Constitution, Article 8:

      The Congress shall have power To lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defence and general welfare of the United States; but all duties, imposts and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

      In short, Congress has been granted pretty broad power to govern the US.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    14. Re:I hope it's rushed through by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul? You're on Slashdot now??

      The rationale is laid out in the Preamble ("promote the general Welfare") and the power in Article I (Congress) Section 8 ("The Congress shall have Power... to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare").

      Besides which, as this is a bill about health *insurance* (not health *care*), and as it does not really establish any public insurance plan, it's really a corporate regulation bill. That's squarely within Congress' power according to the Commerce Clause.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    15. Re:I hope it's rushed through by ircmaxell · · Score: 1

      Fair point. I did not realize that was in the Articles of the Constitution (I knew it said that in the introduction). I will concede my second point, but I still feel my first is valid...

      --
      If a man isn't willing to take some risk for his opinions, either his opinions are no good or he's no good
    16. Re:I hope it's rushed through by aegisvirgae · · Score: 1

      It's not really the 10th amendment that is going to govern this issue. This issue will be governed under the commerce clause of the constitution. This means Congress will get to do it. Right now, legal scholars have a great debate going on concerning the commerce clause. The SCOTUS has defined it so broadly that just about anything that Congress wants to do it can in the name of interstate commerce. Healthcare is something that affects commerce across the states. That means Congress has a very broad discretion to meddle into it. This legacy comes down from the reinterpretation of both the general welfare clause and the interstate commerce clause that occurred in the same era as New Deal legislation.

      In Modern times, the 10th amendment is (normally) only violated when Congress attempts to commandeer a legislative or other process of the states. An example is the old laws where: Congress provides that each state must arrange for toxic waste disposal of waste generated within its borders. Congress requires the state to "take title" of the waste if it fails to comply and thus become liable for tort damages stemming from it. (New York v. United States) Congress can't compel state legislatures to enforce federal policy under the 10th amendment.

      Another example is administrative offices: Congress can not compel a state's sheriff's to perform background checks on applicants for handgun permits. (Printz v. US) Congress can make it illegal and enforce it with federal agencies, but they can not force a state agency to do anything specifically to enforce federal policy.

      As for the commerce clause, generally, Congress may enact laws that cover four broad categories:

      1. The Channels of interstate commerce: This covers the regulation of highways, waterways, and air traffic.
      2. The instrumentalities of commerce: This refers to people and machines (trains and semi trucks) used in carrying out commerce.
      3. Articles moving in interstate commerce: The goods themselves crossing state lines etc.

      And finally the big catch all that gives them so much power:

      4. Anything "substantially affecting" commerce: So long as the activity is "arguably commercial" then it doesn't matter if the particular activity itself directly affects interstate commerce so long as it is part of a general class of activities that, collectively, substantially affect interstate commerce.

      Medical insurance falls into category 4. You can't buy insurance over state lines. That means that most "particular instances" of insurance are not interstate commerce. However, taken collectively, insurance has a substantial affect on commerce when you look at it countrywide. Now, you can see all kinds of examples where this will make Congress have an almost unlimited right to legislate. So many things, when taken in the aggregate, fit this definition. Legal scholars are still wondering what exactly can Congress -not- do? Only a few recent cases have put any real limits on it. It's sad, but we are now seriously waiting to not find out if Congress -can- do a thing.... We're asking "is this one of the rare instances where they -can't- do it?"

      It's messed up, but that's the current state of constitutional law.

    17. Re:I hope it's rushed through by doug · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but they always do it by stretching the commerce clause. I hope that one day it snaps back. And with SCOTUS being 5-4 to the right, if someone can push a challenge up through the appeals process before a conservative dies/retires, then this is could be declared unconstitutional.

      But I ain't holding my breath

      - doug

  11. News For Nerds by Megaweapon · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Not enough clickbait today, Taco?

    --
    I'm sure "SlashdotMedia" will improve on all the wonders that Dice Holdings blessed us all with
    1. Re:News For Nerds by jimbobborg · · Score: 1

      Someone in Congress described this as a "VA-like" system. Have you ever dealt with the VA? That's Veterans Administration. I work with a lot of former military, I get to hear horror stories about VA hospitals. Think about that before you start cheering for this.

    2. Re:News For Nerds by Sircus · · Score: 1

      "After controlling for enabling and need characteristics in logistic regression models, Veterans Administration (VA)-only users were 2 to 8 times more satisfied with their outpatient care than were VA nonusers on 5 out of 10 satisfaction measures.". Oh, and I have a source. You appear to have a mysterious "Someone in Congress".

      Also, the proposed health care bill doesn't set up anything even slightly like the VA. VA -> single provider of health care, like the NHS in Britain. The proposed public option would have been a step toward having a single payer, but still with multiple independent providers. The proposed bill doesn't introduce either.

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
    3. Re:News For Nerds by Enry · · Score: 1

      I'll preface this by admitting that I worked for the VA in a coding capacity in the early 90s. I did spend a week at one of the local hospitals to see the various departments (this is a requirement when you're hired).

      If what you contend is true and the VA were that bad, then why would veterans continue to use it? Many I know have medicare or private insurance already, so why not make use of either of those for their treatment rather than go to the VA?

      If the VA were truly that bad (and I don't want to discount examples like Walter Reed, which isn't part of the VA), then that would imply that fewer people would go to the VA for care given they already have other options.

  12. Neither. by jgreco · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's nothing like the health care bill we should have had, something to create a health care system comparable to other modern countries. The Democrats have no backbone and kept watering it down and morphing it until it was only vaguely acceptable to just barely enough of them to possibly pass. This sort of thing leads to awful legislation.

    The Republicans, of course, are chanting "wait, wait, this is being rushed," but the facts are that they had years in which they could have pushed through health care reform - years where it was clearly necessary. Despite what they say, your average Republican simply doesn't believe in health care reform, which is why it didn't happen under Clinton and wouldn't happen under Obama if they could figure out a way to delay it. So instead of pushing for a fiscally responsible and conservative health care reform, the Republicans are really pushing for the status quo, without trying to seem like they're doing that.

    Both parties stink. I'm kind of hoping this passes, but then the Republicans come into power. It'll be impractical for them to repeal this, but perhaps they'll be smart enough to tinker with it to make it better. Past history is not encouraging, though.

    1. Re:Neither. by Nimey · · Score: 1

      The 'pubs are saying "wait wait" because they're wanting to delay this until after the elections. Should the Dems win the elections, they'll find some other excuse.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    2. Re:Neither. by commodore64_love · · Score: 4, Informative

      >>>Republicans had years in which they could have pushed through health care reform

      They did.
      Or have you forgotten the new Prescription Medicine Reform where people can get "free" medicine? Or the Tort Reform to help reduce expenses?

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    3. Re:Neither. by Chreo · · Score: 1

      As an outsider with a whole bunch of relatives in the US it all seems to me like the big insurance companies are the one who's playing the pipe here.

      Sure, we have higher taxes. However, every time I've had that discussion with a US citizen their jaw drop, once I let them know what those taxmoney buys "me". Free healthcare and university studies, to just name two of the more costly ones. And in the US, even if you have a good healthcare insurance, which pays for, for example vital heart suregery, the insurance (usually) does not cover the actual cost of stying at the hospital and that will quickly become massive (at least this is how it used to be "before").

      Don't get me wrong, US is great place and I'll go there on many more visits, but this reform will help you become quite a bit more independent as citizens and that can only be a good thing, right? (if you are in debt you are not free)

      --

      Life is what happened when Good Intentions met Harsh Reality (the brother of the more infamous Chaos).
    4. Re:Neither. by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      I tend to think this was all a show.

      The real insurance crisis was that the insurance industry wants more profit but cant see how to get it without raising rates even higher. Now rates cant go any higher or else this country will die. My current plan is $1,150 a month. America is already dying so how could they raise profit again?

      Simple... lobby the government to force every American into private insurance plans.

      I'm not sure Single Payer was ever an option, or that the option was even ever an option.

      I have no trust in our government. If we were real American's we would have rid them from our country by now...

    5. Re:Neither. by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or have you forgotten the new Prescription Medicine Reform where people can get "free" medicine?

      You mean the one that will cost about a trillion dollars that isn't paid for:

      Simply stated, the bill cost a fortune, wasn't paid for, is complicated as hell, and doesn't do all that much--though it does include coverage for end-of life-counseling, or what Grassley now calls "pulling the plug on grandma." In their 2009 report to Congress, the Medicare trustees estimate the 10-year cost of [the republican medicare bill[ as high as $1.2 trillion. That figure--just for prescription-drug coverage that people over 65 still have to pay a lot of money for--dwarfs the $848 billion cost of the Senate bill.

      This is typical of Republican governance, they bitch and moan all the time about fiscal responsibility, but they acted in the most inconceivably fiscally irresponsible way again and again during the decade or so they were in power. Now we the taxpayer and the democrats are at least attempting to clean up after the unmitigated spending spree that was the Bush Administration and Republican Congress (Iraq war, tax cuts for the wealthy, "free" prescriptions drugs) and are getting dinged for not being fiscally responsible? If this is a joke, it's not funny.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
    6. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the HSA stuff as well.

    7. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The one where they lied about the true cost of the program?

    8. Re:Neither. by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      You mean Medicare Part D, a prescription drug program that will cost the government $727.3 billion from 2009-2018 in payments to the big pharmaceutical companies that pushed the bill through? The bill is that high because the law prevents the federal government from bargaining with the drug companies over the price. That's why Medicare pays $1,485 for Zocor, while the VA pays $127. Oh, and the program hasn't been shown to increase the lifespan of patients.

      I am not aware of any health care tort reform under the Bush Administration.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    9. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats because we are not a modern country here in the US. The US is stuck in the 19th century with the class warfare of that era. Worse is the fact that those that have the power and obligation to change this have no incentive to change it. The right wingers want nothing in the way of large corporate profits and the left wingers want the government to do everything for everyone. Bullshit on both.

      If there was a private run single payer system or something with the right incentives to actually PREVENT illness and PROMOTE WELLNESS it should happen. It will not occur because corporate culture demands that most of us die early since it's cheaper, that the system have incentives to make loads of money rather than treat people effectively. The US health system in it's current for is the most expensive and nowhere near the best. Since the folks legislating this mess are a bunch of lawyers there is no incentive to make things any better for the rest of us - they would end up suing the government and that almost never works. Individual doctors are really terrific. They are not really the cause of this as I have some really gode ones caring for me. US medical insurance in it's current form is evil and needs to die a clean, swift death. Medical care is a human right in every wealthy country in the world except the US which is utter bullshit. Politics in the US is the disease that needs to be cured right here, right now.

    10. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they pushed through tort reform, then why are people still asking for tort reform? Not a troll, just looking for a citation.

    11. Re:Neither. by kaiser423 · · Score: 1

      But the Republicans did do healthcare. Remember Medicare Part D, one of the largest pork fests and inefficient government programs ever? The one that buys prescription medicine at such a high price that it actually cost more than the current bill?

      So let's take a look at this. For the price of this healthcare bill, the Democrats are somewhat protecting us from abuse from insurance companies, and insuring 30+ million more Americans, allowing them to go to the doctor, get better and get back to work. The Republicans for the same price managed to get some more prescriptions for seniors and line the pockets of the pharma companies.

    12. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Free medicine? That's an extremely sorry excuse for health care reform. Perhaps lower-cost medicine combined with assurance of adequate doctor care. It's access to medical professionals', medical services (particularly emergency or chronic-treatment services), and preventative care which really matter. The idea that doping people up on one or another widely-available prescription medications can be construed as medical care is simply beyond me. Also, Tort reform is a nice step, but look at the bottom line difference it creates in overall expenses (hint: it is a raindrop in a bucket).

    13. Re:Neither. by inthealpine · · Score: 2, Informative

      Clean up the mess by spending 10X what Bush did in 1/4 of the time?

      Any Republican or Democrat that wants to expand government and spend more money is destroying this country. Don't even get caught up in the R or D Left or Right argument, it's a game. Become an independent, vote for people that match your standards and if they let you down kick them out of office.

      Put the cool-aid down.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    14. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>>Republicans had years in which they could have pushed through health care reform

      They did.
      Or have you forgotten the new Prescription Medicine Reform where people can get "free" medicine? Or the Tort Reform to help reduce expenses?

      They didn't do enough. If they had gone further, they would have been able to really shape the face of health moving forward instead of being the position they are now.

    15. Re:Neither. by jgreco · · Score: 1

      Do you really mean to imply that throwing a few table scraps at a starving person is a fix for their ongoing hunger?

      Little band-aid fixes are not substantive health care reform.

      Fundamentally, capitalism suggests a medical care model that looks a bit like what we have now. The problem is, taken to its ultimate conclusion, you wind up with a system where the rich have cadillac care and the poor have no care. We've tried to "fix" that with hospitals that do not turn away anyone from the ER, for example, but that merely shifts costs around.

      Any health care system that is designed to promote the health of the society in general will ultimately have aspects that one can point to and scream "socialism!" - even our current one does: if I go to the hospital, part of my bill is going to cover the hospital's costs for free ER services to those who cannot afford it. It's socialism, just disguised under layers of capitalism and charity.

      As a moderate, I get ticked off by both sides of this debate. I've had Republicans try to paint me as "more liberal than Obama" for trying to discuss rational reasons for national health care and ways to pay for it, including such radical concepts as moving away from procedure-based billing, but then I've had Democrats try to paint me as a cold, cruel monster for suggesting that maybe we cannot have a national health system that covers people without any limitations, or that there must be compromises, etc.

      The reality, folks, is that we're able to keep people alive, healthy, longer. When Grandpa used to get to 60 and had a heart attack, 50 years ago, his remaining life expectancy was horrible compared to the same scenario today... but that progress comes at a cost. Medications, tests, doctor visits, these things all cost money. If he used to pass at 65, but now manages to hang on 'till 75, that's 10 more years of sometimes-expensive treatment to keep him around. This is a reality we have to come to grips with.

      Instead of trying to understand and cope with that reality, we have the Republicans screaming "Death Panels!" and the Democrats trying to jam their heads into the sands about the real issues that cause health care costs to grow.

      I don't expect to be able to have a rational and open-minded discussion with anyone on this topic anymore. The few times it has happened, it's been very refreshing. So many people have made up their minds and aren't willing to consider all the angles to this problem, I'm just disgusted.

    16. Re:Neither. by hey! · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The problem is that Harry Reid has no balls. He gave the Republicans everything they asked for, and then they complained the bill was too long.

      You want a small bill? How about this: let any business or individual buy into Medicare at a price set actuarially to reduce the program contribution to combined state and federal deficit by some fixed figure; let's say a half trillion dollars over the course of a decade. That's roughly the net effect of the current bill. Subsequently premiums would be set so that the net change in government debt over the coming decade would be 0. Three would be no change in regulation of private insurance. Private insurers would be free to shed their sick patients on the Medicare. To discourage this, higher co-payments would be required for patients priced out of their private insurance by being sick, but with hardship exceptions. Even so, private insurance would be free to dump their unprofitable patients on the government, rather than on health care providers' charity. They'd have to moderate that practice only to the degree a rational person might question the value of an insurance product that does not insure.

      This bill is pretty much the Republican counter-proposal to Clinton's health plan. Does it include every idea that Republicans have dreamed up in the last year? No. But based on their track record they ought to be able to get the Democrats to sign on to many of those, too.
       

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    17. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet... this has nothing to do with Republicans or Democrat. It has to do with the American people and according to recent polls, the majority of American people do not support this bill: Rasmussen Reports 43% support, 53% Oppose.

    18. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's nothing like the health care bill we should have had, something to create a health care system comparable to other modern countries. The Democrats have no backbone and kept watering it down and morphing it until it was only vaguely acceptable to just barely enough of them to possibly pass. This sort of thing leads to awful legislation.

      While the democrats may not have a lot of backbone, the revisions to the bill aren't entirely their fault. Since the republicans have universally opposed the bill for reasons largely unrelated to its content, the democrats had to craft a bill that would get universal approval. Have you ever tried to get 60 people to agree on a semi-complicated topic? Now that they are going to push it through with reconciliation, they don't need unanamous approval and some of the sillier provisions (the nebraska kickback for example) are getting stripped back out.

    19. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're assuming that "health care reform" can only take the form of something "comparable to other modern countries", in other words a universal, single-payer system. The reason Republicans didn't get the same thing passed when they controlled congress is because their solution is in the opposite direction of a universal, single-payer system. Republicans preach personal responsibility and savings and the dissolution of the stranglehold that insurance companies have had on the medical service industry. Democrats preach entitlement and government run insurance that they can directly control and fund through taxation. Both are theoretically sound, but are practically subject to so much corruption that it's not really worth the time and effort of the national government to try and support or denounce one way or the other and simply leave the problem solving to the state and local governments who can better diagnose and treat their particular problems.

      Yes, I'm one of those people that still actually believes Federalism was a good idea. To think about how our government is run nowadays makes my soul cringe... so I try not to as often as possible.

    20. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so what you're saying is what they did is bad so you should also be allowed to do bad things?

    21. Re:Neither. by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      Of all the private insurance plans I have been on over the last 22 years I've never heard of one that covered a procedure and did not cover a necessary hospital stay. Over the last four years my wife has had 5 back surgeries and the hospital stay was covered. Suggesting that the hospital stay would not be covered is just plain silly.

    22. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      > Become an independent, vote for people that match your standards and if they let you down kick them out of office.

      Wise words. (And I'm fairly proud of my state in that respect - so many of us are independents instead of party registered that most statisticians refuse to even try to predict the party primaries here...)

      > Don't even get caught up in the R or D Left or Right argument, it's a game.

      But in practice, it's not so much an R vs D thing as a "wtf, the hit rate for Rs is about ZERO" D vs I game. Every time I look into an R who at least appears to be (or promises to be) sane, I find that they voted R 90% or more of the time, and their other 10% were always times where their party was in no danger of losing (in other words, a "safe" opportunity to go counter to the party to gain local credit, while not actually harming the party in any way). Because they're so horribly monolithic, I'm *forced* to judge the members by their party's overall performance.

      The Ds may get mocked as "indecisive", but that's because they're not a big homogeneous lump. Which means I can actually evaluate them individually, because they actually have different platforms (and some subset of them actually stick to their guns). I may still dismiss 3/4 of them, but the remainder are gold.

      > Any Republican or Democrat that wants to expand government and spend more money is destroying this country.

      As always, it depends on the specific details of the specific issue. Some things need more regulation than they currently have and some things need less than they currently have. IMO, part of the reason the Libertarians don't gain momentum is that they're trying to strip away the parts that most people see as necessary and aren't trying to add any of the parts that most people see as sorely lacking.

    23. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm one of those who get "free" medicine. I pay almost $400 a month and still have to pay nearly $8,000 a year for both me and my wife. On top of that, my 'great' drug coverage goes straight to the deficit. This bill should pass for fixing that alone.

    24. Re:Neither. by Roger+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      Two wrongs don't make a right.

      Fiscally irresponsible legislation is a bad thing without regard to who is promoting and who is detracting it.

      The republicans got "dinged" when they were irresponsible earlier in the decade, and the democrats are getting "dinged" now over bailouts and healthcare. It was rightfully so in all cases.

    25. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Republican voting base is obviously too stupid to realize the "fiscally responsible" tagline is a trick, or they wouldn't spout it at every juncture.

    26. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or have you forgotten the new Prescription Medicine Reform where people can get "free" medicine?

      You mean the one that will cost about a trillion dollars that isn't paid for:

      Simply stated, the bill cost a fortune, wasn't paid for, is complicated as hell, and doesn't do all that much--though it does include coverage for end-of life-counseling, or what Grassley now calls "pulling the plug on grandma." In their 2009 report to Congress, the Medicare trustees estimate the 10-year cost of [the republican medicare bill[ as high as $1.2 trillion. That figure--just for prescription-drug coverage that people over 65 still have to pay a lot of money for--dwarfs the $848 billion cost of the Senate bill.

      This is typical of Republican governance, they bitch and moan all the time about fiscal responsibility, but they acted in the most inconceivably fiscally irresponsible way again and again during the decade or so they were in power. Now we the taxpayer and the democrats are at least attempting to clean up after the unmitigated spending spree that was the Bush Administration and Republican Congress (Iraq war, tax cuts for the wealthy, "free" prescriptions drugs) and are getting dinged for not being fiscally responsible? If this is a joke, it's not funny.

      You're correct, during Dubya Bush's presidential term he ran up a whopping 1.7trillion dollar deficit. That's a huge amount of money.

      So far in the Obama presidency he has managed to acquire a 3 trillion dollar deficit, in the first year. I shudder to think what it'll look like in the end.

    27. Re:Neither. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prescription Medicine Reform:
      So far, all that has been signed into law is reduced drug costs for people on Medicare (i.e. seniors). What about the rest of us?

      Tort Reform:
      Nothing signed into law.

      Yeah, way to go Republicans...

    28. Re:Neither. by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      I would guess you are from MA. I would say from experience that the most independent people I've met live in NH. That could be bias since I don't spend much time in MA and have actually met most MA people in NH.
      I would say that I'm not a libertarian, but would find most libertarian arguments compelling. I think the only way to reign in government is to take a lot of their money away and make them cut unnecessary spending or fail to provide basic services. When I've lost my income before I was amazed at how well I could budget the money I did have.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
  13. NO ONE here can tell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one here can tell because the damn bills are in such flux that even the goddamn Congress can keep up with it and the GAO is crushed with requests from them to figure it out.

    So, I'll restate: no one here will know what's going on with regards to what's in the bill. No one in the news media knows exactly what's going on.

    All the doom and gloom you hear and all of the wonderfulness of the plan are all speculation and hyperbole to get viewers and ratings.

    1. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's only one thing you need to know and the rest is pure diversion:

      The taxes start now and the benefits start later.

      The reason this bill is being shoved through against so much opposition is because the government is frantically trying to raise tax revenue before the debt black hole sucks them in. Too bad we've already crossed the event horizon.

    2. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not entirely true. The legislative actions (ending recissions, forcing insurance companies to cover everyone, etc) take effect immediately. Only the benefits that cost money have been delayed. There will be a big, positive effect right away.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    3. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      There will be a big, positive effect right away.

      Those big, positive effects don't come for free. Insurance companies will raise premiums to compensate which will cause some businesses and individuals to drop their coverage because it's cheaper than paying the fine for being uninsured.

    4. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... before the debt black hole sucks them in.

      Shouldn't that be "before the debt black hole sucks us in"?

    5. Re:NO ONE here can tell by omnichad · · Score: 1

      And don't forget:

      The benefits start after the next presidential election
       
      That way, they can take credit for their success, get re-elected, and still fail.

    6. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      O rly?

    7. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we haven't crossed the event horizon already we're very, very close.

    8. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 1

      Theoretically, the insurance companies won't have to raise premiums because they'll be getting millions of additional mandated customers.

      Whether that works out or not depends on how greedy the insurance industry is. So...yeah.

      The economic principles of the reform bill are sound. If they go bad, it'll be due to human nature. At which point more legislation will be needed -- hopefully IMHO, a public option, since that will force real competition and cheaper rates.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    9. Re:NO ONE here can tell by carp3_noct3m · · Score: 1

      I have never thought of it this way. I have yet to read the actual bill (just the summaries from misc sources) and my conclusion was that a) the current system really really sucks and therefore b) at least try something new. The qauntify that though, the idea that someone without health insurance will have to play 3000 in taxes is ridiculous to me. Regardless, there are a couple things that seem to be fundamental problems of the system that are not being addressed at all. Above all of this, I find that America will never have fair and balanced (Fuck both parties) legislation until we somehow cap, limit or prevent the lobbying "business" ability to pour money into political campaigns and control issues.

      --
      "It's ok, I'm completely secure as long as my iron is off"
    10. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      the idea that someone without health insurance will have to play 3000 in taxes is ridiculous to me.

      Did you see Caterpillar's announcement that this plan would cost them $100 million per year? Once this passes companies are going to evaluate the costs and drop health coverage if paying the fine is cheaper than the new compliance costs.

    11. Re:NO ONE here can tell by Arthur+Grumbine · · Score: 1

      The economic principles of the reform bill are sound. If they go bad, it'll be due to human nature.

      Yeah! Wait - what?! Economic principles that don't take into account human nature can be considered sound?! Well, that's good news for this new Grand Unified Theory I've been working on - if it fails it'll be due to the nature of energy (which I didn't include into my calculations, as it would've screwed up my theory). The principles are sound, though.

      --
      Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure everything I just said is completely wrong.
  14. Unconstitutional Mandate by OakDragon · · Score: 1

    I don't know how mandating citizens to purchase health insurance is going to pass Constitutional muster.

    1. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>I don't know how mandating citizens to purchase health insurance is going to pass Constitutional muster.

      The same way in Wickard v. Filburn, the U.S. court was able to tell a farmer, even if his ~20 acres of wheat are only used to feed his cows and sheep (private, personal consumption), is subject to fines for exceeding his 10 acre allowance.

      My reading of the Constitution gives Congress no such power as to regulate a private person's property, but apparently the Court found the non-existent words. (Probably as a result of FDR threatening the judges.)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    2. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by dmr001 · · Score: 1
      An editorial in the January 13 2010 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine addresses this:
      • Via the Commerce and General Welfare Clauses
      • It's really more of a (pretty modest) tax, and not a mandate
      • It's filled with exclusions and not actually universal
    3. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      As opposed to mandating citizens purchase car insurance?

    4. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by digitalnoise615 · · Score: 1

      I don't know how mandating citizens to purchase health insurance is going to pass Constitutional muster.

      The same question can be asked about states that require that drivers must have car insurance - yet none of those laws have ever been successfully challenged.

    5. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the same way they mandate you buying B2 bombers and moon landers I would imagine....

    6. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by OakDragon · · Score: 1

      Well, I can choose not to own/drive a car, and escape that mandate. What do I have to do to escape this one? (And yes, I agree that there are, and will be, very many exceptions and exemptions, but that only serves to stink up the bill, not to make it nice.)

    7. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Well, I can choose not to own/drive a car, and escape that mandate. What do I have to do to escape this one?

      You can choose to not have health... that is, you can commit suicide. Then you won't be required to get health insurance.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    8. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by digitalnoise615 · · Score: 1

      Well, I can choose not to own/drive a car, and escape that mandate. What do I have to do to escape this one?

      You can choose to not have health... that is, you can commit suicide. Then you won't be required to get health insurance.

      For the record I think that the mandate is a bit on the extreme side - but I can see how it serves a purpose, though I don't necessarily agree with that purpose. It's a fact that without a public option, the only way to control premium costs is to have a very large pool of users - and the only way to do that is to require that people carry insurance. However, I think the mandate is going to hurt the very people that this bill is supposed to be helping.

    9. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by doug · · Score: 1

      If I understand things, VA just made that a violation of state law. It is now on the books there, so passing this law will give VA something to sue over. We all know that Federal law nearly always trumps state laws, but I think the Republican plan is to rush it to SCOTUS and let the 5-4 conservative majority declare it to be unconstitutional. After Obama's comment about the SCOTUS in his SotU, some of the Supremes might be looking forward to this case.

      - doug

    10. Re:Unconstitutional Mandate by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1

      Car insurance is for driving, and risk it poses to others. A fee for being alive is a different matter. You can take a cab, bus, bike, walk, car-pool, train, ... , but to stop breathing for insurance purposes is a different matter. You can keep it up until you are blue in the face, but that's about it.

      --
      -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
  15. Put it on the shelf until November by sunking2 · · Score: 1

    In less than 8 months time the entire House will be up for reelection. This is a critical issue and at this point everyone points to their own polls to pitch their case and prove the population wants what they want. Let the results of the House elections decide the issue once and for all who wants and who doesn't.

    1. Re:Put it on the shelf until November by Wildfire+Darkstar · · Score: 1

      Why stop there? I hear there are elections in 2012, as well. It's only fair to the American people to wait until after all the elections are over before the government tries to accomplish anything.

      Seriously, though, you really want to make this argument? The current Democratic majority campaigned heavily on the issue of health care reform in 2008. The details have been debated for longer than the Patriot Act, the Iraq War, and the Bush tax cuts ever were. I can understand the position of folks who disagree with the proposed legislation, even if I don't agree with them, but the suggestion that this hasn't been given greater diligence and attention than almost any other piece of legislation in recent memory is ludicrous. And the suggestion that we should postpone controversial legislation simply because it's controversial kind of ignores the purpose of representative democracy in the first place....

      --
      Sean Daugherty "I have walked in Eternity -- and Eternity weeps."
  16. Re:Comunisam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Considering that most people in the Eastern Bloc speak English better than you, I have to agree.

  17. Very expensive half-assed bill by jjo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As you might expect, this bill is heavy on the benefits and light on the necessary pain. There's virtually only one effective cost-control measure, the tax on high-cost health benefits, and that has been pushed off so far in the future that it will be killed before it sees the light of day. The bill recognizes that coverage of pre-existing conditions requires an individual mandate, but then implements it in a half-assed way that won't achieve the objective of forcing healthy people to get coverage. (It also puts a dual drag on job growth by both raising taxes on private investment and directly increasing the cost of employing people. Way to go.)

    I would much prefer a bill that provided funds to the states to let them structure their own solutions to the health-care problem, as Massachusetts has done. But the top-down command-and-control midset in Washington is too strong for that.

    1. Re:Very expensive half-assed bill by Enry · · Score: 1

      MA's health care solution (proposed by Mitt Romney, who has distance himself so far from it I think he's about to say he's never even visited the state) is still a big mess. It's causing a large number of budget issues, and I have friends who are still struggling to get and keep their insurance.

      I think the goal is good, but it's currently a large expense on the state budget.

      Still, what we have in MA is far better than what is currently being proposed in Congress.

    2. Re:Very expensive half-assed bill by Malc · · Score: 1

      How much is healthcare already costing employers?

      I heard back when the big three started suffering for this most recent recession that they had costs of $2,000 per car compared with their foreign competitors from countries where the government provides healthcare.

  18. Neither by damn_registrars · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It won't do anything. This will go down as the 2010 Health Insurance Bailout act. Few Americans who currently don't have insurance will be helped, and few who do will notice one iota of difference. The largest group of people who will see positive change from this is the top executives at our health insurance companies.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Neither by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yours is a fact challenged comment - NOTHING changes in coverage until 2013 - taxes and costs go up in 2010.

      I suggest you read or watch something besides slashdot and your favorite lefty rags.

    2. Re:Neither by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      It sure does look like corporate welfare. It does not look like the option we voted for.

      It certainly is not single payer, not for profit insurance... which is what we really need as a country.

    3. Re:Neither by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      The majority of Americans don't want this legislation OR single payer. Most people voted for change, they got more of the same. That we can agree on.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    4. Re:Neither by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      The majority of Americans don't want this legislation

      While that is likely true, many of those people from "the majority of Americans" don't want it because they believe the BS that the "main stream media" and the various conservative activists are telling them. If they actually knew what was in it, they would oppose it for a different reason entirely.

      OR single payer

      I am not aware of a statistically meaningful survey that ever asked Americans if they wanted single-payer health care. It is almost always a loaded question when it is posed that doesn't really pose the issue honestly.

      Most people voted for change, they got more of the same. That we can agree on.

      Indeed I do agree on that. This bill does not represent anything resembling real change. The change it will bring is so slight and trivial that it is barely worth the paper the bill is printed on. Indeed the concept of change isn't that different in and of itself from the idea of Obama versus the real Obama.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  19. Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by Nautical+Insanity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The evidence for the efficiency and quality of government-run healthcare in other countries is indisputable.

    However, too many people have been making money hand over fist in the US to let any system where they would be the cut cost pass. Overall, it's an opportunity for the government to provide what the market cannot. Either affordable healthcare or writing into law corporate profits. I don't trust our congressmen to avoid the latter.

    1. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by jake007 · · Score: 1
      On the contrary. Not only are both efficiency and quality of government-run health care disputed, but so are the methodologies used to compare them between countries. The media keep repeating, that US health care is somehow worse and point to life expectancy statistics among others but health care is only one of the determinants of life expectancy - rate of homicides, deaths from traffic accidents and broader lifestyle variations in the US are significant too, yet they have little relevance to efficiency or quality of health care. When these factors are accounted for, US health care quality suddenly jumps to the top.

      See the WSJ here http://blogs.wsj.com/numbersguy/does-the-us-lead-in-life-expectancy-223/tab/article/
      and The City Journal here http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_3_canadian_healthcare.html

    2. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by Rayonic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The evidence for the efficiency and quality of government-run healthcare in other countries is indisputable

      Is it really? I have yet to see year-to-year analysis of how government run healthcare is performing in various countries. It could be good now, but slowly sliding into corruption and inefficiency. You know, like most government programs.

      It's practically like the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics. In any government system, performance decreases while costs rise.

    3. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is possible that all the other single payer systems in the world have remained efficient and of high quality because the world's leading economy (USA) has been willing to respond to market incentives and foot the enormous bill for private research and development. If health care technologies lose the US free market as a way to monetize their investment, we are likely to see a dramatic decrease in medical innovation.

      Strangely, that will probably help control costs, as most new technologies do increase the cost of health care, but we'll never know how much suffering and death would have been avoided by innovations that will simply never come to light.

    4. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by pandaman9000 · · Score: 1

      Indisputable???
      Wiating in line for an MRI in Canada? There's one piece that opens dispute. Talking like an authority doesn't make you one.

      If you don't trust our congressmen, then why would you want them further controlling our health system?

    5. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      The evidence for the efficiency and quality of government-run healthcare in other countries is indisputable.

      indisputable. While having a safety net is very important, access is still limited- only by availability rather than ability to pay. You can see a doctor but may wait a significant period of time; some countries even allow private practices on a pay for service model that effectively creates a two tier system.

      That said, I think we need to reform our system make primary care universally available so the ER stops being the primary care center for the uninsured; that alone will save hospitals a lot of money. ERs bleed money as a result of the current system; to the point hospitals are considering closing their ERs. We also need to get passed the idea we must see a Doctor when a NP or PA could provide equal or better care at a much lower cost.

      We also need to attack other costs such as the cost of educating a Doctor, do they really need an undergad degree, a medical degree and a residence or can you provide the same level of basic skill through a streamlined educational process much like some schools have started to do with Pharm Drs; how costs of drug development are borne, i.e. US purchaser of drugs should pay no more than what other nations charge or pay for drugs sold in the US.

      It's a complicated structural problem that will take a long time to fix.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    6. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The evidence for the efficiency and quality of government-run healthcare in other countries is indisputable"

      REALLY?

      Do you really think Healthcare is better in Countries with Socialized medicine?
      Why is it that so many people come to the U.S. for treament?
      It is because the "free-market" conditions we have had, have allowed the medical treatment in the U.S. to become the best in the world.
      Changing our Healthcare System to one that mirrors Canada, Cuba or Britian is going to give you there style of medical care which is pretty piss poor.

      FREE != The Best

    7. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The evidence for the efficiency and quality of government-run healthcare in other countries is indisputable."

      Is that like when a Canadian politician flies to the US to get surgery he'd have to wait months for at home?

      You're more likely to get diagnosed with a disease in Canada. You're more likely to actually survive that disease in the US.

      Indisputable. rofl.

    8. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      Another the argument is over because evidence that 'I need not mention' clearly shows support for government run care.

      Only thing I can agree on is not trusting 'our congressmen'. Which is interesting that you don't trust government unless they are running health care, then they are totally trustworthy.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    9. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      The US spends approximately twice as much of their GDP on health care as compared to any other western nation. For this they leave over 10% of their population uninsured and have poorer health outcomes for their population at large. So the US pays more, for less, sounds like pretty good evidence that they're doing something wrong.

    10. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course it's disputable. What do think this debate has been about?

      As far as government providing what the market cannot, don't be an idiot. The market provides _all_ of
      the healthcare (unless you are in the military or get your healthcare from the VA). But I take it you are
      not talking about whether your doctor is a government employee or not. What you're flexed about is the
      price. Right?

      The US government pays for 50% of all health care right now via Medicare and Medicaid. Reimbursement to
      providers is based on the DRG system (kind of like a mechanic's flat rate schedule). Problem is, the
      payment is less than actual cost of the treatment by about 15-20% on average. That's a major reason why
      prices in the non-government 50% of healthcare are rising. (Other reasons are defensive medicine (see
      tort reform) and technology.)

      And corporate profits? I know, let's pass a law that says they have to do it at a loss! That'll show
      the bastards who is boss!

      I do agree with you on the last point though. I don't trust Congress either. So why would you trust them
      to "reform" one sixth of the US economy? Especially when the distortion in costs was caused by Congress
      (via Medicaid and Medicare) in the first place.

             

    11. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by ScottyB · · Score: 1

      "It's practically like the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics. In any government system, performance decreases while costs rise."

      Except that there is no such law, and you're using fallacious arguments to support your libertarian bias. Must be nice to be right all the time in that bubble you live in.

    12. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      No, you see, other countries have a simple way to keep government services from sliding into inefficiency and corruption.

      They don't elect Republicans.

      *rimshot*

      Thanks, you've been great, I'll be here all week.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    13. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Efficiency and quality in which dimension? I get better health care than anyone on a government run single payer plan. I have an HSA and can do pretty much as I like with regards to health care, and after a maximum amount spent it becomes "free".

      If you have good insurance in the US you have the best health care in the world. We do the most research, we have the best equipment, the highest number of good doctors, etc...

      Other countries have... availability to poor people. This is in some ways efficiency and quality, but not in any way that means much to me.

      If you're poor, you should have poorer health care. Bill Gates has much better health care than I do, even, and he's earned it.

      Personally, I'm all for some kind of shitty medicare type coverage for poor people in conjunction with some simple, step by step changes to our current system to control costs and make sure good insurance is reasonably priced. A single payer system is bullshit in the US - all these success stories you hear about are a) in countries smaller than California and b) in countries doomed to collapse under their own socialist policies in the coming decades.

    14. Re:Too many hands in the Cookie Jar by weston · · Score: 1

      Is it really? I have yet to see year-to-year analysis of how government run healthcare is performing in various countries. It could be good now, but slowly sliding into corruption and inefficiency. You know, like most government programs.

      I don't know about year-to-year analysis, but there's dozens of analyses out there that compare cost-per-person or cost-as-fraction-of-GDP with population health metrics. Just google "health care ranking by country." If you find one where the U.S. comes out on top, lemme know, but by nearly every systemic measure I've seen, we spend more AND get less.

  20. Well, lets see by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How has private industry done so far with american healthcare? Cost more, gets less. Yup, that is a sign of success.

    Oh and how has private industry been managing the economy?

    It kinda amazes me that people with a healthcare system that is useless in the middle of a global recession all under the management of private industry, then dare to ask whether government can run things.

    Imagine a discussion in North Korea: "Can private industry be expected to handle food production?"

    Answer: "Who knows, but the question is silly when the current system is such an obvious mess".

    Sometimes you got to take a chance. Do anything because when you are nose deep in shit, chances are anything is an improvement.

    Can the government do a better job? It would be hard to imagine how they can screw it up even more.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Well, lets see by Bos20k · · Score: 0

      Since the insurance industry is the most regulated of all in America, maybe the regulators should take some responsibility for the mess...

      (last reply didn't seem to go through, hopefully not a repost)

    2. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You also have to ask, "what does the government run correctly and efficiently?" Amtrack? Post Office? Name one, please. And if you can name one, then you're probably too ignorant to talk about anything that has to do with a bureaucracy.

    3. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no clue here bud, it is the regulation of all this you mention by the govt that is the cuase of the problems. Health ins cos not being able to trade accros state lines for one and lack of tort reform another. the economy is down to the carter and clinton admins and the community reinvestment act which forced banks to lend to folks who they knew couldn't carry the bill, under penalty later with clinton. try looking at the history AND the facts not just the huffington post, and the NY times for your answers to this.

    4. Re:Well, lets see by osgeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Is your premise true? That the US health care system is under the management of private industry?

      I would argue that the health care system we have is a monopoly that is shored up by wiling politicians who at best refuse to take simple steps to promote competition and transparency of costs and who pays what to consumers.

    5. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      "How has private industry done so far with american healthcare? Cost more, gets less. Yup, that is a sign of success."

      Considering that the government pays for over 50% of health care - I'd have to say that blaming this mess on the private industry is wrong. Costs are on the runaway because it's no longer a free market with pricing transparency, and people no longer pay for their own healthcare. Comprehensive insurance pays for everything and so people don't shop around for the best deal. Without real competition, of course prices have risen. Government takeover will really just mean forced rationing, because when it's free, everyone wants a slice.

      "Oh and how has private industry been managing the economy?"

      Great, except when government intervention screwed it up. Seriously, the housing thing that triggered all this? Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac caused it - two government organizations.

      So can the government screw it up? Yes, because they did it once already. The solution isn't to give them more control, they've already proven they can't do it without screwing up, the sollution is to find a way to restore the basic economic forces that drive costs down and quality up - real competition in a free market.

    6. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      1. An overwhelming majority of Americans are satisfied with their health care plans.

      2. Most economists say that a major factor in the cost of health care is the way that government taxes health care benefits.

      3. Future Medicare ( a government run program) shortfalls are measured in the TRILLIONS and the program is to anyone with a grain of common sense unsustainable in its present form. Doctors and pharmacies sometimes refuse to take Medicare and Medicaid patients due to insufficient reimbursement rates.

      4. Many of the successful systems in the world , e.g. Switzerland, are largely privately based albeit with governmental regulations.

      5. Define "gets less". That's a rather complicated question when you talk about health care. In fact some viewpoints are that Americans get too much - to many unnecessary MRI's and test procedures. Are you talking about like expectancies which some assert are low for Americans due to non-medical factors like murder? Are you talking about outcomes, because then we need to a talk about specific diseases and the statistics for those, which in some cases favor the American system? Is it about availability of procedures, which in some countries are contrained by government rationing?

      Bottom line - it's well more complicated than your facile response indicates.

       

    7. Re:Well, lets see by grep_rocks · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As a corallary to this you could ask is there really anything big business does right? I mean we get a finiancial collapse every 5 years, Enron (remeber them), GM (we can't make a decent car by an american company), Microsoft (we are a bloodsucking monopoly that stifles innovation), Insurance Companies, Banks (they charge 30% credit card fees, get money from free from the gov't and collapse the economy) - the list just goes on and on - YES! given a choice bettween Goldman Sachs and the US government I will take the US goverment ANY time!

    8. Re:Well, lets see by Ihlosi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      4. Many of the successful systems in the world , e.g. Switzerland, are largely privately based albeit with governmental regulations.

      Switzerland is not the rule, it's the exception. And by pure coincidence, they have the second most expensive health care system in the world. (Although they're still quite a ways behind #1, the US).

    9. Re:Well, lets see by MartinSchou · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Police? Or would you prefer to have privatized crime fighters? "Sorry, maam. You didn't pay, so we aren't interested in tracking down the person who shot your husband and kids and ran off with your jewellery".

      Army? Or would you prefer it if the defence of the US was run by Xe Services LLC?

      Coast guard? "I'm sorry. We can't send a helicopter out to rescue your husband and child. You didn't buy our insurance, and your credit rating shows you cannot afford to pay the US$50,000/hour it costs to run the search and rescue operation. Thank you for calling the Coast Guard - have a nice day."

      Fire departments? "Well, we'd love to put out the fire in your house, but you see, you don't pay the insurance company that we work for. No, sorry, no other fire department works in this town. But if you run in and fetch US$10,000 in cash, we'd be happy to help you."

      Food and drug administration? You'd prefer it if there were no government checks on the safety of foods and drugs? I suggest that you not only look at the milk scandals that hit in China a few years ago, but also look at the history of the US itself. Not just the US, but pretty much all of the western world.

    10. Re:Well, lets see by RetiredMidn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How has private industry done so far with american healthcare? Cost more, gets less. Yup, that is a sign of success.

      Cost more, yes. Gets less, I don't think so.

      Overall cost of health care is up because the tests, treatments, and medications that are now mainstream are all dramatically better than they were not all that long ago, when they were prohibitively expensive and rarely employed. They are used more widely now because they are less expensive (economies of scale), and, after all, nobody wants sub-standard treatment.

      There are a lot of things that could be done to reduce the cost of health care and therefore make it more accessible to more people, and this bill does none of them:

      - Move the tax incentive for health insurance from employers to individuals (McCain proposed this before the election). This extends the benefit of cost reduction to those who aren'y insured through an employer, such as the self-employed and those who work for very small businesses.

      - Tort reform, to reduce doctor's malpractice insurance and the practice of overdone preventive testing to ward off lawsuits.

      - Promote Health Savings Accounts (and make them less damned complicated) for non-catastrophic health care, so patients have a vested interest in the cost of the tests and treatments chosen for them.

      - Remove state mandates for coverage of arguably elective medical procedures (such as in-vitro fertilization) that drive up the cost of insurance packages. [For the record, my wife and I couldn't conceive children and might have benefitted from the mandate my state now imposes.]

      - Streamline the regulatory environments so that insurance can be bought across state lines.

      One aspect of the current HCR bill really drives me nuts: it imposes a small penalty for not being insured, and eliminates restrictions on pre-existing conditions. The incentive here is to remain uninsured, which is cheaper than paying for coverage, until you're sick. The end result will be higher premiums for those who are insured. There are already protections for pre-existing conditions: the Kennedy-Kassenbaum (HIPAA) Act disallows exclusions for pre-existing conditions if you maintain continuity of insurance coverage (with an allowance of several months gap in coverage). I was protected by this 12 years ago when I was laid off and re-hired less than a year after being treated for cancer.

    11. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its the government we are talking about here. They thrive on finding ways to screw things up more.

    12. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, correct me if I'm wrong, but with the exception of the Army and FDA, aren't all of those things actually run on a local basis by small regional governments?

      So it's not a great argument against somebody who is complaining about the inefficiency of large national government.

    13. Re:Well, lets see by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Yes. The fact that some states have higher standards is "the cause of the problem".

      That's utter nonsense. In all cases, the states have failed to adequately controlled
      the profiteering of the industry. Federalizing the incompetence and corruption is not
      really going to help. It's a nice sounding idea but you will end up with something
      along the lines of RIAA veterans being sucked into the Justice Department.

      There will be no place to escape the federal incompetence versus having the option
      of fleeing California.

      Anything that doesn't empower the individual is ultimately bad news. Liberals are not
      about empowering people. They are about making them wards of the state. That is a sad
      side effect of their attempts at being "do gooders".

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    14. Re:Well, lets see by b3d · · Score: 1

      Since the insurance industry is the most regulated of all in America, maybe the regulators should take some responsibility for the mess..

      Regulated!? Excuse me?! The health insurance industry has an anti-trust exemption. How is that over regulated? These guys have totally run a muck.

    15. Re:Well, lets see by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Personally, I LOVE the fact that I can make sure that I get an "unecessary MRI"
      by way of my car insurance if I am subject to the most likely condition that
      would cause me to need one. No muss. No fuss. No second guessing or BS from
      some sort of adjuster. I just go and get it done and can even choose my own
      service out of any out there.

      Beats any other options under discussion (including fully socialized medicine) by a mile.

      This nonsense about people whining how some tests are "unecessary" is why I don't want
      people like these to be running my healthcare. I want to be able to run my own healthcare.

      The real problem is that no one saves for a rainy day anymore. We're all so busy living
      our lives to our credit limit that when something happens there is no extra left over.
      So something that is not terribly expensive (like a doctors visit or a cash-basis MRI visit)
      seems like something that's out of the reach of the common man when it really isn't.

      People just aren't used to fending for themselves anymore.

      Tending to the really needy is fine. Tending to the lazy is a recipe for disaster.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    16. Re:Well, lets see by operagost · · Score: 1

      The police and fire departments are locally run. The army and coast guard are part of the constitutional national defense. The FDA is arguably constitutional because it passes the smell test as being for the "general welfare" and doesn't impose a tax or threaten imprisonment to support it like the health care bill.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    17. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the Coast Guard they do send out rescues but they also bill the rescuee when it's by his own negligence or foolishness that he got himself in a shitty situation (this is because a shit-ton of New York business men and similar types like to buy a boat without learning how to use it and take it out too far without checking weather reports). So if you send a rowboat out into a hurricane and call in the Coast Guard it isn't cheap. As for the police and fire departments they are run (primarily) at the municipal or county level, not the state or federal levels, unlike most healthcare proposals (and allowing health insurance over state lines with few restrictions allows you to philosophically move to any insurance company without having to actually change place of residence -- that sounds like a good proposal given this argument). There are also varying levels of risk with hard numbers that a person can manage by moving to a new area whereas actual catastrophic healthcare issues cannot be reasonably managed beyond general healthy living which has far fewer documented statistics. The military does not provide a service directly to a consumer and you are not assessed a risk and required to pay accordingly. (Unlike fire and police where the risk is geographical, roughly.) Also, the military risk is roughly the same for every person so the cost-benefit analysis is relatively simple, even if you consider "income value" or some analog a value. There are also strong ancillary benefits in the army as it's a major research investor, including research for health purposes and it does act as a form of jobs program for low-education individuals both in direct military The FDA, even for all its good, is a huge cost that gets directly pushed onto the consumer by the pharmaceutical industry. It's not the only cost, obviously, of drug development, but it's a big one and that cost hurdle does prevent research except in the largest potential profit drugs. As much as it does well it could be better, much like our health insurance system. Health care and health insurance makes no simple analogy to other forms of social welfare programs. (Except maybe welfare+SS, I've never actually looked at that analogy.)

    18. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This point should be made more often. Regulation increases the cost of anything and shuts out competition.

      It's been pointed out that medical insurance for pets is really cheap, not because dogs and cats don't get serious illnesses, but because the vetinary industry is not regulated by the Government. So there is less overhead and more competition. Maybe deregulation is the sort of health care reform that's actually needed, rather than "more regulation"?

      If the goal is actually to improve health care, why should only one sort of solution be considered?

    19. Re:Well, lets see by Dolda2000 · · Score: 1

      Disregarding the facts that the healthcare/insurance and banking industries are so regulated that they can hardly be considered private enterprise, and that the blame for the recession lies, apart from the aforementioned regulation, with the Fed and the government-run banks like the FNMA; what strikes me the most with your post is this:

      It kinda amazes me that people with a healthcare system that is useless in the middle of a global recession all under the management of private industry, then dare to ask whether government can run things.

      If not that, then what do you suppose they should ask? Is not the determination of the means by which the ends sought should be attained, indeed, the foremost question that should be on everybody's mind? Should regulation just be tried at random just because anything might be better? If that is the mindset of the regulators, then I finally understand why laws look the way they do.

      (By the way, I don't think the US healthcare system is such an utter failure as you make it out to be. You should try living over here in Europe for a while.)

    20. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Government screwed up the healthcare industry. As said above, Government pays for 50% of healthcare already. I'll give you one example. Medicaid pays less to doctors than private insurers. A doctor running his own practice is effectively a business. That doctor has per patient expenses for the medical supplies and tests he runs and his nurses and himself, and then he has overhead which is his office/facilities, his clerical staff, and all of the benefits he has to provide to them like health insurance. Technically he doesn't have to provide those benefits, but if the other doctors are to be competitve and get good staff he is effectively forced to offer those costs.

      Now for those of you who have studied accounting, overhead is extremely difficult to calculate and manage. You ahve to guess what your overhead is going to be to determine your rates for the next year or so based on how much work your business is going to get, in this case how many patients. But wait! Medicaid patients always pay less than patients with other insurance. Well he still has his overhead costs; he still needs his office and clerical staff. So guess who pays for that? The other insured patients. Thus the non-medicaid patients pay more money to cover his overall business expenses. Also, as a business, he's in it to make a profit, not only for him to earn money for himself but also to have a little bit of leeway in case his costs unexpectedly go up. Medicaid patients pay less, so he earns less profit. To keep his practice profitable, guess who pays more? The non-medicaid patients!

      I'm not saying at all that Medicaid should go away, there are some benefits to it. This is simply an argument that Government is in fact mostly responsible for the mess we're in. More Government will not fix it. And Obamacare is not a good option even for Government fixes; it's more of a Rube Goldberg-esque contraption of legislation with a whole host of risks and red flags that if a few of them go wrong the whole mess will implode.

    21. Re:Well, lets see by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      The FDA is arguably constitutional because it passes the smell test as being for the "general welfare" and doesn't impose a tax

      In what way does the FDA not impose a tax? Are they somehow magically free of charge?

      ANYthing that is run by a government (local, state or federal) is paid for by taxes.

    22. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How has private industry done so far with american healthcare? Cost more, gets less. Yup, that is a sign of success.

      Oh and how has private industry been managing the economy?

      It hasn't, if I recall right Barry's team tried manipulating it with so called 'economic stimulus plan'. Not only that, the government is who mandated that lenders ensure that people who can't afford a house still qualify to get one.

      Can the government do a better job? It would be hard to imagine how they can screw it up even more.

      We're about to see it happen. If there's any one thing the government can do perfectly, it's screw shit up.

      Health insurance isn't a right, it's a privilege. If you can't afford it, then try getting rid of your iPhone and Cable TV.

    23. Re:Well, lets see by Bos20k · · Score: 1

      You really think there is that much of a separation between government and big business? They work together to further each other's agendas. Maybe there wouldn't be a financial collapse every five years if the government would stop meddling in the economy.

      Oh wait, that would take away some of the government's power so they won't do that. It would also eliminate the sweetheart deals, tariffs, etc. that government hands to big business. Well now, we certainly can't have that!

    24. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Private industry hasn't been able to much with the economy or the current healthcare system BECAUSE of all the excessive government intervention. If you want to know how a government run economy and healthcare system works go Google "Venezuela" or "Cuba." Then go Google "Chile" and see the difference in prosperity.

      I might also suggest reading Atlas Shrugged. It's the private sector/government collusion that has led us to ruin.

    25. Re:Well, lets see by swan5566 · · Score: 1

      How has private industry done so far with american healthcare? Cost more, gets less. Yup, that is a sign of success.

      Oh and how has private industry been managing the economy?

      It kinda amazes me that people with a healthcare system that is useless in the middle of a global recession all under the management of private industry, then dare to ask whether government can run things.

      Imagine a discussion in North Korea: "Can private industry be expected to handle food production?"

      Answer: "Who knows, but the question is silly when the current system is such an obvious mess".

      Sometimes you got to take a chance. Do anything because when you are nose deep in shit, chances are anything is an improvement.

      Can the government do a better job? It would be hard to imagine how they can screw it up even more.

      Actually the government had a lot to do with american healthcare right now. For one, health insurance has anti-trust exemption from an old law that needs to be taken off the books. In fact, they are even forbidden to compete across state lines. Before the government tries to ultra-regulate the health care industry, they should try to de-regulate it and see if that wasn't the major problem all along.

      --
      In debates about Christianity, there are two groups: those looking for answers, and those looking to just ask questions.
    26. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mention fire departments and this is in point of fact an interesting case. Some of the first fire departments were actually a service attached to fire insurance. If you had the right insurance they would come put out your fire since it was better for the insurance who had to fix it. Otherwise they would just watch it burn to the ground.

    27. Re:Well, lets see by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

      Those are all non-rival, non-excludable services. Having the government run them makes sense. Health insurance is both rival and excludable.

      (The major exception to this is contagious disease. Having local governments pay for immunizations makes a lot of sense for a game-theory/economic perspective.)

    28. Re:Well, lets see by TBone · · Score: 1

      Tort reform, to reduce doctor's malpractice insurance and the practice of overdone preventive testing to ward off lawsuits.

      Almost every halfway independent study of this suggestion pegs such savings in the low to mid single digits of %.

      Promote Health Savings Accounts

      Works wonderfully...for those people who actually have enough money to be able to put some of it away in a place that's untouchable for anything but health care. For those people who have to make decisions about fixing their car or taking their medicine, or buying clothes for their family when the season changes or kids grow up, HCA's are of little use, because they do not have the flexibility in their income to be able to (in reality) lose that money to other expenses.

      Streamline the regulatory environments so that insurance can be bought across state lines.

      This is perhaps the dumbest idea I've heard in the entire debate recently. Please point out to me a single industry or market where regulations were relaxed, markets were opened further to small groups of monopolistic companies, and the result is that the product got better? The HI industry is already ruled by 5-6 companies who oversee something like 90% of the entire insurance spending in this country, all D.B.A. various licensees of the BC/BS name or some such front. Removing interstate restrictions will do two things. First, all those subsidiaries may collapse back on WellPoint/Aetna, HCA, and such, so that we will see that it's just those 5-6 companies. Second, it will set up a race to the bottom, focused on the states with the least protective and cheapest coverage. Prime example? Delaware, with it's structure in place to the benefit of credit card companies. Just about every major credit company now resides in DE, because Delaware has made it nearly impossible for people to declare bankrupcy against companies.

      There are already protections for pre-existing conditions

      Only when applied to group policy coverage. There are no such provisions if you were to have gone and bought individual insurance coverage on the public market.

      --

      This space for rent. Call 1-800-STEAK4U

    29. Re:Well, lets see by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      There are a lot of things that could be done to reduce the cost of health care and therefore make it more accessible to more people, and this bill does none of them:

      The goal is not to "reduce the cost of health care and therefore make it more accessible to more people"
      The goal is to increase competition in the insurance market, which will reduce cost and make insurance more accessible.

      Not even a swimming pool of kool aid could convince me that there is real competition when a single company controls 40~80% of the policies of any particular State.

      The only thing you've suggested which will increase competition is allowing insurance purchases across State lines... which
      1. is a shitty idea the way Republicans have proposed it because it would neuter State consumer protection laws
      2. has already been included in the House/Senate bills by allowing States to form compacts.
      2a. The House bill says the States get to decide which consumer protection laws apply to out of state policies
      2b. The Senate bill says that no matter where the insurance comes from, the consumer protections of the recipient's State applies.

      Of course, the Republicans hate these two ideas because it maintains meaningful regulation by the States.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    30. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A more idiotic comment I could not expect to see.

      So you really believe that you've been watching a "private" system in action without government intervention?
      Well, welcome to our planet, because you are clearly from somewhere else.

      The "current system" is a mess precisely because of governmental meddling all along. Do even have any idea of all the ridiculous regulations that all businesses have to deal with? And you wonder why costs are so high.

      Go back to Pluto and leave us Earthlings along.

    31. Re:Well, lets see by MartinSchou · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Those are all non-rival, non-excludable services. Having the government run them makes sense. Health insurance is both rival and excludable.

      Look up the history of fire departments.

      The only reason health insurance is rival and excludable is that the US has decided it should be. Look at pretty much every other western country, and you'll find that health insurance isn't rival nor excludable, because they see an advantage to cheap and readily accessible health care.

      And I realise that part of this is because the US has somehow convinced itself that anything that even resembles social anything is somehow evil. But that doesn't mean it is the gospel truth. In fact, if you really want to be pedantic, you'll find that social medicine IS gospel truth - why else would Jesus talk about the Good Samaritan? I'm pretty sure that parable wasn't about how the priest and Levite were right in leaving the beaten and half dead jew alone.

      "Fore they knew, he did not hath Health Insurance, and thus they leveath him to die in a ditch. And God looked upon these actions and saw that they were good."

      I'm not a religious man, but I'm pretty sure that part isn't in the Bible.

    32. Re:Well, lets see by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      How has private industry done so far with american healthcare? Cost more, gets less.

      What? Time travel back to 1980, and tell me how much it costs to get a hip replacement, if you can get one. All this talk about rising healthcare is smoke and mirrors that the Obama crowd is using to grab power. We have an aging population meeting an ever increasing capability to provide procedures. Of course the overall cost is going to go up, even though the per procedure cost is dropping. Hell, how much did Americans spend on Viagra ten years ago?

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    33. Re:Well, lets see by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

      Whatever - how many times do you have to get screwed by a company before you realize that the goverment might not be the greatest but at least it is accountable to people through elections - think of that the next time you get credit card fees, deal with high interest rates in the middle of a recession(!), have to pay your student loan from a private loan company, pay deductables on health insurance if you can get it, deal with a defective product, or watch your 401K go nowhere in 10 years (apparently gov't bonds are a better place to put your money than the market) - thank-you may I have another? apparently so - rest assured these big companies will lobby tirelessly to reduce your individual rights and extract more money from you (through "deregulation" over the past 20 years) - and apparently you deserve it. The goverment might not be the greatest but it cares more about you than the tender tentacles Goldman, Exxon, GM, Chase, Microsoft, ADM etc...

    34. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How has private industry done so far with american healthcare? Cost more, gets less. Yup, that is a sign of success.

      Cost more, yes. Gets less, I don't think so.

      Overall cost of health care is up because the tests, treatments, and medications that are now mainstream are all dramatically better than they were not all that long ago, when they were prohibitively expensive and rarely employed. They are used more widely now because they are less expensive (economies of scale), and, after all, nobody wants sub-standard treatment.

      There are a lot of things that could be done to reduce the cost of health care and therefore make it more accessible to more people, and this bill does none of them:

      - Move the tax incentive for health insurance from employers to individuals (McCain proposed this before the election). This extends the benefit of cost reduction to those who aren'y insured through an employer, such as the self-employed and those who work for very small businesses.

      - Tort reform, to reduce doctor's malpractice insurance and the practice of overdone preventive testing to ward off lawsuits.

      - Promote Health Savings Accounts (and make them less damned complicated) for non-catastrophic health care, so patients have a vested interest in the cost of the tests and treatments chosen for them.

      - Remove state mandates for coverage of arguably elective medical procedures (such as in-vitro fertilization) that drive up the cost of insurance packages. [For the record, my wife and I couldn't conceive children and might have benefitted from the mandate my state now imposes.]

      - Streamline the regulatory environments so that insurance can be bought across state lines.

      One aspect of the current HCR bill really drives me nuts: it imposes a small penalty for not being insured, and eliminates restrictions on pre-existing conditions. The incentive here is to remain uninsured, which is cheaper than paying for coverage, until you're sick. The end result will be higher premiums for those who are insured. There are already protections for pre-existing conditions: the Kennedy-Kassenbaum (HIPAA) Act disallows exclusions for pre-existing conditions if you maintain continuity of insurance coverage (with an allowance of several months gap in coverage). I was protected by this 12 years ago when I was laid off and re-hired less than a year after being treated for cancer.

      So basically you are happy with the current broken system.
      More treatment is not necessarily better. Too often diagnosis is based on using modern techniques that are expensive while a good old fashioned differential diagnosis would suffice. Oh but that would mean you would need medical personnel that actually understood what they were doing.
      Tort reform is a code word for taking away the rights of people that have been injured. Tort cases are not very common and the total yearly awards/costs for torts are very small, but with so called tort reform the actual number of injuries will go up because there will be no disincentive. The concept of tort is one of the few areas of law that protects the individual and compensates for injury.
      Health savings accounts are useless and a gimick to line the pockets of brokers. Health savings accounts only assist the wealthy.

    35. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [For the record, my wife and I couldn't conceive children and might have benefitted from the mandate my state now imposes.]

      At least your wife let you try :(

    36. Re:Well, lets see by GastronomicalEvent · · Score: 1

      Amen! Want an education? Too bad your family can't afford grade school. Might as well start working at McDonalds and continue the cycle with your own kids.

    37. Re:Well, lets see by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      The police and fire departments are locally run.

      You've never heard of the FBI? DEA? BATF? There are also a lot of federally employed firefighters and both police and firefighters are funded and regulated significantly by the federal government. Your argument is stillborn.

    38. Re:Well, lets see by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      To bolster your point:

      http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601070&sid=aGrKbfWkzTqc

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    39. Re:Well, lets see by kungfugleek · · Score: 1

      Can the government do a better job? It would be hard to imagine how they can screw it up even more.

      Most (as in, more than half, with some estimates going up to 90%, but I don't think I've seen any that said less than 60%) Americans do have adequate health care. Usually from their employers. Can that be improved? Of course. A lot. But is it really "hard to imagine how they can screw it up even more?" That statistic could drop to 50%, 40%, 30%, etc. That would be worse, wouldn't it?

    40. Re:Well, lets see by hypergreatthing · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that the police dept. isn't in the business of writing tickets more than they are in preventing crime?

      Or that rescue operations haven't been sending bills to those people whom they rescue?

    41. Re:Well, lets see by Bos20k · · Score: 1

      Our current government serves no purpose other than to increase it's own power at this point. If you believe otherwise, then good luck to you when they come knocking on your door.

    42. Re:Well, lets see by t33jster · · Score: 1

      MOD PARENT UP!!!

      The problem statement here has been so incredibly glossed over, that the solution proposed fail to solve any root causes of the problem. What exactly is the problem? IMHO, health care costs too much.

      Why does health care cost so much?

      Nobody (who has the authority to do anything about this) has acknowledged the existence of a root cause of this problem so I'll make an attmpt. As evidence to health care costing 'too much,' I submit that regular chek ups (annual physicals, well-baby visits, etc) are covered by medical insurance. Why? Because the cost of walking past the reception desk at a doctor's office is more than my budget can handle. How is it that I can't afford to walk past the reception desk, but my insurance company can? Does car insurance cover oil changes?

      To me, the primary cause of health care costing too much is that when a new treatment is developed, providers and insurers agree on how much this treatment costs, they codify it, and they never speak of it again. To put this into geek terms, what if the cost of an 80386 CPU was the same today as it was when it was released? Wouldn't an i7 have to cost more money? After all it has higher performance. This is precisely how the cost of a visit to a doctor's office or ER is determined, then the insurance company determines how frequent those visits will be spread out across their customers, so they'll have an idea how much they'll need to have to cover their costs. They then apply premiums, copays, deductibles, coverage maximums, etc in such a way that their costs are covered (more than covered in the case of for-profit insurance companies).

      Not being a lawyer, I can't say for certain that the arrangement between providers and insurers amounts to illegal price-fixing. I would be very interested to see the DOJ explore this with the sort of vigor that they have with other industries run by abusive monopolies and oligopolies (railroads, steel, telecommunication, software, etc). Open-market competition *should* lead to lower prices, making insurance more affordable, leading to more people being able to afford insurance if they so choose.

      The status quo allows providers & insurers make money hand over fist. Consider the ratio of hospitals in your area that have had a major addition/renovation in the last 5 years to those that haven't. Chances are that the hospitals that have had construction are non-profits, so they have to reinvest their profit back into the hospital. For-profits are doing just as well, as evidenced by the cars driven by the executives (for-profits give out bonuses, and thus are less likely to add a new wing). Insurers & providers have been successful in preserving the status quo by pointing the finger at each other in order to distract us from the fact that they control the costs that we're forced to pay if we want to receive modern medical care. They further hedge their bets by hiring lobbyists to distract lawmakers from attending to their constituents' concerns. I have to wonder who wrote that 10,000 page health insurance reform bill anyhow.

      --
      Take off every 'sig' for great justice.
    43. Re:Well, lets see by Xonstantine · · Score: 1

      As a corallary to this you could ask is there really anything big business does right? I mean we get a finiancial collapse every 5 years, Enron (remeber them), GM (we can't make a decent car by an american company), Microsoft (we are a bloodsucking monopoly that stifles innovation), Insurance Companies, Banks (they charge 30% credit card fees, get money from free from the gov't and collapse the economy) - the list just goes on and on - YES! given a choice bettween Goldman Sachs and the US government I will take the US goverment ANY time!

      Beautifully ignorant post. Who enables Goldman Sachs? The US government. The Treasury Department is a revolving door for GS execs. Who oversees Goldman's corrupt trading? The SEC and the FRBNY. The closer these firms move towards government, the worse it becomes for us...cue the catastrophes that are Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.

      In a functional capitalist system, when companies fail spectacularly, they go out of business. In today's America, they get bailed out by taxpayers.

    44. Re:Well, lets see by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      And to add to your point about fire departments: Putting out fires used to be a private business. You would pay a fee for a guarantee that a particular fire company would come to put out any fires on your house. And it kinda sorta worked, except when someone skimped and in the course of his house burning to the ground somebody's gas line explodes and 3 neighboring houses catch fire and also burn to the ground.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    45. Re:Well, lets see by Ozlanthos · · Score: 1

      "Can the government do a better job? It would be hard to imagine how they can screw it up even more."

      Trust in this, "if" it is possible for the government to screw it up, they will find a way to do it. The reason that the health care plan they currently have tabled will be worse is that they are addressing the issue the wrong way. The only way to make "health care" affordable is to BAN all health "insurance". It's a what the market will bare thing. An insurance company will always be able to pay a higher price for services rendered than the average person, therefore the cost of a procedure is determined by the insurance companies (rather than real "cost-based" pricing). They conflate the price of materials, and services, "then" factor in an additional cut for the hospital, and also an additional cut for themselves. I mean really, think about it, if you can make .10 off of a piece of surgical tubing and a syringe by charging .50, if your client has no choice but to pay, why not charge them $5.00 for it? Because the majority of an insurance company's clients will be healthy than sick at any one time, they will always be able to afford the higher price. In essence by allowing insurance companies into the health care market, you price the average person out of being able to afford care without having health insurance. How is turning the federal government into a health insurance provider going to fix that? Better yet, how is making me a felon for not participating in the scam that is health insurance going to improve my health?

      -Oz

    46. Re:Well, lets see by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

      OMFG - jack booted thugs in black helicopters are coming! and that socialist, un-american Barack Hussien Obama is going to force us to have abortions and watch Oprah - their gonna take our guns and force us to marry horses! Oh the humanity! Thanks for straightening me out.

    47. Re:Well, lets see by zerocool^ · · Score: 3, Informative

      Cost more, yes. Gets less, I don't think so.

      Overall cost of health care is up because the tests, treatments, and medications that are now mainstream are all dramatically better than they were not all that long ago, when they were prohibitively expensive and rarely employed. They are used more widely now because they are less expensive (economies of scale), and, after all, nobody wants sub-standard treatment.

      Absolutely provably false.

      Harvard Business Review published a piece on this recently. It uses raw data to compare the US health care system to other developed nations. It's conclusions:

      Americans realize amongst the poorest health outcomes of developed nations. Americans have the lowest life expectancy amongst developed nations -- 78.1 years, compared to 81 in the UK, and 82 in Switzerland. [...] And America has the highest infant mortality rate -- 6.9 deaths per 1000 live births, compared to 5.4 in Canada, or 4.7 in Belgium.

      The numbers are preliminary, but suggest a visible trend. Where survival rates have increased in other countries -- sometimes significantly -- in the US, cancer survival rates have dropped over the last two decades.

      Americans pay more for healthcare because they trade more expensive products for less service, realizing poorer outcomes. Why? Because that is what maximizes near-term profits along the value chain. [...] Healthcare in America is a textbook example of thin value. The healthcare industry maintains significantly supernormal profitability -- yet, those profits are divorced from people being relatively better off. An American healthcare industry that "creates value" by limiting how much better off people are is simply transferring value from society to shareholders.

      (emphasis theirs)

      The article also goes on to state that most pharmaceutical companies spend over TWICE as much on marketing as they do on R and that the gap between R&D and marketing continues to grow. By moving to a government single payer health insurance system, the pharmaceutical industries would have to forego their ~20% annual profit margins and live with profit margins in line with the state of the economy.

      The outraged opposition from "Real Americans" to public health care is entirely a manufactured product, supported by those who have interests in the insurance and pharmaceutical industries.

      On a personal note, I talk with some friends from Europe on a regular basis about this, and they don't really understand the fuss, or the need for insurance to be involved. One friend from Denmark summed it up by saying "If you're a citizen, you pay taxes and get health care. If you're sick, you go to the doctor, you get treated, the doctor sends the bill to the government. The end".

      As opposed to my current situation, where the Family Practitioner that my family has been going to since my son was born (the OB/GYN that delivered him works there) is now suddenly not covered by my insurance company - EVEN THOUGH the insurance company's own website says that certain doctors at the practice participate, and EVEN THOUGH we have previously had coverage for things performed at the doc's place. We got a bill for over $500 for a STATE MANDATED health checkup for my son that was required before he could enroll in Kindergarten - not a drop of it was covered. My employer stepped in and reimbursed me for a portion of it, but told me sadly that they couldn't fight the insurance company and that I'd have to change doctors.

      We need health care reform. The Right Wing in Washington opposes it. They will fight it at any cost, because it cuts into their backing funds from the insurance and

      --
      sig?
    48. Re:Well, lets see by Bos20k · · Score: 1

      No problem.

      What you brush off as impossible has happened before and will happen again.

    49. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      In my country we have what you would call 'socialized medicine' and have had since the early 70's.

      7% of our budget goes toward Health. 17% of yours goes toward Health.

      We have a higher life expectancy than people in the US, and a lower child mortality rate.

      Under the public coverage 100% of people are covered for 85% of their health costs ... and 60% of people are fine with this.

      The other 40% take out private health insurance. I'm one of them. Private health insurance in this country 'fills in the bits'.

      Private health insurance premiums have increased by an average of 6% per annum for the last 20 years ... but I still only pay a 1.5% tax levy for my socialised system (that reimburses me 85% of my costs).

      Private health insurance has a 15% administrative overhead in this country ... the public scheme has a 3% administrative overhead. Private health funds run for a profit ... so all manner of exclusions are introduced, but the public scheme funds everyone for everything (although not for the full costs, as I said.)

      Most other Western countries (in Europe, Canada, Australia and New Zealand) have some sort of public health insurance scheme. Most seem to be running OK. All seem to be cheaper than the AMerican scheme, all seem to generate better public health outcomes, and all seem to be widely appreicated by their various publics. Any threat to same usually resuls in the politicians or political parties who do the threatening either losing or failing to win office.

      I think the American thing has been clouded by illogical and self-intrested ideology (hey, if not for health and infrastructure, exactly waht do American's pay their taxes for?), self interest on the part of the American health funds and health establishment (who seem to be generating huge profits from the current unregulated situation), and the potboiling of various political pundits (being funded by the aforementioned funds and establishment in that uniquely American verison of privatised politics they call lobying and election funding.

      Bottom line: If you don't do anything about it, it will expand to consume greater and greater amounts of your budget and it'll eventually implode under the pressure. If you got with this scheme you'll just slow the inevitabel down a little. If you eventually do come to realise that it's not a crime to whack tax dollars into a universal public health scheme, and have a private system there to pick up the gaps you may eventually manage to rein in the expenditure.

      Else: The HMO suits, the fund shareholders, and the medical fraternity will ride your system down in flames ... in pretty much the same manner the banking fraternity did your economy.

    50. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      everything you just said would be more efficient and lowerer cost than we are paying right now thru tax. by the way have you heard of black water, they are privitized defense and there missions go smoother and run cheaper then the army.

    51. Re:Well, lets see by zerocool^ · · Score: 1

      You could have just posted this pic:

      SOCIALISM!

      --
      sig?
    52. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought private industry had been doing pretty good with the technology, since it seems that so many travel to the United States when A> they wish to live and B> can afford it. The problem is that greed is stinking up the party. Greed of insurance frauders, greed of insurance companies, greed of pharmaceutical companies. Now politicians see a way to get their hats into the ring.

      It's ironic you bring up North Korea though, a country who is *already there* when it comes to government controlled everything, which is where the Democrats seem to want to take us. The only credible discussion you could have there regarding private industry IS imaginary.

      Our healthcare system may be expensive, and may be unfordable by a _fraction_ of the population, but it is far from being "useless".

      The North Koreans, Soviet Union, Poland, Cuba, China, Vietnam took a chance on government run everything.. lets consider how that worked out for them before jumping into the same frying pan.

      Sure, healthcare is a problem and needs to be fixed. The Democrats are proposing a bad solution and taking a "My way or the highway" stance on it. Just because it needs fixed doesn't mean you replace it with an arguably worse solution simply because a party sees a prime opportunity for a money and power grab. There are good ideas out there that can help the current system. This government take over is a bad idea in so many ways.

      That's why we have a balance of power. That's why we use a "Democratic Process" to govern our Republic. Ironic the Democrats want to avoid any kind of vote which will consider public or opposition opinion.

      And lets not forget our government is TRILLIONS of dollars in the hole. It has less than no money for the next who-knows-how-many generations.

      "The borrower becomes a slave to the Lender"... How's your mandarin?

    53. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How has private industry done so far with american healthcare? Cost more, gets less. Yup, that is a sign of success.

      Oh and how has private industry been managing the economy?

      It kinda amazes me that people with a healthcare system that is useless in the middle of a global recession all under the management of private industry, then dare to ask whether government can run things.

      Imagine a discussion in North Korea: "Can private industry be expected to handle food production?"

      Answer: "Who knows, but the question is silly when the current system is such an obvious mess".

      Sometimes you got to take a chance. Do anything because when you are nose deep in shit, chances are anything is an improvement.

      Can the government do a better job? It would be hard to imagine how they can screw it up even more.

      Well, one variable to consider, is health care "quality" is still top notch in America. I think that would be one thing we might want to consider decreasing, or getting "screwed up" more, if the govnt took control. Definitely something to consider...

    54. Re:Well, lets see by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

      Very perceptive, if we had less goverment Goldman, Exxon, Chase, GM, ADM, Aetna etc.. would be less powerful, I am sure this would happen I just can't see how but you must be right - after all I am ignorant. I am sure competition would spring forth, prices and transaction fees would go down, taxes would go to zero and we would live in a libertaian utopia. Unfortuantely, I suspect most companies miss slavery, since the damn gubernment made it illegal in the 1860s - the next best thing it to put everyone in debt and make people pay for things that used to be free - for example if I ran a bottled water company I would lobby for the gubernment to reduce taxes and get rid of water treatment plants, by reducing regulation and goverment meddling, I would create "value", and make the serfs pay for their potable water - I love captalism.

    55. Re:Well, lets see by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      It kind of amazes me that people take as gospel that the European systems are inherently better than the American ones. When adjusted for racial and cultural differences (including the fact that more americans are in, say, car accidents) the American system arguably does a better job on average for its people. It's more expensive, and it's possibly less efficient, but it is better.

      Also, taken as a whole, the model European countries have overall a worse economy and worse per capita living standards than the US. Yes, Sweden is better... but not compared to Swedes living in the US. And France is significantly worse. It's not just that the rich americans are richer, either - the middle class is as well.

      I'd much rather we looked at what aspects of care are better in Europe (less diabetes due to a better diet, more preventative medicine due to better compensation for primary care physicians) rather than what seems to be the level of inspection going on in most of these debates, which is "I get free healthcare in France so therefore it's better."

      This reform will be great for some percentage of the 30 million people in the US right now who don't have insurance. At what cost to the rest of us I don't know (so far all medical entitlements actual costs have come in at several multiples of their expected cost). It's not going to do anything to slow down the rising cost of healthcare, though, as those rising costs are driven directly by the third-party payer model that this not only continues but now requires of all people.

      Healthcare is expensive because we are fat and unhealthy. Because primary care physicians don't make half of what technicians make (the US has far fewer primary care physicians per capita than Europe) so we get worse preventative care. Because most people never see how much their medical care is costing them beyond a $50 deductible, so they don't think twice before going in for a $10,000 MRI. Because doctors know this, and hospitals get paid by insurance companies based on how many tests they run, and because they don't want to be sued because they *didn't* run the tests.

      None of these are addressed by current legislation. So great, you're helping 10% of the country get medical care at a possible (giant number) cost. But expecting it to make any real dent in real medical costs, which are the real reason that insurance costs are going up... more than any evil conspiracy of corporations who care about dollars instead of people... I don't see it.

    56. Re:Well, lets see by jmknsd · · Score: 1

      Wow I wasn't expecting to get to the classic retort to libertarians until a bit further down.

      Also, you left out roads, we hate roads too.

    57. Re:Well, lets see by kingramon0 · · Score: 1

      Near where I live, there is a town that does not provide a fire department. It is run by volunteers.

      I don't think anyone said "Everything should be privatized," so your entire argument doesn't make sense to me. If not just for that reason, then also for the reason that if it really turned out to be the way you describe, the People, themselves, would organize a way to make it work so they receive the services they need (contract to a different company, set up volunteer agencies, etc).

      What you get with Federal control is whatever they want to give you. It's their way or the highway.

    58. Re:Well, lets see by nanoakron · · Score: 1

      Speaking of highways...how you enjoying your federally funded, 'socialised' access to your highway network?

    59. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you seen the national defict?

    60. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We keep seeing "The Government" versus "Privat Industry". Here in the USA, that's a false dichotomy.

      All reasonable folks can and do disagree about what a revised health care system can and should provide, as these discussions show. Like any dynamic system, a feedback mechanism and means to compare options is necessary to optimize the solution. One of the USA's key features in doing that is the federal government model.

      In other words, the states can and should handle this, with the federal government guaranteeing free availability of trade between them. As such, state mandated monopolies (hello, Alabama!) wouldn't be possible. And other reforms would be far easier.

      Yes, the states are mostly broke. The federal government is even more so. If folks don't think their state is up to the task, with its more immediate feedback, how on earth do they think the federal government is more able to do it?

      I'm reminded of the 1960s "War on Poverty" which we've obviously not won. Or the '70s Departments of Energy to eliminate dependance on foreign oil. Or the Department of Education. And on, and on, and on...

    61. Re:Well, lets see by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      LOL... Just like the Mob...

      Call it insurance... :) Protection Money by any other name. "Sure would be a shame if something were to happen to you or your loved ones now wouldn't it..."

      Army and coast guard... well there is something to be said there. I know there was a news story a couple of years ago that sort of pissed me off. Basically Israel was having (another) war with its neighbor. Thousands of "Canadian Citizens" had to be evacuated. Not tourists. People living there with Canadian Citizenship. Some likely have never set foot in Canada, or have spent most of their lives in another country. Yet here we are spending MILLIONS of tax dollars to help them (yet they pay ZERO Canadian Tax). Then to add injury upon insult, they for the most part all move back immediately, and a few days later, when hostilities break out again.... they are all evacuated yet again at huge expense. Same as the middle eastern kid who was charged with murder because he accidentally killed another kid in the middle east and was facing the death penalty. Partitioned Canada for diplomatic interference which they did, and was a big deal at the time, likely at cost, when in reality the kid had spent all of a few Months in Canada in total. I also liken it to the morons who live in "tornado ally" have their home destroyed, get a bailout from government, rebuild their house, have it destroyed, get bailout, rebuild, repeat... Why am I (or anyone else) paying for these people?

      Don't get me wrong, if there is a legitimate disaster or emergency I want my government to do something about it to help, I just don't want to be paying for the poor choices of others. Yesterday I saw that the Red River flooded... again... and people lost their houses.... again. Either A) don't live there, or B) live with the risk and be prepared.

      As for fire departments. one of the richest people ever to live on the planet did exactly that. Show up to the fire and ask an exorbitant price to save the residence, often buying them up outright for next to nothing, as the alternative is actually nothing, and then turning around after saving it, and selling it back at full market value. He was a Roman, I forget his name, back in ancient times. One of the top 10 richest people of all time. So while you try to make it sound ridiculous, someone was actually very successful doing exactly that. Crazy huh?

      From what I have heard the FDA are pretty much in the pocket of the drug companies. While this might not be totally true, I would bet that there is plenty wrong with how they operate.

    62. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Police

      Many communities have private policing since the regular policy don't exit to protect you, merely to clean up after.

      Coast guard

      Started privately and never had any issues like this. This goes back to the ye ol' lighthouse argument, lighthouses where started and paid for by shippers but where available for all. Additionally Coast Guard services in many countries (including several in Europe including the UK & France) are mostly funded through charitable contributions and are manned by volunteers.

      Fire departments

      See small US towns, voluntarily staffed and funded through local fund raisers.

      Food and drug administration

      For imported goods? Certainly but this should be levied directly against those importing. In the case of domestic organisations they already have significant financial motive to ensure their products are safe, juries have shown time and again they are very happy to hand individuals vast amounts of money even when the organisations didn't do anything wrong. Also the fact it costs $3b to get a new drug approved (with an est 80% of that being regulatory approval) is disgusting and responsible for a significant proportion of the cost of drugs. Also of note is that you have to re-seek approval to use a drug for another purpose, Asprin would cost approx $1.2b to re-approve for its current off label usage even though its interactions have been well established and its (relative) safety is well established.

      It should be noted that IMHO all of the above (with the exception of the FDA) are valid functions of government but suggesting that private industry can't provide a better service and/or coverage then government simply misstates how it has been observed to function elsewhere. Yes we need a police, fire and armed forces but they don't actually perform what they claim to do (particularly the police with regards to defending people) and they should be honest about the limits to what they can do.

    63. Re:Well, lets see by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure why local, regional, or national should make much of a difference in whether or not government managed is ok or not.

      But since you want to play that same tired mantra of "my [insert geo-political division here] knows what's best for us (except when it tells me something I don't like), how dare you [insert other geo-political division here] try to tell us what to do?" You realize that if you're looking to create in efficiencies in a system one of the fastest ways to do it is to duplicate services and infrastructure, especially on the administrative side.

      I'm really getting tired of the f*** everyone but me isolationists. Everyone else is busy working hard to provide for a fair and prosperous society and you folks are reaping all manner of the benefit while spitting in our face demanding the right to not have to contribute. If you want to be an isolationist, get out of my government and get off my lawn. There are plenty of places you could go where you must survive by your wit and personal resources and no one but your neighbor living in the same manner to interfere with how you choose to go about it. Societies were formed to provide a better life for all, if you don't want to be a contributing member of it then leave.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    64. Re:Well, lets see by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Those who do not learn from history are doomed to argue for its repetetion.

    65. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Police do a fine job of placing tape around the body. And sometimes bad guys wear shields.

      The Constitution mandates a small, limited Republic precisely because the unintended consequences of well meaning but non-mandated gov't programs do far more damage in the long run - and foment tyranny by picking winners and losers based on political criteria.

    66. Re:Well, lets see by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Cost more, yes. Gets less, I don't think so.

      Then you ignore facts. There isn't a single metric you can point to that says Americans have the best care, and all the available metrics show that we have nowhere near the best.

      Tort reform, to reduce doctor's malpractice insurance and the practice of overdone preventive testing to ward off lawsuits.

      Better we weed out incompetent doctors. You don't win a malpractice suit unless somebody made a horrible mistake, and not testing for something that may kill your patient IS a horrible mistake. If your child dies because a surgeon who has been working for twenty hours straight makes a mistake, do you really want caps on what a jury can award? I don't.

      Promote Health Savings Accounts

      That's not very practical, considering that most Americans are in debt up to their eyeballs and have no savings of any kind.

      Remove state mandates for coverage of arguably elective medical procedures

      OK, I can agree with this one, but the tenth amendment to the US Constitution might make that a bit difficult to impliment.

      Streamline the regulatory environments so that insurance can be bought across state lines.

      I don't see how this could help at all; all the large insurance companies are nation wide, and only have to set up shop in the states they do business in. Do that, and it's a race to the bottom. It could make things even worse than they are.

    67. Re:Well, lets see by bmajik · · Score: 1

      I'm against the healthcare bill, and I am not in the insurance industry, nor am I a right winger. I'm an anti-statist, which nobody seems to know what to do with [well, apart from "safely ignore" :)].

      Of course, I don't think much of what the federal government has done since the 1800s has been constitutional, so you can surmise where my most basic objections lie. Ideologically, this isn't the federal government's problem or business. It's actually illegal for them to be doing this. Of course, some people disagree, or some people just don't care what should or shouldn't be legal. Like the congress, for instance, or the previous administration's justice depatment, etc.

      But then let's get to your HBR quotes.

      - regarding infant mortality rate: the rest of the world measures it differently than we do. If a baby is born prematurely in europe and dies, it isn't counted in infant mortality statistics. Here, it is.

      Let me tell you why the US health care system is incredible. I live in a smaller town, and I personally know of 2 babies born in the last 3 years at under 30 weeks gestation, who were delivered and treated in our local hospitals.

      Those children are now _normal_. Approximately 25 years ago [and maybe even more recently], no baby born that early had _ever survived_. And now it is happening routinely, in small towns, to the children of "normal" people. Every few years, the youngest surviving baby gets younger. In this country, if my wife went into super-early labor at 25 weeks, they'd not only try to save our baby, but they'd have a good chance, and if they failed, they'd count that in "infant mortality".

      On to the issue of overall life expectency: those statistics aren't corrected for murders and other violent deaths. The real news should have been "In the US, there are a lot of poor people and ethnic underclasses who like to kill each other and find other ways to die early.". They also aren't corrected for the obesity problem and the # of working hours and the per capita and aggregate productivity of the US. The average US worker works more hours and produces more wealth than in any other ecnomy. If you want to argue that we are working ourselves to death, that's fine, but I don't think of that as a problem with the quality of our care.

      _Nobody_ leaves the US to get healthcare of a higher _quality_ elsewhere. _Some_ people leave the US to try and get care of a lower _cost_. But when money is no object, as it often is for foreign politicians, they seem to frequently leave their utopian state care systems behind and come here to get treated. That's the damning evidence that continues to argue that if you want the best, and you can pay, the US is the only place to get it and get it as soon as you want it.

      Never, ever tell me what is in my best interest. I'll decide for myself. With gunfire, if you insist.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    68. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You totally missed the point of that Good Samaritan story.

      Look, Jesus was very keen on charity. That is, on people helping each other voluntarily. The Good Samaritan volunteers to help the man. It is a choice.

      You are using this as a justification for compelling everyone to help. And they're not allowed to help in whatever way they choose. Oh, no, that wouldn't be socialist. Instead, they are required to help by paying more taxes.

      It isn't good to do something if you're compelled to do it! Come on, this is Jesus 101. Free will, yeah?

      To apply the Good Samaritan parable to your argument: the Good Samaritan, the priest and the Levite should all have been prohibited from helping the man directly, but required by law to pay the authorities to help him. The Good Samaritan clearly should have been prosecuted for breaking health and safety law, and for giving first aid without the appropriate licence. What a shithead... he was probably on the way to an Ayn Rand convention.

    69. Re:Well, lets see by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      I would expect old people to use more than 50% of health care resources considering that they are much closer to death than others.

      --
      ...
    70. Re:Well, lets see by Totenglocke · · Score: 2, Informative

      First, life expectancy being lower in the US has to do with a different culture, specifically regarding eating and exercise habits. Unless you're suggesting that a government official force you to eat the government approved diet and force you to do government mandated exercises, you're never going to change that element with laws. Secondly, the infant mortality numbers are a lie. Even just a cursory glance at Wikipedia shows that other countries alter their data to decrease their infant mortality rate (if you take the time, you can find better sources for it as well). How do they do this? Things such as if the baby doesn't weigh X pounds and dies, they don't count it as a live birth. If it isn't X inches / cm long and dies, they don't count it. If it's less than 24 hours old when it dies, they don't count it. If it's more than X days premature and dies, they don't count it. In the US if a baby is born alive, even if it's only alive for a minute and is ridiculously tiny and premature, they still count it as a live birth.

      The outraged opposition from "Real Americans" to public health care is entirely a manufactured product [alternet.org], supported by those who have interests in the insurance and pharmaceutical industries.

      Oh great, a false claim where you say that anyone who disagrees with you is bought off! I disagree with you because I value my rights, believe in upholding the Constitution (the bill is unconstitutional, fyi - check out the 10th Amendment to the US Constitution), and don't want to see my costs go up or my taxes go up to pay for someone else's health treatment. None of those things come from "interests in the insurance or pharmaceutical industries", they come from me having an Economics degree, having read the US Constitution, and having seen (not just in reports / new stories, but first hand from friends / relatives themselves in Europe) that the wonders of government run health care are a myth.

      On a personal note, I talk with some friends from Europe on a regular basis about this, and they don't really understand the fuss, or the need for insurance to be involved. One friend from Denmark summed it up by saying "If you're a citizen, you pay taxes and get health care. If you're sick, you go to the doctor, you get treated, the doctor sends the bill to the government. The end".

      And they pay out the ass for that "privilege". In the US, federal income tax is between 15% - 35%, with state income tax being on average about 5% - so a US citizen (that pays taxes, the lower income ones don't) pays 20% - 40% in income taxes. They then (depending on state) pay anywhere from 0%-10% on sales tax. In Denmark, income taxes are 38%-59% and then they pay a 25% VAT on everything they buy. If you want to cut your income by 25% just to get "free" insurance, then you really need to retake some math / finance / economics classes.

      As opposed to my current situation, where the Family Practitioner that my family has been going to since my son was born (the OB/GYN that delivered him works there) is now suddenly not covered by my insurance company - EVEN THOUGH the insurance company's own website says that certain doctors at the practice participate, and EVEN THOUGH we have previously had coverage for things performed at the doc's place. We got a bill for over $500 for a STATE MANDATED health checkup for my son that was required before he could enroll in Kindergarten - not a drop of it was covered. My employer stepped in and reimbursed me for a portion of it, but told me sadly that they couldn't fight the insurance company and that I'd have to change doctors.

      I agree, that sucks, and we should probably pass a law to prevent that. However, changing doctors and complaining about it is like complaining about having to go to a new mechanic - there are others you can go to. Yes, it's a bit of a hassle to take the time to find one, but it's nothing critical.

      Oh, I also want to note the

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    71. Re:Well, lets see by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I tune out anytime someone mentions the lie about infant mortality (the US uses a much more critical measure, other countries discard a lot of cases the US considers an infant mortality). I also tune out when people pretend life expectancy isn't highly tied to culture and factors other than health care.

      Your premise is simply flawed. The US has the best health care in the world, for those of us who have good insurance. So ultimately this is just another case of "to each according to his needs" - a growing majority of have-nots forcing the haves to reduce the quality of their health care so that the have-nots can get their "fair share".

    72. Re:Well, lets see by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Look at pretty much every other western country, and you'll find that health insurance isn't rival nor excludable, because they see an advantage to cheap and readily accessible health care.

      Not even going into quality of care issues, look at the tax rates they pay for that - Denmark is a pretty typical European country and their LOWEST tax bracket is TWICE that in the US, then they add the VAT on top of that (which is generally at least twice as high as the highest state sales tax in the US). I'm not debating quality or readily accessible here (there's more than enough evidence to prove that government run health care is lower quality AND less accessible due to long wait times), but you can't try to claim it's "cheap". Just because they don't hand you a bill and take it out of your paycheck before you get it doesn't make it "free" or "cheap". Run the numbers, the "free" health care and "free" education of those countries costs way more in the long run than it'll cost in the US.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    73. Re:Well, lets see by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

      Once government enters a market, they NEVER LEAVE. Once the Fed gets into dealing health insurance (if and when they do), they will always be there, no matter how colossal and costly it is for the taxpayer.

      At least, with a more free market and some ethical restrictions on private health insurance providers, poor companies will fail (if the government will finally let a company die).

      I believe that a privately owned, competitive market, when properly regulated, is the best mode of commerce.

    74. Re:Well, lets see by zerocool^ · · Score: 1

      Wow, I don't even know where to start.

      Even just a cursory glance at Wikipedia shows that other countries alter their data to decrease their infant mortality rate

      Uh, well, I'll just quote your own source:

      Wikipedia:
      Many countries, including the United States, Sweden or Germany, count an infant exhibiting any sign of life as alive, no matter the month of gestation or the size [...] France, the Czech Republic, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Poland do not report all live births of babies under 500 g and/or 22 weeks of gestation. However, the report also concludes that the differences in reporting are unlikely to be the primary explanation for the United States' relatively low international ranking.

      The length thing was from Russia during the Cold War. 500g, for the google-lazy, is 1.1 lbs. 22 weeks is almost universally non-viable - that's only halfway through a pregnancy. These cases count for an insignificant percentage of total births, and as Wikipedia makes a point of saying, don't explain the US's higher infant mortality rating.

      [babbling about European tax rates]

      In the US, tax rates are as much as 35% for federal, and up to 10% for state, not to mention up to 10% sales (VAT) tax, as well as a payroll of tax of up to 20%+ (you, and Huffington Post, and the Heritage foundation, and World Net Daily, ad nauseum, always love to put that in when talking about a flat tax - no reason to leave it out now).

      Universal government-run health care payment is provably the cheapest way to provide health care.

      Oh, I also want to note the irony that you're promoting government mandated buying of insurance / government run insurance, [...]

      False. I don't want health insurance. I want health care. There's a big difference.

      [...] yet you're complaining about government mandated checkups for your child.

      False. I'm complaining that if I am mandated by the state to have my child examined by a doctor, ideally the state should pay for the exam, and if nothing else, there should never be a question about the insurance company not covering it. It should be something that's covered 100% of the time, in network / out of network / whatever / period. It is the very definition of a "standard health care visit" - it will be the same in every doctor's office across the entire state at least, and probably the country.

      I disagree with you because I value my rights, believe in upholding the Constitution

      The right-wing mainstay for blocking progress when its convenient, and throwing out when it's expedient.

      Ever actually read the document? Surely, you've read the Preamble - the statement of intent that covers everything else in the document? Specifically, the part about "promote the general welfare"? Or, how about the Declaration of Independence, where the framers of the constitution stated that it was self-evident that all mankind has the right to life, as well as the pursuit of happiness?

      Ever tried to be happy with 7 million dollars in medical debt?

      We ALL benefit from a society that is healthy. Healthy citizens are productive and happier, and produce more.

      My mother-in-law died a couple of years ago, from breast cancer. Toward the end of her life, the part of her prescriptions that wasn't covered by insurance ran over $50,000 per month. If I got cancer, my health insurance covers my family for a maximum lifetime payout of $1,000,000. With today's medical rates, you can easily blow through that in 3 months.

      But, it's no big deal, the free market will solve it! We should leave it alone! Why rush this through?!

      Calling it "Obamacare" is a huge waving flag showing your true colors. You're a Registered Independent(tm). One of those people who lives by the credo: "BOTH SIDES ARE BAD LOL (vote republican)". So, take your talking points elsewhere. The rest of us are trying to make progress. You're outdated and, frankly, wrong, and you're damaging this country.

      --
      sig?
    75. Re:Well, lets see by Xonstantine · · Score: 1

      Sure you're ignorant, because you think the way to solve the problem of big business is big government. The problem isn't big or small government or big or small business. It's corruption endemic through and through the whole system, but it is empowered by government corruption, not business corruption. Goldman can only loot the public treasury through the malfeasance and participation of government bureaucrats. Trying to increase the scope and control of these kleptocrats is beyond moronic. Organizations don't suddenly become "good" when they cross the over the private boundary into the public one as you state worshipers would have us believe.

    76. Re:Well, lets see by diablovision · · Score: 1

      Spot on. If any other industry functioned the way the medical industry does, they would all be in jail.

      --
      120 characters isn't enough to explain it.
    77. Re:Well, lets see by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

      health insurance isn't rival nor excludable, because they see an advantage to cheap and readily accessible health care

      There is an advantage to cheap and readily accessible food, but they are still both rival and excludable so I don't see how your justification leads to the conclusion you claim it does. (Note, I'm using the Economics meanings of these terms.)

      Examining these claims in detail:

      • The cost of providing health care to 2 million people is about twice the cost of care for 1 million people. That is textbook rivalness. Please explain why you don't think it is. (As I've already mentioned infectious diseases are an exception.)
      • It is possible to provide health insurance to one person while not giving it to another. Again that is textbook excludability. It doesn't matter whether we should or do exclude. It is possible. Please explain why you think it isn't excludable. (Again, infectious diseases are an exception.)
    78. Re:Well, lets see by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      (Note, I'm using the Economics meanings of these terms.)

      Fair enough. I wasn't.

      I just took the words at what I saw as face value - rival as in "more than one provider" and excludable as in "no, you're not worth the possible costs to keep alive - fuck off and die".

    79. Re:Well, lets see by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      Those children are now _normal_. Approximately 25 years ago [and maybe even more recently], no baby born that early had _ever survived_. And now it is happening routinely, in small towns, to the children of "normal" people. Every few years, the youngest surviving baby gets younger. In this country, if my wife went into super-early labor at 25 weeks, they'd not only try to save our baby, but they'd have a good chance, and if they failed, they'd count that in "infant mortality".

      Normal gestation is 36 weeks. I was born 10 weeks premature (read 26 weeks gestation) in 1956 and I'm still not dead yet (it did make me a liberal and a manager, though, so maybe that's what you "anti-statists" are scared of). This actually hasn't improved much since then. It might have pushed back by an additional 2 weeks or so over the last 50 years, but they were keeping premies alive then and they'll continue to keep them alive until the insurance companies decide it's too expensive. And, I'm pretty sure that, if you check European average gestation length and the stats underlying them, you'll find a fair number also at that minimum mark. Of course, given your idiotic statement that no baby born that early ever survived until 25 or so years ago, I'm not surprised that you're misinformed about health care in general.

      --
      That is all.
    80. Re:Well, lets see by kingramon0 · · Score: 1

      Ok, once again, I never said "Everything should be privatized."

      But there are some examples out there where privatizing some roads has been beneficial. I don't know if it would work for highways.

      However, I do object to the federal government taking our money, and then bribing our state governments with the same money in order to pay for the highways. I would rather pay less money to the feds, and just give it directly to my state/local governments to provide those same services with fewer strings attached.

      So, to answer your question: I don't like the political costs of having federally funded highways. My state already does all the work, I'd rather pay them directly; cut out the middle-man. The quality would be the same.

    81. Re:Well, lets see by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      In the local services, your comments are really not telling the whole story...

      Fire departments? "Well, we'd love to put out the fire in your house, but you see, you don't pay the insurance company that we work for.

      Actually, there is a trend toward fire departments charging insurance companies for certain services. And many fire departments (particularly in rural areas) aren't even paid; they are staffed by volunteers. As for other emergency services, namely ambulances, you should generally expect a (often hefty) bill to be paid by you or your insurance company.

      Police? Or would you prefer to have privatized crime fighters? "Sorry, maam. You didn't pay, so we aren't interested in tracking down the person who shot your husband and kids and ran off with your jewellery".

      Actually, a private crime fighter might be useful, if you actually want to be protected. See, the police actually have no duty to track down anyone or even to prevent you from harm (even rape or murder), even in the case of a prior restraining order, etc. So, if you actually want guaranteed protection, I wouldn't depend on the police. See South v. Maryland, Warren v. District of Columbia, Bowers v. DeVito, or, most recently, Castle Rock v. Gonzales.

    82. Re:Well, lets see by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1
      PS -- it goes without saying that the Army, Coast Guard, and FDA don't give a damn about you individually, and in almost all cases if you tried to sue them for not acting on your behalf, you'd be dismissed out of hand.

      The government does not exist to care about individuals, and they will only act when it suits its purpose and/or to avoid embarrassment. If you expect it to act on behalf of individuals (as in most of your example scenarios), you'll likely be sorely disappointed unless they happen to have the resources easily available or it's good press for them.

    83. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone living in a country with socialized medicine, I'd like to inform you that you're sorely mistaken, if you think socialized medicine means that you cannot get "an unnecessary MRI". What it means is that if a doctor doesn't consider it necessary, you have to go to a private clinic to get it (those aren't outlawed due to socialized medicine but instead they offer premium - or unnecessary - services such as what you want and e.g. plastic surgery).

      Since I'm not a medical professional, I prefer to have a doctor decide what I need and do not need instead of me buying what I think I need or worse: getting whatever my insurance covers, if I really need treatment.

      Now, whilst it's none of my business how you run healthcare on that side of the pond, I do wonder where slashdotters get some of their ideas from. Geeks tend to be smart and curious but it seems to me that American geeks have bought awfully well into the idea that government run healthcare with no profit motive results in less money spent on actual care than a system with private insurers with a profit incentive administering money between customers and healthcare providers.

    84. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no argument constitutionally or morally. You simply want others to have to pay your bills for you, and for that I say you can go to hell, you greedy bastard.

      So you have absolutely no compassion for those who are not only born with a medical condition due to which they'll suffer all their lives but that also cannot afford the treatments that would make their lives a little more bearable? Are they greedy, if they think that everyone should chip in a little? I'm not religious but if I were, I'd say that they're not the ones going to hell.

    85. Re:Well, lets see by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Troll

      So you have absolutely no compassion for those who are not only born with a medical condition due to which they'll suffer all their lives but that also cannot afford the treatments that would make their lives a little more bearable?

      I was born with an incurable disease, so you're going to have to try harder than that. Also, just because you feel sorry for someone doesn't excuse theft.

      Are they greedy, if they think that everyone should chip in a little?

      It depends on how they want to go about it. If they want to take donations, then no. However if you want to forcefully take peoples money (which is how government run programs work), then yes, it is greedy and wrong.

      I'm not religious but if I were, I'd say that they're not the ones going to hell.

      Yes, how dare I support freedom, personal responsibility, and property rights. I'm such a horrible person!

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    86. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was born with an incurable disease, so you're going to have to try harder than that.

      Why is your medical condition relevant? Or do you apply such logic that because you - despite your condition - have been able to get a degree in economics, there are no such conditions that actually do prevent people from supporting themselves? A degree in medicine would give such a claim some credibility.

      Also, just because you feel sorry for someone doesn't excuse theft.

      If you wish to argue that taxes are theft, I'd like to first know whether your opinion then also is that healthcare is the very worst purpose to spend taxpayer money on.

      It depends on how they want to go about it. If they want to take donations, then no. However if you want to forcefully take peoples money (which is how government run programs work), then yes, it is greedy and wrong.

      If I interpret this correctly, you do argue that taxes are theft and that healthcare for those in need is a very bad purpose to spend taxpayer money on.

      Yes, how dare I support freedom, personal responsibility, and property rights. I'm such a horrible person!

      I haven't said that supporting those makes anyone a bad person and why would I since they're good issues to support?

    87. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was born with an incurable disease...

      Yeah, me too... It's called life. We're all doomed I'm afraid. Welp.. cheer up.. make the best of it, I say :-)

    88. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well then, I'll let you in on a little secret. They are already in health insurance. Yes, it's true. Been in it for centuries (public health). Since 1965, they've had this huge program called Medicare/Medicaid. People love it. Really! And did you know they provide free care to veterans? Shocking but true!

      In fact, just under half of the health care in the US is publicly funded in some form. You may now close the barn door. It's been open for awhile.

    89. Re:Well, lets see by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Troll

      Why is your medical condition relevant?

      It's relevant because you were using the sob story "some people are just born with medical problems". I was too, but that doesn't mean that anyone else is responsible for you.

      If you wish to argue that taxes are theft, I'd like to first know whether your opinion then also is that healthcare is the very worst purpose to spend taxpayer money on.

      Taxes are for the necessary functions of government. Any program that goes beyond the necessary function of government (and in the case of the federal government in the US, that's regulating trade, providing for the national defense, running the legal system, and that's pretty much it) that uses tax dollars to pay for it is theft. And yes, healthcare is a pretty poor thing to spend tax dollars on. For one, it's immoral to force anyone to pay for another persons expenses. Next there's the fact that some people use more medical care than others - that means that you have a large portion of the country paying while using little resources while others use a disproportionate amount - that's why insurance companies adjust your rates based on your medical expenses, because those who use more services need to pay more (just like how if you order more food, you pay more money - same with everything else). Then there's the fact that government run healthcare provides a much lower quality of care (read the studies that discuss the unbelievably long wait times or the government denying treatment because it's not cost effective, also, read the more recent articles about how several of the prominent socialist countries are having issues with their medical treatment because despite the massive amount of tax funds spend on medical treatment, it's still not enough and they can't afford to raise taxes any higher).

      I haven't said that supporting those makes anyone a bad person and why would I since they're good issues to support?

      Government run healthcare runs contrary to freedom, personal responsibility, and property rights. It really is an "either / or" situation - you support one or the other, because they're polar opposites. You saying that you support freedom / personal responsibility / property rights and saying you support government run healthcare is like someone saying that they're a vegan and think it's morally wrong to eat meat, then saying that they're having steak for dinner because it tastes great.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    90. Re:Well, lets see by bmajik · · Score: 1

      Since we're slinging accusations of misinformation and idiocy:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestation
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pregnancy
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viability_(fetal)
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premature_birth#Notable_preterm_births
      https://scholarworks.iupui.edu/bitstream/handle/1805/583/OS76-127_VII.pdf?sequence=1

      I was playing fast and loose with the age, and I don't see a nice excel chart of "90th percentile fetal viability by gestational week", but I'm at least as close as your notion of how long pregnancy _even lasts_.

      The literature is pretty unambiguous about the following: premature babies with low birth weights have considerably higher outcomes when they have access to better NICU and pre-delivery technology. The survivability and zero-defect percentages get higher and higher and the gestational viability age creeps ever younger, as does the mass of viability.

      That last link [the PDF] appears to be from the early 70s [based on guess]. It refers to no documented evidence of any infant surviving when born under 600g and before 24 weeks. The wikipedia link, refering to births in the 2003-2005 timeframe, pushes that to 21 weeks and _280g_.

      You're trying to argue that medicine hasn't made significant advances in positive outcomes for low weight, early delivery babies since the 1950s.

      You are objectively wrong. Don't misinform other slashdotters.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    91. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's relevant because you were using the sob story "some people are just born with medical problems". I was too, but that doesn't mean that anyone else is responsible for you.

      No, I didn't use a sob story. I asked whether you have any compassion or not since you didn't seem to. You could also see it as me pointing out how flawed your generalization was.

      Taxes are for the necessary functions of government. Any program that goes beyond the necessary function of government (and in the case of the federal government in the US, that's regulating trade, providing for the national defense, running the legal system, and that's pretty much it) that uses tax dollars to pay for it is theft.

      Government should have whatever functions people through a democratic process decide it should have. If you think that it is theft when tax dollars being used for anything else than what you personally agree with, you could just as well say that you oppose democracy. And maybe you indeed do.

      And yes, healthcare is a pretty poor thing to spend tax dollars on.

      Yes, that is your view.

      For one, it's immoral to force anyone to pay for another persons expenses.

      So if you need to use the services of the police department, you're doing something immoral because the services are paid for by everyone even though not everyone need them.

      Next there's the fact that some people use more medical care than others - that means that you have a large portion of the country paying while using little resources while others use a disproportionate amount

      That's the very issue here. What should be done when some people need healthcare more than they can possibly afford no matter what they do? Usually ability to have a high income has an inverse correlation with the need for healthcare.

      - that's why insurance companies adjust your rates based on your medical expenses, because those who use more services need to pay more (just like how if you order more food, you pay more money - same with everything else).

      No shit. They're trying to maximize profits.

      Then there's the fact that government run healthcare provides a much lower quality of care (read the studies that discuss the unbelievably long wait times or the government denying treatment because it's not cost effective, also, read the more recent articles about how several of the prominent socialist countries are having issues with their medical treatment because despite the massive amount of tax funds spend on medical treatment, it's still not enough and they can't afford to raise taxes any higher).

      Ok, you watch Fox "News" a lot.

      Government run healthcare runs contrary to freedom, personal responsibility, and property rights.

      Actually, it's easy to argue that government run healthcare means that society is in favor of those values. Or is it contrary to freedom to try to give every citizen a little more freedom to do something with their lives instead of being bound by limitations caused by their medical conditions? Given the chance, many more could be personally responsible for themselves and would certainly like to be independent that way. Oh, and a society with more stability (aka. fewer people with completely fucked up lives) makes it easier to enforce property rights.

      It really is an "either / or" situation - you support one or the other, because they're polar opposites. You saying that you support freedom / personal responsibility / property rights and saying you support government run healthcare is like someone saying that they're a vegan and think it's morally wrong to eat meat, then saying that they're having steak for dinner because it tastes great.

      You use an analogy when you could say that it in your view is hypocrisy. I believe you use such an example since you try to simplify the issue so that it is only limited to the arguments you like.

    92. Re:Well, lets see by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      Those are all non-rival, non-excludable services. Having the government run them makes sense. Health insurance is both rival and excludable.

      You seem to miss something. Health insurers compete not for providing better health care, they are competing for making more profits.

      I'd rather not let my health being a subject of the financial gambling.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    93. Re:Well, lets see by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

      Every company aims to make more profit. By the same logic I'd rather not let my food/car/house/life-savings/etc. be the subject of financial gambling.

      Of course insurance companies don't sell health care. That is like thinking that auto-insurance companies sell mechanic services. An insurance company (of whatever sort) sells risk management. I might have a 5% chance of incurring a $100,000 medical/auto/house expense in any particular year. In its most basic form insurance is the offer that in exchange for me paying each year $100,000*5%=$5,000 plus a small (~6.7%) profit margin, I don't have to worry about the risk of me randomly getting stuck with a $100,000 bill. The expense of the $5000 premium isn't the fault of the insurance company. It is the "fault" of the $100,000 upstream cost and the 5% chance.

    94. Re:Well, lets see by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Troll

      No, I didn't use a sob story. I asked whether you have any compassion or not since you didn't seem to. You could also see it as me pointing out how flawed your generalization was.

      No, you used a sob story to try to make it seem like anyone who would hold people responsible for paying for their own treatment is "evil". As I pointed out to you earlier, just because you feel sorry for someone doesn't excuse theft on their behalf. If you want to give them your own money (charity) of your own free will, then that's great! I donate to charities too - however, forcefully taking money from people to give to someone else is theft, plain and simple. Just because the government says it's ok doesn't mean it is (see all the countless unjust laws governments have had, such as slavery, jim crow laws, anti-gay laws, etc). I read a quote once from someone criticisim socialism about 150 years ago who said "If I cannot legally do something, what right do I have to ask someone else (read:the government) to do it on my behalf?"

      I never have, and never will, argued against charity. I actually promote it quite a bit. However, there is never an excuse for forcefully taking on persons property (that includes money) for onther persons personal gain.

      Government should have whatever functions people through a democratic process decide it should have.

      See, there's one pesky problem with the US federal government "having whatever functions people want" - it's called The US Constitution. It specifies the powers of the government, which are quite limited - it then has the 10th Amendment which says that any powers NOT specifically given to the government are given to the states. I never once said that states can't implement socialist health care, because they have the authority to do so. It would still me horribly unjust, but it's pretty easy for people to pack up and move if they dislike it. It's very easy to move from one state to another - it's much harder to move from one country to another, especially since, despite all the freedoms we've lost in the last 20 years, every other country is a worse place to live.

      If you think that it is theft when tax dollars being used for anything else than what you personally agree with, you could just as well say that you oppose democracy. And maybe you indeed do.

      No, I'm very much for democracy, much more than you (you support tyranny of the majority, which is not the same as democracy). In a democracy, no one has the right to vote away someone else's rights - that means you can't use popular vote to pass a law that says blacks can't vote or people MUST give their own property to someone else. Tyranny of the majority, your view, is that as long as the majority wants it, it's ok - that's not how democracy works.

      So if you need to use the services of the police department, you're doing something immoral because the services are paid for by everyone even though not everyone need them.

      First, everyone benefits equally from the police - the police are there to capture criminals equally, regardless of where you live or how much money you make, and their presence acts as a deterrent for everyone equally. Secondly, police are paid for with local taxes, meaning that areas that need more police pay more. Then there's also the fact that there's so few police officers per 1,000 citizens that the amount paid per person is very low, which cannot be said for government run health care.

      That's the very issue here. What should be done when some people need healthcare more than they can possibly afford no matter what they do? Usually ability to have a high income has an inverse correlation with the need for healthcare.

      What should be done? You ask for charity or help from friends / family / religious organization you belong to. You don't steal. Stealing is never justified

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    95. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you used a sob story to try to make it seem like anyone who would hold people responsible for paying for their own treatment is "evil".

      Again you insist on interpreting it as a sob story when I ask whether you really intended your harsh and rude statement to be so universally applicable.

      As I pointed out to you earlier, just because you feel sorry for someone doesn't excuse theft on their behalf. If you want to give them your own money (charity) of your own free will, then that's great! I donate to charities too - however, forcefully taking money from people to give to someone else is theft, plain and simple. Just because the government says it's ok doesn't mean it is (see all the countless unjust laws governments have had, such as slavery, jim crow laws, anti-gay laws, etc). I read a quote once from someone criticisim socialism about 150 years ago who said "If I cannot legally do something, what right do I have to ask someone else (read:the government) to do it on my behalf?"

      I never have, and never will, argued against charity. I actually promote it quite a bit. However, there is never an excuse for forcefully taking on persons property (that includes money) for onther persons personal gain.

      See, there's one pesky problem with the US federal government "having whatever functions people want" - it's called The US Constitution. It specifies the powers of the government, which are quite limited - it then has the 10th Amendment which says that any powers NOT specifically given to the government are given to the states. I never once said that states can't implement socialist health care, because they have the authority to do so.

      Ok, so government run health care would require an amendment to the constitution. Is that what you're saying? And if so, what is your point?

      it's much harder to move from one country to another, especially since, despite all the freedoms we've lost in the last 20 years, every other country is a worse place to live.

      It's not fun to argue with you if your trolling is that obvious.

      No, I'm very much for democracy, much more than you (you support tyranny of the majority, which is not the same as democracy). In a democracy, no one has the right to vote away someone else's rights - that means you can't use popular vote to pass a law that says blacks can't vote or people MUST give their own property to someone else. Tyranny of the majority, your view, is that as long as the majority wants it, it's ok - that's not how democracy works.

      So all I need to do is to rephrase things and say that you cannot vote against other peoples' right to health care and you'll want universal coverage as much as you (presumably) want people to have the right to an attorney. That costs money too, you know. Or do I manage to get you to argue what rights Americans should have?

      First, everyone benefits equally from the police - the police are there to capture criminals equally, regardless of where you live or how much money you make, and their presence acts as a deterrent for everyone equally.

      Now, you probably concede that in practice the police force doesn't work that way but you're avoiding the question: If you're the victim of a crime, why should other peoples' tax dollars pay for the investigation?

      Secondly, police are paid for with local taxes, meaning that areas that need more police pay more.

      True but why is that relevant?

      Then there's also the fact that there's so few police officers per 1,000 citizens that the amount paid per person is very low, which cannot be said for government run health care.

      A very bad comparison. Both due to the needs people have and the skills required to provide them.

      What should be done? You ask for charity or help from friends / famil

    96. Re:Well, lets see by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Troll

      Again you insist on interpreting it as a sob story when I ask whether you really intended your harsh and rude statement to be so universally applicable.

      It's a sob story because you're trying to use emotion as a justification for doing something instead of using facts or logic. Your argument is no different than the "think of the children!" arguments - it's an attempt to get someone to forget reason and make a decision because they feel bad about something. Also, saying that people should be held responsible for themselves is not "harsh" or "rude".

      Ok, so government run health care would require an amendment to the constitution. Is that what you're saying? And if so, what is your point?

      First off, they are trying to pass a law (that they know is unconstitutional) - they are NOT trying to pass an amendment and THEN pass a law. It requires 2/3's of the states (66%) to make an amendment to the constitution. Currently there are 38 states (76%) that either have already passed or are in the process of passing laws to sue the federal government over the unconstitutionality of this law. They know that they do not have the support to pass an amendment and if there is an amendment made, it will be one specifically banning the federal government from running health care. Despite the BS you hear on tv, you don't get the majority of the popultion in 76% of the states to vehemently oppose a bill and have the support of the people.

      it's much harder to move from one country to another, especially since, despite all the freedoms we've lost in the last 20 years, every other country is a worse place to live. It's not fun to argue with you if your trolling is that obvious.

      Once again, you don't like facts. The rest of the developed world has higher taxes, lower incomes (before taxes!), lower quality health care, fewer freedoms, and every year citizens of those countries leave to come to the US to have a better life. That's not trolling, that's stating facts.

      So all I need to do is to rephrase things and say that you cannot vote against other peoples' right to health care and you'll want universal coverage as much as you (presumably) want people to have the right to an attorney. That costs money too, you know. Or do I manage to get you to argue what rights Americans should have?

      There IS no right to health care. Health care is a service, and like all services, is a priviledge that you must pay to recieve. Nothing is stopping you from getting a job and paying for it, that's what the majority of the country does. Also, if you still want to claim you have a "right" to healthcare, try reading the Bill of Rights again. Obama himself is often quoted for stating that he wishes that the Constitution said that you have a right to health care and other government run programs.

      Now, you probably concede that in practice the police force doesn't work that way but you're avoiding the question: If you're the victim of a crime, why should other peoples' tax dollars pay for the investigation?

      And you didn't read what I wrote at all. Everyone benefits equally from there being fewer criminals on the street and, again, everyone benefits equally from the fact that the presence of police (them driving / walking around and being seen) is a deterrent to crime.

      Secondly, police are paid for with local taxes, meaning that areas that need more police pay more. True but why is that relevant?

      It's relevent because areas that need more police, and thus cost more, pay the extra amount. That way you don't have people living in Smallville, Kansas which requires very little police (and thus doesn't cost much) isn't paying large taxes to support the large police force required for an extremely high crime place such as New York.

      Then there's also the fact that there'

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    97. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First of all: I'm starting to doubt that you have a degree in economics due to your grammar errors and inability to express yourself concisely.

      It's a sob story because you're trying to use emotion as a justification for doing something instead of using facts or logic.

      How am I using emotion when I ask whether you refer to everyone? Including the ones who are really unfortunate due to no fault of theirs.

      Also, saying that people should be held responsible for themselves is not "harsh" or "rude".

      Telling people to go to hell is. Especially if you refuse to consider any unfortunate circumstances.

      Once again, you don't like facts. The rest of the developed world has higher taxes, lower incomes (before taxes!), lower quality health care, fewer freedoms, and every year citizens of those countries leave to come to the US to have a better life. That's not trolling, that's stating facts.

      How is that applicable to e.g. Kuwaiti citizens that get excellent government run health care but pay no taxes? Anybody that is able to think independently realizes that proclaiming that "every other country is a worse place to live" cannot be a fact since such a statement makes no sense. The best place for each and every individual to live depends on so many factors. If you have a good education and some wealth and are healthy, the US is probably at the top for you. But if you are less fortunate and lazy, a nanny state is probably better for you.

      There IS no right to health care.

      Correct. And that is why I suggest debating whether there should be a right and compared it to the right to an attorney even if one cannot afford one.

      Obama himself is often quoted for stating that he wishes that the Constitution said that you have a right to health care and other government run programs.

      Yes. And evidently you're vehemently opposed to that whilst I'm not.

      And you didn't read what I wrote at all. Everyone benefits equally from there being fewer criminals on the street and, again, everyone benefits equally from the fact that the presence of police (them driving / walking around and being seen) is a deterrent to crime.

      Do blacks who are more often shot by police mistaking their wallets or car keys for guns benefit equally from the police?

      However, the massive costs involved ith government run health care (the usual wasteful spending, the extra beauracracy, increased taxes funneled off to side projects, etc), will be enough to lower people's standard of living.

      How can you be so sure of that? If the US is the greatest nation on earth, we should be able to have the best government run health care in the world and since it's clearly debatable whether citizens in countries with government run health care really pay more for it than they would with an entirely private system, it can hardly be as certain as you claim.

      Again you show a failure in reading comprehension. I never said taxes were stealing. I said taxes for programs that exist to redistribute wealth (take money from person 1 and give it to person 2) are theft, because that's what it is when you forceably take one persons money (that they earned and it belongs to) and give it to someone else (who didn't earn it and it does not belong to).

      Again, this is that pesky property rights thing I keep bringing up - you're very against property rights, despite your claims to the contrary.

      I'm not against property rights, if that's what you're thinking. I'm simply being pragmatic. Property rights can be enforced entirely by private security and the police and in an unstable society more force is needed than in a stable one and society is more stable, if it takes better care of all of its citizens. Either way, enforcing property rights cos

    98. Re:Well, lets see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, horseshit.

      You pick the most expensive European country and claim that is the norm. Im from the UK, not the cheapest place to live but Denmark is very expensive.

      Its a bit like someone sitting in China saying "The US is a typical western nation, yet look how much it spends on the military; therefore, the west are all war-mongers".

  21. Ahem... by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

    Why do you hate the troops so much?

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  22. Correct Spelling by mcspoo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    cspell: Faux "News" Why do millions of people think a comedy channel provides real news? Faux "news" is NOT a news channel. It's a comedy channel using absurdity as a comedic take on American society.

    1. Re:Correct Spelling by Spad · · Score: 2, Funny

      See: Comedy Central.

      As a Brit, the "quality" of TV news in the US depresses me no end; I'm amazed that anyone has been able to hold even vaguely rational debates about the Healthcare reform bill given the utter bollocks spewing from all sides of the media. At least The Daily Show doesn't pretend to be a serious news organisation.

      The only conclusion I can draw from the coverage I've seen is that the Healthcare reform bill will either cure cancer or mandate the killing of anyone over 40, it could go either way.

    2. Re:Correct Spelling by Cimexus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Have to say "ditto", as an Australian who spends ~6 months a year in the US. Two main observations with US news:

      - It's quite partisan. You tend to hear one side of the argument from one channel, and the other from another. Rarely do you hear a well-balanced story out of a single source. I think the lack of a well funded public broadcaster (ala BBC or Australian ABC) is most of the reason behind this.

      - The emphasis placed on local, national, international is almost completely the opposite of what I'm used to in Australia. Generally in Australia, an international story or major domestic (but never local) story would be first in the bulletin. From my trips to the UK it appears to be similar there. Local stuff would be relegated to 2/3rds through the news, with sport and weather at the end. In the US it seems to be mostly local/domestic, then maybe if you're lucky one international story near the end (and only if its really major ... you never hear 'interesting but not that important' stories from overseas like you do elsewhere).

      The other odd thing (to me at least), is that even if you compared a US local news with an Australian local news bulletin, the type of stories they run are quite different. In the US they have local stories like "the mall is getting extended" or "they are putting traffic lights in on this intersection". That'd never get reported at home ... the local stories are more along the lines of what the local/State govt. is doing, or any major crime incidents etc.

      On the other hand, the US does one thing way better than anyone else - weather. Even little local stations in small towns have their own meteorologist and often their own Doppler radar, and they actually know what they are talking about! In Australia you just get some vacant blonde chick who knows NOTHING about weather, reading the script sent to her by the weather bureau. :)

    3. Re:Correct Spelling by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Somebody help this guy. His TV's perpetually stuck on repeats of The Colbert Report and he thinks it's Fox News. Not that I'm a fan of Fox news, or anything.

  23. *sigh* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Political debate in the United States is *dead*.

    Every number you have heard or will hear about health care is a lie. It used to be that the Congressional Budget Office put out good numbers, but politicians have gotten too good at manipulating the process. Now, even CBO numbers are untrustworthy.

    The rate regulation in the Senate health care bill is a disaster. The first problem is that no one in their right mind would ever enter a market which is rate regulated. The bureaucratic red tape will keep newcomers out. The second problem is that rate regulation removes any incentive that health care insurers have to control costs. Why? Because under the Senate bill, 90% of total health care insurance revenue must be paid out for health care. So, total revenue is x. All profit must come from y, which includes profit and all non health related expenditures. The last variable is z, health expenditures. x = y + z. y = 10% of x. z = 90% of x. How do you increase your profit in such a system? Easy. Increase z.

    If I ran a health insurance company, on day 1 of the new health care regulations, I would shut down my fraud department. Not only would I get rid of a nonhealth care expenditure that must be counted against y (and thus my profits), but it would also increase fraudulent health care expenditures, which will be included in z. If the feds want to stop fraud, let them spend *their* money to do so. I don't care anymore.

    So my insurance premiums go up because I am spending more money on health care. Won't my customers just go to my competitors? Well, because of rate regulation, there won't be very many competitors. The few existing competitors will be very likely to do the exact same things I'm doing.

    Aren't I afraid that my customers will just drop health insurance altogether? That's the beauty of it. The Senate bill requires everyone to buy insurance. They can either buy my ridiculously overpriced insurance or they can pay a fine. And guess what the fine is used for? That's right, subsidies for other people to buy my insurance, so one way or another, I get the money.

    Even if you want european style health care (which many Americans do not), the Senate bill is not the way to do it.

    1. Re:*sigh* by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Ironically, the reason Congress is able to game the CBO numbers so well is because the CBO has embraced transparency and openness. It described how it scores bills, and as a result, this bill was able to avoid counting the mandated insurance payments towards the federal budget, whereas Bill Clinton's efforts circa 1993-94 had those included in the federal budget. When everyone saw what those costs were, they lost all appetite for the reform. Now they can pretend those costs won't be incurred.

      You're definitely right that the bills in both houses of Congress are horrible hand-outs to the insurance companies.

  24. who knows by JeffSh · · Score: 1

    who the hell could possibly know? the bill has more pages than a dictionary. no one really knows what's in it. i doubt even the people voting on it for us know what's in it.

  25. Not perfect, but a start by astaines · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From our perspective (I'm a health policy person based in Europe), US health care is staggeringly expensive, very variable, and very unfair. It's the single biggest cause of personal bankruptcy in the States.

    Your health is poor, overall, especially you have poor child health, and relatively poor maternal and infant health.

    A large part of your population have no access to good quality health care, and this imposes large costs on your society.

    Your major companies find high health care costs for staff a major burden, and this sharply reduces the competitiveness of good US employers.

    You have the highest administrative costs for heath care that I know of, now running over 30%, and at current rates of increase, in thirty years you will be spending 100% of your GDP on health services.
    At the top end, there is no better health care anywhere for acute illnesses, but very few people can access this.

    The proposed changes are a start, and only a start. With no public option, there is a real risk that the insurance companies will continue to combine together to rip you off. However, the current proposals will save a lot of money over the next decade, which is why the insurance companies are spending millions buying ads, and influencing politicians to stop the change.

    I hope it passes!

    --
    -- Anthony Staines
    1. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with Americans is deep down, they'll always hoping they will "strike it big". The American Dream: getting super rich at the cost of others who weren't so "bootstrappy" (actually, lucky) to hit it big. The other is of course, the top decision makes are all bought and paid for by industry to lobby corporate policy.

        Anytime there is a threat to this, they fight back. The heath care industry makes billions, people involved in it are millionaires and people outside it, want/dream they were in on that piece of pie. Same goes for banks/financial. The thought of one less way to make lots of money is anathema to an American's thought process. Even if family members are denied their insurance for "pre existing conditions" and pay hundreds of thousands in medical bills, they still latch on to the dream they will find a way to get rich and the heath care is a great option.

    2. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know which government you work for but you clearly don't know the numbers.

      The *average* cancer survival rate in Europe is 55-75% that of the US, wait times for electives (you know, things like hip replacement) average at 6 days in the US while average in Europe is 8 months.

      The majority of people in the US do have access to the high quality care, the fact that roughly 10 million US citizens do not have access to regular healthcare and need it is not a reason to penalise the other 300 million.

      The one fact you are correct about is the administration, 80c of every healthcare dollar is not spent on healthcare with the majority being consumed by insurance and their agents. Do you really think the best solution to this issue is to hand insurance companies even more healthcare money?

      Those of us who self-fund via HSA's and a catastrophic policy and seek out non-insurance doctors get the best deal. What I pay for a visit to my doctor is less then most people copay for their visits and the doctor actually (or rather claims) to make more now we his not insurance affiliated then prior. On the issue of ongoing conditions my wife has three regular prescriptions, one of which is DEA scheduled so we can't get it imported, and generally needs to a doctor once every month or two, we sill are paying less then if we had "standard" insurance or indeed loosing less from out pay check if we took up employer insurance.

      Also insurance companies are generally supportive of the bill despite what the media suggests, they lobbied lightly against the equal cost of pre-existing conditions but that was it. The government is about to hand them tens of millions of extra customers and effectively grant them a monopoly on healthcare provision.

      Having moved from the UK 5 years ago I also have to point out that certainly in the case of the UK the suggestion of higher costs here in the US is complete and utter crap. The average contributor in the UK pays 20% more then an average contributor in the US pays for insurance *and* federal contributions for entitlement healthcare, so the situation is actually that you get higher quality care in the US while paying less even with the insanely high overheads from insurance. Perhaps while reading the WHO reports on the issue you should go and take a look at how they calculate things like costs and you will note two significant issues: affordability is measured in absolute cost not based on per capita GDP and healthcare for the US includes cosmetic which is not included with most other countries costs.

      Finally I should not be penalised because people make stupid decisions, I left the socialist states of Europe precisely because they seem to think this is acceptable. I am not responsible for any one else's decisions unless I choose to be, on this I don't choose to be.

    3. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Entrope · · Score: 1

      You are awfully poorly informed for a health policy person based in Europe.

      The studies that blame bankruptcy on medical costs were basically cooked. They've been debunked left and right since they came out. This bill will drive more people to bankruptcy (or jail) because of the insurance mandates.

      Our poor health outcomes are heavily skewed towards minorities (especially Blacks and Hispanics). Oddly, those are the same groups that get more government-funded health care now. This bill doesn't really do anything to reduce the maternal, infant or child health that you mention.

      The cost of uncharged emergency room care is tiny compared to the cost of this bill.

      Republican proposals for health care reform would largely eliminate the health care costs for employers, by removing the tax subsidy that makes it worthwhile to give employees health insurance rather than additional money for health care. This bill will do nothing to reduce those costs.

      I would continue, but I'm getting bored. I can just hope that you're not inflicting similar scales of ignorance on your fellow Europeans.

    4. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Your health is poor, overall, especially you have poor child health, and relatively poor maternal and infant health."

      Try again. The US infant health is lower, because we try to save and deliver high risk pregnancies. Many other countries abort or do not give the baby a chance. The health of infants is much higher in US when looking at low-risk vs high-risk categories than any other country.

    5. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really think the best solution to this issue is to hand insurance companies even more healthcare money?

      Had the public option been left in, health insurance companies would have been forced to compete with a low-cost government-run plan. The cost increase limitations in the bill will prevent unnecessary rake hikes and increased costs.

      The average contributor in the UK pays 20% more then an average contributor in the US pays for insurance *and* federal contributions for entitlement healthcare

      As for the contribution costs for health care in the UK, does the government discriminate against people with pre-existing conditions, or charge those people more or less dependent on those conditions? Does the health care in the U.K. provide less or more coverage for health care than the "average" U.S. plan? The fact is "basic" coverage in the U.S. covers a very limited range of health care services. Do citizens of the U.K. have to worry about these things?

    6. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope that what PolitiFact calls "overhead" and you call "administrative costs" are comparable, because if they are, there is a stark contrast between their claims and research and yours: http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2010/mar/12/americas-health-insurance-plans/health-insurers-get-small-percentage-overall-healt/. Despite your profession, I'm going with their number.

      I am not sanguine about improved infant and child health; I know there are bad outcomes to infant and child illness that result from very real cost barriers, but I am certain that a greater factor is formed by softer considerations (transportation, especially in rural areas, low incomes that make it parental education and attitudes--are Europeans as ill-educated as most of our teen moms and are Europeans as blase about vaccination as many Americans are?); these factors will not be mitigated by the current ObamaCare proposal (nor would HillaryCare have helped, nor would market-based solutions).

      If there were ever, in the history of our Republic, a government program that stayed within original estimates of its costs (whole-number error factors, and even the occasional order of magnitude are an ironclad rule, whether it be levees in Louisiana, Medicare or crop subsidies), I might not be shaking my head at the naivete of people (like yourself) who think this might "save" money ultimately. Whether it will be money well-spent, I'm not going there, but anyone who thinks CBO's numbers (which are accepted as gospel only because they are the least partisan numbers, not because they have a track record of accuracy) are reasonably correct is an incurable optimist at best, a fool at worst.

      New stories have circulated here that the Social Security Administration will soon begin to sell the bonds it bought from the Treasury (required by law, since investing the past surpluses of Social Security taxes over Social Security in equities or private debt instruments was anathema to both right and left, for different reasons), meaning that the Treasury will have to borrow money to pay off the Social Security Administration in addition to funding everything else. With Rube Goldberg financing like this, can you blame me for worrying that missing the cost estimates of ObamaCare by a "mere" 50% over ten years (long after Citizen Obama retires and writes his memoirs), which would be "only" a trillion dollars (for our European friends, who do their numbers differently, that's 10^12 dollars) off.

      "Saving money" is in the government lexicon, but it is manifestly not in the government's toolkit or history.

    7. Re:Not perfect, but a start by kaiser423 · · Score: 1

      God I wish that we could mod you more than +5.

      The bottom line is that we're paying a lot for healthcare and not receiving great outcomes. The status quo is not acceptable. The "Republican plan" that was waived around was a cover sheet with blank paper behind it. We need to do something, and the current plan is the only one that has been fleshed out and worked through the process, votes whipped, etc.

      It's not great, but at least we're starting to get some momentum on reforming a system that needs lots and lots of reform.

    8. Re:Not perfect, but a start by debrain · · Score: 1

      Sir —

      This post is apparently written without regard to widely established facts. For example:

      The majority of people in the US do have access to the high quality care, the fact that roughly 10 million US citizens do not have access to regular healthcare and need it is not a reason to penalise the other 300 million.

      The number of Americans without health insurance is 47 million, according to the U.S. census.

      Further, according to Paul Krugman, the U.S. spends over 15% of GDP on healthcare, nearly twice that of the U.K at around 8%.

      According to Google the life expectancy of the UK is 79.3 years, and 78 years in the U.S. The infant mortality rate in the U.S. is higher than the U.K. also (by about 1% I understand).

      All to say this post – like many on this topic with an agenda – is utter, mindless drivel.

      The U.S. would have a much better healthcare system (among other things) if there weren't so many people like this with baseless yet entrenched positions.

    9. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may not know this, not being from the US, but the health care companies aren't spending millions trying to convince politicians to stop the change.

      When Health care reform seemed like a done deal, the value of insurance companies WENT UP. They are pushing FOR the reform because it is a huge benefit to them to become an oligarchy capable of creating even more false increases in the "cost" of health care.

      I am against a single-payer system for reasons of principle, but I am against this reform as a matter of common sense. The insurance companies benefit form this reform, don't be fooled.

    10. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL "health policy ... in Europe"

      doctor in the street: I have a degree in homeopathic medicine!
      Truck with loudspeaker: You have a degree in baloney!

    11. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The number of Americans without health insurance is 47 million, according to the U.S. census.

      Go and check the methodology for that number, firstly it is not sourced from the census it is sourced from two surveys. Secondly it covers everyone including resident aliens and those on temporary visas. Thirdly when you drill down in to the data you will note a significant number (~30 million) are firmly in the middle classes and can afford insurance but choose not to.

      Many people do not want insurance.

      Further, according to Paul Krugman, the U.S. spends over 15% of GDP on healthcare, nearly twice that of the U.K at around 8%.

      Again you get a much clearer idea with the raw data as compared to the opinion on the issue - countries report healthcare spending in extremely different ways, primarily the US reports on all spending including cosmetic and other quazi-healthcare spending whereas other countries do not.

      Besides this I clearly stated that non-medical costs consume 80% of the spend, the expense is largely down to people wrongly assuming that they need full coverage insurance, they don't and until fairly recently insurance didn't cover visits to the dr etc.

      Perhaps rather than mandating insurance government should be raising awareness on why the alternatives are often preferable.

      According to Google the life expectancy of the UK is 79.3 years, and 78 years in the U.S.

      Supportive healthcare is less important then lifestyle, a minority of early deaths can indeed be explained by lack of access to healthcare but as the US already has supportive care for the elderly (not to mention in excess of that in most of Europe) but lifestyle choices such as eating habits and smoking (Both of which are generally higher in the US) have a much larger impact. As an indication of this 8 times the number of Americans have heart attacks compared to Britons yet the survival rate is better then the UK (In the UK 48% die within 28 days of having a heart attack, in the US this is 12%).

      The infant mortality rate in the U.S. is higher than the U.K. also (by about 1% I understand).

      Again lifestyle choices are in play here as much, if not more, then healthcare access.

      All to say this post – like many on this topic with an agenda – is utter, mindless drivel.

      You don't have an agenda here? clearly you support socialised medicine of one form or another so clearly you have an agenda as much as I do, the difference being I don't want to force my view on to other people - they can have their single payer system as long as it remains voluntary and doesn't restrict my property rights via taxation.

      The U.S. would have a much better healthcare system (among other things) if there weren't so many people like this with baseless yet entrenched positions.

      As I mentioned earlier I recently migrated to the US. I have used the healthcare systems in the UK, France, SA and the US. While France was marginally better then the UK (I was able to actually visit a dentist for instance) they are both nothing in comparison to my experiences with the US system. I am middle class earning slightly above average (~2%) for where I live which is precisely the same to my situation in the UK. How many healthcare systems have you used first hand rather than simply reading aggregated statistics that can be used as opinion pieces as much as an article in the Guardian or Washington Post?

      Do you just re

    12. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also lets talk about three things government prevent from working now:

      1. Cap on limit to what I can pay in to my HSA, I would like to have $20,000 in there so I cover my full exposure in emergencies but they wont let me.

      2. Preventing insurance policies being sold cross state lines, this makes life extremely difficult for the underwriters and is responsible for a great deal of the cost of administration.

      3. No suggested cap on malpractice layout in cases where a reasonable reason for malpractice exists or transferring liability to the organisation they work for. A number of states already have this and have seen a drop in the cost of provision as a result, when doctors malpractice premiums go down so does the cost to the consumer.

      Now here are three things the new bill will prevent from working in the states that adopt it:

      1. No more HSA's, the government is mandating I should not be able to save for my own care.

      2. For those who want full coverage you will be charged 40% tax (unless the insurance is provided via a union or a unionised job in which case it is exempt - no back room dealing there).

      3. As a result of 1 much more difficult to find and expensive cash alternatives. If I am out of state and need to see a doctor I wont be able to quickly.

      4. A vast increase in direct affiliation between medical practitioners and insurance carriers. Right now if you have insurance you have some limitations on who you can visit but generally it is fairly flexible, under the new system insurance carriers have to add mandated lock-in to their contracts in order to control costs. People will loose access to healthcare not gain it.

    13. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "US health care is staggeringly expensive,"

      It is, but that's because people aren't involved with the actual costs and complaining that shit is so expensive. Overnight hosptial stays are like $1,200 to $1,800 a night, generally unmonitored. That's more than the average pimped out high end 4-5 star hotel in a metro area plus hooker.

      I'm healthy, relatively. I have a minor pre-existing condition. I buy brand-name prescription drugs online through a US pharmacy (saves about $20 per 100 pills). I pay everything out of pocket, from $400 eyeglasses ($320 lenses, I'm not blind, but I've got coke bottles), my dental care, my ER visits, to my blood tests and specialist checkups.

      I still come out $5,000 a year cheaper than the lowest comprehensive health care plan when I was quoted 4 years ago. My understanding is that rates have gone up. Most don't include eye or dental. My friend that has a company bought health care, I come out $3,000 cheaper than what we estimate his company pays for his group. When he goes skiing, he doesn't care if he really blows out a knee. I'm more touchy, since I don't like pain or the cost.

      The eye opener was when *I* shop for my care. If I got get the blood tests done at the hospital branch the specialist recommends because he's affiliated with the hopsital (his office and the hospital are in the same system), it's $180, with discount for self-pay and early pay, $145. iow, they charge the insurance company $180, they say their cost is $145. The same test, at the local unaffiliated for-profit blood test company that only does blood tests and sends it out, is $85 up front. And despite faxing or mailing the results, gets the results to the doctor 2 days prior to the more expensive and electronically filed one. And is a 10 minute wait versus 25 minutes and are better and more careful at the draw (who are you, this is you right, previously been here, have cash or check, hand over dough, go to this room, sit down, tag the vial, blood drawn, check you 5 minutes later, leave).

      My ER visit, which came after a trip to my primary care family physician, would have been denied when I had a foot infection that went up to my knee, cost me $3,000 for an overnight. $1,800 was for the "room" (costing 3x a high end hotel). I'd rather have my leg than some shit doctor saying I don't need to be inpatient, then is pushing vancomycin(sp) 8 hours later shocked that the infection moved up 8 inches. This is at the same shit hospital system that has the jacked up blood tests. I could have gone to 3 other area hospitals.

      When you pay for your own care, you find out WHO IS FUCKING YOU OVER IN COSTS. My dentist was charging $185. My current, nicer and more efficient dentist charges $105, film is $5 cheaper per shot, and is just plain better.

      My father, has a heart problem, has medicare, goes to the hospital, and suddenly has a train of 5 cardiologists and affiliates stroll in as soon as they find out he's never used his medicare significantly before. Hospital bill? $125,000. Note that this is the government system already in place, it's that high, and that's supposed to be efficient. Also note medicare is a system people were supposed to pay INTO, as he's put 15% of his wages toward, which he has, so he's paid for his care and bought into the system, and it's still that high. I'd like to see that same bill for the same procedure from a EU or British Commonwealth nation.

      btw, I have a benign parotid growth. I was unquote, unsure by the otolarynologist, $10,000 for the procedure with pathology report and overnight stay. If I went elsewhere, I was quoted half that, travel costs included.

    14. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "From our perspective (I'm a health policy person based in Europe), US health care is staggeringly expensive, very variable, and very unfair. It's the single biggest cause of personal bankruptcy in the States."

      You may be bankrupt, but at least you'll be alive.

      There are many fallacies being promulgated by the media and those on the Left (Dems and Repubs) who support "some reform, ANY reform, just so we do something". One of these is that if you can't pay, you get turned away. It is against US law for any hospital to turn away someone needing care simply because they can't pay. Those hospitals which do get slapped down. Many hospitals budget a certain amount of funds to cover care for those who cannot pay; other hospitals exist entirely on donations, and do not require patients to pay at all (St. Jude's, anybody?).

      Furthermore, the health insurance industry is one of the least-profitable enterprises in the US economy. Health insurance company profits as a percentage of overall earnings (a.k.a profit margin, the true indicator of profitability) was a meager 3.4% (figures are from 2008, I believe), according to http://www.usnews.com/money/blogs/flowchart/2009/08/25/why-health-insurers-make-lousy-villains.html. UnitedHealthGroup was the at top, with a 4.1% profit margin. This compares to 2.2% as the median profit margin across 215 industries in the US. The top 3 industries were beverages (25.9%), healthcare real-estate trusts (the landlords or managers for hospital properties), and application software. By comparison, the "eeeeviiillll" oil industry saw an average profit margin of 10.2%; Google and Microsoft saw margins of 20.6% and 24.9%, respectively.

      Do you know what entity turns down the most health coverage claims as a percentage of total claims received? Medicare.

      "A large part of your population have no access to good quality health care, and this imposes large costs on your society." BS. Everybody in the US has access to the best health care system in the world. The overall quality of the care is evidenced by the fact that Canadians, Brits, and other foreign nationals continue to come here for their treatment, rather than wait months or even years for their own socialized medical services to deem them worthy of receiving care. Much of the "large costs on your society" come from illegal immigrants who flood hospitals all over the country, who not only cannot pay but also do not pay: to the hospital or to any other aspect of the US economy.

      Do you really believe that the same government that has brought us Medicare (projecting more than $38 TRILLION in unfunded liabilities over the next few years), Social Security (which will be bankrupt by the time half the Baby Boomer generation is dead), and the DMV will be able suddenly to run something right for change? I think you'd better get your meds checked.

    15. Re:Not perfect, but a start by clafarge · · Score: 1

      I can call my Dr for appointment this very morning, have an MRI immediately after, and begin treatment this afternoon. All for a $20 co-pay. We've been led to believe that many other nations' citizens have to wait greater than a few hours to get in for many specialists and tests. Also, I know it's easy to think of yours as free, but your taxes pay for it. I do have health insurance, which I pay for along with my employer... and you pay for yours, too... through taxes. All this does is divert Medicare funding ($500B of funding comes from Medicare, which is bankrupt already), raise taxes ($496B of funding is from tax increases/fees), raise insurance premiums (to recover costs of preexisting conditions and mandated coverage for things like Abortion... even in policies for males), and dictate that everyone must now have it. The current version dictates that we must have a $12,000 premium for my family (4) or face $2500 penalties. $12000 is not free healthcare. My current healthcare (example above) cost a total of $10,000, so it would not be good enough. We actually have charities that care for people who need assistance but can't pay for it. That's what we're good at: taking care of our people without requiring government intervention. Our most impoverished citizens have color TVs with cable programming subscriptions, cellular phones, at least one car, and generally more than 900sqft of living space. Try not sound too superior.

      --
      Tis I: Me.
    16. Re:Not perfect, but a start by Late+Adopter · · Score: 1

      in thirty years you will be spending 100% of your GDP on health services.

      I'm undoing mods to post this, but this is EXACTLY the kind of logic that makes me die a little inside. Didn't we learn better from Malthus? The fact that extrapolating growth leads to an impossible outcome means that growth won't continue that way. Surely you're not suggesting that people will sign away the entirety of their paycheck on health insurance and opt not to eat, clothe themselves, and otherwise live their lives. There is some hidden limit to what amount of expenditure the economy will support, and eventually we'll hit it and people will have to ask themselves what sort of health care they're actually willing to pay for.

      Government intervention delays, not prevents, that day, by making us able to continue spending more (societally instead of out of pocket). I'm not suggesting reform isn't a good idea, only we stop kidding ourselves if we think anything that doesn't actually cut costs is going to help anything. It may or may not be that THIS reform isn't a good idea on those grounds.

  26. Effectiveness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It isn't only a question of effectiveness. There are legal and moral issues as well.

    Moral: It is wrong to force your will on someone. Just because a majority of people get together and decide they want something doesn't give them the right to take it by force. I know that has become one of the finding principles of our country, but it is wrong.

    Legal: The federal government lacks the legal authority to enact this legislation. This could only be implemented at a state level, or a county/city level if a state allows for that.

  27. Dear readers with mod points... by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do not have anything of actual use to say about this bill, other than common talking points, unsourced blather about what this bill will accomplish, and vague appeals to antiauthoritarianism. But please mod me +5 Insightful like you're doing with everyone else, just to be fair.

    --
    Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
    1. Re:Dear readers with mod points... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're such a Karma Bum!

    2. Re:Dear readers with mod points... by Cimexus · · Score: 1

      I can't believe that actually worked! :)

    3. Re:Dear readers with mod points... by aeropawel · · Score: 1

      Citations needed.

    4. Re:Dear readers with mod points... by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 0, Troll

      I can't believe that actually worked! :)

      New to Slashdot, are you? :V

      --
      Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
    5. Re:Dear readers with mod points... by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 0, Troll

      Hey, I may be a karma bum, but at least I'm not a SOCIALIST.

      --
      Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
    6. Re:Dear readers with mod points... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're looking for a handout, your at the wrong end of town. Nothing for free over here. You have to work for everything you get.

      Oh sorry...my bad. That only applies to Parkinson's victims, not slashdot posters.

    7. Re:Dear readers with mod points... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      But please mod me +5 Insightful like you're doing with everyone else, just to be fair.

      You've got to bash either the bill, or Obama, or both for that. Sorry.

  28. It's only 2700 pages. If you care, read it. by karlnyberg · · Score: 1

    Rather than bashing one side or the other based upon perceived biased information, go get the document and read it yourself. Then, weep for future generations, either way.

    --
    -- Karl --
  29. Just look to the North... by S-4'N3 · · Score: 3, Funny

    If the health care reform plan goes through then it signals the end of civilization as you know. Just look at where I am from, Canada, where we introduced universal health care in 1962. Since then, we've been living in barbaric fiefdoms, the likes of which have not been seen outside of the Hyborian kingdom.

    1. Re:Just look to the North... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we go to a single payer down here, where will your Canadian Politicians go for health care...

  30. To Big by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    The problem is that it is too big. Being able to do a large bill is good politically but not for the american public. There are a lot of things going on in big bills. Almost everyone has something they don't like about it. So by passing a bill you really kinda force pass a bunch of bills, with no real debates on each section.

    Smaller bills will be much easer to handle.
    Laws to prevent insurance companies from denying coverage based on medical reasons. Probably an easy pass.

    Laws to require everyone to get healthcare a difficult slim pass and probably will take some extra time to perfect.

    Laws about funding for abortions as part of the plan. Probably will be filibuster out. However filibusters take a lot of work and filibustering everything will probably literally kill a party. So they will not overuse the filibuster allowing passing for other details.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  31. Silly Scully by snorb · · Score: 1

    Doesn't she ever learn? Fox's paranoia is always proven justified in the end.

  32. Canada by i_ate_god · · Score: 1

    The issues aren't the system. The problem are the paranoid people who goto the emergency room because they have a cold. The problem is that the pharmaceutical industry push doctors to over prescribe, causing even more visits to the hospital and clinic for follow ups and what not.

    Also, universal healthcare in Canada is more like a federal mandate telling the provinces to setup such a system. Each province has their own healthcare system that's partially funded by the federal government. I'm not sure about the US, but I'm sure this would have been more palatable to americans if the healthcare law was the same, giving the individual states more autonomy over healthcare services.

    In any case, Canada's system isn't perfect, and yours won't be either. It won't do much for reforming the pharmaceutical industry. It will have a positive effect on the over all health of society though.

    Or it might drive you all into civil war, which would be pretty fun too.

    --
    I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
  33. Healthcare is a good thing. This bill is not. by salesgeek · · Score: 1

    Any bill that expands power for the IRS (does anyone else think that the IRS has no place in making health care decisions?), places an entire sector of the economy under Government control (Biden's words, not mine) and will create lots more opportunity for people to go to jail is just not the prescription.

    As it is, this law basically raises taxes, forces healthy, young people to buy insurance and creates a class of people who are too wealthy to get assistance and not wealthy enough to afford insurance, and then jails them for being squarely in the middle class. Why not take a little more time and do this right, and make it so health care becomes a right, not an enforced purchase of insurance bundled with a tax increase?

    --
    -- $G
  34. You got the wrong generation by linzeal · · Score: 1

    Greatest Generation and Baby Boomer's are costing 10k's to 100k's of thousands of dollars of year in health care costs and you blame this generation? Who smokes less, drinks less and is in overall better health than the three previous generations? Give me a break. My Uncle who worked maybe 10 years of his adult life started receiving Medicare last year and he is already up to half a million in costs with his congestive heart failure alone.

    1. Re:You got the wrong generation by geekmux · · Score: 1

      Greatest Generation and Baby Boomer's are costing 10k's to 100k's of thousands of dollars of year in health care costs and you blame this generation? Who smokes less, drinks less and is in overall better health than the three previous generations? Give me a break. My Uncle who worked maybe 10 years of his adult life started receiving Medicare last year and he is already up to half a million in costs with his congestive heart failure alone.

      This generation is nothing but a byproduct of the generation you accuse. If you want to try and make an even comparison when speaking across generations(and therefore massive age gaps), try not to make it so damn one-sided with something like health costs. A group of 20-somethings is healthier than a group of 50-somethings? Gee, no shit.

      The issues with entitlement started with previous generations, but it's not like this generation of spoiled-ass 20-somethings learned a lesson from it, as evidenced by their financial "health" and overall debt, and won't roll out of bed for less than $15/hour.

    2. Re:You got the wrong generation by linzeal · · Score: 1

      We are not a " by product " of your generation, thank you. We would have far less debt if tuition had not increased at 10-20x inflation throughout the 1990's because most of us did not buy McMansions we will never be able to pay off. We work less hours and demand better pay because we like to enjoy life while we are living and we are not going to see a pension plan and neither are you, unless you are 60+. We are healthier because we choose to be, there are a lot of reasons why American seniors cost 2-3x the amount that British or Canadian seniors cost. 20% of all 60+ year olds in the US have Type II diabetes, whereas in Europe it is less than 10% for the same age group, in some countries less than 5%.

      I would not roll out of bed for less than 40 an hour and I only work 6 months a year.

         

    3. Re:You got the wrong generation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're damn right I won't roll out of bed for less than $15 an hour. There would be no point. At $15 an hour, I could not afford to pay the rent on my tiny, studio apartment, my monthly utilities, groceries, transportation, and the monthly payment on my student loan that was necessitated by the rising costs of education. Never mind actually having any money for any semblance of a social life, let alone fancy, shiny possessions.

      Oh, but wait, I'm sure your retort will involve uprooting my entire life to a less expensive region of the country all for the sake of not appearing "entitled". Right...

    4. Re:You got the wrong generation by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Wait a minute, did you just argue that all generations are the 'entitlement generation'?

      You do realize that rather means you don't have a point, right? It's rather stupid to blame a problem on 'everyone' and pretend that's somehow useful.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    5. Re:You got the wrong generation by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Greatest Generation and Baby Boomer's are costing 10k's to 100k's of thousands of dollars of year in health care costs and you blame this generation? Who smokes less, drinks less and is in overall better health than the three previous generations?

      I apologize in advance; much of this comment will be offtopic, but my "no bonus" buttons don't seem to work.

      First, I take issue with the "greatest generation" label. They weren't. My late friend Ralph and most of my uncles were of that generation (my dad was the generation that fought in Korea), and my uncles' and Ralph's generation really screwed a LOT of things up. People forget that Hitler, Mussolini, and Stalin were part of the "greatest generation". Christ, you should hear some of the stories Ralph told (I miss the old bastard). The "greatest generation" created more pollution and bigger messes of nonenvironmental kinds than any other. Their generation outlawed marijuana. Their generation was in charge of McCarthyism. Their generation lynched blacks and promoted racism.

      They were mostly not nice people.

      Second, please learn to use an apostrophe, or don't use them at all.

      Third, what's so great about smoking and drinking less? The worse your health the sooner you'll die. The sooner you die the less you cost in health care. As examples I cite my non-smoking, teetotalling grandmother and my uncle from your "greatest" generation, her alcoholic son who smoked four packs a day. He died at age 64, never collecting a single social security check, nor having Medicare pay a single doctor's visit. My Grandmother lived a hundred years, and collected Social Security for decades and went to the doctor on Medicare's dime every other week.

      Everybody runs up huge medical bills before they die, including my uncles (one who died of cancer in his late seventies and one in his eighties who died of ALS) and my ninety nine year old teetotalling nonsmoking grandmother. Nobody lives forever, kid, and unless you die suddenly, you're going to have huge medical costs associated with it.

  35. Need a little more research on Article 10 by elhondo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If I take what you're stating correctly, then Article 10 would also be able to shoot down Medicare, Fannie/Freddie, the NEA, the DOL.... NASA. In other words, it sounds right, but ever since the Civil War, I don't think it's been enforced in the manner you describe. There are specific exceptions in case law when dealing with commerce, and with health care spending in the top 5, it's a pretty easy out for the SC. I think you need look no further than the DEA's position on medical marijuana laws to realize that the 10th isn't that powerful. I'm not arguing that the 10th shouldn't be the law of the land, just that it plainly isn't, and a court challenge on strict 10th amendment grounds would cause an upheaval to the federal government.

    1. Re:Need a little more research on Article 10 by digitalnoise615 · · Score: 1

      If I take what you're stating correctly, then Article 10 would also be able to shoot down Medicare, Fannie/Freddie, the NEA, the DOL.... NASA. In other words, it sounds right, but ever since the Civil War, I don't think it's been enforced in the manner you describe. There are specific exceptions in case law when dealing with commerce, and with health care spending in the top 5, it's a pretty easy out for the SC. I think you need look no further than the DEA's position on medical marijuana laws to realize that the 10th isn't that powerful. I'm not arguing that the 10th shouldn't be the law of the land, just that it plainly isn't, and a court challenge on strict 10th amendment grounds would cause an upheaval to the federal government.

      There's a bigger out than that right in the preamble to the Constitution:

      "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."

      It can and will, I assure you, be argued that the "promote the general Welfare" allows the Government to take actions that, in general, benefit all citizens. It cannot be argued that reforming Healthcare won't have a positive impact on citizens of the United States. Some may not like it, but it comes down to whether a tangible benefit can be shown for the majority of those affected - and I think that will be fairly easy to do.

    2. Re:Need a little more research on Article 10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... a court challenge on strict 10th amendment grounds would cause an upheaval to the federal government.

      And this is a bad thing?

    3. Re:Need a little more research on Article 10 by ircmaxell · · Score: 1

      That's a BS argument. Try telling that to your child. "You can't hit him!" to which the child responds "But I hit him all the time, and nobody has ever told me not to"... Just because they have gotten away with it time and time again, doesn't mean that it's right...

      --
      If a man isn't willing to take some risk for his opinions, either his opinions are no good or he's no good
    4. Re:Need a little more research on Article 10 by ircmaxell · · Score: 1

      That states the reason for drafting the constitution. It's not explicitly granting the power to do that (as is required by the text of the 10th amendment). Sure, it will be argued that health care falls within that, but it won't be the first time that an invalid argument was made in an attempt to prove a point...

      --
      If a man isn't willing to take some risk for his opinions, either his opinions are no good or he's no good
    5. Re:Need a little more research on Article 10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fail to see how the 10th amendment prohibits a single payer system. While it is not directly spelled out in the constitution it is not directly a state's rights issue either. This is a peoples issue and as such it should therefore be decided by those elected and they obviously think it is a federal issue.

      Now I'm not a right winger (I'm actually pretty far left) but I do not support this bill because I feel that a private system supplemented federally or not is inherently corrupt. Any time a corporation stands to make a large sum of money you can bet they will not have the best interests of their customers in mind rather just the stockholders.

      Health care should be a system where the ONLY parties with an interest in it are the patient and the doctor giving the services. The patient needs to be given the appropriate care (i.e. not unnecessary tests, but only when needed) and the doctor needs to get reasonably compensated for his work.

    6. Re:Need a little more research on Article 10 by digitalnoise615 · · Score: 2, Informative

      That states the reason for drafting the constitution. It's not explicitly granting the power to do that (as is required by the text of the 10th amendment). Sure, it will be argued that health care falls within that, but it won't be the first time that an invalid argument was made in an attempt to prove a point...

      Except that that exact section of the Preamble has already been used to argue successfully for government power for the greater Welfare of the people - and in a healthcare case, no less!

      See: Ellis v. City of Grand Rapids.

      I quote "Substantively, the case was about eminent domain. The City of Grand Rapids wanted to use eminent domain to force landowners to sell property in the city identified as "blighted", and convey the property to owners that would develop it in ostensibly beneficial ways: in this case, to St. Mary's Hospital, a Catholic organization. This area of substantive constitutional law is governed by the Fifth Amendment, which is understood to require that property acquired via eminent domain must be put to a "public use". In interpreting whether the proposed project constituted a "public use", the court pointed to the Preamble's reference to "promot[ing] the general Welfare" as evidence that "[t]he health of the people was in the minds of our forefathers". "[T]he concerted effort for renewal and expansion of hospital and medical care centers, as a part of our nation's system of hospitals, is as a public service and use within the highest meaning of such terms. Surely this is in accord with an objective of the United States Constitution: '* * * promote the general Welfare.'"

    7. Re:Need a little more research on Article 10 by niola · · Score: 1

      The "Necessary and Proper" Clause in Article One, section 8, clause 18 was implemented to give the federal govt the ability to assume ANY powers not necessarily enumerated in the Constitution.

      "The Congress shall have Power - To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof."

      The intent of this was spelled out in the federalist papers - basically they understood things would come up they would not foresee and they did not want to tie down the federal govt from doing what it felt was necessary.

    8. Re:Need a little more research on Article 10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Just because they have gotten away with it time and time again, doesn't mean that it's right..."

      Actually, when it involves the Constitution and the Supreme Court, yes it does.

  36. Pray you do not get a chronic condition by catherder_finleyd · · Score: 1

    If you get a chronic condition (MS, Diabetes, etc.), you will regret your catastrophic insurance choice. Your routine, non-covered expenses will go through the roof. It will get worse if the condition is such that you have problems working full-time, or you lose your job, etc.

    1. Re:Pray you do not get a chronic condition by pandaman9000 · · Score: 1

      If healthcare is run by the government, you will eventually have a board, like the one that exists now, that makes "recommendations" on what treatments will be used for what. The issue here is that the recommendation becomes the only treatment option. With costs being a consideration, what happens when you get a chronic disease that is expensive to treat? There is no recommended treatment, and the problem is solved, even if there is a valid treatment. Insurance companies already try this tactic now. It will get much worse, I predict, when everyone has to be insured.

      I disapprove of the bill because it does not fix tort problems, and has too many earmarks added, and WAY too many pages.

      I have a gut feeling that tells me that this is a bad idea. The fact that congress and Obama have tried every single trick including violating their own campaign promises about transparency just makes me feel that gut feeling is valid.

  37. Sure. by taskiss · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Will this bill do what the administration claims to do"?

    Yes it will. It claims to tax the households in the upper 5% much greater than it does today, it claims to increase insurance costs for a large percentage of folks, and it will re-distribute the wealth it collects into the medical industry to provide health care for the lowest percentage of folks who mostly don't have insurance because they would rather have multiple TV's, cars and luxury items rather than buy health insurance.

    --
    - real hackers don't have sigs -
    1. Re:Sure. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Will this bill do what the administration claims to do"?

      Yes it will. It claims to tax the households in the upper 5% much greater than it does today, it claims to increase insurance costs for a large percentage of folks, and it will re-distribute the wealth it collects into the medical industry to provide health care for the lowest percentage of folks who mostly don't have insurance because they would rather have multiple TV's, cars and luxury items rather than buy health insurance.

      You mean, like my father, who lost his job and was later diagnosed with Lou Gherig's disease? Fuck you, asshole.

    2. Re:Sure. by iamhigh · · Score: 1

      rather have multiple TV's, cars and luxury items rather than buy health insurance

      Yeah, I see soooo many people at the free clinic with a dozen TVs, multiple new cars and *prada bags. Even if true...
      32 inch TV = $500
      Car payment = $300
      New earrings/luxury item every month = $200
      And that is still less than what me and my employer pay each month for my family's healthcare (3 people)


      *The real ones.

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    3. Re:Sure. by taskiss · · Score: 1

      http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2004/01/Understanding-Poverty-in-America

      http://www.epionline.org/study_detail.cfm?sid=122

      --
      - real hackers don't have sigs -
    4. Re:Sure. by iamhigh · · Score: 2, Informative

      second link was 404.
      First link was full of fallacies, inconsistencies and straw-men.

      For instance it talked much about color tvs. Do you know how much a 19" color tv costs? I got one at goodwill for $10 last year. Point rebutted.

      It suggested that poor people shouldn't have cars... but a car is a necessity in most any city/county with under 1 million people. Public transportation isn't great here in the US... a car is about as close to a necessity as it gets (if you want them to work, which I suppose you do). Point rebutted.

      It talked much about the "crowding" of poor households, but have you ever drove around the ghetto? They have big houses... that nobody wants to live in. It did mention that the idea of "poor" is perhaps skewed and that is true. But poor doesn't mean you have to live in a shanty to qualify. Point rebutted.

      It also noted the comparison of poor crowding to Europe, but that's an obvious straw man. We could do the same by comparing the poor of rural AZ to the poor of Southern CA. In whole the US has more room than Europe... point rebutted.

      The poor are much better off than median just a few decades ago... but if we keep adding time we can easily get to the point that we define poor as worse than when Jesus lived (or better than slaves, etc.), and 99.9 percent of the country wouldn't be "poor". Times change, things improve and the level of comfort for the poor will go up just as it does for others. I have heard this argument before and can understand part of it... but many people struggle. The definition of struggle may be debated and change over time, but we are not to a point that we can stop helping the poor.

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    5. Re:Sure. by taskiss · · Score: 1

      Ah, you feel an anonymous post on an internet forum with no citation is capable of rebutting a research paper from one of the most influential research organizations in the US.

      Oh SNAP! You got me!

      --
      - real hackers don't have sigs -
    6. Re:Sure. by iamhigh · · Score: 2, Insightful
      1. You should learn to think for yourself... instead of blindly following others.
      2. Nothing I said requires citation... go take a drive in the ghetto this weekend, stop by a goodwill and review a globe. You will have all the info you need.
      3. From the Heritage website:

      Founded in 1973, The Heritage Foundation is a research and educational institution--a think tank--whose mission is to formulate and promote conservative public policies based on the principles of free enterprise, limited government, individual freedom, traditional American values, and a strong national defense.

      It's a conservative think tank with an agenda... not a research organization. You should learn the difference. Look up "objective" (I can think of two definitions for that word that would help you) in Websters for a start (hint: dictionary = objective without an objective).

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
  38. do you trust obama and the dems ? by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As i understand it, the bill has 3 major parts
    1) a whole bunch of programs to evaluate new ideas; basically grants to researchers of one sort or another
    2) regulations to rein in the bad behaviour of insurance companies
    3) provide insurance to 30 million people who now lack it
    lets leave 1 aside and look at 2 and 3
    Do you really think that this bill will stop the insurance companies ? For instance, there is a section (109 in HR3967) that bans lifetime benefit caps. and you can read it yourself, and it looks pretty straightforward. I don't know how the insurance companies will get around it, but htey have, literally, hundreds of millions of dollars to buy armies of lawyers and lobbyiest and politicians to overturn this over the next 5-10 years
    So my conclusion is tthat at best, (2) will have some moderate effect over a few years
    As to 3 - I think what will happen, based on the MA model(I live in MA) is that yes, there will be a lot of people who will get insurance, but we won't have the money to pay for it. So, to save money, we will make this new insurance cheap and not very good (eg, low payments to doctors and hospitals, so only really bad hospitals will take people on this plan), so what will wind up happening is that we will create a permanent underclasss of people who have "insurance' that doesn't really work - it is like poor people who get charged with a capital felony crime; we pretend to provide lawyers, but dont' do anything really effective
    If you look at the down side, it is Huge.
    Obama is instituting a new national policy - health care, a basic fundamental right ina civilized society, is providd by for profit companies, and the FED. Govt requires you to pay these for profit compnies its horrible
    Another way to look at this is Obama's track record, say with the wall street bail out, where he made sure bankers got their million dollar bonuses - with tax dollars that came from your pocket.
    how on earth could anyone trust this guy with a track record like that ??

    1. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by alta · · Score: 1

      Speaking of hospitals not accepting government insurance... Did you hear that walreens is no longer going to accept Medicaid? Apparently they know what to expect and this is what's to come...
      http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=walgreens+stops+medicaid

      --
      Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
    2. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Another way to look at this is Obama's track record, say with the wall street bail out, where he made sure bankers got their million dollar bonuses - with tax dollars that came from your pocket.

      You forgot the part where he did it before he was elected or sworn into office. (Bail out was Oct 2008, Obama became president late Jan 2009)

      how on earth could anyone trust this guy with a track record like that ??

      Well, time travel is a very important power to have, as long as it's used wisely. I suggested that he go back and prevent the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, but apparently he can't or doesn't want to. There's an obvious conspiracy here, I suggest you form several websites and newsletters. Leaflets would be a good start.

    3. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      Actually the Wallstreet bail out was signed into law by George W. Bush.

      But I do agree that this health care reform bill is shady. If we wanted real reform, it would be NOT FOR PROFIT insurance. It would be a single payer government program where we all pay into... and all benefit from without the middle man (insurance company) in the middle with their excessive profit and administrative costs.

      This bill is corporate welfare at its worst.

      I dont trust either party. Both simply represent the corporations. The American citizen has no representation.

      The health insurance industry spent 1.4 million dollars PER DAY on lobbying against reform. That is the kind of access corporations have. We the people do not have this access. There are two Americas.

      The odd thing is... that 1.4 million per day... comes from our insurance payments. ITS OUR MONEY... and Instead of it being used to care for the sick... its being used to maintain the disgusting practices of the insurance industry... which now includes, spending 1.4 million a day while trying to enslave Americans for profit based on their sickness and desperation.

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/05/AR2009070502770.html

    4. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      The Wall Street bailout (the TARP program) was passed by the Bush Administration. I don't understand why people who do not know the facts and who do not understand the issues continues to run their mouths off as though they know what they're talking about. I know that's mean, but the quality of the debate is in the shitter because of people yelling out "death panels" without any basis in fact for doing so.

      The current health care system will bankruptcy us. That is a fact. Escalating costs will eat our economy alive in a few decades unless steps are taken to drive down costs. You seem to think that's okay but responsible grownups want to prevent our economy from failure in the future. Don't get in their way with incorrect drivel.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    5. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama is instituting a new national policy - health care, a basic fundamental right ina civilized society, is providd by for profit companies, and the FED. Govt requires you to pay these for profit compnies
      its horrible

      Another way to look at this is Obama's track record, say with the wall street bail out, where he made sure bankers got their million dollar bonuses - with tax dollars that came from your pocket.

      how on earth could anyone trust this guy with a track record like that ??

      1. The dems would have done a single payer or public option if the gop didn't bitch and moan and cry "Armageddon" at the very mention of it
      2. The wall street bailout was the idea of the Bush administration. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Economic_Stabilization_Act_of_2008

    6. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, we should have kept in the oil barons who went to war with Iraq and gave the reconstruction contracts to their own companies. We can trust those guys!

    7. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As opposed to the current system, where the pressure of 'natural' selection on the 'underclass' who can't afford insurance keeps their numbers down.

      Nice try. A bad hospital is usually better than no hospital.

      Also, in all seriousness, think of all the insurance company functionaries this keeps out of the breadline. It's basically a privatized choice of payment processor for a national system, and means that instead of 'the gubbmint' unilaterally declaring which treatments are supported, the 'market' selects.

    8. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Dealing with medicaid (as in, billing them for services rendered to someone covered by it) is a goddamned pain in the ass. I've been involved with it on a small scale, and we were dialing into a BBS to submit billing reports right up until about 2003 or so. I know the people I was involved with only took Medicaid because in the area we were in it was that or cut most of your patients off.

      I'd hope Walgreens has a better interface for reimbursement but between dealing with them and dropping reimbursement amounts i can't say it surprises me.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    9. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looking at what the Declaration of Independence says we are endowed by our Creator with three inalienable Rights: Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness. None of these are services the government is supposed to provide; they are natural rights that governments should never be allowed to take away.

      That being said, healthcare can be reasonably determined to fit in the category "Life". This does not obligate the government to provide care, but gives it the obligation to not screw it up.

      Politicians should learn from doctors, and take the Hippocratic oath when taking office.

    10. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by iamhigh · · Score: 1

      low payments to doctors and hospitals, so only really bad hospitals will take people on this plan

      You know, maybe if we had an actual free market like you assholes like to pretend we do, that would already happen. Why isn't there an option for a poor person to go to a doctor for $10? Weren't there any doctors that made C's and D's? Like the guys that work the helpdesk now, those docs should be working for the poor for a bad salary.

      So please, let's find some way to actually bring some free-market fundamentals to healthcare - I guess if it takes government intrusion, so be it.

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    11. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama bailed out Wall Street? I don't think so. Congress (both parties) did it. And it was George W. Bush that was president when it happened.

    12. Re:do you trust obama and the dems ? by Chakra5 · · Score: 1

      Another way to look at this is Obama's track record, say with the wall street bail out, where he made sure bankers got their million dollar bonuses - with tax dollars that came from your pocket.

      Obama's purpose in bailing out wallstreet was focused on "making sure bankers got their million dollar bonuses??" ...Really?? As in, he saw that the bankers were not going to get their astonishingly crass bonus, and said "well, we just can't have THAT, now can we!"??

      --
      Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please.--Mark Twain
  39. so basically higher taxes by Average_Joe_Sixpack · · Score: 2, Interesting

    higher insurance premiums and longer wait times in the emergency room

  40. bad by Beer_Smurf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Read it for yourself. What I read is a wet dream for the insurance companies and penalizes anyone who is self-reliant.

    1. Re:bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read it for yourself.
      What I read is a wet dream for the insurance companies and penalizes anyone who is self-reliant.

      If by "self-reliant" you mean. "Willing to externalize your health care costs onto others" so that they have to pay for it when you get ill. I don't have a problem with a health insurance mandate. You may be young and healthy now ... but guess what? Unless you die quickly in a horrible car wreck you WILL get ill at some point and you WILL grow old. There will almost certainly be a time in your life when your medical expenses will overrun your ability to pay without insurance.

    2. Re:bad by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      There will almost certainly be a time in your life when your medical expenses will overrun your ability to pay without insurance.

      A self-reliant man will put a bullet through his skull when that happens. Hopefully, they'll still be able to pull the trigger. Oh, and they'll also provide this service to their dependents should they ever become ill enough to overrun the self-reliant man's ability to pay.

  41. Brown Shirts!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sign me up baby! I want one of those snazzy brown shirts!!

    1. Re:Brown Shirts!! by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1

      Sign me up baby! I want one of those snazzy brown shirts!!

      Would that be from UPS, or SS?

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
  42. What frivolous lawsuits? by gbutler69 · · Score: 0, Troll

    How the fuck do you know they're frivolous? Were you or yours harmed?

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
    1. Re:What frivolous lawsuits? by Bos20k · · Score: 1, Informative

      I don't think anybody said they are ALL frivolous. Some certainly are. I don't think anyone including yourself would argue that doctors should have to pay the outrageously high malpractice insurance rates that they do now. Those high rates most certainly can not be caused by only (or even mostly) valid lawsuits.

    2. Re:What frivolous lawsuits? by Entrope · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The major lawsuit-related driver of medical costs is not frivolous suits. It is jackpot verdicts, where someone with no lasting harm or even short-term disability can be awarded tens or hundreds of millions of dollars in punitive and other special damages. Because the number is big, jurors think that this sends the right message, and because a faceless insurance company will pay most or all of it, they're not afraid of the costs it will incur for the doctor. That's why tort reform usually tries to impose caps on damages, and that in turn is why courts usually throw the laws out (because the laws are seen as a legislative infringement on the judicial function).

    3. Re:What frivolous lawsuits? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      In many cases they are frivolous.

      The typical lawsuit against a healthcare provider is not suing over any obvious error, it's about suing over an outcome, and claiming healthcare provider should have done some thing in addition to or other than what they did (even if that thing is not common, or standard process).

      For example "They should have tested for extremely rare disease PQRS". They didn't, the patient was diagnosed with something less severe, and they died, now their family sues.

      So... they get these huge legal expenses. But more importantly... now suddenly they will have to start testing all people for PQRS, even though it's a genetic disease that effects 1 out of 10 million. Every single person will have to be tested, to avoid future lawsuits. So the lawsuit itself increases costs, but so do lawsuit-created modifications to medical practice: providers now have to waste money and compel tests and practices that the average person would not want to pay for, just to avoid the possibility of lawsuits.

      A lot of expenses have to be imposed in 'practice modifications', and paperwork.

      Your typical example is also people suing over something that went poorly for them, even though normal medical procedures were followed.

      For example, patient died of X or suffered Y, when they were being treated for Z.

      Even if X was not a reasonably avoidable outcome, or X/Y would not be prevented by generally accepted medical practice, there is a chance that a lawsuit will still be generated.

      People sue when bad things happen to them. Of course all bad things are always someone else's fault. And the medical provider must be in full control at all times of everything that happens right?

      If you leave with condition Y, or (for one reason or another) they can't or fail to cure it, it must be their fault. If they induce condition Y, but it's not any error on their part, or problem with their facilities, then their practitioners really must still be liable, right?

      Even though they disobeyed your medical provider's direct instructions, the provider must be to blame, because they supposedly have the cash.

    4. Re:What frivolous lawsuits? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > The typical lawsuit against a healthcare provider is not suing over any obvious error

      You need to stop swimming in the cool-aid and stop getting your knowledge of the courts from the Brady Bunch.

      Most medical malpractice suits are infact for medical errors and they don't even represent all of them. Lots of stupid sh*t goes on in hospitals and with doctors that treat medicine like a get rich quick scam. If you are counting on the media to clue you in, then you're probably going to remain ignorant. They want to create headlines and shocking stories. They tend to leave out key details or just get the technical aspects horribly wrong.

      This "horribly innacurate yellow journalism" isn't even limited to the torts issue. They do this with everything. That's part of why corporate news is bleeding money.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    5. Re:What frivolous lawsuits? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Most medical malpractice suits are infact for medical errors and they don't even represent all of them.

      Who said anything about malpractice suits?

      You are obviously misinformed. I'm going to stop here, since you made it abundantly obvious that you have no fucking clue.

    6. Re:What frivolous lawsuits? by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      "Many of the current tort reform initiatives, such as caps on noneconomic damages, are motivated by a perception that ‘jackpot’ awards in frivolous suits are draining the system....But nearly 80% of the administrative costs of the malpractice system are tied to resolving claims that have merit."

        - Michelle Mello, Associate Professor of Health Policy and Law at the Harvard School of Public Health

  43. The Pointy Haired Boss Knows Best, People by yup2000 · · Score: 1

    I do software.... all software has bugs. Bills are a lot like software that is interpreted by people. I'm a little bit skeptical of something this large being thrown into production all at once with almost no testing to replace an aging program that has worked (albeit with flaws) for decades. This has all the feel of a Dilbert comic, but with a completely new level of pointy haired bossedness (Ph. B.)... we tried this once where I work on a $20millon project, and it ended up costing over $75M to fix!

    1. Re:The Pointy Haired Boss Knows Best, People by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Bugs? Try trojans...

  44. Decide for yourself by dgreer · · Score: 1

    Taco,

    You're old enough to answer this one for yourself. Look back in your lifetime, as ANY government run project EVER come in on budget or accomplished what it said it would?

    It's not in the best interests of the bureaucrats or politicians to resolve problems, it's in their best interest to appear to WORK on problems. If the WORK on problems, then more funding and more power can be gotten by saying, "Well, we just don't have enough to get the job done."

    I think Fox does exaggerate things a bit, but if you took Fox on one side of the scale, and NBC on the other, what's in the middle is still pretty damned bad.

    The simple truth is, we cannot afford this and it's never a good thing to give more power to the government. That has historically always led to problems, and with 15-20% of our economy involved here, the scale of the problem could become disastrous.

    --
    "I don't think software should necessarily be free ... but if you pay for it, it should work!" - me
    1. Re:Decide for yourself by EQ · · Score: 1

      Damn. Well said, although you ight want to modify that to any "social welfare" project (Apollo worked out OK). Where are my mod points when I need them?

      --
      Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo! http://goo.gl/J9bkO
    2. Re:Decide for yourself by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      has ANY government run project EVER come in on budget or accomplished what it said it would?

      There are plenty. They usually don't make headlines, though, because they are not flamebaiting enough ... er ... I meant to say, they do not promote engaging discourse for the readers to enjoy.

  45. Random health care thoughts by itlurksbeneath · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It amazes me that with the high percentage of negative public opinion on the health care bill that congress is still considering it. This is supposed to be government by the will of the people, right? To me, the will of the people is not being executed here.

    Also, this is apparent in the back door manner in which they are trying to pass the bill by some trick of house/senate rules. This isn't some bill to appropriate a few million dollars for federal park support but a bill involving a trillion dollars of outlay. Given the current administration's massive spending and addition to the national debt with little to show for it, does anybody have any real confidence that this will work?

    Some comments on health care industries making money hand over fist. Everybody seems to be in an outrage with doctors making hundreds of thousands of dollars per year, but nobody bats an eye when some sports star signs a multi-million dollar contract. If you were going to the hospital for open heart surgery, would you want the lowest paid doctor that has no incentive for good performance cutting you open? I'd want the super-star doctor that drives the Porche. If he's good enough to earn that much money, he's got to be worth his salt.

    If they were really serious about health care reform, why didn't they start with the biggest money issue in health care: tort reform. Why? Because Congress is made up with a bunch of lawyers that don't want to see their industry lose out on billions of dollars per year in fees brought about by the misery of other people. People are incensed about million dollar bonuses at financial firms, but nobody shines the light on lawyers that, for the amount of work put in, end up making thousands of dollars per hour in a settlement or ruling. Consider, also, that even though that doctor is making a quarter of a million dollars per year, he's paying 25 or 30 percent of that in malpractice insurance to protect himself from every Tom, Dick and Harry that decides to sue because they didn't follow instructions and ripped their stitches out.

    Some lawyers are a blight on society, but unfortunately, their buddies are crawling all over Washington as lobbyists or in Congress/DoJ/White House/etc. The more I think about it, the more I agree with what Get Out of Our House is doing.

    --
    Have you ever considered piracy? You'd make a wonderful Dread Pirate Roberts.
    1. Re:Random health care thoughts by virg_mattes · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It amazes me that with the high percentage of negative public opinion on the health care bill that congress is still considering it. This is supposed to be government by the will of the people, right? To me, the will of the people is not being executed here.

      Right wingers say that there's almost no support for it, and left wingers say that it's pretty popular. You want to bet what the real truth is? It's in the fact that it's on the knife edge right now.

      Also, this is apparent in the back door manner in which they are trying to pass the bill by some trick of house/senate rules. This isn't some bill to appropriate a few million dollars for federal park support but a bill involving a trillion dollars of outlay. Given the current administration's massive spending and addition to the national debt with little to show for it, does anybody have any real confidence that this will work?

      Given that no administration in the last thirty years has come close to a balanced budget (except Clinton, but his administration was awash in money due to the economy running up) I don't see "massive spending" as very damning. What did the last adminstration have to show for all the money they pissed away? Or the administration before that? I agree that this piece of the reform puzzle has some significant flaws but it's a start that allows actual progress in the next decade.

      Some comments on health care industries making money hand over fist. Everybody seems to be in an outrage with doctors making hundreds of thousands of dollars per year, but nobody bats an eye when some sports star signs a multi-million dollar contract.

      What a dumb example. If you're poor and can't afford tickets to the big game, will you die from it? People don't care as much because sports stars aren't a requirement for living, whereas doctors are.

      If you were going to the hospital for open heart surgery, would you want the lowest paid doctor that has no incentive for good performance cutting you open? I'd want the super-star doctor that drives the Porche. If he's good enough to earn that much money, he's got to be worth his salt.

      AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHA.....(gasp)....AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. You must be new in town. Average salaries for primary care physicians (not the "superstars", but the rank and file) is $147,000, and that's the average for the lowest paid segment of doctors. The average salary for everyone else in the country is around $40,000, for comparison. If you think that astronomical salaries are any guarantee of competence, then you'd best hope that you don't ever need surgery.

      If they were really serious about health care reform, why didn't they start with the biggest money issue in health care: tort reform.

      Because tort reform is only a small part of a very ugly picture, no matter what Beck and Hannity have to say about it. Patent law reform would take a big bite out of health care costs too, but you never hear that mentioned on talk radio.

      People are incensed about million dollar bonuses at financial firms, but nobody shines the light on lawyers that, for the amount of work put in, end up making thousands of dollars per hour in a settlement or ruling.

      The very fact that this bill is wending its way through Congress is testament to the fact that plenty of people are quite incensed about the spending in health care.

      Consider, also, that even though that doctor is making a quarter of a million dollars per year, he's paying 25 or 30 percent of that in malpractice insurance to protect himself from every Tom, Dick and Harry that decides to sue because they didn't follow instructions and ripped their stitches out.

      Most people qould file the concept of earning "only" $175,000 in a year rather than $250,000 in the "cry me a river" slot. It's easy to point to tort reform with friv

    2. Re:Random health care thoughts by Good+Grief · · Score: 1

      Some comments on health care industries making money hand over fist. Everybody seems to be in an outrage with doctors making hundreds of thousands of dollars per year, but nobody bats an eye when some sports star signs a multi-million dollar contract. If you were going to the hospital for open heart surgery, would you want the lowest paid doctor that has no incentive for good performance cutting you open? I'd want the super-star doctor that drives the Porche. If he's good enough to earn that much money, he's got to be worth his salt.

      We're not concerned that doctors are raking in money, we're concerned that health insurers are raking in money while charging most of us a lot of money for very limited access to actual health care.

    3. Re:Random health care thoughts by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      If you were going to the hospital for open heart surgery, would you want the lowest paid doctor that has no incentive for good performance cutting you open?

      Are you really saying that most surgeons don't take their job seriously? That their main motivation for keeping you alive and doing a good job isn't their sense of ethics and pride as a doctor, but their income?

      I'd want the super-star doctor that drives the Porche.

      There is a Porsche in the staff parking lot of our public hospital. Some governments actually pay their doctors quite well.

    4. Re:Random health care thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were going to the hospital for open heart surgery, would you want the lowest paid doctor that has no incentive for good performance cutting you open? I'd want the super-star doctor that drives the Porche. If he's good enough to earn that much money, he's got to be worth his salt.

      You clearly have not been engaged with the US Healthcare system in any deep way recently.
      I have been. NO, please for the love of GOD, avoid Porche driving doctors at all costs.

      99% of the time these guys aren't rolling in Porches because they are "worth their salt", they are doing so because they have found shady ways to bilk the system for all it's worth. They aren't doctors, they're entrepreneurs, and to them, you are not a patient, you are a head of cattle.

    5. Re:Random health care thoughts by itlurksbeneath · · Score: 1

      Looking at United Health Care, their net profit margin is 4.33% for the fourth quarter of 09. I'd hardly call that raking in the money.

      If you do the math, that's only about 150 dollars profit per person enrolled in UHC.

      --
      Have you ever considered piracy? You'd make a wonderful Dread Pirate Roberts.
    6. Re:Random health care thoughts by itlurksbeneath · · Score: 1

      Are you really saying that most surgeons don't take their job seriously? That their main motivation for keeping you alive and doing a good job isn't their sense of ethics and pride as a doctor, but their income?

      Given the fact that fewer and fewer people are going into primary care every year because of the lack of profitability, I'm saying that's a factor, yes, but not the only reason. There are plenty of doctors that are motivated by ethics and pride, just as there are many lawyers similarly motivated. I doubt that anybody would argue that's true of the entire population of either profession.

      --
      Have you ever considered piracy? You'd make a wonderful Dread Pirate Roberts.
    7. Re:Random health care thoughts by zildgulf · · Score: 1

      If you right about tort reform then health care in Texas should be way cheaper than it is in our states. So why are Texans health insurance premiums increasing?

      The answer is that tort reform was not the end all be all solution to the health crisis. It turns out to be a small, but important part of the solution.

      The thing that doesn't work to save costs is our fee for service system. It discourages cheap preventive treatment and encourages very expensive that tend to be less effective in the long run.

    8. Re:Random health care thoughts by radtea · · Score: 1

      Everybody seems to be in an outrage with doctors making hundreds of thousands of dollars per year, but nobody bats an eye when some sports star signs a multi-million dollar contract.

      Since you apparently think this is an argument, I'll point out that it isn't. Neither is your well-known falsehood about tort reform.

      You are merely pointing out here that some people are hypocrites, although you falsely claim that "nobody" bats and eye about sports salaries when in fact there is frequent and lively public discussion of the obscene numbers some athletes make.

      Even granted that falsehood, you are still not making an argument, because it is equally plausible that everyone should be as upset about sports salaries as they are about doctor's pay. You have provided no reasons for choosing one alternative over the other. When you do, you will have an argument. Until then, do please keep trying.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    9. Re:Random health care thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Also, this is apparent in the back door manner in which they are trying to pass the bill by some trick of house/senate rules."

      It is one thing to disagree with the proposals. However, to hide action/inaction behind comments like this is ridiculous. After all, the g-No-p has attempted, or threatened, to filibuster almost EVERY piece of democratic legislature, which is ALSO a trick of house/senate rules.

      Get over it, that's part of the game.

    10. Re:Random health care thoughts by itlurksbeneath · · Score: 1

      Wrong. Filibuster is not a trick of senate rules, but a recognized practice since the 1800's. And reconciliation was designed ONLY for budget bills. And this crap about passing a new rule that says if bill A passes it implies that bill B passes to is a bunch of horse shit.

      Bottom line is they've (dems) broke the rules a lot. Consider the Senate rule that if a senator requests the reading of a bill, that reading must proceed and may not be interrupted for ANY reason. When someone called for a full reading of the health care monstrosity, they sidestepped it, clearly breaking Senate rules.

      And to all the other liberals on this whole thread, y'all can kiss my ass. I don't like this bill because it raises taxes, bribes states for the representatives and senators, requires people and business to purchase something or be penalized monetarily, and basically they way they are pushing this is by saying "well, you've got to approve this or it'll weaken the power of the president for the rest of his term". Fuck him. And fuck them for using such sideways logic to approve something. The reasoning should be "do you think this is a good bill or not" not "oh, if we don't pass this pile of shit it'll make the president look bad".

      Mod me into oblivion. I don't give a fuck.

      --
      Have you ever considered piracy? You'd make a wonderful Dread Pirate Roberts.
    11. Re:Random health care thoughts by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      *Pfft* On of my fellow engineers at work has a Boxter. Another bought a used (Oops! I mean pre-owned!) 911 Targ- Turb- um, something or other. I don't know if it pushed back their retirements at all, but Porsches are just not that big of a deal, anymore.

      Now if the doctor has a Bugatti Veyron or Ascari A10, you might want to worry. ;-)

      If he drives up in a Morgan Aero, run away as fast as you can.

    12. Re:Random health care thoughts by bigNuns · · Score: 1

      Tort reform isn't the problem, there are several comments above about it... Texas tried that, has it made their health insurance any cheaper? No. Has it helped Joe Consumer pay his medical expenses? No.

      Having personally gone to doctors for open heart surgery I can actually answer your question. I went to Canada and had surgery there the second time because the heart surgeon in Toronto was better than the heart surgeon in Buffalo. So, yes, I'd be okay with going to a cheaper doctor as long as they were good at what they do. How many times have sports teams payed WAY too much for a star player only to see they got a mediocre player instead? That happens more often than not, no? Sure, some star players are totally worth the money they are paid (to their teams) but many are not. Basically, the amount of money someone makes in no way determines how good at their job they actually are, it just shows that they are interested in making lots of money. Would you rather have a doctor who wants to make a lot of money or one who gets excited about his job? Is windows better than linux because it costs more? Certainly since they are able to charge more money for it it must be better right?

      I don't think people are mad that doctors are making lots of money, I think people are mad that insurance companies are making lots of money. Why are we paying a private companies to make money off our health problems? That to me seems stupid.

      Still, this bill sucks and does very little to actually improve the system here. In fact, I think it is probably going to make things worse for a lot of people. The upper class will continue to get good coverage as they have always gotten and the middle class will have to feel the burden of helping out the poor. I do think we should help out the poor, but I think the insurance companies should not be private companies. I don't think our tax money should be fed to the private insurance companies to help the poor afford their overpriced service. I think they should be forced to provide service at a reasonable price instead but this bill does little to nothing to make that actually happen.

      --
      .................... ...mmm farm fresh...
    13. Re:Random health care thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bottom line is they've (dems) broke the rules a lot. Consider the Senate rule that if a senator requests the reading of a bill, that reading must proceed and may not be interrupted for ANY reason. When someone called for a full reading of the health care monstrosity, they sidestepped it, clearly breaking Senate rules.

      Because clearly the republicans have never used reconciliation before like for the 2001 Bush Tax Cuts [HR 1836, 3/26/01] or maybe the 2003 Bush Tax Cuts [HR 2, 3/23/03]. Nope, the republicans hate reconciliation and never would have used it to pass the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 [HR 4297, 5/11/06] or the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 [H. Con Res. 95, 12/21/05].

      By the way here's a short list of both republican and democratic use of reconciliation:

      Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1980
      Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981
      Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982
      Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1982
      Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1983
      Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985
      Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986
      Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987
      Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989
      Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990
      Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993
      Balanced Budget Act of 1995 (vetoed)
      Personal Responsibility and Budget Reconciliation Act of 1996
      Balanced Budget Act of 1997
      Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997
      Taxpayer Refund and Relief Act of 1999 (vetoed)
      Marriage Tax Relief Act of 2000 (vetoed)
      Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001
      Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003
      The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
      Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005

      So uhm...tell me again how the Dems are breaking Senate rules?

    14. Re:Random health care thoughts by tgrigsby · · Score: 1

      You sure about that? I tried to get to www.goooh.org, and there was a cyber-squatter there.

      --
      *** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
    15. Re:Random health care thoughts by randyleepublic · · Score: 0

      "Random" is accurate. "Thoughts" less so. People are not in an outrage over "doctors" pay - they are in an outrage over the parasitic insurance companies' profiteering. Tort reform is not the "biggest money issue". You trumpet "negative public opinion", but then when you express *your* opinions they don't make any sense.

      What's even sadder than the fact that you are obviously of above average intelligence and education, yet still a dolt, is that this bill does fuck all to actually improve the quality of life in the US for "the people." The reason it does fuck all to improve the quality of life is precisely because of hordes of nearly mindless parrots such as yourself. You completely fail to perform any sort of rational analysis of the real issues of health care. You and your ilk are the blight, not "lawyers".

      I will give you this much: the one and only change I would make to the legal profession is simply this: no one who ever takes and passes a bar exam, should ever be permitted to serve as an elected member of any legislative body.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    16. Re:Random health care thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod me into oblivion. I don't give a fuck.

      Stop being such a martyr. You were not modded at all, up or down, because you are neither a Troll nor Insightful. Rather, all your arguments were debunked one by one by better-informed people.

    17. Re:Random health care thoughts by itlurksbeneath · · Score: 1

      Sorry.. it's .com instead of .org. I should test my URL's before submitting.
      GOOOH

      --
      Have you ever considered piracy? You'd make a wonderful Dread Pirate Roberts.
  46. We need reform but not this way by YodaToad · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I've gotten sick of debating this bill and the process behind it so I'll let this comic I made last night do the talking for me:

    http://dl.omgninja.net/images/comics/pelosi-healthcare.png

  47. Who Cares?! by organgtool · · Score: 1

    This bill has been neutered so badly that I don't think it matters whether it passes or not. If it does pass, the Democrats will claim victory despite the fact that most of the important stuff had to be cut out of the bill just to get it to pass. The Republicans will claim it's the end of the world despite the fact that the bill does very little to actually reform health care. At the end of the day, we're basically right where we started.

    And on that note, trying to improve anything in this country is a waste of effort. Americans seem happy with what we have and there is no motivation to make things better despite the fact that there's plenty of room for improvement. It's gotten to the point where anyone who tries to make things better here is either an idiot or completely masochistic. But on the bright side, at least it's Friday!

    1. Re:Who Cares?! by bigNuns · · Score: 1

      "Americans seem happy with what we have and there is no motivation to make things better despite the fact that there's plenty of room for improvement."

      Ahhh, the fluoride in the water is totally working.

      --
      .................... ...mmm farm fresh...
  48. Yawn by rpjs · · Score: 1

    Let us know if you finally do decide to join the civilised world America.

    1. Re:Yawn by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      Let us know when you have a major illness, need care that is being rationed and need to come to the US. Maybe we can grab a bite to eat after you get your care, which will be about an hour after you get here.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    2. Re:Yawn by rpjs · · Score: 1

      Except with my pre-existing condition I wouldn't be accepted by any health insurer in the US... What was that about rationing again?

    3. Re:Yawn by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      You didn't even see your train of thought and you exposed yourself with that comment. Your first reaction was if you came to the US to get insurance, so someone else can pay for your medical needs. All I meant was that you could get the care you need, when you need it.

      What is it with people thinking they are entitled everything. If I had to choose between saving my life resulting in a $50,000 medical bill, or death I would welcome the medical bill.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    4. Re:Yawn by rpjs · · Score: 1

      No, I was expecting someone else to pay for it, but then I'm not intending to come to the US for any healthcare anytime soon, as all the international stats show that my country is rather better at healthcare than the US is, even though we spend far less than you do.

      And guess what, here in Socialist UKistan, we have *private* healthcare too! Yes, if I have the money, I can be seen by a private doctor or treated in a private hospital instantly. I don't know why I'd want to, assuming I had the money, as the NHS is pretty damn good in an emergency and the waiting times for non-emergency treatment have been steadily falling over the last few years. And private healthcare here doesn't have a terribly good rep. There have been several horror stories of people who've gone in for private treatment, suffered severe complications and been sent to an NHS unit for them to be dealt with as the private hospital was unable to cope.

  49. Are you willing to pay for it? by zerosomething · · Score: 1

    It's a simple question to see where you stand on the issue. 1. Are you willing to pay more than you are now so other people can have health insurance? 2. If you aren't already paying for insurance are you willing to start paying about 10% of your current income to have it? (up to a max of about $15,000 or so).

    --
    It all starts at 0
  50. Let the Disease Popularity Contests Begin! by happy_place · · Score: 1

    Now that there's gov-run healthcare, we can start to have beauty contests for which disease/disorder/medical convenience is the most popular and therefore the most subsidized. Viagara is probably already covered by the drug-benefit to seniors, but there will be other popular diseases too. We can all get our popular flu-shots, too. And there's never been a better time to get in a free abortion and weightloss surgery! Don't forget to give the government a DNA sample while you're at it, and get your own free organ-donating clone with your next visit to the government mandated blood-donation center. Unfortunately those of you with unpopular diseases will just have to hope they blow over... otherwise you're really not contributing to the genepool of quality disorders and diseases. You can wait in a subcommittee waiting-room until you're blue in the face... though I hear blue-face may be the new trend... in which case you're covered!

    --
    http://www.beanleafpress.com
  51. "Entitlement Generation" by cybrthng · · Score: 1, Insightful

    From my perspective, you have it all wrong. Taking care of fellow humans is simply respecting humanity and being willing to love and cherish this one life we have to live.

    The only "Entitlement Generation" i know are people of faith who entitle themselves with the only path to salvation. They entitle themselves with absolute truth. They entitle themselves with morality.

    And yet, people think helping out our fellow brothers is "Entitlement"

    1. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Entrope · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You clearly don't know what "entitlement" means, so don't waste your breath ranting about it.

    2. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Forcing your neighbor to take care of you against his will is a form of slavery. You don't have to force someone to help out his fellow brothers, but to expect it from everyone is entitlement.

    3. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Dr+Damage+I · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yeah, stealing my money and giving it it indolent layabouts unwilling to put in the hours of labor that I do and take the risks that I take makes you a good and caring person. At least in the eyes of the people you give my money to. Why not just donate to a fucking charity if you're so goddamn superior?

      --
      "Cursed is he who rises early in the morning..." Isiah 5:11
    4. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Taking care of fellow humans is simply respecting humanity and being willing to love and cherish this one life we have to live...And yet, people think helping out our fellow brothers is "Entitlement"

      When you give your own money to the downtrodden, you're "taking care of fellow humans". When you use the force of government to reach into someone else's pocket and give the money to whoever wins the lobbying game in Washington you're just a hypocrite.

    5. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With that line of reasoning, you can justify government taking over anything. Doesn't taking care of your fellow human mean feeding, clothing, providing shelter, employment, etc... Government from cradle to grave. No thanks, you take care of yourself and I'll take care of my self. Just provide a level playing field.

      Healthcare is just one aspect of this, but so were Social Security, welfare, medicare, medicaide, etc... All of them are struggling to balance the books and all of them either operate at a deficit or will soon be operating at a deficit. Taking care of your fellow man is a noble thing to do, but it is a personal choice to do it or not and how you want to go about doing it. That's the nature of freedom. You get to make those choices and the government doesn't make them for you. Sounds harsh, but freedom has never been easy.

    6. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Taking care of fellow humans" should be a charitable function based on personal beliefs and ability to give. If your personal beliefs guide you to taking care of crack babies, your charitable contributions should be able to be directed to that end. If you then as the contributor don't believe the charity is living up to your expectations, you can simply withhold your support in favor of one that does. As your priorities change, so can your commitment to the charity.

      None of these options exist in an entity run by government. 'Charity' should not be the responsibility of a government who can, via taxes enforced at the end of a gun, take as much as they want from you and give it to whomever they 'deem worthy of it.'

      The responsibilities of the federal government are clearly spelled out in our constitution. The mandates in this bill clearly violate the 10th amendment.

    7. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are free to help out your fellows. That's great. It's called charity. However, it ceases to be charity when it's done under threat of force and loses all altruism associated with it.

    8. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Taxes are not the same as slavery. Don't be so naive. You are free to vote for someone else or leave the country if you don't like how you're being taxed. A slave can't do that.

    9. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      How is a sick person supposed to work? Do you really not care about other people? What has being superior got to do with anything? Caring for other people is just a basic part of being human. I just don't understand getting so hateful over public healthcare. If we had to rely on charities, there wouldn't be enough money because people like you wouldn't give anything.

    10. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by tbannist · · Score: 1

      From wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entitlement):

      "It also refers, in a more casual sense, to someone's belief that one is deserving of some particular reward or benefit."

      Actually that's quite reasonably apt as a description of the Christian Right who believe they are entitled to salvation (heaven), and forcing their view of morality on everyone else.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    11. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by HaZardman27 · · Score: 1

      I see where you're coming from, however we'll also be forced to take care of those unwilling to take care of themselves. People may think I'm an asshole for thinking this way, but in my opinion if you're not willing to take care of yourself, you don't belong in the gene pool.

      --
      Apparently wizard is not a legitimate career path, so I chose programmer instead.
    12. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      That hate relies on the image of the "indolent layabout"

      Which is largely a myth but good luck convincing people of it.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    13. Re:"Entitlement Generation" by Dr+Damage+I · · Score: 1

      If we had to rely on charities, there wouldn't be enough money because people like you wouldn't give anything

      Looks like not only do you understand getting hateful over health care, you're feeling pretty superior too.

      Sometimes when a person is in need, it is due to ill fortune. Other times, it is due to irresponsible and/or profligate behavior. If a person is in need due to ill fortune, I am happy to assist, because I care about other people. If a person is in need due to irresponsible or profligate behavior, I am unwilling to assist them because I care about other people. I care about the people harmed by their irresponsible behavior, I care about the people who will have to do without so that those irresponsible people can be assisted. But mostly, because I care about irresponsible people who will be lured into making disastrous life choices by the unquestioning availability of assistance without any accountability for how they found themselves in difficulty in the first place.

      Do you really not care about the people who people who will be harmed by your uncharitable (being charitable with other peoples money is not actually charitable) largess? Do you really not care about the people who have trouble making ends meet because you're so busy being charitable with the proceeds of their labor?

      --
      "Cursed is he who rises early in the morning..." Isiah 5:11
  52. Here's what I say to my worthy opponents: by wiredog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Don't give me that, you snotty-faced heap of parrot droppings! Shut your festering gob, you tit! Your type really makes me puke, you vacuous, coffee-nosed, malodorous, pervert!!!

  53. Question for the non-US based Slashdotters by Khan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Obviously here in the states, this bill is a huge deal for us especially considering the price tag attached. I noticed several non-US based posters chiming in about how they don't care about this topic, etc. etc. Understandable since this is a widely read site across the globe. But instead of just posting a negative comment about our health care situation, how about helping us understand how health care works in your country. Pros...cons...whatever. Not being fully versed in what other countries offer and certainly not believing what the major news outlets spew, I figured this would be the best place to ask. Thanks.

    --

    "Klaatu, verada, necktie!" -Ash

    1. Re:Question for the non-US based Slashdotters by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      But instead of just posting a negative comment about our health care situation, how about helping us understand how health care works in your country.

      Yes, but see, then you'll get a lot of comments from people in nations with universal healthcare who basically say: "It's not perfect, but it ain't bad, and I won't go bankrupt if I get a catastrophic illness."

      Then the people who like the idea of healthcare reform will say "See, I told you! Government-run healthcare is good! It can so work!". And the people who are afraid of it will say "Yeah, but the US system is the best in the world! And yours sucks because of <insert few extreme examples>. Oh, and you're a communist, anyway, and you just don't understand how awesome American and Freedom are!"

      In short, it's basically pointless. The American government is, in my mind, just a microcosm of the beliefs of the American people, who are so deeply polarized on this issue that there will *never* be any agreement, as there's simply no middle ground that can be had, and certainly no swaying people who, quite honestly, probably made up their minds before Obama was ever elected.

    2. Re:Question for the non-US based Slashdotters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, let's begin with Spain, my country.

      In Spain we have a public healthcare system, a public unenmployment insurance and a public pension plan system. We have special protection for women at pregnant periods and post-birth periods.

      The biggest "money-eaters" are the pension system and the healthcare system - called "Seguridad Social" in Spain -; you must pay a part of your earnings before taxes, usually a 4.5%,and your employer pays a tax percentage of 28% minus your percentage - in this example, 23.5 % - of your earnings before taxes.

      Employers want to reduce their payments and "free firing" because they like USA job market, but they don't care about the consequences. Remember that "Seguridad Social" covers healthcare, pension system and unemployment insurance; it may appear a big amount of money - too much in your employer's view ;-) -, but if you think about the benefits - less job hours wasted because illness, no personal bankruptcy because healthcare,... - the money is well spent. Your "Healthcare Bill" seems ridiculous if you compare it with our system.

      Drugs in Spain have much - much much - lower prizes than USA drugs - the SAME drugs -, with big discounts if a medic prescribes you the drug; some generic drugs, like Aspirin, aren't covered by this discounts. The same drugs, boys and girls.

      I think that USA people was perverted by the "neoliberal" wave from Nixon to our times, an they think that "tax" is "theft". meanwhile, big corporations bosses "sneak" their earnings in tax paradises, and at the same time they scream words of horror about the REALLY "poor healthcare" bill: tax black hole, hte end of healthcare industry, etc.

      How sad...

  54. A first step by teneighty · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know we're getting trolled, but it's too important an issue to ignore.

    In an ideal world, we would tackle the problem properly by decoupling health insurance from employment. Linking health care to employment was the worst mistake ever made in health care in America. There are probably too many powerful lobbyist in Washington to hope for that to ever change. So we're left with imperfect alternatives. Such is politics, such is life.

    And yes, this is an imperfect bill, but it's a first step towards badly needed reform. Is going to hurt? There's no way health care reform can NOT hurt some interests, while helping others. That's why leadership - political or otherwise - is supposed to take courage. Too bad we don't get that from our leaders.

    1. Re:A first step by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      In an ideal world, we would tackle the problem properly by decoupling health insurance from employment.

      I heard an NPR report about this about 2 months ago.

      Gist: That was exactly how it worked before World War II. However, wage freezes went into effect in America as a result of the war. To attract workers (worker shortages), employers introduced the only incentives they could with a wage freeze in effect: fringe benefits! And thus the health insurance - workplace relationship was born.

      Please correct me if I'm off base, but I think that was the gist of it.

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
  55. Hard to have a debate by CaroKann · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The healthcare bill is so huge and complex that it is difficult to have any intelligent debate over it. People mostly make simple, sound bite sized remarks. Very few people seem to understand the bill. I don't understand it myself.

    That said, the conventional wisdom states that the bill will be extremely expensive, on the scale of Social Security or Medicare. While I agree the current health care system leaves a lot to be desired, I think the timing is terrible. Our financial house is not in order and the economy seems to be in the middle of a long term case of fatigue. In short, I don't think we can afford it. I'm worried it could be the straw, or bale, that breaks the camel's back.

    1. Re:Hard to have a debate by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 1

      While the conventional propaga^H^H^Hwisdom calls this bill hugely expensive, the CBO is stating that the bill will be mostly deficit neutral after ten years.

      --
      Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
    2. Re:Hard to have a debate by kaiser423 · · Score: 1

      Look at the numbers. We already can't afford our current system. It making our companies uncompetitive and it's driving the federal government into massive debt all the while our population becomes less healthy, and therefore, less competitive.

      I don't necessarily like this plan, but to do nothing at this point is pull a Nero and fiddle while the country burns.

    3. Re:Hard to have a debate by guyfawkes-11-5 · · Score: 1

      The healthcare bill is so huge and complex that it is difficult to have any intelligent debate over it. People mostly make simple, sound bite sized remarks. Very few people seem to understand the bill. I don't understand it myself. That said, the conventional wisdom states that the bill will be extremely expensive, on the scale of Social Security or Medicare. While I agree the current health care system leaves a lot to be desired, I think the timing is terrible. Our financial house is not in order and the economy seems to be in the middle of a long term case of fatigue. In short, I don't think we can afford it. I'm worried it could be the straw, or bale, that breaks the camel's back.

      I agree the timing is terrible, but for historical precedence universal health care in the UK was created immediately after WWII, a time that the UK was not in any condition to create a new program.

    4. Re:Hard to have a debate by bdenton42 · · Score: 1

      Define "deficit".

      Social Security is deficit neutral. But this year we're supposedly going to find out what happens when this "deficit neutral" program with $2.5 trillion saved in a "trust fund" decides to actually draw down some of it.

      Most people don't understand the the way that Congress treats the Social Security Trust Fund, and they have been doing this for years.

      Do you really think Health Care Reform going to be any different of a shell game?

    5. Re:Hard to have a debate by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      It's not that hard - don't be intimidated by the size of the bill. It's what's left out that's important - there is no public option to force costs down, there is no end to the anti-trust exemption enjoyed by insurers, to bring costs down.

      While I agree the current health care system leaves a lot to be desired, I think the timing is terrible. Our financial house is not in order and the economy seems to be in the middle of a long term case of fatigue. In short, I don't think we can afford it.

      We can't afford not to do it. If you think this is expensive, how about the fact that insurance companies have been upping their rates by double digits every year - 39% in California this year alone?

  56. As long as you're even about it. by copponex · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    If we can't afford to give my neighbor health care, we can't afford a trillion dollars a year for warfare and imperialist adventures, or any other corporate welfare programs.

    When we gave Wall St hundreds of billions to fix their fuckups, they continued bonusing themselves tens of millions of dollars. I don't think access to basic medical care is in the same universe of entitlement of the wealthy.

    1. Re:As long as you're even about it. by sageres · · Score: 1

      Stop putting government noses into the business with regulations and bailouts, and then the system would not be so fucked up. And btw, in regards to wealthy: The upper 50% of the wage earners pay @97% of all tax collections, and the lower ones only @3%. The upper of the upper pay a disproportionate share of that too, the Top 1% of earners = 37% of taxes paid, the next bracket 2-5% accounts for another 20%. So about 57% paid by the top 5%. Especially as this is for Personal Income Tax only, and many of the more wealthy have much of the income taxed (some would say double taxed) by in the Corporate returns of those corporations they control/own. The top 1% of earners pay 21.20% of all taxes paid at an average rate of 24%, the top 2 - 5% of earners pay 14.55% of all taxes at an average of 18% (Top 5% pay @36% of all tax) The bottom 50% pay 3% of all tax collected at an average rate of 2.98%. How much in taxes do YOU pay?

    2. Re:As long as you're even about it. by copponex · · Score: 1

      The upper 50% of the wage earners pay @97% of all tax collections, and the lower ones only @3%

      Since that mirrors the distribution of wealth that would make sense. How about we ask the wealthy if they'd like to give up all of their assets in exchange for a lower effective federal tax rate? And instead of just sitting on their ass, investing in financial companies that exploit people and resources, they'd actually have to show up and do some real fucking work?

      Oh, suddenly there's no problem? That's what I thought.

      And by the way, go ahead an call me an anti-American commie. I'm in great company.

      At the first session of our legislature after the Declaration of Independence, we passed a law abolishing entails. And this was followed by one abolishing the privilege of Primogeniture, and dividing the lands of intestates equally among all their children, or other representatives. These laws, drawn by myself, laid the axe to the root of Pseudo-aristocracy. And had another which I prepared been adopted by the legislature, our work would have been complete.

      It was a Bill for the more general diffusion of learning. This proposed to divide every county into wards of 5 or 6 miles square, like your townships; to establish in each ward a free school for reading, writing and common arithmetic; to provide for the annual selection of the best subjects from these schools who might recieve at the public expence a higher degree of education at a district school; and from these district schools to select a certain number of the most promising subjects to be completed at an University, where all the useful sciences should be taught. Worth and genius would thus have been sought out from every condition of life, and completly prepared by education for defeating the competition of wealth and birth for public trusts.

      I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. Already they have raised up a monied aristocracy that has set the government at efiance. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people to whom it properly belongs.

      I hope that we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength, and bid defiance to the laws of our country

      -Thomas Jefferson

    3. Re:As long as you're even about it. by richieb · · Score: 1

      I hear that in Somalia they have no socialistic government programs and no restricting regulations on business. Why don't you move there?

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    4. Re:As long as you're even about it. by JTsyo · · Score: 1

      What's the income of the top compared to the average? The top 1% is getting rich a whole lot faster than the bottom 50%. I don't think they should be complaining. Wiki

    5. Re:As long as you're even about it. by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      Obviously Jefferson was a pinko liberal commie!

      </sarcasm>

  57. They should come for IT next by MikeRT · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    As I have pointed out, IT is as wasteful, if not more so, than the health care system. It is also filled with far more errors, failures, etc. than would ever be tolerated from the health care system. Even if you believe this is comparing apples to oranges, they're still fruit; both are extremely complicated, technically-challenging fields which have added a significant benefit to the lives of most modern people and the efficiency of our economic system. Medical professionals are as educated, if not more so, on average, than most IT workers and software developers. They are also significantly more regulated than most of us who have to work for on business infrastructure so we don't get to use the excuse of obstacles with them.

    Yet, no one on Slashdot and other left-leaning sites wants to see a similar smashing of major enterprise IT firms like Oracle simply on the basis that their products are bloated, inefficient are so overly complicated that their "ecosystem" of support professionals is damn near a make-work program considering the delta between what most customers actually need, and what the computer industry rams down their throats. I don't want to see more regulation, I want to see less, but at this point I freely say to a lot of the geeks I meet who make big bucks on software that is as bloated, inefficient and overpriced as they say the health care industry is "yuck it up chuckles, they may come for your ass next."

    1. Re:They should come for IT next by DigiShaman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't worry, IT will get regulated. Our industry has far too much power that, quite frankly, scares the shit out politicians. They can't leave well enough alone. Never have, never will.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    2. Re:They should come for IT next by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      As I have pointed out [codemonkeyramblings.com], IT is as wasteful, if not more so, than the health care system.

      Well, the minute IT is responsible for routinely bankrupting people because of conditions that are completely outside their realm of control, let me know. And the minute IT is responsible for truly astonishing levels of drag on the economy, placing a massive burden on the small businesses which are the engine of the American economy, well maybe then you might have a point. And when IT, like healthcare, becomes a service that everyone will, at some point in their lives, be forced to personally avail themselves, well, then your little metaphor might be worth considering.

      Until then, I think it's safe to say that healthcare and IT are such drastically different industries that to compare the two is the height of idiocy.

  58. wait . . . dude . . . what? by babboo65 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm still reading and wondering HOW this applies or even belongs in this forum. This accomplishes nothing but to start the much-heated bantering again.

    This is a hot-button POLITICAL issue that *supposedly* bears no value here unless we find there is hidden wording (what? in over 2000 pages of legislation from OUR congress? I must be off my rocker!) pertaining to the way data or information or privacy will be (ab)used in the future whether this pork-laden by-product passes or not.

    In the end isn't this OP trolling??

  59. The bill appears to suck but.... by cervo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The reality is that the government doesn't seem to get anything done. I recall Arlen Spector saying that the patriot act was flaws, but he would vote for it as is and fix it later... Well as you can see, no one has really changed it to fix it. In 1992/1993 when Bill Clinton tried to make health care, no one agreed with him and he couldn't pass the bill. The republicans that later got in control of congress failed to make another health care bill. I think it will be similar with this bill. The republicans are calling to scrap the bill and start over, or why the hurry. But pretty much they (and the democrats who vote no) will forget about it.

    Still a lot of provisions I don't like. For example if you get cancer you are screwed with a 5 million per year benefits cap. But then again my insurance at work has a 5 million dollar lifetime cap, so I am even more screwed. People like my brother who didn't go to college and work at hourly jobs without benefits need this bill. He doesn't make enough money to afford health insurance, and the company does not provide it. So there's really nothing he can do. If he gets poison ivy, even real bad, he has to sit at home and suffer rather than visiting a doctor to get a prescription for a cortico steroid that could cure it. That's not right.....

    Also an awful lot of personal bankruptcies are due to medical bills. There was a time when I graduated college and I was unemployed for almost a year before finding a job. If I got into a traffic accident or I broke my foot jogging, I would have been in deep trouble. Sometimes surgeries go into the hundred thousands or even millions.... I don't have that kind of money. Even now, if I got cancer and went over that 5 million lifetime cap on my company's insurance, I'd have to somehow borrow massive amounts of money that I would never pay back, or just die... Any system that doesn't value human life over all else is broken....

    This bill pretty much sucks. The more provisions I see of it, the more I hate it. Also the parties are busy taking pot shots about things like abortion funding instead of fixing the bill. I don't really care about abortion funding. Most Americans don't give a damn either except for a few religious right nuts. I just want a bill that gives me some security that if I lose my job and get sick, I'm not going to have to declare bankruptcy or suffer with my illness until it gets better or I die......

    Considering the Trillions we spend on wars, I think one trillion for health insurance is worth it. It is an investment in the american people... And unfortunately if this shitty bill doesn't pass, the same thing that happened in 1992-1993 will happen again, people will scream it is the other party's fault, and then it will go away..... But it's a shitty Bill for sure. It is overly complicated, probably on purpose so that no one can read/understand the whole thing before voting on it. I'm sure there are lots of special interest payments in here......

    It also does nothing to address the over charging on medical supplies. Ie the $500 paperclip. Not only that but when you don't have insurance all the rates are way higher than the rates negotiated with insurance companies. So not only is it harder to pay, it is even more expensive without insurance. Because those companies have people to say $500 for a paperclip, you're full of shit, we'll give you $1 and the hospital will be like okay, we still make $.95. And the people doing the billing try to double/triple charge me all the time. The insurance company and hospital billing often fight for 6 or 7 months before they get the entire bill properly worked out........ The hospital will bill twice, the insurance company will see two bills and reject all the bills, etc... Then you have to act as mediator to teach the hospital how to code the bill....And the insurance company to be ready for a payment....it wastes a long time.... By yourself you don't have a chance.... The rates are crazy too. I was well over $1,0

    1. Re:The bill appears to suck but.... by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      If he gets poison ivy, even real bad, he has to sit at home and suffer rather than visiting a doctor to get a prescription for a cortico steroid that could cure it. That's not right.....

      This is the crux of the issue for many conservatives, I believe: Whether or not there's a moral or legal imperative for the federal government to provide healthcare. I think there's a lot of fundamental issues that come into play:

      • Does the federal government have the authority to do this? Many people believe that the federal goverment's entire set of authorities is enumerated in the Constitution, and that it has no legal basis for making federal law in this area.
      • Why can't this be done by the states, individually, as each state sees fit? Having it be a federal law is, in some senses, anti-democratic, because there are more localities in which it lacks the consent of the governed.
      • Is it automatically the case that the Federal government is the best agent to fix this situation? They've fsck'ed up a lot of other areas of governance in the past.
      • Why should people who earned their wealth through hard work, careful investment, and self-sacrifice have to pay for lazy people? I'm not saying that all poor persons are lazy; I'm referring to the fraction of poor persons who truly don't deserve to have other people pay for their bills. Example: should I have to pay for treating emphasema in a smoker?
      • Is healthcare a true Right? If so, accoridng to what framework of reasoning?

      I'm not saying what the particular answers to those questions should be. I'm just saying that the notion of healthcare being a "right" touches on a lot of fundamental issues of ideology and political and moral philosophy about which reasonable people can and do disagree.

    2. Re:The bill appears to suck but.... by cervo · · Score: 1

      I support a constitutional amendment if the power is not already there... it is a much better use of the various legislature time than say gay marriage....

      Seriously the government has warped the interstate commerce clause to pretty much let them do anything. And some states have done a lot for health care, like Massachusetts, but others haven't done anything at all....

      Also I'd point to the financial industry. The government was very quick to jump in with low and zero interest loans for its buddies in wall street. The health industry needs some regulation. And many of the companies involved span multiple states.... Not that the government is great at regulation, because ATT is basically back to what it was in the 80's. But without regulation you end up like in Argentina where 1 or 2 companies control the industry, throw in barriers to entry so new companies can't enter the industry, and pretty much charge huge rip off prices that people can barely afford, but have no choice. E.g. Every hospital my family has dealt with has totally screwed up billing...It seems to be quite common. Almost all of them charge ridiculous prices for basic things. You would think since gauze is paid for in bulk, it would be cheaper than going to the supermarket...There are all sorts of reports of how hospitals/doctors rip off medicare/medicaid all over the country. That ripping off and over inflated pricing costs a lot of money....

      In reality the states should be cracking down/prosecuting these tax thieves, but they don't....

    3. Re:The bill appears to suck but.... by Petron · · Score: 1

      The issue here is how sue-happy the US is. Sure you had a $1,000 bill to 15 mins of X-rays, and talking to a couple of doctors, but due to how the courts decide things they have to bring in a circus to deal with your arm. Lets break it down.

      You go in and say your arm hurts. The doc thinks it's fine, but if there is the slightest chance of any fracture, he could get sued. So he has to get an X-Ray done. He can't do the X-Ray, even tho it's really Stand here, point and click... Because he's not an X-Ray specialist. Anything missed, it's his fault. So they have to get a X-Ray specialist to take a few X-Rays. The Specialist can't develop the film because they aren't an expert at film development. They are an expert at "Stand there" and click. The Lab tech in charge of developing X-Rays hands the Medical Assistant to deliver them to the doc that can see there isn't anything wrong, but he's not an expert in arm-joint structure damage, so they have to refer you to another doctor that is an expert and have them tell you that you sprained your shoulder and need to do a couple of stretches for a week. Plus add in the X-Ray machine repair tech that has to verify the machine is working correctly on a regular basis, the stock personal that has to make sure the film is fresh and free of contamination. And the bigillion other things I'm missing... All of those things have a cost tied to them and THAT is why health care is so expensive.

      We live in a sue-happy country. You are put in a wheelchair in hospitals and wheeled around because you may trip over your own feet and sue the hospital. Hospitals have to cover EVERY possible entry point for a lawsuit, no matter how ridiculous.

      --
      if (it != oneThing) it = another;
    4. Re:The bill appears to suck but.... by cervo · · Score: 1

      Well some stuff is sue happy but other stuff doctors should be sued over. Mostly it is sue happy. I recall a court case on jury duty (thank god I was dismissed) where the defendant didn't like the way a doctor adjusted her muscle so she was suing.

      It really depends though, if a doctor causes a mistake that makes someone disabled for the rest of their life, then you have to sue (due to no health care among other things) in order to have money to treat the condition and for the person to live without needing to work. Should this ever be more than 10 million (probably not).

      If a doctor leaves his instrument inside you and then takes them out without any ill will, then probably you should just sue and get medical bills only, and any lost work due to recovering from the second surgery. And there should be some penalty for the doctor to encourage him to be more careful. Whether this is some type of sanction/suspension/fine levied directly against the doctor who knows.... Now the doctor gets sued and the insurance pays out...so it makes no difference to the doctor. And even good doctors have to pay out a fortune for insurance....

      It really depends, but I don't think anyone should be getting 100 million out of pain in suffering... Now if a mistake from a doctor causes a condition that will take 100 million in medical treatment over the course of someone's life, then maybe they need 110 million (money for medical treatment and 10 million in lost lifetime wages....). I don't know.

      Totally eliminating the ability to sue would result in people having no recourse from medical mistakes. A medical mistake can ruin your lifetime earnings (today I would think it is around 3 or 4 million for the average person, but I'm not sure) and cause huge medical bills both of which a victim needs to be compensated for. Also a doctor needs to have sanctions directly from him. Whether it is a fine into a fund to handle medical mal practice, or a payment directly to the victim who knows. But the current situation where the insurance pays out doesn't affect doctors at all...they have to pay for insurance regardless...

    5. Re:The bill appears to suck but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does your hourly wage brother have a cell phone? Does he spend money on video games and entertainment, eating out regularly? Those lifestyle expenditures, for many, cost the same as or more than health coverage. I understand many don't have the wherewithal to curb their comfort spending to cover the non glamorous things like health. Personal responsibility seems to be a dirty word anymore. Give up the cell phone, live without the playstation, the nintendo, do you really need 500 channels? Cut all fixed expenses as much as possible, instead of watching that pay per view, for Pete's sake talk to another human, play cards or a board game, go for a walk, read a book from your local library.

    6. Re:The bill appears to suck but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should people who earned their wealth through hard work, careful investment, and self-sacrifice have to pay for lazy people? I'm not saying that all poor persons are lazy; I'm referring to the fraction of poor persons who truly don't deserve to have other people pay for their bills. Example: should I have to pay for treating emphasema in a smoker?

      This is a quality point, which is all too often hidden behind by people who don't qualify. Its generally used as a loaded argument in which agreeing to the concept locks in the thought that; all rich people are hard working, careful investors who makes self sacrifices.

      There are two classes of people here that ruin the question. Those who are born to privilege, get lucky with investments and who have never sacrificed a thing in their lives. And those who live off unemployment, never really trying to find work, or contribute in any meaningful way to society.

      I don't have an answer to your question. For me the question transmutes into which worthless segment of society do I feel we should help? Those who have money and don't contribute, or those who don't have money and don't contribute? Is there a means of favoring those who do contribute over those who don't, regardless of financial situations?

    7. Re:The bill appears to suck but.... by radtea · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Whether or not there's a moral or legal imperative for the federal government to provide healthcare.

      No modern "conservative" is the least bit concerned about any of that. Proof? The War on Drugs and the War on Terrorism, neither of which the Federal Government of the United States is empowered by the Constitution to undertake.

      Since "conservatives" are all major supporters of those two bits of Federal meddling in the rights of the states, and the people, they have no moral leg to stand on when it comes to opposing a Federally-regulated health-care system.

      Nor can I find anything in the Constitution about regulation of abortion being within the Federal government's purview, yet again, "conservatives" are in favour of it.

      The mythical "small-government" conservative can still be sighted rarely in the American political wilderness, but the dominant "conservative" movement is in fact populated by wild-eyed radicals who would extend Federal power into any number of areas where there is no Constitutional mandate for it.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  60. Without single payer, there's no point by gig · · Score: 0

    We have single payer defense, single payer firefighters, single payer cops, and for 65+ we have single payer medicine. Those under 65 have had their right to life revoked to create a false market so health insurance companies can siphon billions from hospitals and doctors.

    With single payer, there is a financial incentive to cure people, so you don't have to treat them again. With private health insurance only, the financial incentive is to deny care, to boot people out of their insurance.

    Almost 200,000 Americans will die before the prohibition on denying care based on existing conditions goes into effect in 4 years.

    The worst part is, this bill makes it illegal not to have private health insurance if you are under 65, no matter the cost. So this false market will continue to drain us dry. It's a kind of taxation without representation.

    I was as much an Obama supporter last year as anyone. He lost me with this. He was elected to provide Medicare for all, and didn't even try. We have the worst infant mortality in the developed world. We have gross obesity because it's not stopped before it gets too far. We have people with warts and other skin conditions, totally untreated. We have people dropping dead who haven't seen a doctor in the preceding 10 years. We have people getting healthier after they turn 65, soley because they finally get health care. We have tuberculosis going untreated, we have many epidemics. We would be the laughing stock of the world if they weren't so fucking horrified by it all.

    In 2012, if trends continue, we will have the same access to health care as Dickensian England. Remember Tiny Tim? He was going to die until Scrooge got visited by 3 ghosts and paid for his health care out of charity. Well, health care is not charity any more than cops are charity. Your neighbor getting his tuberculosis cured benefits you as well as him.

    The irony is, the US inspired universal health care in many countries after World War 2. It's a right in the UN Charter which we helped write. It's a right in the founding documents, which clearly defines a right to life.

    Finally, the much less important business argument: we cannot compete globally if we waste half our health care money and our workers are sick. People in Europe do not worry they cannot see a doctor, they focus on their work. We change jobs every year now and we're supposed to play roulette with our health care such as it is? Completely unproductive.

    So I am extremely disappointed in this bill. We have no representation. We are going to have to have sick ins, we are going to have to all cancel our private health insurance, we are going to have to build a nationwide network of free clinics on our own.

    Shame on us all. Shame.

    Respect for mothers? America kills its mothers, the only ones in the developed world who have to beg for care or go without care. Next time you hear that bullshit line about Mom and Apple Pie, feel ashamed of yourself.

    1. Re:Without single payer, there's no point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a fucking idiot. How can you honestly believe this shit? I agree the bill is crap, but your idiotic views on the subject have clearly been tainted by the ridiculous fear-mongering the Democrats have been spreading to try to get morons to support so-called health care reform at all costs. Tuberculosis epidemics? Get a fucking clue.

    2. Re:Without single payer, there's no point by bdenton42 · · Score: 1

      Those under 65 have had their right to life revoked to create a false market so health insurance companies can siphon billions from hospitals and doctors.

      You are quick to blame insurers, but the problem is really the providers. The Feds can go a long way toward health care reform with much simpler legislation... just make it a crime for health providers to charge vastly different rates to individuals and insurance companies.

      A few months ago Quest Diagnostics sent me a bill for $186.20 for a set of blood tests yet "negotiated" a rate of $30.44 with my insurance company. That is completely insane... if I didn't have insurance they would gouge me 6 times over.

      If not for these overinflated bills I, and probably most people, wouldn't even need insurance for most things other than catastrophic illnesses. And that's exactly how the insurance companies want it.

  61. Trusting Faux News? by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    In my personal experience, anything that Fox says is "bad for America" usually means "bad for the republican agenda". I'm not exactly inclined to believe any sort of fearmongering they promote.

    1. Re:Trusting Faux News? by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      Problem is, if Fox started spewing Obama talking points you would think they were the best news outlet ever. don't say it's not true, because it is. You would be shopping the factor store so quick it would look like Bill O'Reilly thew up on you.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    2. Re:Trusting Faux News? by Funk_dat69 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I always hear this knee-jerk Fox bashing.
      Guess what? All news sources have a slant, and bashing Fox just shows your bias.

      Right Slant
      ----------------
      Fox

      Left Slant
      --------------
      CNN
      MSNBC
      ABC
      CBS
      Comedy-f'king-Central

      So watch your TV with your brain turned on at all times, I would think.

      --
      FUNK!
    3. Re:Trusting Faux News? by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Bias != blatant untruth

      "Terrorist Fist Jab?" Need I say more?

      -------------
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fist_bump

      On June 3, 2008, Barack Obama and his wife Michelle Obama fist-bumped during a televised presidential campaign speech in St. Paul, Minnesota. Fox News host E.D. Hill, in a "tease" for an unrelated story, paraphrased an anonymous internet comment characterizing the gesture[4] as a "terrorist fist jab", and the gesture became known as "The Fist Bump heard 'Round the World".[5] A reporter on one local Fox affiliate also mistakenly called the gesture fisting.[6]

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    4. Re:Trusting Faux News? by Pranadevil2k · · Score: 1

      So I guess Fox is as far to the right as they are because they have to make up for the 5 networks that are on the left?
      I guess that's why they claim 'balance.'

    5. Re:Trusting Faux News? by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      Comedy-f'king-Central

      That's because comedy has a well-known liberal bias (just ask Dennis Miller).

      --
      That is all.
  62. HANDS OFF MY BODY by dazedNconfuzed · · Score: 1, Troll

    Keep government out of the doctor's office.
    The doctor/patient privilege is one of the few sacrosanct sociopolitical relationships (along with husband/wife and clergy/parishioner).
    As for who pays for it, that's between the patient, doctor, and any insurance company the two VOLUNTARILY choose.

    You have a touching anecdote? come up with legislation which helps that situation, without interfering with the >250,000,000 cases where there isn't a problem.

    Any "democracy" which passes legislation without voting on it isn't.

    And no, this isn't a suitable topic for /.

    --
    Can we get a "-1 Wrong" moderation option?
    1. Re:HANDS OFF MY BODY by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      Good thing it's been passed by the house and senate already in some form so we know it's democracy.

    2. Re:HANDS OFF MY BODY by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      How you you can claim that government bureaucrats are bad but for-profit insurance company bureaucrats are good is unfathomable. I hope it isn't just the simple-minded beliefs that since insurance companies are capitalist enterprises they are by definition good, or that since they want to spend as little as possible on you they will be maximally efficient rather than maximally stingy. Look around you. Neither of those beliefs are supported by facts.

  63. Entire media is the culprit by orthancstone · · Score: 1

    Much as I would vilify Fox specifically for treating its viewer base like children who cannot comprehend intelligent debate, let's be fair here: All of the news organizations really screwed the pooch on this matter.

    Anyone looking for intelligent discussion on Health Care gave up on the media a long time ago.

  64. Do you like HMOs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How would you like an HMO run with government efficiency?

  65. What about the other morality issue? by DG · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The morality issue that the health insurance industry is set up to rape its "customers" at the cost of their health?

    There's a reason why every other civilized nation has publicly funded, universal health care - the government of a state, no matter how inept it may be, is in place to serve the needs of its citizens.

    Private health care, no matter how competent, is in place to generate profit for the private corporation operating it.

    The primary lever operating on a public-run system is voter outrage. This tends to apply pressure on the government to improve the system for the benefit of customers.

    The primary lever operating on a private system is the generation of profit. This tends to apply pressure towards raising costs and reducing services.

    The current American system is defective by design and is ruining the health of your citizens. And the shills of the insurance companies have convinced a large portion of you that it is immoral to try and fix the system. THAT is what you should be outraged about - that you have been successfully PSYOPed into believing that universal public healthcare is somehow immoral and wrong.

    DG

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
    1. Re:What about the other morality issue? by Gybrwe666 · · Score: 1

      I think you are over-simplifying this just a tad. While I agree with the general direction and ideas, there are two poignant facts that you seem to be overlooking in this.

      First, every other universal health care system is nearly an order of magnitude smaller than the US. The ones that are continually compared to the US (particularly Britain and Canada) are much more manageable due to the much smaller size. I've been watching our government for years, and I cannot fathom the bureaucratic cock-ups that will inevitably occur in any system we may implement, whether its the current bill, or a public-option, or any other.

      Second, based on current experience with both government run health systems, and with other entitlement programs (particularly Social Security), I have little faith that the US government (no matter who is in charge, they are both guilty) will manage to correctly run any implemented system. I have a lot of friends who are veterans, and without exception they all believe that the VA system is fundamentally broken. And look at the cock-up that is Medicare/Medicaid. Do you seriously believe that any government which has legally forgone it's right to negotiate prices (in the case of drugs) or that continually screws up procurement (google Medicare and powered wheel chair pricing) is in any way capable of running a health system of *ANY* sort? I'm sorry, but I don't buy that. Look at how the money taken for Social Security has been used as a slush fund for 50 years. Had it not, Social Security would in all likelihood be solvent today.

      I'm sorry, but this isn't better than nothing, if only because the basic tenet, health care "reform" is false. We are not reforming health care. We're doing a backhanded deal with the insurance companies, who, by the way, are spending $1.4 million per day on lobbying and advertising. How much health care could $400 million dollars buy?

  66. Not a good thing at all. by Vince56 · · Score: 1

    Thirty plus million more people getting access to care with no plan to increase the number of primary care providers - not good. Most of the newly insured not part of the tax contributing population - not good. No incentivization to have health insurance or maintain a healthy lifestyle - not good. More healthcare administration from CMS that has brought us Medicare and Medicaid and its $500B in fraud and waste - not good.

  67. Not so. by gbutler69 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Study after study has completely debunked the myth that high malpractice insurance is due to frivolous lawsuits. High malpractice insurance is for the same reason their is high medical insurance. The insurance companies made bad investments and lost their shirts now they're raking everyone over the coals while still pulling down 20 to 40% profits.

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
    1. Re:Not so. by diskofish · · Score: 2, Informative

      citation needed.

    2. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, 3% to 5% is the industry average profit. The investors closed Mervyn's down for not making 15%. In the business world, the insurance industry is not the profit king.

    3. Re:Not so. by Snyper1000 · · Score: 0

      I think you need to provide references to said studies, and not ones funded by lawyers! The high malpractice insurance is NOT a recent thing. This has been going on since the 80's!

      Its not about bad investments, its about the potential for a high payout. Insurance isn't a magical pot of money, it has to come from somewhere. Reguardless of whether the lawsuit was frivolous or not, doesn't play into the statistics when the insurance comapanies figure out how to cover the suits. It frustrates me that this should even need to be pointed out. A person could die in the OR, and a family sue for the persons earnings potential (rightfully so if he/she has a family and their income was expected). Since nearly ANY doctor at ANY time could have such a situation (outpatient procedures can be dangerous too, even a simple infection lanceing, not tested for say MRSA, causing late treatment and eventual death could put a family doctor at risk for one of these major lawsuits), the insurance companies have to manage that risk, and ensure they have the cash on hand to be able to pay out. Obviously thats oversimplified, they don't expect every doctor to have such a case at the same time, but they have a pretty good idea of the frequency, and how much money they need on hand to pay the suits. If there were reasonable limits on lawsuits, this pot of money the companies need to maintain could be less. They'd probably have to be beaten with the regulatory stick to actually do so, but thats a whole other issue.

    4. Re:Not so. by genghisjahn · · Score: 2, Informative

      20 to 40% profits? Hardly. Try 3.4%.

      "Overall, the profit margin for health insurance companies was a modest 3.4 percent over the past year, according to data provided by Morningstar. That ranks 87th out of 215 industries and slightly above the median of 2.2 percent. By this measure, the most profitable industry over the past year has been beverages, with a 25.9 percent profit margin." http://www.usnews.com/money/blogs/flowchart/2009/08/25/why-health-insurers-make-lousy-villains.html

      --
      Sorry about the mess.
    5. Re:Not so. by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1

      If that were really the case, couldn't some entity with a couple of spare tens of billions start a new insurance company and make a bundle by saving people a ton of money? Or, to save time overcoming regulatory hurdles, maybe one of the existing insurance companies could offer it, and make up for their losses by dragging in a lot more customers. And if it really is so lucrative to overcharge for insurance, why would they wait until some investments turned up bad? Save some time, cut to the chase!

      I just don't think the logic works out. You try to make as much profit as you can off your customers, and you try to make as much profit as you can off your investments. When the investments don't work out so well, it shouldn't really affect the customers that much. You might possibly have a bit of a regulatory scramble for capital and you might be able to burn some goodwill taking advantage of people who don't want to deal with the hassle of switching, but industry-wide "rake them over the coals" behavior is just asking for someone to steal customers.

      Or... maybe the insurance companies were undercharging before, but have since realized that you can't make the kind of money off of the investment side of the business that you once thought you could, and so it isn't really worth it to charge people as low a premiums as they once did. That might explain why no one is doing it anymore.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    6. Re:Not so. by iniquitous · · Score: 1

      Not sure where you got "20 to 40%." There are a bunch of health insurance companies that are publicly traded, which means you can directly check their financial statements. Here's a few:

      http://www.google.com/finance?q=NYSE:AET&fstype=ii
      http://www.google.com/finance?q=NYSE:CI&fstype=ii
      http://www.google.com/finance?q=NYSE:CVH&fstype=ii
      http://www.google.com/finance?q=NYSE:HUM&fstype=ii
      http://www.google.com/finance?q=NYSE:WLP&fstype=ii

    7. Re:Not so. by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      You first have to define "frivolous". My job is software testing. The server crashes, and it is my job to look through the mess and figure out why.

      Doctors have to look through a MUCH larger mess, with many more moving parts, and very little in the way of debuggers. The human metabolism is some of the worst spaghetti code ever written/developed (let's please not start that debate). I think "you knew or should have known that 80yr old Granny had contracted the South London Swahili gout" on her visit to Atlanta, GA is frivolous and should be thrown out, but a jury would award the family millions. (because, it's really the insurance companies that will be paying it)

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    8. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where do you get your 20% to 40% profits? Do you just make numbers up? Health insurance profit margins are around 6% on a good year. Last year they were they down to about 2-3% depending on the company. That means 94%-98% of the money you pay in goes to pay for yours or other memembers' healthcare. This also means that if insurance companies made absolutely no profit (which some don't, Kaiser Permanente is a non-profit) your total savings on a 500/month policy would be $30.

    9. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just pull the 20%-40% profit numbers completely out of your ass?

      http://www.smallgovtimes.com/2010/03/the-truth-about-health-insurance-profits/

    10. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Study after study has completely debunked the myth that high malpractice insurance is due to frivolous lawsuits.

      Source, please?

    11. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The insurance companies ... pulling down 20 to 40% profits."

      "60% of consumers surveyed thought that profit margins for health insurance companies are more than 20%, and 25% of consumers pegged insurers’ profits at more than 40%"
      http://www.healthinsurancecolorado.net/blog1/2009/06/08/profitability-and-the-health-insurance-industry/

      "the industry "Health Care Plans" ranks #86 by profit margin (profits/revenue) at 3.3%"
      http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2009/08/health-insurance-industry-ranks-86-by.html

      "Accident & Health Insurance: Net Profit Margin: 6.70"
      http://biz.yahoo.com/p/sum_qpmd.html

    12. Re:Not so. by gbutler69 · · Score: 1
      From the CBO study on just this issue:

      Rules governing medical malpractice claims are one of a host of factors potentially affecting the delivery and cost of health care services in the United States. Although this analysis provides some evidence of links between tort limits and health care spending, the results are inconsistent and depend on the particular relationships and specifications tested. The mixed results also demonstrate the difficulty of disentan- gling any effects of tort limits from other factors that affect levels of spending for health care. CBO continues to monitor the work of other researchers and conduct its own research on the issue.

      --
      Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
    13. Re:Not so. by gbutler69 · · Score: 1
      From the CBO study on just this issue: As I've said elsewhere...

      Rules governing medical malpractice claims are one of a host of factors potentially affecting the delivery and cost of health care services in the United States. Although this analysis provides some evidence of links between tort limits and health care spending, the results are inconsistent and depend on the particular relationships and specifications tested. The mixed results also demonstrate the difficulty of disentan- gling any effects of tort limits from other factors that affect levels of spending for health care. CBO continues to monitor the work of other researchers and conduct its own research on the issue.

      --
      Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
  68. after working for 40 years by kpjlfm · · Score: 1

    I'm all for the *reform*, as long as I don't have to pay for it. I've been paying for 40 years, time for you young fellas to pony up. BTW, which company has a working DB for handling the health records of over 350 MILLION people, the kind of DB the single payer system would require?

    1. Re:after working for 40 years by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      The single payer system would simply just pay out. There wouldnt be a giant database of health records etc.

    2. Re:after working for 40 years by bdenton42 · · Score: 1

      That would be a ripe target for fraud. You're not going to track double billing or anything?

  69. Thanks for the TRUTH by microcars · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The "truth" is, the same people that want anything the Obama Administration does to fail are the same people that created the Third Largest Government Agency.
    How has that worked out? And where was their outrage over its creation and its current status of operation?

    Try sending a letter or small package through the USPS, UPS and FedEx and let me know which one was more cost effective.
    Now try building a straw man and knocking him down.

    --
    I like microcars
    1. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by mikerz · · Score: 1

      I don't understand what you mean? On the one hand, Obama has not tried anything fiscally or economically sound, on the other hand neither have the Republicans for a very very very long time. Personally, I want what the Obama Administration does to fail simply because they keep trying to do stupid things in a weak way -- as soon as they support something rational I will support them in it. Your argument would appear to be anti-government corruption, and yet pro-Obama Administration? You just can't separate the two!

    2. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by maxume · · Score: 1

      DHS was created with glue, not raw cloth. It would be interesting to see a breakdown of the budgets of the child agencies prior to the consolidation and after though.

      And the USPS is cheaper than UPS and FedEx, especially for sending a letter slowly, but part of the reason for that is that UPS and FedEx are legally enjoined for competing in that space.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      The "truth" is, the same people that want anything the Obama Administration does to fail are the same people that created the Third Largest Government Agency [dhs.gov].

      Fail.

      I was against the theater that is DHS. I was against invading Iraq (hell, I'm against all the military bases we have spread all over the world).

      And...I am very MUCH against this health care system power-grab atrocity, thank you very much.

      furthermore, I am against all of it for the very same reason.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    4. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try sending a letter or small package through ... UPS and FedEx and let me know which one was more cost effective

      You cannot send a standard letter via UPS or FedEx. It is illegal for them to process and handle because of the government mandated monopoly USPS has on letter delivery. In order to ship a letter they have to treat it like a normal package (which is why those large cardboard letter envelopes cost so much to ship...) UPS/Fedex would be hung over the wringers for attempting to handle a standard letter and compete with the USPS.

      Comparing a company that makes the bulk of it's money off of billions of small letters to a company that cannot do so (because it's illegal) is a little unfair. It costs far more to ship a package than it does to process a letter. There are machines specially designed and restrictions on letter sizes so that they can process millions of letters per second where a parcel that can be any size, shape or form has to be handled by a person or an expensive multi-vector scanners and weighing systems. If UPS/Fedex could buy and use those letter processing machines to compete with USPS, I believe you'd see a whole new side of your argument.

      The only reason the USPS can ship a packages for as cheap as they do is because they are loss leaders. They make enough on letter service that they can pad those numbers and make it seem like it's inexpensive to ship packages, and even then, they have package size requirements there as well.

    5. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by ffreeloader · · Score: 1

      The "truth" is, the same people that want anything the Obama Administration does to fail are the same people that created the Third Largest Government Agency [dhs.gov].

      What a biased, narrow, view of the world.

      I'm against Obama care. I didn't like the creation of the DHS as it's just another inefficient government bureaucracy. I think the Patriot Act was nothing more than an exercise in removing our liberties. I'm against nationalizing the Student Loan Program, but not the idea of student loans. I think the FDA should stay away from regulating supplements. I also think programs that help the disabled are a good idea as in vast majority of cases they cannot help themselves out of their situation, but that with a helping hand they both can and will improve their life. I think entitlements for those who can help themselves are a waste of money, degrade the people who use them in the long run, and are dragging this country to financial ruin. I hate greed and corruption in all their forms.

      We as a nation have lost sight of what made this nation great. The educational system has taught the younger generations that the US is evil rather than educating them on why and how we became the greatest nation on earth and the principles of government and personal life that made our rise to power inevitable.

      I don't want "everything" that Obama does as President to fail, only those things that are contrary to the principles our nation was founded on. As he thinks the Constitution is flawed and the Bill of Rights needs to be revisited I'm naturally going to be opposed to most of what he does, but I'm not opposed to what he does just because he does it.

      Now, tell me just what pigeon-hole you're going to place me in....

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    6. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Goyuix · · Score: 1

      It isn't simply about cost - though I understand that is the specific issue you are trying to address:

      Try sending a letter or small package through the USPS, UPS, and FedEx (and DHL and a local courier service for good measure)
      - See which one was more cost effective
      - See which one was fastest (or slowest)
      - Which offered the best service (up to date tracking, delivery confirmation + signature, etc.)
      - Sends thousands of parcels and see which was the most reliable with fewest lost/late arrivals
      - See how the service varies by region, distance traveled, etc...

      There are a lot of variables, and while cost is certainly and important one - it isn't the only one.

    7. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Schadrach · · Score: 1

      Cost effective? For small/light things (letters, things tht fit in those flat rate boxes, etc) where the time of delivery isn't particularly strict, USPS.
      If you need it to be there in three days or less or it is large and/or heavy, then either of the other two is a better deal.

    8. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by saider · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The USPS is in debt up to its eyeballs because electronic documents are causing a drop in volume. FedEx and USPS have adjusted their rates , fleets and staffing to accommodate this drop. The USPS is less nimble because it faces restrictions imposed by the government (what kind of business it can do, what rates it can charge, etc.). If we ran healthcare like this, you can bet it would have the exact same problem.

      Furthermore, various states run insurance companies, but often they are used by private companies to dump their risky products. Since the state then holds the risk, they are supposed to set the rates to a level that can cover it, but the politicians intervene and drop the rates. The result is a company that either has to rely on a taxpayer bailout or failure altogether.

      Here in Florida, they created a property insurance company to be the last resort for people who cannot get property insurance, which is required if you finance your house. The private insurance companies started divesting their risky properties, and the state insurance had to take them. When the state insurance company adjusted the rates to accomodate the risk, the policyowners yelled at their politicians, who in turn forced the company to limit the increases. This has resulted in a company that does not have enough money to cover losses in the event of a Hurricane. You can bet that if we get a major hurricane or two (we've had few since the scheme was concocted) that Florida taxpayers will be on the hook for the payouts.

      Government healthcare would suffer the same problem with premiums becoming a political football that politicians use to get elected.

      --


      Remember, You are unique...just like everyone else.
    9. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by microcars · · Score: 1

      I apologize, I was not actually referring to you specifically. (unless you had an active hand in creating DHS...)
      I was referring to those lawmakers and "public servants" I keep seeing in the news that view any American that does not share their view as "the enemy".
      These are the same people working in government being paid with our tax dollars that are against ANYTHING the current administration wants simply because they view this like a sporting event and they want their "team" to win and the other team to "lose".

      --
      I like microcars
    10. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by microcars · · Score: 1

      I'm against Obama care.

      I don't know what "Obama Care" is.

      I didn't like the creation of the DHS as it's just another inefficient government bureaucracy.

      I agree.

      I think the Patriot Act was nothing more than an exercise in removing our liberties.

      I agree

      I'm against nationalizing the Student Loan Program, but not the idea of student loans.

      I agree

      I think the FDA should stay away from regulating supplements.

      I have no opinion one way or the other

      I also think programs that help the disabled are a good idea as in vast majority of cases they cannot help themselves out of their situation, but that with a helping hand they both can and will improve their life.

      I agree

      I think entitlements for those who can help themselves are a waste of money, degrade the people who use them in the long run, and are dragging this country to financial ruin.

      I agree, but I am also a realist and understand there will always be people that will game the system to their advantage. Why do we allow corporations to game the system with no repercussions?

      I hate greed and corruption in all their forms.

      Hard for me to disagree with that.

      We as a nation have lost sight of what made this nation great. The educational system has taught the younger generations that the US is evil rather than educating them on why and how we became the greatest nation on earth and the principles of government and personal life that made our rise to power inevitable.

      ???? not sure what specifically you are referring to. While I think the US has done an incredible amount of good in the world, we have also done some very bad things and to ignore them or sweep them under the table is asking for them to be repeated by future generations.

      I don't want "everything" that Obama does as President to fail, only those things that are contrary to the principles our nation was founded on.

      OK, I would agree with you there.

      As he thinks the Constitution is flawed and the Bill of Rights needs to be revisited I'm naturally going to be opposed to most of what he does, but I'm not opposed to what he does just because he does it.

      I thought the previous administration tore up the Constitution and the Bill of Rights already.

      Now, tell me just what pigeon-hole you're going to place me in....

      well, looks like we agree on most everything.

      --
      I like microcars
    11. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by microcars · · Score: 1

      DHS was created with glue, not raw cloth. It would be interesting to see a breakdown of the budgets of the child agencies prior to the consolidation and after though.

      good point, thank you for the clarification.

      --
      I like microcars
    12. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Taevin · · Score: 1

      Personally, I want what the Obama Administration does to fail simply because they keep trying to do stupid things in a weak way -- as soon as they support something rational I will support them in it.

      Here it is folks; this is what is wrong with this country. Yes, the obvious problems are things like corporations buying laws and other corruption in government, but it only maintains because of the attitude of the citizenry. People have been so mind-fucked that they actually go out in public and declare that they want their leader to fail.

      I completely understand not agreeing with his ideals, or the manner in which he tries to achieve his goals. However, I simply cannot support this childish notion of "in order for me to be right, you must be wrong and anything that demonstrates this should be cheered." As for me, my reaction to the proposed reform is "meh." I don't feel that it does enough; another might say it's too much. At the end of the day though, Obama is championing health care reform in an effort to do some good for the country. You want this to fail. You want the country to be weakened, just so you can say "see, you should have listened to me." Disgusting.

    13. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by mcvos · · Score: 1

      The "truth" is, the same people that want anything the Obama Administration does to fail are the same people that created the Third Largest Government Agency.

      But that's okay because it has a suitably patriotic-sounding name.

      Call it Department for Healthy Americans, and point out that some veterans are diabetic, and I'm sure you'll get a lot more support.

    14. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by mikerz · · Score: 1

      Personally, I want what the Obama Administration does to fail simply because they keep trying to do stupid things in a weak way -- as soon as they support something rational I will support them in it.

      Please, read the whole sentence. If a murder is out to kill someone, I want him to fail. If a mugger is out to steal money, I want him to fail. If a business is exploiting people to increase their profit margin, I want them to fail. If a politician is creating a flawed system under false pretenses which is going to waste taxpayer money, I want him to fail. If Obama is going to bankrupt our monetary base further, I want him to fail.

      Do you see? It's GOOD to want bad things to fail. Because I want a thief to stop stealing, does not mean I think the thief is evil and must be put to death. Because someone does wrong, does not mean I think they are evil, but it most certainly means I do not support them!

    15. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      Government healthcare would suffer the same problem with premiums becoming a political football that politicians use to get elected.

      Duh. Not only 'duh', but this is absolutely the design. The desired goal is single payer and defuncting the system is a means toward that end.

    16. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by LordByronStyrofoam · · Score: 1

      Actually, USPS loses money to UPS and FedEx because first, unlike the others, the USPS is required to go to _everybodys_ house _every_ day; And second, letters are the least cost effective per ounce, but are at the core of our reliance on USPS.

      --
      Slashdot's name? When my compiler sees /. it generates a warning about a badly formed comment.
    17. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      I have a better name:

      Department for Healthy Americans and Their Children

      There, all bases covered.

            -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    18. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by noidentity · · Score: 1

      Try sending a letter or small package through the USPS, UPS and FedEx and let me know which one was more cost effective.

      Should I include consideration of the laws restricting operation of the latter two private companies, and the special benefits the first one gets, or should I pretend they are all on a level playing field?

    19. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      No, you are still wrong.

      If a murderer is out to kill someone, I want him stopped and brought to justice. If a mugger is out to steal money, I want to protect myself against him, and perhaps help raise awareness so that potential victims can also protect themselves. If a business is exploiting people to increase their profit margin, I want it held to account and the victims restituted.

      Likewise, if Obama is going to bankrupt our monetary base further, I want to raise awareness of the situation, point out why it is wrong to continue with such plan, and perhaps even propose an alternative that will not bankrupt our system. At the very least I will not support those efforts with which I disagree.

      Do you see? It is NOT GOOD to want bad things to fail, that just reflects spite and malice. It is GOOD to want to solve problems, point them out, and offer solutions. Not supporting misguided or wrong solutions is not bad; but actively and willfully wishing failure on someone--anybody--just to be able to say, "I told you so", is just petty and unproductive.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    20. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by microcars · · Score: 1

      Should I include consideration of the laws restricting operation of the latter two private companies, and the special benefits the first one gets,

      of course.
      The latter two companies are really suffering financially because they can't deliver "letters" cheaper.
      I don't see how they can compete and survive!

      --
      I like microcars
    21. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Taevin · · Score: 1

      Do you see? It's GOOD to want bad things to fail.

      Ah, right. I forgot we had to phrase things in absolute terms of good and bad. Capitalism, good; socialism, bad! Insurance companies, good; government, bad!

      There are two views here. 1) You think health insurance is find as-is, in which case you're an idiot, or 2) you think that [something] needs to change to make the system better. Even Republicans realize they can't get away with saying #1 any more. So, Obama is trying #2. We've come to the point where Americans are not going to accept that millions of people do not have insurance and more continue to lose their insurance when they need it most due to the greedy practices of the health insurance industry. The bill describes changes which attempt to solve these problems by removing loopholes which allow insurance companies to deny or drop coverage, and also "guarantee" coverage by making it mandatory. You want this to fail.

      You say that this is because this change is bad, and that Obama is a criminal attempting to bankrupt the country under "false pretenses." By "false pretenses," I'm assuming you mean Obama is supporting health care reform for ulterior motives. So what are these motives, exactly? The bill may be less than ideal, but the intentions are pretty clear. Further, the CBO reports that the bill will reduce the deficit, rather than drive us further into bankruptcy.

      So, I ask you: What do you want to fail and why? As originally stated, you want the Obama Administration to fail "simply because they keep trying to do stupid things in a weak way." My interpretation of that is that you like neither what they're trying to do ("stupid things") nor how they're trying to do it ("in a weak way"). I really hope this is a grand misunderstanding over the word "fail," because it seems to me that either you want the goal (improving the healthcare system) to fail, or the method to fail, leading to an unachieved goal.

      If it's the method, instead of just saying you want it to fail because it's "bad," why not explain yourself a little? Why is it bad? Who/what is it going to negatively affect? What are "they" lying about? Where have they miscalculated/cooked the numbers? From where do you source your information? Where is the "good" in wanting this "bad" thing to fail? And so on. Explaining why the method is bad, and how it's vulnerable to failure is a far cry from just saying you want it to fail. One makes you appear like you actually give a shit about the prosperity of the nation and its people, and the other makes you appear like all you care about is your schoolyard appearance.

    22. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by noidentity · · Score: 1

      I don't understand your sarcasm. My point was simply that a comparison of USPS, UPS, and FedEx must take into account their differing nature if it is to make valid conclusions beyond "The amount I pay at the counter is least at ".

    23. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You failed to mention the USPS is bankrupt. They are thinking of cutting service on Saturdays. Also, in my experience, UPS and FedEx are faster and more accurate. The reality is, if I don't like a private company, I can stop using them and they will die if there are enough people like me. The same cannot be said for outdated and horrificly managed govt programs. If everyone quit buying health insurance and just saved the premiums in a savings account, we could easily kill off the industry. But Americans, especially baby boomers, are terrified babies who go to the doctor every time they sneeze or get a splinter.

    24. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by 31415926535897 · · Score: 0

      The "truth" is, the same people that want anything the Obama Administration does to fail are the same people that created the Third Largest Government Agency.

      How has that worked out? And where was their outrage over its creation and its current status of operation?

      Try sending a letter or small package through the USPS, UPS and FedEx and let me know which one was more cost effective.
      Now try building a straw man and knocking him down.

      The USPS sends packages cheaper because they're subsidized by the taxpayer. They have lost $BILLIONS per year for the last few years. Of course you can mail stuff for less when you're allowed to have the Federal government bail you out. UPS and FedEx don't have that luxury. Their prices reflect reality.

    25. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by yup2000 · · Score: 1

      ad hominem arguments do not help the debate

    26. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Bush administration created the DHS. They are now out of power, retired, or pulling in $ on the speaking circuit.

      The people that want the Obama administration's efforts on health insurance centralization to fail are anyone that is not a democrat, and the rare democrat.

    27. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by John+Newman · · Score: 1

      The USPS is in debt up to its eyeballs because electronic documents are causing a drop in volume. FedEx and USPS have adjusted their rates , fleets and staffing to accommodate this drop. The USPS is less nimble because it faces restrictions imposed by the government (what kind of business it can do, what rates it can charge, etc.). If we ran healthcare like this, you can bet it would have the exact same problem.

      I really like the USPS vs FedEx analogy. It illustrates the fundamental difference between private industry and the government, and applies perfectly to heath care.

      The USPS is required by law to provide a service to the people of the US. FedEx is required by its stockholders to make the largest possible profit. USPS has to provide affordable rates for tiny packages picked up at any address anywhere in the US (or overseas for APO addresses) and deliver it to any other address anywhere else in the US. FedEx does no such thing, or at least can charge whatever it actually costs to do so. Try to have FedEx pick up a one-page letter from your house and deliver it somewhere 2000 miles away. How much does that cost? A hell of a lot more than 44 cents. FedEx is better at delivering a package as fast as humanly possible, as certain as humanly possible. But which service to most people need most often?

      USPS is single-payer healthcare (imagine affordable primary care instead of letter delivery) while FedEx is a private insurance company (lots of elective cardiac caths and hip replacements). One will provide better services to most people, the other will do certain profitable things well and make a lot of money doing it. Maybe we need both to give everyone the best possible health care. But right now unless you're over 65 or a veteran we live in a country without a postal service, where FedEx charges us $50 to send a birthday card to Grandma, and where they cancel delivery service altogether if you subscribe to too many magazines.

    28. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Mashdar · · Score: 1

      Actually the primary focus of the bill is to prevent denials of coverage, so a government run insurance program would have the exact same pool of insured people as the private insurers, baring any economic factors (ie subsidies, premium differences). I lived in Florida up until recently, and yes, their property insurer was terribly designed. But the problem was that private insurers could decide to dump covered property on the state.

      Assuming a non-profit government health insurer required to run a balanced budget, the insurance companies would have a much harder time gouging, which is a risk when mandating coverage for everyone. Of course, the coverage mandate is economically implied by any attempt to prevent refusing coverage because of pre-existing conditions, or dropping coverage though the current shady methods used by the industry.

    29. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by mikerz · · Score: 1
      It's amazing to me how #2 tends to mean it's time to roll out a new bullshit regulation on top of an enormous stack of previous bullshit regulations.

      "most due to the greedy practices of the health insurance industry" This is facetious - lobbyists for the health insurance industry have helped to foster the corporatist sentiment in American government. What we have now is the result of previous failures, which were instituted to reduce competition in that particular market (in the name of stability). The natural result of this is that prices have soared. The issue is not greedy companies, because frankly that would make them concerned about budgeting wisely -- the issue is that it's impossible to have a small business step in and offer insurance because of government regulations. If you want to blame someone: blame corrupt politicians who set up the industry for failure in order to step in and pick up the reins.

      The bill describes changes which attempt to solve these problems by removing loopholes which allow insurance companies to deny or drop coverage, and also "guarantee" coverage by making it mandatory. You want this to fail.

      You see, this is the provided justification. There are many hidden provisions within the bill just increasing other important taxes. There is no smart budget cutting happening. There are increased social security taxes, medicare taxes, home care taxes (CLASS Act). There is an obvious lie associated with these, in that these taxes are supposed to be kept for their respective programs, whereas they are going to go toward paying for Obamacare. Forcing companies to hold on to people who are too expensive will make things more expensive. Do you really think it will drive costs down to mandate these things? Do you think the government will step in and magically create money? It's a sad reality that some people are too expensive to reasonably insure right now -- if the government picks up the tag, the costs are passed on to the taxpayer either as taxes or inflation.

      The source of some people being so expensive comes down to a number of problems, also related to health care regulations. Every doctor is required to pay insanely expensive malpractice insurance (which doesn't even kick in until they pay $300,000 of their own money). The government-supported monopolies within healthcare are EXTREMELY bloated, and pass the cost on to their constituents - there was recently the media-exposed case of $1,200 surgical staplers which have become the standard fare.

      The situation is like this: The prices are insane because the market is sick and distorted. The market is sick because of government regulations put in via health care lobbyists, which were intended to create stability within the market and help them by reducing competition from "untrustworthy" insurance companies. These regulations helped create the virtual collapse we're at now, of course the answer from the government is more government restrictions (which are already guaranteed to drive prices up further). Many politicians stand to gain great power through maneuvering like this because they have their own personal and electoral connections -- they can easily amend something like this once it exists. In fact, the upcoming "fix" to the bill being passed Sunday will decrease taxes and increase the coverage! Wtf?

      Please, explain to me how it makes sense to have 10 years of taxes pay for 6 years of coverage. This is how it was actually budgeted -- and this is with fuzzy math like the nested provisions i listed!

      The CBO report is blatantly wrong on two accounts: using their method for the decade after the first, we will be losing 100 billion+ yearly (they are relying on many successful budget cuts including a great amount from Medicare which has NEVER been able to cut their budget significantly). Secondly, they are trusting the figures provided (like the Medicare number) and not account for historically proven mis-budgeting. In the 60s, w

    30. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Omestes · · Score: 1

      I think entitlements for those who can help themselves are a waste of money, degrade the people who use them in the long run, and are dragging this country to financial ruin. I hate greed and corruption in all their forms.

      So, how do we define those who are helpless, and those who can help themselves? This has always been the problem. There is no magic DNA marker saying one person is a slacker, and another person is helpless, while another person may just need a quick helping hand.

      The educational system has taught the younger generations that the US is evil rather than educating them on why and how we became the greatest nation on earth and the principles of government and personal life that made our rise to power inevitable.

      Either that or we were lying nationalist twits before. I'm a patriot (see below sig), but I have a hard time seeing the US as being the greatest national on earth. What are we greatest in? Healthcare? Education? Crime? Liberty and freedom? Even from a historical view we've been pretty bad, we've committed as many atrocities as anyone else, and currently demonstrate that we are just as capable of doing them.

      Generally the whole "we're #1" sentiment is a bad tautology. "America is #1 because America is #1"; "We have the best healthcare system because We're #1, and We're #1 because we have the best health care/education/etc...". There is no figures to back this up, and most meaningful metrics tell us that Europe passed us by as #1 some time ago. I think even Italy and Spain have better health and eduction than us now.

      I don't want "everything" that Obama does as President to fail, only those things that are contrary to the principles our nation was founded on

      And what principles were those? Do you have the various signers of our various founding documents on the phone so you can ask them? I personally think that public healthcare fits fine within the intentions of the founders, being the "general welfare" and all. I also doubt that our founders read Ayn Rand, and wanted us to be a nation of freemarketeers no matter the human cost. I doubt our founders would be amicable to letting the poorest among us die in the streets for the benefit of the richest.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    31. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Taevin · · Score: 1

      The issue is not greedy companies, because frankly that would make them concerned about budgeting wisely -- the issue is that it's impossible to have a small business step in and offer insurance because of government regulations.

      To be honest, I don't know enough about the regulations in the health insurance field to say how much or how little they affect a small business health insurance start-up. I can say that there's more to it than just regulations, though. Health insurance, like any insurance, is a managed risk pool. The bigger the pool, the more risk you can take on. A small business insurance provider simply could not compete with the established, larger corporations as payouts would probably have to be capped at lower levels.

      This is facetious - lobbyists for the health insurance industry have helped to foster the corporatist sentiment in American government.

      If you want to blame someone: blame corrupt politicians who set up the industry for failure in order to step in and pick up the reins.

      The number of conspiracy claims that get leveled against the government and politicians is simply incredible. They didn't have some elaborate scheme to carefully plan laws to reduce costs and meet with their insurance exec buddies to get them to sabotage their own businesses all while covertly fostering in the populace a growing discontent with the existing system. It's much more simple, and you pointed it out yourself: lobbyists. The insurance companies have paid to get laws that benefit them on the books, just like every other major company in this country does. Recent history is replete with examples of short-sighted executives that thought no one would mind their ever-expanding and unsustainable profits.

      Please, explain to me how it makes sense to have 10 years of taxes pay for 6 years of coverage. This is how it was actually budgeted -- and this is with fuzzy math like the nested provisions i listed!

      The CBO report is blatantly wrong on two accounts: using their method for the decade after the first, we will be losing 100 billion+ yearly (they are relying on many successful budget cuts including a great amount from Medicare which has NEVER been able to cut their budget significantly). Secondly, they are trusting the figures provided (like the Medicare number) and not account for historically proven mis-budgeting. In the 60s, when Medicare was budgeted to be 12 billion in 1990, it came out to 110 billion, In 1988 When Medicaid was to be less than 1 billion in 1993, it was 17 billion.

      http://ask.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1588498&cid=31537760

      You've provided no source and I haven't been able to find one for you, so I can't speak to the budgeting of Medicare (though I've always been told that it historically comes in under budget). However, in terms of relative GDP, $12 billion in 1965 is approx. $97 billion in 1990; $13.5 billion in 1965 would be about $110 billion in 1990 so it doesn't seem all that bad to me--off by 12% for a 25-year prediction.

      Obama's false pretenses are that he is doing this for the good of the people. In fact, the majority of people do not want this. It will only benefit government expansion and set us up for further regulation (as seen by previous attempts -- there are very many but I provided you with at least some examples). This is about government-control, not about the good of the people.

      Really? Are you sure the majority of people do not want this? Actually you could be right about this specific bill since it's decidedly not universal healthcare which we were all promised. As you may recall, Obama made a big deal about universal healthcare during his campaign and a majority of people voted for him, leading to his election. If you listened to

    32. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by mikerz · · Score: 1

      To be honest, I don't know enough about the regulations in the health insurance field to say how much or how little they affect a small business health insurance start-up. I can say that there's more to it than just regulations, though. Health insurance, like any insurance, is a managed risk pool. The bigger the pool, the more risk you can take on. A small business insurance provider simply could not compete with the established, larger corporations as payouts would probably have to be capped at lower levels.

      Yes, but there are plenty of poor "big insurance" choices right now. It is rare and an exception to find good coverage at a reasonable price. It is impossible to get individual insurance as good as that provided via an employer, because of government regulation. They are simply not allowed to provide it! What's more - I can't believe this is blamed on greed! Health insurance gets an average of 2-3% profit, which is below standard corporate profit. It is simply not a very profitable business, and its problems are not due to greed - they are lack of competition -- again, because of regulations which were meant to stabilize insurance according to insurance companies.

      Compare the health insurance industry to the pharmaceutical industry. Vastly different -- pharma is among the most profitable (nearly as profitable as the oil industry is right now -- ). And is anyone cracking down on them? Nope. McCain and Obama have been helping them with healthcare funding under the pretense of reform -- in fact, one such deal in 2009 involved lower prices of drugs for government officials -- and the elderly, by the PhRMA.

      As for the short-sighted executives -- I've seen no such thing in health insurance. How about Banking? Oh hell yes! And guess who got bailed out? Sure there's a lot of fuss about bonuses right now, but this is both after the fact and more bark than bite.

      You've provided no source and I haven't been able to find one for you, so I can't speak to the budgeting of Medicare (though I've always been told that it historically comes in under budget). However, in terms of relative GDP, $12 billion in 1965 is approx. $97 billion in 1990; $13.5 billion in 1965 would be about $110 billion in 1990 so it doesn't seem all that bad to me--off by 12% for a 25-year prediction.

      A source: http://blog.heritage.org/2009/08/04/health-care-reform-cost-estimates-what-is-the-track-record/ I don't know how you are calculating inflation (it is not a linear or simply process), because in this kind of case there will be many imperfections. The inflation rate itself was definitely influenced by debt incurred by Medicaid failures.

      Really? Are you sure the majority of people do not want this? Actually you could be right about this specific bill since it's decidedly not universal healthcare which we were all promised. As you may recall, Obama made a big deal about universal healthcare during his campaign and a majority of people voted for him, leading to his election. If you listened to the conservatives, you'd think that they were the majority, that some of them (apparently) begrudgingly voted for Obama, and then were absolutely shocked when he started doing the things he said he'd do if elected. Despite what you may hear on oxymoronically-titled conservative radio shows like "The Wilkow Majority," you're not necessarily the majority.

      Recent polling does not show this kind of reform is wanted. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/september_2009/health_care_reform .. I don't listen to partisan news radio, it is all trash.

      I'm sure you're a fine guy/gal in Real Life but my first encounter wit

    33. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, people are not computers. The more of them connected together does not equate to better performance. The exact opposite. But the bruhaha isn't about helping more people get insurance or even making a healthier nation, those concepts are really only possible with a focused national effort similar to fascist Germany or the space race in America and soviet union. The real issues are the two philosophies of:

      1)The Robin Hood Steal from the rich and give to the poor "ideology"
      2)The natural ideology of people deserving exactly what they work for and "earn."

      The debate right now is the slow waking of the bear from his slumber. People realizing that, as one person commented earlier, we don't really have any real liberties. This is not "the republic for which it stands" and hasn't been a true republic for over a century. This country originally didn't have income taxes, tariffs, or centralized banks (thanks a bunch, Alexander Hamilton). What will be interesting to see is whether the fuss will amount to anything or just be blown off as some states blow off any concept of accurate history. Not knowing history is like not recording any data when running an experiment. If you don't know how or why something failed, you are bound to repeat it (someone's definition of insanity...hmmm). I could spout endless cliches but people's brains might go into sleep mode.

      Finally, social utopias only work in small scale communities.

      Nothing is free.

      All systems, whether in physics, economy, or sociology are flawed in some way, shape, or form. The writers of the original constitution knew the good times couldn't last even when they wrote it. Hey, shit happens.

      And if some supremely intelligent force out there put all its might into making the universe, do you really think it was all so we could sit on our asses all day, make endless babies, and zombie-out to the TV?

      THAT is the truth, life is the PURSUIT of happiness. Didn't say a damn thing about guarantees or refunds.

      There, I feel better now...

    34. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by ftobin · · Score: 1

      The USPS is in debt up to its eyeballs because electronic documents are causing a drop in volume. FedEx and USPS have adjusted their rates , fleets and staffing to accommodate this drop.

      Additionally, one of the main USPS's main source of debt is that it has to prepay its health benefits premiums, something no other public or private entity does:
      http://www.usps.com/communications/newsroom/testimony/2009/pr09_pmg0128.htm

      Searching Google for "usps prepay health benefits" turns up plenty of hits as well. That story doesn't resonate as much with the reading public as much as the stories of how "the internet is changing everything", though.

    35. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by ffreeloader · · Score: 1

      You have never heard of "Obama care"? It's Obama's current push toward nationalizing health care.

      What previous administrations have done with the Constituion and Bill of Rights is nothing compared to what Obama and his administration have planned for it. Previous administrations didn't even begin to say the Constitution and Bill of Rights are flawed and need to be changed. Once that starts you won't be able to even recognize what the US has historically been from looking at what it will be when they are done with it. It's a very scary proposition.

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    36. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by ffreeloader · · Score: 1

      How do we define who's a slacker? Are you kidding me?

      You really don't know what the principles are that this country was founded on? If you don't know you need to start studying the history of our government and country outside of the writings of Marxist and Socialist writers. Read what the men involved in creating our country had to say for themselves. Look into what society was like in their day, and what part of everyday life they thought government needed to play.

      You can't see anything to be proud of in our history? I feel sorry for you that you have been so brainwashed by our current educational system. We are the only nation in the history of the world that has rebuilt the nations we defeated after they have attacked us. We fought a civil war to rid us of the evils of slavery, which was exported to us by England. White men killed white men by the hundreds of thousands to give black men and women their freedom. Was that the end of bigotry? Of course not because bigotry lives in the hearts of men and no war can change men's hearts. But we had leadership and people willing to fight and die to rid us of institutional slavery.

      We have been the country of choice for the rest of the world's citizens to emigrate to. We are not known as "the melting pot" for no reason. Hell, we paid for most of the financial cost of WWII all by ourselves. The only nation in the world that paid off its WWII debt to us was Finland, and their part of the debt very small. We forgave the debts of the rest of the world and the US taxpayer footed the bill. In a day and age when freedom of religion was almost unknown in the rest of the world one of the founding principles of our nation was that anyone had the freedom to worship as they pleased.

      I see much to be proud of in all of that. It means that even though not everyone in this nation is good, and in what nation that has ever existed has that been true, we have often stood for what is right, good, and true and have been willing to help others freely and without asking for recompense.

      Do evils exist here? Of course they do. Just because someone lives here doesn't make them perfect. But, all the evils that have existed here have existed just because evil exists in the hearts of men, and they have not been accepted long term by the American people or our government.

      Why does everyone bring up Ayn Rand on this site? Who the hell is she, and what does she have to do with our founding fathers?

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    37. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Omestes · · Score: 1

      How do we define who's a slacker? Are you kidding me?

      I notice that you did not supply a criteria to judge. This is either because you take it for granted, which doesn't help since you refuse to offer a definition to help along the discussion with those who don't hold the same definitions. Or you don't know, which is hardly creates a decent debate, or solution.

      You really don't know what the principles are that this country was founded on? If you don't know you need to start studying the history of our government and country outside of the writings of Marxist and Socialist writers.

      No, I don't know. And I don't think (barring time travelers and psychics) that anyone else can claim that they know either. The only thing I've got that I'm almost 100% sure the founders would agree with is that we are founded on debate and the raucous and contradictory will of the people.

      So marxists and socialists don't have a say in the post-hoc interpretation of the founders? Who does? Only libertarian, or republican writers? Reading though the early history of the US, from the mouths of the people themselves, has only shown me that they were a VERY fractious bunch, and that there was barely a consensus on much of anything. See the battle between Franklin and Jefferson as an example.

      You can't see anything to be proud of in our history?

      Never said that, or hinted at it. There are plenty of things to be proud of, but we often are, and were, the bad guys as well. I don't see any point in painting America as the most glorious and perfect of nations since it belies the facts, and the potential for improvement. If someone is doing something better than us, with better results, we should learn from them. But saying the the US is the best at everything sort of short circuits this bit of common sense.

      Hell, we refuse to even learn from our past. We didn't learn anything from the Great Depression, as evident from our current plight. A large portion of the country would love to see us devolve back into the land of robber barons and child labor, for the sake of some mythical freemarket ideal, completely ignoring that our previous experiments with an unregulated market lead to the hardship and pain of millions.

      I don't see much to be proud of in a nation that cannot learn from its mistakes, and the mistakes of others, nor can learn from its past triumphs and the current triumphs of others.

      We do have high points, and things to be proud of. I won't disagree with that. But they shouldn't hide our flaws either.

      It means that even though not everyone in this nation is good, and in what nation that has ever existed has that been true, we have often stood for what is right, good, and true and have been willing to help others freely and without asking for recompense.

      I agree 100%. No argument there.

      Why does everyone bring up Ayn Rand on this site? Who the hell is she, and what does she have to do with our founding fathers?

      Because she is the largest cheerleader for unmitigated greed and selfishness as a virtue, and is often used as a post-hoc rationalization for being a sociopath. Also, people like to back-write her "philosophy" onto the founding fathers, and the founding of this nation.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    38. Re:Thanks for the TRUTH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now take your mom to a doctor, while she is dying from m/ediciation a week late, only to find out there next appoint/ent is three months away. So sad to bad you choose Osama health care.

  70. Bad tax design by FooAtWFU · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One specific beef. One of the tax proposals is to extend the Medicare tax to unearned income for anyone who makes more than $200,000 ($250,000 if filing jointly). Specifically, it means that if you make $199,999 you're not taxed on any investment income or capital gains, but if you make another dollar then the tax applies retroactively to any capital gains you have whatsoever, possibly costing you hundreds of dollars.

    That's bad tax design, and it will probably bite a bunch of middle-class/upper-middle-class types who have sudden large expenses and need to liquidate something to pay for them.

    --
    The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    1. Re:Bad tax design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only 1.8 percent of households make 250,000 or more[wikipedia]. That's not middle class. Also the number is 1,000,000 for married couples filing jointly. Small business tax laws are different and always have been.

    2. Re:Bad tax design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might realize capital gains to push you over $200,000 gross in a single year even if your salary is significantly less than that. And the Wall Street Journal said 'joint filers over $250,000'.

    3. Re:Bad tax design by TheFaithfulStone · · Score: 1

      $250,000 yearly income is NOT middle class or upper middle class. That's upper 1%. Being richer than 99% of the people around you is the definition of being rich

    4. Re:Bad tax design by kramerd · · Score: 1

      It would be very bad tax design, except it doesn't work like that. The proprosal is that you get taxed the higher rate on income above 200k.

      So if you make 200,001; you get taxed the higher rate on a dollar.

    5. Re:Bad tax design by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1

      The Wall Street Journal's assessment said otherwise; if they've amended it to make it more sane, though, that's good.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
  71. Said from who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Said the guy with great parents (no alchoholism)? Great upbringing (no gang-banging)? Great friends (no overly drug-addicts etc.)? Great opportunities at school, and then in work-life you have it pretty smooth?

    Face it, you're living off whatever you inherited by your parents, which is also entitlement.

    The constitution says everyone should have equal opportunities, but surely you must see that not everybody has the same opportunities, and then they get sick and die, because of assholes like yourself that doesn't care about other people.

    In any other country in Europe, health care is in most cases next to free, and much more cheap overall than the cartel you have there in the US.
    Companies making a living by killing people, yeah, that's freedom for you.
    A country is getting big trouble when it sees its people as assets for billion-dollar sickness-industry, and is not interested in educating and making people useful.
    You've been duped.

  72. Wait for it..... Wait for it.... by navygeek · · Score: 1

    This thread is going to be full of so many +5's and -1's, it's going to be ridiculous. Too many people have mod points left unused right now? Is that why this 'article' was posted? LET THE FLAME WAR COMMENCE!

  73. Personally... by emagery · · Score: 1

    I'm torn on the subject. There are some negatives in the bill I am not too happy about... there are also some badly needed positives. I'd rather have seen as a first small but serrated-edged move the creation of a public option available to ALL people. It does nothing more than offer something for the insurance cartels to compete against... just to stay alive, they'd have to shape up. Then again, insurers are not the only problem... regional hospital cartels are partially responsible as is pharma and their ludicrous advertisements for drugs, not to mention the hypochondriac nation these things have engendered over the last fill_in_the_blank years. One thing is true, though... the status quo is fatal, and one sure sign of insanity is to keep doing the same thing and expect different results.

  74. no reform. by roman_mir · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is not a 'health care reform'.

    This is not even an 'insurance reform'.

    What is going to pass is a few regulations that are supposedly going to make it not possible for an insurance company to drop coverage, to do rescission and a few more items. - This is good.

    Here is what you are not going to get:

    1. No optional public insurance against private insurance, the prices will not go down. Worse than that, what is happening is private insurance is raising prices to offset any of the new changes that will be coming with this 'reform'. Does not look good.

    2. You probably are going to get a mandate, which is unfortunate given that you will have no public option. You will be forced to buy into expensive private insurance, there will be no choice or it looks like you will get some sort of a fine. Does not look good.

    3. No cheaper drugs imported from other countries. The bill was introduced earlier this fall, but Obama actually killed it very very personally because he signed a deal with the manufacturers to do this: no competition from cheaper imported drugs AND the patents are to be extended from 5 years to something like 12 years. Does not look good.

    4. Looks like US is one of the backwards countries that will try to limit women's access to health care they need. You going to get the 'reform' that will prevent any private insurance coverage for women that includes abortion. This is no joke, even for those who have coverage today, looks like they will actually lose it with this 'reform'. Does not look good.

    The other part of it, the cost of it, that's a moot point. It was calculated that if Medicare was provided as a buy in for anyone at all, at cost (at cost - means whatever it costs, but no money is made for profit), or if there was a public option, then the reform could even save money. The way it is going to happen with no public negotiations with hospitals, no public negotiations with drug manufacturers, no import of cheaper drugs, no generics because the patents will be extended, well, I don't know if this will be cost neutral. It does not matter really, if US just cut its WAR cost, it's defense contractors costs they could probably fund the entire reform in health insurance and there would be enough money for the public education reform. Of-course that's not going to happen.

    Anyway, Pelosi and Obama and the rest of them are lying sacks of shit. They do not want to take a vote on the public option, they will not take a vote on Grayson's proposal to just allow anyone to buy into Medicare at cost. This is not a health reform, this is just a little chunk of 'change' you were promised. Take it and be happy, cause you are not going to get anything better at all.

    1. Re:no reform. by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      "4. Looks like US is one of the backwards countries that will try to limit women's access to health care they need." translation - women won't get abortions free on demand, paid for by the taxpayer?

      Please.

      --
      -Styopa
    2. Re:no reform. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      What, do you have reading comprehension problems? Women who today have abortion coverage in their private insurance will not be able to have that anymore in their private insurance.

    3. Re:no reform. by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Elective surgery is not something that should be insured against. Insurance companies are already receiving subsidies from the government, and are about to receive a lot more, so it is about time that they faced some restrictions. On second thought, abortions might be cheaper than birth, in which case the government still has cause to intervene lest the country be depopulated due to a single industry's profit-motive.

    4. Re:no reform. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Elective surgery is not something that should be insured against.

      - 1. if someone is willing to provide insurance for a fee, then what is your objection?

      I know dancers and sportsmen insure their body parts against damage, people insure their luggage, people insure whatever they want. It's between them and the insurance company and has nothing to do with anything except money.

      --
      2. who are you to say that it is an 'elective surgery'? Are you a doctor? Why can't someone have any coverage for any type of condition based on a contract? Why is the government interfering with this?

      3.

      On second thought, abortions might be cheaper than birth, in which case the government still has cause to intervene lest the country be depopulated due to a single industry's profit-motive.

      - that's stupid. Government needs more bodies, more cannon fodder. More supposed tax payers.

    5. Re:no reform. by yoasif · · Score: 1

      4. Looks like US is one of the backwards countries that will try to limit women's access to health care they need. You going to get the 'reform' that will prevent any private insurance coverage for women that includes abortion. This is no joke, even for those who have coverage today, looks like they will actually lose it with this 'reform'. Does not look good.

      Highly inaccurate. Not sure where you are getting this information, but as far as I can tell, there is nothing in the bill mandating a removal of abortion access for people who have insurance that covers abortion. Care to cite that?

    6. Re:no reform. by Robyrt · · Score: 1

      Yes, if you pulled everybody out of Iraq and Afghanistan tomorrow you could fund this health care bill. But that would cause far more people to die than health reform would save.

    7. Re:no reform. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Except that just last week they were talking about the nuclear program in the US and that out of the 3 delivery systems that US has, eliminating any single one would immediately pay for the health care and education for everyone in the US.

      Do you know the 3 systems that US has to deliver the thousands of nukes it amassed?
      1. Bombers.
      2. ICBMs fired from ground stations.
      3. Nuclear missiles fired from submarines.

      Get rid of Bombers only for example and pay for your health care and plenty of money would still be left over.

      So to answer your question, no you do not need to pull everyone out of Iraq and Afghanistan, but may I ask you what the hell are you doing there? You have already 'won' those wars, when are you getting out? That was a rhetorical question.

      The correct answer is never. You are never getting out of there because it is not a profitable proposition for your 'defense' contractors and the government.

    8. Re:no reform. by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      Pelosi and Obama and the rest of them are lying sacks of shit

      More generally, American politicians starting around the county level on up are lying sacks of shit representing the interests of mobsters.

      All the world's a "free" market, and we are but its mules.

  75. Good intentions but off target by chowdahhead · · Score: 1

    The purpose of health care reform originally stated during the presidential campaign was to reduce the cost of health care, thereby extending health care to more than 38 million uninsured Americans. Being a healthcare provider, I skimmed an early draft of HR 3200 and was struck by how little politicians understand how our health care system works, the problems within, and how to elucidate possible solutions. And there are solutions, like repealing the anti-trust exemption for health insurance providers (in the works), streamlining Medicare benefits, regulating the prices of pharmaceuticals, developing methods to evaluate and approve generic biopharmaceuticals, and so forth. There just aren't any meaningful reductions in the cost of health care in this proposal. We're looking at a situation similar to the extension of Medicare to part D, championed by the Bush administration and a noble idea, but has cost much more than initially anticipated. And honestly, the largest barrier we face is ourselves, by the inordinate amount of dollars we spend on preventable disease in this country. Low cost, affordable health care would be easily attainable if Americans just took better care of themselves.

  76. Re:Bullshit! by Bos20k · · Score: 2

    Links? Why bother, I'm sure there aren't any. I've read over and over again exactly the opposite of what you are claiming. I could dig up links for you but I'm too busy making money and paying ridiculously taxes to pay for the health care for you and all the other socialist bums on this site.

  77. I Believe We Need Reform by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I just can't help but think this bill isn't going to do it. I'm sad about the lack of a public option and I'm disappointed in the Democrats for their lack of solidarity. The GOP is a stubborn bunch but they remain effective in their unity.

    --
    I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
    1. Re:I Believe We Need Reform by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I Believe We Need Reform... I just can't help but think this bill isn't going to do it.

      This is probably the most commonly expressed opinion about this bill. I ask you, is there anything in this bill you don't think should be there? After reading the bill or even a summary of the major points, the vast majority of people in the US say they support all the things there and want more reforms yet. And yet, the majority of people don't know what is in the bill and currently don't support it. I see this as a complete failure of our press to accurately inform the populace, which is another serious issue where reform is needed.

    2. Re:I Believe We Need Reform by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      History repeats. The minority party always unifies and sticks to its guns, the majority party always fractures. That is especially so now because the Democrats have a super-majority. History also shows that presidents are far more successful when the opposite party has control of the legislative branch. When we get both branches controlled by the same party, they think they can ram-rod their agenda through and ignore the minority. The minority always finds a way to stick it to 'em. When opposing parties have the White House and Congress they have to at lest make a show of cooperation. If the Republicans were not he minority they would have passed a smaller but probably workable bill by now.

    3. Re:I Believe We Need Reform by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      Public option is just the start of single payer. That is what Obama has stated may times in the past he wants, this bill is an attempt to remove itself from single payer enough to get passed, but the thought is it will bring everyone one step closer to single payer.

      I don't want single payer or a public option, but that's my take for what it's worth to you.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
  78. sign everybody up for veterans' healthcare by rkww · · Score: 1

    Seems to me you already have a government-run healthcare system in the way of the Department of Veteran Affairs. Or am I missing something?

    1. Re:sign everybody up for veterans' healthcare by wonkavader · · Score: 1

      It would be over burdened, because it's a physical system. Better to sign them up for medicare, which is a payment system with very low overhead. The VA does specialized work for amputees, explosives victims and such which is relatively hard to find elsewhere. We don't want to saturate it with millions of new patients.

    2. Re:sign everybody up for veterans' healthcare by McDozer · · Score: 1

      I'm suppose to have VA Healthcare I was discharged out of the Army being 40% disabled. Yeah....I'm still on a waiting list to get it started more than 5 years later. I haven't heard anything from the VA about it either, they send me my monthly check and that is it. Your suppose to have to go back every year to get re-evaluated, even that isn't happening. From what I've seen so far from my experience the VA is utter fail at the moment.

    3. Re:sign everybody up for veterans' healthcare by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      The difference is that most people who vote aren't veterans. And most veterans don't use the VA because they now get private insurance through their jobs. The VA serves a tiny minority which in a democracy means they don't get served well.

      Now if most everyone signed up for a national health care system, then deficiencies would become campaign issues for sure.

      --
      ...
  79. If the left had written the bill by Gonoff · · Score: 1

    It's a good job that the USA has absolutely no far left in its government then! The Democratic Party, for example, fits in well with "mainstream right" parties in other countries such as the UK Conservatives who share some advisers with them.

    So if the Repubs see them as wayyy left, where does that leave them if they are well right of moderate right wingers?

    --
    I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    1. Re:If the left had written the bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, fuck off already. Your political systems are predicated on the notion of controlling a populace that historically enjoyed being the property of a monarch. We don't do that here, sorry.

    2. Re:If the left had written the bill by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      That's because in the U.S. left is currently defined as favoring increased government power. In Europe there are no major political parties that do not openly favor increasing government power in one way or another.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    3. Re:If the left had written the bill by Gonoff · · Score: 1

      Outside the USA, "Left" has little to do with increasing government power. That is an irrelavent side effect that may or may not occur.

      The meaning of the concept is increasing justice in society by helping the downtrodden and needy. That is why Christians find the US link between your far right and your religious so incomprehensible.

      --
      I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    4. Re:If the left had written the bill by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Where has the left ever improved the lot of the downtrodden and needy?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  80. Obviously by copponex · · Score: 2, Informative

    The point of this article is to discuss the reform in a constructive manner, not to bash entire ideologies just because they are not your own.

    Obviously, you've never seen a single hour of Fox. Imagine several schizophrenic paranoid white men, who are afraid of gays, Mexicans, muslims, the poor (that's code for minorities), hate equality, love war, and instead of using a values system as a starting point for their worldview, they start out with a worldview and then selectively apply their values system in nonsensical rants. Give them an audience and editors and producers that only care about ratings and pushing ideology handed directly to them from GOP and other ultra-conservative sources.

    Now pretend that it's news so people think they are using journalistic standards, when in fact they are simply opinion shows.

    All of the media outlets are rather stupid. Fox News is dangerously delusional.

    1. Re:Obviously by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      & Mr Rogers. Anything you could ever want to know about Fox news is summed up with the fact that they did a hit piece on Mr. Rogers.

      The guy a few generations grew up on.
      The guy that got PBS funding doubled.
      The guy that defended VCRs against Sony

      MR. ROGERS.

    2. Re:Obviously by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wow. You complain about skewed information from Fox News, then post links to a satire site and ... Media Matters!

      Hey, pot, kettle says you're black!

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    3. Re:Obviously by copponex · · Score: 1

      Well, if you think clips of Fox News are detrimental to the reputation of Fox News, then thanks for your support of my argument.

    4. Re:Obviously by cayenne8 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well, I usually try to balance things out, and watch a bit of MSNBC for awhile.

      Watch Keith Olbermann spew a bit of vitriol and some insane rants for awhile, and that alone will balance out a bit of the worst that Fox news throws out at times. But honestly, as bad as Fox can get at times...MSNBC can get as bad or even sometimes a bit worse hitting from the other end of the political spectrum.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    5. Re:Obviously by trurl7 · · Score: 1

      You do know that Colbert is a *parody* of a right-winger, right?

    6. Re:Obviously by copponex · · Score: 1

      You did watch the linked video where Colbert rips apart Hannity's Tree of Liberty, didn't you?

    7. Re:Obviously by trurl7 · · Score: 1

      No I didn't, apparently. Good job. (Come on, man! No one RTFA's, you want people to RTFP?! ) :)

    8. Re:Obviously by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Imagine several schizophrenic paranoid white men, who are afraid of gays, Mexicans, muslims, the poor (that's code for minorities), hate equality, love war, and instead of using a values system as a starting point for their worldview, they start out with a worldview and then selectively apply their values system in nonsensical rants.

      It amazes me that people seriously write stuff like this. You're obviously wrong, and obviously exaggerating so much that any point you're trying to make is lost in the insane ranting hyperbole. The truth is, they are a bunch of people (some white, some not) (some men, some not), who are most likely not paranoid or schizophrenic, who are probably not afraid of gays, Mexicans, Muslims, etc... but who simply have differing political opinions than you.

      Why the over-the-top tirade? It makes you seem like an angry juvenile. Address the issue. Don't do an angry, idiotic rant about how other people are angry idiots.

    9. Re:Obviously by copponex · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll give you a dollar for every quote from the television broadcasts of Hannity, Beck, or O'Reilly that defend the rights of:

      1. A person who isn't wealthy.
      2. A person against a corporation.
      3. An illegal alien.
      4. Muslims suspected of terrorism.
      5. Same sex couples.

      Remember: rights mean equality under the law.

      I'll give you ten dollars for any pleas to go through a diplomatic process when conflict arises between the United States and any non-white country.

      I'm dead serious. Respond with links to the transcripts, and I'll paypal or mail a check for up to $100 to the person with the most links. I seriously doubt it will be enough to buy a cup of coffee. At Dunkin Donuts.

    10. Re:Obviously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keith Olbermann doesn't claim to be news. It's an opinion piece. Fox claims to be a news outlet, yet their 'reporters' express opinion in every breath. I would be hard pressed to find a single political news piece that just reported the facts without hearing the opinion expressed from the reporters. It just doesn't happen. If you caught the Colbert Report, you would see how funny it is. Fox was practically screaming at their viewers to call their senators and complain and ask that they stop health care reform.

      Reporters typically don't appeal to their viewers vocally at least, to see their side, convert people to their cause, etc. They typically represent the facts. They may ask questions that push in a specific direction, digging for a particular answer, but Fox doesn't even pretend to do that. They flat out tell their viewers where the tea party is, how to join, where to pick up the bumper sticker, and where to send money. Hell, their reporters were right in there organizing the thing.

      Impartial my ass...

    11. Re:Obviously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Media Matters is pretty freaking objective, but then that's not surprising the left almost always is. Lying is a Republican core value, not a Democrat one.

    12. Re:Obviously by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      You are proposing a false equivalency. Olbermann has at most a 30-minute rant where he blasts the other side. Fox news has (at least) three hours a day of a hate-fest in their top-3 evening hosts (Beck, Hannity, and O'Reilly) and that's not counting the slantedness of the rest of the reporting (MSNBC, due to the MS and NBC parts - who don't want to lose their mainstream credibility - has been required to actually moderate and balance their reporting during the daytime hours). So sure, Olbermann provides a cup of sludge. Fox News provides gallons each day. I would think anyone on Slashdot would understand how quantities work.

      --
      That is all.
    13. Re:Obviously by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      Actually, I was just using Olbermann as an example of the most extreme on the MSNBC side, but the whole channel overall, I say IS a good counterpart to Fox. Maddow...the Ed show..etc. They pretty much ALL that I've seen on that channel hang to the far left.

      Hell, even regular NBC is hardly centrist...they are pretty well over to the left on their network channel...MSNBC just takes it further as a whole.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    14. Re:Obviously by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      I'm from EU (Portuguese).

      I spent some time working in the US and used to watch Fox News to entertain myself in my lonely evenings in the hotel. I watched it like a comic show.

      We have a few pretty bad TVs and newspapers here in Portugal, with half-illiterate idiots posing as journalists that make that kind of opinionated, ill-informed pseudo-journalism. But I've never seen anything like Fox News, and I never thought that was possible.

      Actually, the Colbert Report and Jon Stewart, despite being comic shows, are more insightful and reliable than Fox News.

      The fun goes away when I think that millions watch that Fox shit and take it seriously. That scares the shit out of me.

    15. Re:Obviously by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      I really don't know where this comes from. I see mostly lies in all the mainstream media, but I didn't start seeing it until a few years ago, because I took most of it at face-value. But then I started noticing how news items that I was familiar with were reported really ... wrong. I assumed at first that the journalists were just being sloppy, or misunderstanding everything going on, or whatever.

      But as I became more involved with things that the media reported about, I began to see that it was very common. They seem to just want to report what they want to, staying close enough to some truth, or quoting people that really don't have enough visibility to get the corrections seen, so they aren't questioned in their lies.

      This isn't just a Fox News or Murdoch phenomenon. It's ALL of them. The local news paper and news stations lie and distort their reporting on local stories too. You just never see it unless you really have the details yourself beforehand. Once the media outlets put their "spin" on it, that becomes the view of the event, no matter how myopic the view may be.

      I would suggest that you get involved in some events that get reported on, or get to know people that are quoted or mentioned in the news and media, then look for how the events / people are reported. You would be shocked at the lies.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    16. Re:Obviously by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      I'm perfectly aware of that. The media are owned by huge economic corporations. They report what the corporation tells them to, in the way they tell them to. I can give you many, many examples, all of them so blatant that anyone with a brain can immediately detect them. But most people will simply eat that shit with a spoon and regurgitate it every time I try to argue with them about social and political issues.

      I take my information from many sources, always with a grain of salt, and try to match and double check everything. But that's a lot of work, most Average Joes just want to be spoon fed a bunch of lies and manipulation, and pop open another beer.

    17. Re:Obviously by lessthan · · Score: 1

      I hate Fox too, but I have a link for you. O'Reilly recently raked a Catholic Church rep over the coals. Why? Because a private Catholic school refuse to re-enroll two kids, on account that their parents were a lesbian couple. The end times are here.

      --
      Space Shuttle was a program that strapped humans to an explosion and tried to stab through the sky with fire and math
  81. Re:Obama-Care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMFG it's the DEATH PANEL. Grandma will be forced to buy the FUNERAL INSURANCE!!!!!one!

  82. Please. by gbutler69 · · Score: 1

    Provide links to examples of such Jack-Pot verdicts. I used to believe that, but, everytime I looked into what was being bantered about as "Jack-Pot" verdicts turned out to be something where the medical system did fuck up big and the person was harmed very substantially.

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
  83. Re:Comunisam by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This isnt communism. Read the bill.

    Its more fascism. This isnt a government run health care program, its a mandate that buy private insurance from the insurance industry.

    Thats not quite communism.

    And Single Payer, Universal health care wouldnt be communism either, anymore than the military would be. Not that this bill is Single Payer. The democrats failed to bring real health care reform. What we are left with is a corporate welfare bill, that the democrats will praise like the republicans praised no child left behind and the patriot act. This not to say I support the republicans in anyway. More so that the democrats are just as lame and bought out by the corporations we ask them to regulate.

    For some reason SOME people are ok with spending all of our money on military defense, but when it comes to spending it on health defense... certain people cry communism.

  84. There is no spoon by phrostie · · Score: 1

    and there has been no reform to the health care system.

    just a legal requirement to be part of a broken insurance system.

    fix it and people will be drawn to it.

  85. Re:Bullshit! by Entrope · · Score: 1

    If there are so many studies to that effect, why didn't you link to any of them? Will you remedy that shortcoming so that the rest of us have data rather than a single anecdote with an inflammatory contrary response?

  86. dear libertarians and tea baggers: by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    universal healthcare is a form of investment in your society that pays dividends

    if you don't pay for it overtly, you pay for the lack of universal healthcare in terms of easily preventable heart conditions complicating into more expensive conditions, breadwinners out of work because they can't treat their diabetes leading to their children to become street criminals, mumps and whooping cough outbreaks because vaccination is too complicated for the poor, people out sick more often because of inadequate healthcare, personal bankruptcies leading to losses at financial institutions due to sudden and expensive healthcare, etc.

    in other words, you pay for healthcare, one way or another, no matter what your policy is

    its just that universal healthcare is the CHEAPEST way to pay for it. but since the cost is overt and in your face, you reject it. but this simply means you don't understand the roundabout MORE EXPENSIVE and hidden ways you pay for it if you DON'T have universal healthcare

    in other words, libertarian and tea bagger rejection of universal healthcare is based on a lack of ability to understand that life is complicated. what happens if you DON'T pay for healthcare as a society? people who get sick just disappear off the face of the earth? they are all paragons of personal financial virtue and never need aid? you yourself never need a helping hand? think about reality, then form an opinion

    there are PLENTY of areas of life that should NEVER be public, and should always be private, for a number of reasons. capitalism, in fact, is the most useful engine for the creation of wealth ever invented by man. the point is, for SOME sectors of life, not all, making some thing run by the government actually is the CHEAPEST AND MOST EFFICIENT way for that sector to function

    in other words, simplistic, fundamentalist adherence to the idea of free markets does NOT answer all questions in life, JUST AS TRUE as a simplistic, fundamentalist adherence to communist ideas does not work. but socialism, as understood by the rest of the first world, is simple the concept that SOME, not ALL, sectors of life require the government to run it for MAXIMUM FINANCIAL EFFICIENCY

    a society with a capitalist engine, with socialist safety nets grafted on, is SUPERIOR and MORE EFFICIENT than a purely capitalist society. this really is the objective financially solid truth, not an opinion. lose your utopianism please: in life, simplistic absolutist philosophies, such as a fanatic devotion to individual reliance, DOES NOT WORK IN ALL FORMS. you are part of a society. as such, you contribute financially to it so that SOME functions in your life. by doing that some functions in your life are simply handled MORE CHEAPLY than if you handled them yourself. life is complicated, and requires a moderation between competing needs. understand this about the world, and drop your extremist ideologies

    there is such a concept as the common good. there is such a concept as personal reliance. both are paragons of virtue that, in the real world, exist in tension in how they work. the idea is to find a BALANCE between the two ideals, not to simplemindedly adhere to one or the other polar extreme

    teabaggers and libertarians: in SOME avenues of life, not all, the government is good, and works for you. you reject it at the price of your own impoverishment. that's the simple obvious truth

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by willda · · Score: 0

      I just don't know whether to sit on the fence or stand on one side or the other on this one. I worked with a Canadian for a while and he told tales of the nightmare that Canadian health care is. To hear him tell it....socialized heath care is everything but good heath care.

    2. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      You have forgotten one thing: Americans do not take care of themselves very well. It does not matter how good or available health care is, if you lead a sedentary life and eat too much food you are not going to be healthy. And in the future you are going to be expensive.

      If the people made good health choices knowing that the rest of the country is sharing their burden, it would work out great. But if a large number of people are willing to forgo personal responsibility, it is going to be an ever increasing burden on everybody.

      The US does not have a major health care problem. The US does not have a major health insurance problem (although there are some things that need to be addressed, like dropping coverage after people get sick). The US has a major social problem - lack of personal responsibility. This is not going to help.

      Also, if you want to be taken seriously, learn to capitalize properly and do not call people rude names.

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    3. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      in other words, libertarian and tea bagger rejection of universal healthcare is based on a lack of ability to understand that life is complicated. what happens if you DON'T pay for healthcare as a society? people who get sick just disappear off the face of the earth? they are all paragons of personal financial virtue and never need aid? you yourself never need a helping hand? think about reality, then form an opinion

      universal healthcare will be a disaster, mark my words
      and now back to earth.
      1. the US currently runs a deficit of 1.5trillion dollars, don't think that such reform can be done without bankrupting the country, especially when economy is on life support now, even without that bill. How long can you pile up debts, no less than 1T every year? In pursue of universal happiness there will be universal downgrade of everything.
      2. libertarians don't mind paying for insurance but they oppose MANDATORY insurance and that's the case. You go to jail if you don't have insurance if i got it right.
      3. government run healthcare is unconstitutional - but who cares about the constitution
      4. problems with the US healthcare:
      - insurance tied to employer bacause of the tax code, any system where 3rd party pays doesn't put downward pressure on prices, quite the opposite. People should shop around with their own money
      - no competition across the state borders so there are de facto monopolies on the state level - bad for prices
      - doctors practise defensive medicine and run every test possible not to be sued - bad for prices
      5. i know first hand how government run healthcare works - in my country there are monthly limits of procedures, so for example if you happen to get cancer, you may wait several months for a potentially life saving procedure. And this system is permanently in the red. There is always more money needed. Maybe other countries got it right but i don't think any of government run healthcare systems works without pumping tons of money into the system.

      disclaimer: i used to be idealist leftist but after hearing what Peter Schiff has to say I converted to libertarianism.
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rcwzC-2LigM - about HC reform

    4. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by kehren77 · · Score: 1

      Well said. Wish I had mod points to give you.

    5. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      You could make this argument for just about anything that is considered private sector. What you are talking about is fascism, and I don't mean that in the 'your Hitler' kind of way. A private industry being directed nearly fully by government. Basically a government ran private sector.

      I would stop using the term "tea baggers" if you want to be taken seriously. The term is a spiteful sexual derogatory term to put that group of people down. Tea Bagging means to drop ones scrotum on anthers face - hence tea bagging.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    6. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by khallow · · Score: 1

      universal healthcare is a form of investment in your society that pays dividends

      Let's see, what sort of dividends does it pay?

      1. More government power over our lives.
      2. More people to handle the money and drive costs up.
      3. Universal health care doesn't fix the more pressing problem of expensive health care.
      4. There's no explicit constitutional authority for universal health coverage.

      The third point (about the absence of correlation between universal health care and cheap health care) warrants some elaboration. It's worth noting here that private insurance pays somewhere around $2800 per capita (not per customer!) for health care. Government (US, states, etc) pays almost as much. And with $800 out of pocket, that roughly makes up the $6600 per capita spent by the US on health care costs. The implicit assumption is that by having universal coverage, the US would slide into one of the many existing schemes. I don't see that this would happen. The US is in a unique situation, and to be blunt, the current crop of politicians has massively fucked up markets before (for example, the California electricity crisis and cap-and-trade, a couple of older examples are public transportation and Superfund).

      This discussion of universal health care ignores also that the US is not about to implement such a scheme. Whatever the US eventually implements will be unique for various reasons. cts, you haven't done so, but I've seen some people argue that health costs will go down because more people will get insurance (more accurately, they'll choose between losing 2.5% of their income and paying insurance, a choice which I imagine will still lead to a lot of people choosing not to get insurance).

    7. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by jbabco · · Score: 3, Informative

      socialized heath care is everything but good heath care.

      Canadian here.

      I've been following this all pretty closely. And as soon as the public option is off the table, I just have to sit back and laugh. Conservatives/Libertarians/name-your-right-wing-group-member just don't get it, and never will. I almost understand. It's baked into the fabric of America. Take advantage by any means necessary to gain wealth no matter what the ramifications. Case in point - insurance-based healthcare.

      What is good health care and what is bad heath care? Go ask these four people: A poor American, a poor Canadian, a rich American, and a rich Canadian.

      • Rich American: I have the best heath care in the world. We have the best doctors, no wait times, and access to the latest technology. Why, I had a triple bypass last year and I feel great! Only cost me $90,000, but worth every penny!
      • Rich Canadian: I have great health care! Doctors are always available and treatment is top-notch. I get to choose my physicians and everything! I went in for a triple bypass last year. Didn't have to wait for it. Cost? What do you mean?
      • Poor Canadian: (see above)
      • Poor American: I have a heart condition and need a triple bypass. I can't afford that and my employer-provided insurance doesn't cover it. They do cover the heart medication I'm on though, which is expensive. Unfortunately, I have to keep this shitty job at Meijers to keep it, even though I'm tired all the time and should probably be at home resting. Hopefully, things will get better. Oh shit... I just died.

      And for all those who think socialized medicine is evil, well I guess the rest of the world is just evil and America is, as it always was, the epitome of "good".

      Oh, and BTW, since you already have socialized postal, fire, school and police services, you should return those. They are evil.

      Just imagine a society where someone's house is burning down and the fire dept. checked to see if you had insurance before dispatching a truck. It boggles the mind.

    8. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by radtea · · Score: 1

      teabaggers and libertarians: in SOME avenues of life, not all, the government is good, and works for you. you reject it at the price of your own impoverishment. that's the simple obvious truth

      Simple and obvious to anyone who isn't innumerate, but the people you are trying to talk to are by definition innumerate. Otherwise they wouldn't have to lean on the crutch of ideology, which is what innumerate people are wont to do. Otherwise they would have to deal with actual quantitative reality, rather than black-and-white abstractions.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    9. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      1. the US currently runs a deficit of 1.5trillion dollars, don't think that such reform can be done without bankrupting the country, especially when economy is on life support now, even without that bill. How long can you pile up debts, no less than 1T every year? In pursue of universal happiness there will be universal downgrade of everything.

      Other countries with universal health care spend half per capita what the US does per capita. Multiply per capita spending by the capita involved and you get the financial drain on the economy of paying for health care. If the US instituted a universal health care system that cost 3/4 what is currently spent per capita, then that would save 25% of the cost to the US economy currently incurred by the status quo way of paying for health care. With the US economy on the ropes, the US can't afford NOT to institute a more efficient way of paying for health care.

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    10. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by SupraTT+GOP · · Score: 1

      Actually they understand this position perfectly well, and they will take you one further to a point you have not yet considered, apparently. The most advantaged competitor (that would be what we call federal government, whether in a more limited capacity as a minor regulator to an all-out "public-option" provider) has a distinct ability and tendency to eat away at the whole of the system, like cancer. And the more intervention there is in the system by those that "know" how best to intervene, the more cancerous and debilitating the intervention becomes. So a few years of seemingly blissful universal healthcare for all is not worth healthcare for no one at some not too distant point in the future. I hope you understand now.

    11. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by Rolgar · · Score: 0

      Don't use the term tea bagger. That is a degrading term based on childish antics of kids using video games to emulate vulgar actions. If you really want to be taken seriously, recognize we identify with the patriots who participated in the Boston tea party, so you might try tea party protesters.

    12. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

      teabaggers and libertarians: in SOME avenues of life, not all, the government is good, and works for you. you reject it at the price of your own impoverishment. that's the simple obvious truth

      If we could reject them, we would. Our philosophy is for all people to choose their own poison. You're forcing it down everyone's throat. ONCE AGAIN, states' rights. If California or Iowa or [state] wants to enact this legislation, alright. But don't force it on 300m people! Our nation is too large for the high government to be representative of the people. Such sweeping, life changing, nation-bankrupting legislation is best reserved for the better-representing states, where only a portion of the country will be affected.

    13. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      please don't lump libertarians in with teabaggers. this isn't the time or place, but I am sick of having my political affiliation hijacked by mindless Glen Beck followers.

      Those assholes AREN'T libertarians - they are right wing extremists using our third party as a shield so that if it blows up in their face they have a scapegoat.

    14. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Economics of scale. A national health care system will save far more money than state-based systems, and then you don't have to fiddle fart around when you move from one state to another. Just as it makes far more sense to have a national highway system than trying to patch together multiple state-based highways.

    15. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      It's an appropriate term for idiots engaging in childish antics. As they proved when they started protesting Obama, right after he gave them the largest tax cut in their lives.

    16. Re:dear libertarians and tea baggers: by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Let's see, how much of this needs to be debunked?

      More government power over our lives.

      The only ones with power over your medical decisions would be you and your doctor. Which would be a huge improvement over the current situation, where the insurance company has power over your medical decisions. With a vested interest in saying no, so they get more profit.

      More people to handle the money and drive costs up.

      Actually it would be less people and drive costs down. Medicare and the VA have 2%-4% overhead, compared to 20%-30% for insurance companies. The former are ten times as efficient because they aren't employing an army of bureaucrats to deny you what you paid for (health care) and the highest paid federal official is paid a fraction of a CEO's salary.

      Universal health care doesn't fix the more pressing problem of expensive health care.

      Uh, yeah, it does. It's why other industrialized countries have better care for half to a third of what we spend per patient. It's why freaking Cuba has comparable health care despite spending 1/30th per patient that we do.

      There's no explicit constitutional authority for universal health coverage.

      Of course there is, General Welfare. It's in the Constitution. Twice.

      And before you launch into the standard Libertarian shpeels that this would be a 10th Amendment violation or that Article I, Section 8 is a strict list of powers given to Congress, remember that the Constitution "only allows" Congress to fund an Army and a Navy. Which means that if Medicare for All and Social Security are unconstitutional, so is the Air Force, NORAD, the CIA, the NSA, most of the FBI, and spy satellites.

      The US is in a unique situation

      How so? We already have some forms of single payer (VA, Medicare), and they already provide better care for less money than private insurance.

      the current crop of politicians has massively fucked up markets before (for example, the California electricity crisis

      You mean Enron's massive energy fraud against the state after power was deregulated? Your California example is a good one for showing how regulation is good and deregulation is bad.

      cap-and-trade

      The whole point of cap-and-trade is to use the power of capitalism to fight global warming. How long have you hated capitalism, commie?

  87. how many pages by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 1

    Much ado has been made about the length of the bill. If you actually look at the bill text, there are approx. 25 lines per page, tabbed way in, yielding approx. 100-150 words per page, including line numbers and a whole lot of in-text references to other sections. If you trim out the legalese, references, line numbers, etc. the actual summary of what it does MIGHT make it to 20 pages.

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    stuff |
  88. How about single-payer computing? by Compaqt · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't computing be a right in this day and age?

    Finland has already declared a right to broadband.

    It's time for the US to take a leadership position.

    If it doesn't, the poor are going to fall further and further behind.

    Every resident (whether citizen or not, taxpayer or not) has this right, because rights are not dependent upon citizenship status.

    Everyone should get a computer, LCD monitor, mouse and keyboard with Windows. (That's every person, not every household. People have rights, not groups.) Everyone would get a new computer every 3 years, and free virus cleaning and computer "physicals". People might have to wait in a waiting list to get a computer, but this is better than the current system, which is based on a profit-motive, first-come, first-served basis.

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    1. Re:How about single-payer computing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't know when you last stopped into a public library, but they typically have a large section of computers for public use.

  89. no need by xaothewretched · · Score: 1

    http://eh.net/encyclopedia/article/thomasson.insurance.health.us the question isnt healthcare do this or that, question is, does it come from the federal gov't? yes, than we dont need it. its a simple study in liberty, gov't kills liberty.

    1. Re:no need by rotide · · Score: 1

      That's such a weak argument and reeks of Fox News.

      Look the fact of the matter is, if I lose my job today, I can't get health insurance. Not only will I lose my house, my car, everything I have, I won't even be able to stay healthy.

      In the end, insurance companies (private) ones at least, are a huge conflict of interest. Their supposed purpose is to insure everyone willing to pay against huge medical bills, but that is precisely what they don't want to do. They don't get rich paying for _anything_.

      They are there to keep you healthy and to get rich but getting rich is more important so your health is put aside.

      Now I'm not arguing for or against this bill. But what I am saying is that private health care is a _joke_. Myself and many others basically are uninsurable or will have to pay much more than our mortgages just to keep insurance.

      Our health insurance system is broken and free markets won't fix that. Hell just look at it now. We've let it run along and it's _failed_ _us_ _all_. Well, maybe not the rich who couldn't care less what the premium is.

      So continue with your hollow "gubmint is bad mmmkay" bullshit rhetoric. The fact is, non-goverment run health insurance is terrible beyond belief, it's time to change the game.

    2. Re:no need by xaothewretched · · Score: 1

      that is not the fact of the matter. that is the emotion of the matter. did you happen to read the link at all? gov't has been trying to get in on the health game to make a profit since early 1900s, gov't has broken the health care system through regulations, taxes and by being the single largest customer of medical care and supplies, thereby setting the market price for the rest of us not on the dole. so with the gov't setting the prices, and demanding what doctors must do charge and pay to CYA, they are running health care, right into the ground, giving them total control will only speed up the process. the free market is the only way to insure a fair and balanced system for all involved, the thing most people do not like about free market is that they have to be involved because no one will take care of it for them. we are the ones who are responsible for our own health and personal maintenance, the insurance companies are like a savings account you pay into so the money is there to pay for care when you need it. gubmint isnt bad, its "a necessary evil, but evil nonetheless"

  90. They don't know what they're doing. by atomlbomb · · Score: 1

    1. Obama has said that with this bill employer's healthcare costs will go down 3000%. Either he doesn't understand the math or he thinks health insurance companies are going to pay employer's. I think he thinks people are stupid and will think to themselves 3000%, my boss is going to save so much money. Do we want someone like that controlling our healthcare? 2. Everybody has to get insurance even if they don't want to. (What country are these people living in?) What happened to freedom of personal choice? 3. Insuring 30 million people will not make anything cheaper. 4. If the health care system is screwed up who could really think that the Feds could make it better if they controlled it? Think about how efficient our Fed. Govt. is.

  91. Taking care of people is not wrong by Chemisor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is absolutely nothing wrong with taking care of fellow humans, with loving and cherising their lives as much as your own, and with giving them your money so they can live longer and healthier lives. Except that this bill is not about that. It's about forcing you to do these things at gunpoint (and yes, a gunpoint is somewhere in your future if you stop paying your taxes) by raising taxes (by 3.8%) and by forcing you to buy health insurance when you don't want to do so. This is the core problem of socialism: it's not that we should hate helping our fellow man, it's that we should hate being forced to do so. It's that we should hate not being able to choose whom to help with our efforts, and so to not be able to value the lives of the people we love more than the people we don't.

    1. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is really there someone who DONT want to have a health insurance ? So, what's the problem with all these crazy people whom are affraid from create their own enterprise, only because the health system is a mess ?

      I just think that people who don't "want" to pay for this, just "can't". And that's the real problem for practicing liberalism.

    2. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by jwl17330536 · · Score: 1

      If that is what you *want* to do, but forcing me to is theft. If I forced someone to "take care" of me or my neighbor I would be in jail, but the government doing it is alright? I pay for the things I use in other taxes. (fuel, tolls, sales tax, ss, unemployment, etc.) It should ONLY be about things that *I* use, not things that *YOU* use.

    3. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Maybe if you stopped hating things so much you would be happier and wouldn't have as much of a problem with giving a small part of your income away to help the other people.

    4. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you also resent having your money taken at gunpoint to go into Iraq? Afghanistan? To fund your local fire and police departments? To provide clean drinking water in your community? To provide education for the children in your neighborhood?

      YOU are part of a community. YOU BENEFIT from being part of that community.
      The COMMUNITY is what allows you to live a non-third-world existence.
      It is THE COMMUNITY that you live in, that allows for a rule of law, so that when your neighbor decides that he doesn't love you as much as he loves his other neighbors and decides that he should roll up in your house and take all your possessions in the dead of night, that there is a system in place to protect you from that.

      THE COMMUNITY is what, frankly, allows you to succeed, and there is a price to being part of that community in terms of paying into the system that allows EVERYONE (not just the people you deem worthy) to benefit from it.

      This is not "SOCIALISM", these are the core principals of American Democracy man.

      Quit reading so much Ayn Rand. She wasn't a very good writer and didn't think her shit out very well.

    5. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that people would choose to help the people they love (e.g. family, friends) over the rest of society is the root problem which government itself solves. Your model leads to both vicious and virtuous cycles, leading to some groups becoming dominant and others dying out. Inheritance tax, for instance, prevents families becoming too powerful. And orphanages take care of kids who would otherwise die. This was known to the ancient Greeks.

      No-one is forced to do anything in a free country, because they can always leave*. If they choose to stay, and enjoy the fruits of living in that country, there is a social contract which says, broadly speaking, that you get to pay taxes in return for the benefits. The idea that these taxes are paid "at gunpoint" is ridiculous. This isn't Soviet-era East Germany.

      As for your Stallmanesque insistence that we "should" all have libertarian ideals: no, we shouldn't.

      * yes I am aware that if you leave you are still expected to pay US income tax. Sucks to be American.

    6. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish I could mod higher than 5 (hell, as a permanent AC I just wish I could mod...)

      The above poster has everything correct. This is the problem "conservatives" have with socialist systems. It's a matter of motivation. Teaching a person to love and cherish his fellow man is a noble goal all intelligent people should be aiming for. Forcing another person to love and cherish his fellow man doesn't work. No system is perfect, people will always find a way to work around it, or corrupt it until they are willing to buy into it on their own terms.

      And here's the rub, if everyone was willing to help their fellows on their own terms, we wouldn't need the government stepping in to force anyone to begin with. This pretty much states that the whole socialist ideal of getting everyone together is nothing but a clever ruse. If you really wanted everyone to help their neighbors you'd teach them why it was important, and how to do so in our current system. You wouldn't just steal all their money and send them to jail if they disagree with your ideas.

    7. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      forcing you to buy health insurance when you don't want to do so

      This would be fine if the emergency room wasn't forced by law to care for you when you need it. So please rally to change the law to allow ERs to turn away patients who they think can't pay......

      They way it is now, hospitals have to pay for those like you who might choose not to buy insurance through a mix of raising prices and federal assistance. So instead of making people buy insurance (we are all human and none of us wants to get sick) we are having the taxpayer and the those who have insurance pay for it. That is the way it stands RIGHT NOW.

      I understand that you right winders don't want to pick up the tab for poor minorities, or illegal immigrants. But you don't seem to realize that you are right now. The only way to change that is to make every human buy insurance.

    8. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by master_p · · Score: 1

      It's a sad thing that you were modded insightful, but I guess your modding reflects the mentality of Americans.

      Here is a simple question: if you make taxes optional, then what would you do if 90% of the people choose not to pay taxes?

    9. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by ooji · · Score: 1

      Why is it acceptable to value the lives of people you love more that those you don't? OK - we all DO on a personal level, but public policy should promote the opposite, in part to counter-balance peoples tendency to prioritize their friends.

    10. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aaaand.. why should you be entitled to not pay your taxes again?

      If charity-based healthcare were a success in the US we wouldn't be having this debate.

    11. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but but but - you sound exactly like the kind of person that would have to be forced to do it.....

    12. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Chemisor · · Score: 2, Funny

      > Here is a simple question: if you make taxes optional, then what would you do if 90% of the people choose not to pay taxes?

      I would end up with a smaller government, of course. If you eliminated all the income redistribution programs like social security, medicare, medicaid, earned income credit, etc., the government would likely end up needing 10% of the tax revenue it needs now. Then, if we also stopped fighting stupid wars over pipeline politics in central asia, we might actually be able to *gasp* pay off the national debt.

    13. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Chemisor · · Score: 1

      > Why is it acceptable to value the lives of people you love more than those you don't?

      Because that's the definition of love. To love someone or something is to value them. Are you seriously suggesting that it is not acceptable for me to love and value my daughter more than you? If so, you need to get your head examined and maybe get some treatment at your local mental institution (assuming you can afford it, of course; I have no interest in paying for your problems).

    14. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by bjk002 · · Score: 1

      I would argue that, if we are going to point guns, point it at the people unwilling to help out their fellow man, as opposed to pointing it at those with less fortune. Those less fortunate have no choice. Why is the argument always about the fortunate people of this world and their choice to do something or not...

      --
      Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
    15. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Chemisor · · Score: 1

      > This would be fine if the emergency room wasn't forced by law to care for you when you need it.
      > They way it is now, hospitals have to pay for those like you who might choose not to buy insurance
      > through a mix of raising prices and federal assistance.

      I really don't know where Obama and you get these idiotic ideas. If I go to the emergency room, I'll have to pay for it. I seriously doubt that I can just show up and say, "treat me for free". They will probably ask for some proof of insufficient income or something. And if I don't qualify for assistance, they'll just sell the bill to the collection agency and ruin my credit rating. Maybe the illegal immigrants don't care about such things, but I do.

      But, of course, this argument is missing the point; if the emergency room is forced by law to care for you when you need it, then

      > please rally to change the law to allow ERs to turn away patients who can't pay

      If there is a law like that, it is effectively forcing the emergency room to work for you for free. That's slavery, and we have a constitutional amendment prohibiting it. Therefore, the law MUST GO! And if people start yelling about how turning away people who can't pay is like killing them, note that a grocery store will not give you free food just because you are hungry, even if you'll starve to death because of it, and yet most of us think that this practice is perfectly fair and just. After all, nobody is stopping you from paying to heal the sick or to feed the hungry. And many people do just that without any government compulsion.

    16. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Sanity · · Score: 1

      It's about forcing you to do these things at gunpoint (and yes, a gunpoint is somewhere in your future if you stop paying your taxes) by raising taxes (by 3.8%) and by forcing you to buy health insurance when you don't want to do so.

      And yet I'd bet you'd be the first to expect to get treated in an emergency room if you didn't have health insurance and something bad happened. The reality is that nobody wants to live in a country where people are allowed to die on the streets because they are poor. If you accept that as a premise, then at some point it is necessary for us all to accept some kind of mandate to participate in the health care system. The alternative is the current situation, the worst of all worlds, where emergency rooms end up being the safety net for those without insurance, and we all pay through the nose for it.

    17. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by ooji · · Score: 1

      No - as I said we DO. I am saying that's not a sensible way to decide on a policy, and that the policy should instead counter balance peoples tendency to assign their resources to people more like them. Or do you like entrenched elites and no prospects for the poor? Every bodies life has the same value.

    18. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by isomer1 · · Score: 1

      You post reminds of the KKK PR materials from the past few years: "It's not that we hate black people, we just love white people more"

    19. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by goodtrick · · Score: 1

      Hey we could also just throw them into debtors prison if lowering their credit rating doesn't work. Fact is, a signifigant number of people just won't pay. I really don't know where Obama and you get these idiotic ideas. If I go to the emergency room, I'll have to pay for it. I seriously doubt that I can just show up and say, "treat me for free" You call me an idiot and then you show that you have no idea what you are talking about. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Medical_Treatment_and_Active_Labor_Act passed in 1986 during the Reagan administration. Slavery?? REally?

    20. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you!

    21. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      By being inefficient, the status quo is FORCING me, at gunpoint if I attempted to steal health care a la John Q to pay more for health care than I would be paying if there existed if there were a single payer system as there is in other countries.

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      ...
    22. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get frustrated with the "it's socialism and that's bad" arguments. Most of the people (not saying you here, just generally) who argue about socialism are staunch military supporters, despite the fact that the military system is itself a socialist item. Mostly people aren't upset by socialism if it provides something they want, they just use the hot-button word to attack things they don't want.

    23. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem i have with the argument above is that over the course of my lifetime I've seen most people opt completely out of helping others. The attitude in this country seems to be that if you give money to a Church then you are a good person who doesn't have to act to contribute to common property maintenance, protecting the weak, or caring for the indigent.

      Given that about half the country distrusts all large scale co-operative action, perhaps the 50% of us who would like more co-operation should form a voluntary shadow government that taxes and spends to provide health care. Oh, wait, we can't, because its illegal to do so. Shit.

    24. Re:Taking care of people is not wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I would end up with a smaller government, of course.

      Are you sure of that? I think you would end up with a big mafia if there wasn't a well-financed government to keep the rule of law.

  92. Public option & game theory by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1

    The public option makes the most sense from a game theory perspective: the "players" (insurance companies) in the "game" would have to adapt to a new set of rules, be more competitive, and eventually be more effective in providing services. Is that status quo, where the players all know each other's strategies and plan accordingly to preserve an oligopoly, really what we want?

    (I love the conservative argument against the public option: "Heavens, how can we expect a private company to *innovate* their way out of a situation, that's anti-capitalist!" Cry me a river, fellas.)

    --
    --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
    1. Re:Public option & game theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The public option makes the most sense from a game theory perspective: the "players" (insurance companies) in the "game" would have to adapt to a new set of rules, be more competitive, and eventually be more effective in providing services. Is that status quo, where the players all know each other's strategies and plan accordingly to preserve an oligopoly, really what we want?

      (I love the conservative argument against the public option: "Heavens, how can we expect a private company to *innovate* their way out of a situation, that's anti-capitalist!" Cry me a river, fellas.)

      Unfortunately it isn't a very fair game when one of the "Players" (the public option) is the one who makes the rules, can change them at anytime, and doesn't have to score any points (make a profit) to stay in the game.

      I think everyone on each side of this debate will agree that reform is needed, but bigger government ISN'T the answer. Everyone knows the quote "A government big enough to give you everything you want, is big enough to take everything you have". There's a bit of truth to that. And I ask you this, do YOU (or anyone else) believe that the US government really cares about you. Do you think they care about this "Awesome" health care bill? Or do you think they care about extending their own power and wallets? Everyone needs to dig down and ask themselves if they TRULY believe the government is concerned for their well-being. Also, think about they the government also has the ability to opt out of this great bill their voting on. It's good enough for us, but not for them?

      Reform IS needed, but not through bigger government, period.

    2. Re:Public option & game theory by Wildfire+Darkstar · · Score: 1

      There has been no credible mechanism for reforming the system without government involvement. Every one of the "alternatives" put forward has been, frankly, a joke. Tort reform? A handout to wealthy interests that would slice down only about 2% of the cost problem. Health savings accounts? Works very poorly for chronic conditions. Interstate competition? Fine, so where's the framework to prevent abuse when insurance providers flock to the state with the least regulation? The federal government would need to regulate as a matter of interstate commerce, but if the stated goal is to prevent "bigger government," then they're hardly going to be able to do a decent job of it.

      The question of whether or not you should "trust" the government is a red herring. The issue at stake is that private insurance has proven that they cannot be relied upon to police themselves (nor, honestly, should they be expected to), and that the normal rules of supply and demand that might keep problems in check are too easily abused when dealing with something as essential as health care. Under the circumstances, the government is both more accountable and more responsive to the public, and increased government oversight is preferable to the status quo.

      Is it a perfect solution? Maybe not. But this has been a public policy issue, on and off, for fifty years, and has dominated all other domestic policy items for almost a year now. It's not been rushed, and the parameters of the debate have been readily available to anyone who cares to look for them. And the "no bigger government" argument continues to spout the same old dubious talking points and non-sequiturs. It's not an argument being made honestly or in good faith.

      --
      Sean Daugherty "I have walked in Eternity -- and Eternity weeps."
  93. Some interesting statistics by wembley+fraggle · · Score: 2, Informative

    Here's the graph. Health Care expenditures, as a percentage of US GDP, have increased pretty significantly over the last 40 years. Keep in mind that health care costs are PART of GDP (so when WellPoint raises insurance rates, it actually shows up as an increase in GDP, which helps illustrate why GDP might not be the best indicator of our national economic health). That means that the expenditures in the health care sector have been growing much faster than those in most other sectors of the economy - if they were all growing equally, the portion of the GDP associated with health care would stay flat.

    I have my own opinions about how to solve this mess, but I'm not in congress and I have trouble making my fish agree with me, let alone other people. So I won't talk about those, just about the facts of the situation.

  94. Why _first?_ That just means stop. by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    If you really want to fix healthcare, do tort reform..

    All well and good, but for some reason no one is willing to do that. Neither of the two most powerful parties ever work on that whenever they're on top, and they've had decades in which to do it. Nobody runs on that as a platform issue and gets votes. So while that issue is worth pushing, it's pretty safe to assume that 99% of America is violently opposed (ok, so I overstate it: they're violently apathetic) to it, and it's not going to happen.

    ..first.

    If it does happen some day, that's great. But without any voter support at all, it just doesn't make sense to say "do it first." And it turns out there are reforms that many voters are willing to support. Might as well take advantage of that right now while people's enthusiasm is still whipped up. Tort reform can happen asynchronously, whenever its prerequisite resources (votes) get unblocked.

    But there you have it: lots of different people say "x" is the most important part. Your pet is tort reform. All these different reforms should be running in parallel, so that the consensus ideas can go ahead and the unpopular ones wait until people want them. Instead, we have a multi-thousand page monolith. WTF? Why a health care bill, instead of 50 health care related bills?

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  95. OK, then why doesn't the EU have universal care? by davide+marney · · Score: 1

    People are forever comparing the US to individual countries in Europe. But that is not an apples-to-apples comparison. France, for example, is demographically and economically the size of the state of Virginia. To get a fair comparison, you'd have to compare the entire US to the entire EU.

    Surprisingly, the EU does not have universal health care. In fact, it has exactly the same plan as the US: each member country/state decides for itself. We have states such as Massachusetts and Tennessee that have plans as generous as those in Europe, and other states where there is very little centrally-planned health care.

    What the Democrats are asking the US to do is something even the EU won't do.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  96. Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scott Brown

  97. ZOMG Socialism! by KingSkippus · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It's because people here are stupid. They are so desperate to avoid any trappings of Socialism that they'd rather die because they can't get medical care than to let Big Evil Government help them out.

    The truth is that we desperately need a single-payer system, just like every industrialized country in the world that realized a long time ago that health care is a basic infrastructure need for a productive, thriving population. But the American people are collectively so scared, stupid, and easily swayed, even by outright lies ("Death panels! Federally funded abortion! Rampant costs! Elderly care cuts!") posted on bumper stickers, they they would literally show up with torches and pitchforks in Washington if Congress actually did what is right.

    The funny thing to me is that these stupid people who are so quick to bash Socialism are usually fanboys of one of the most huge, expensive Socialist organizations in the entire world: the U.S. military. Now, I'm not bashing the military, I have a lot of respect for it, Socialist as it is and everything. But it's just kind of funny how when George Bush sunk trillions of dollars into it, you didn't see these idiots showing up in Washington with caricatures of him as Hitler.

    Maybe I'll post more later. I really could write a book about this, but I've got to go to work.

    But consider this. The U.S. is the only country, other than Myanmar, that still has not converted to the metric system. If this country is so stubborn and stupid as to not do things the right way just to spite those damn commies in Europe (and not have to buy a new set of wrenches), seriously, what hope do we ever have of really moving to a single-payer health care system?

    1. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by inthealpine · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't listen to this guy, it's just random spew of talking points emailed to him from the DNC.
      The biggest push that Marxism or socialism in general has is the 'right to health care'. So when people are concerned about government run health care and socialism their fears are based in reality.

      The military is not a business. I don't know how that is even an argument. Our constitution requires the government to have a military to protect our citizens.

      Ignoring the George Bush comments, that's just name that's invoked to gain acceptance of other like minded liberals/socialists.

      I agree with the change to metric, although the reason we don't switch over is the huge cost associated with such a large country.

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
    2. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's because people here are stupid. [... T]hey'd rather die because they can't get medical care than to let Big Evil Government help them out.

      No, they'd rather have other people die without medical care... The opposition to this bill comes from people who have employer-provided insurance and secure jobs -- and no relatives or friends who have been bankrupted and/or killed by the American Way (TM) of health insurance. They realize that they would pay more to cover the uninsured, but don't think about how it might be them...

    3. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by Shotgun · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's because people here are stupid. They are so desperate to avoid any trappings of Socialism that they'd rather die because they can't get medical care than to let Big Evil Government help them out.

      So, I'm stupid because I have a world view that I, not Obaman, own my body. Thank you, Mr. Sheep, but, yes, I would rather die than let "Big Evil Government" help me out. You see, in order to let BEG help me out, I will have to turn control of my life over to them...a fate worse than death.

      The truth is that we desperately need a single-payer system, just like every industrialized country in the world that realized a long time ago that health care is a basic infrastructure need for a productive, thriving population.

      Yes, because people are dropping dead left and right around me. It's a picture straight out of "Zombieland"

      But the American people are collectively so scared, stupid, and easily swayed, even by outright lies ("Death panels! Federally funded abortion! Rampant costs! Elderly care cuts!") posted on bumper stickers, they they would literally show up with torches and pitchforks in Washington if Congress actually did what is right.

      Only half of us are scared of that. The other half run screaming for their mothers if you whisper "Pay your own damn way" in their ears.

      The funny thing to me is that these stupid people who are so quick to bash Socialism are usually fanboys of one of the most huge, expensive Socialist organizations in the entire world: the U.S. military.

      When we set up this country, you know, with that silly "Constitution" and all, they enumerated some things that the government would be responsible for. Things that made sense. A federal military to protect the federation made sense. A federal bureaucracy to direct individual health care is nonsense in an American context.

      Now, I'm not bashing the military, I have a lot of respect for it, Socialist as it is and everything. But it's just kind of funny how when George Bush sunk trillions of dollars into it, you didn't see these idiots showing up in Washington with caricatures of him as Hitler.

      Ahem....http://semiskimmed.net/bushhitler.html...now you have.

      But consider this. The U.S. is the only country, other than Myanmar, that still has not converted to the metric system. If this country is so stubborn and stupid as to not do things the right way just to spite those damn commies in Europe (and not have to buy a new set of wrenches), seriously, what hope do we ever have of really moving to a single-payer health care system?

      And now, you demonstrate what a simpleton you are. It isn't just some lone mechanic having to buy a new set of wrenches. It is about replacing trillions of dollars worth of machine tools, trillions of dollars worth of machines, and trillions upon trillions of dollars worth of supporting infrastructure. You're willingness to slur others over your academic concept of replacing a massively entrenched system overnight with something that works better in your mind belies your inexperience and ignorance. Come back and talk to us when you grow up.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    4. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Yes, because people are dropping dead left and right around me.

      Yup. 45000 a year from not having insurance.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    5. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by KingSkippus · · Score: 1

      So, I'm stupid because I have a world view that I, not Obaman, own my body.

      No, you're stupid because you think that this bill is going to take away your ability to make decisions regarding your own health care. Or a liar. Which do you prefer?

      The truth is that we desperately need a single-payer system, just like every industrialized country in the world that realized a long time ago that health care is a basic infrastructure need for a productive, thriving population.

      Yes, because people are dropping dead left and right around me. It's a picture straight out of "Zombieland"

      There, I highlighted the part you deliberately overlooked to create your strawman. It's not a matter of people dying in the street, it's a matter of people going bankrupt because they have a screwed up gene, they fall down, they get into an auto accident, the get pneumonia,...

      When we set up this country, you know, with that silly "Constitution" and all, they enumerated some things that the government would be responsible for.

      You mean things like, "promote the general Welfare?" (Right there in the first sentence, in case you weren't paying attention.) Or maybe you're referring specifically to the enumerated power of Congress to "lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States?" Inconvenient it is, that zany Constitution, isn't it?

      And now, you demonstrate what a simpleton you are. It isn't just some lone mechanic having to buy a new set of wrenches. It is about replacing trillions of dollars worth of machine tools...

      This idiot doesn't understand a simple metaphor and calls me a simpleton. That's golden. Anyway, it shows the amazing arrogance of these idiots, that they completely neglect the fact that the entire rest of the world somehow managed to do it, a combined economy that is emphatically much larger than ours. But then, most of the rest of the world isn't so boneheaded that, when they see a much better idea, they deliberately run away from it. There are exceptions, of course--witness Myanmar--but then it's sheer lunacy to sit here declaring, "Yeah, we want to be like them!"

    6. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup. 45000 a year from not having insurance.

      Maybe then the illegals should go home to die and quit sucking up all of my tax money.

    7. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by ffreeloader · · Score: 1

      This is absolutely false. I'm unemployed, have diabetes, high blood pressure, and have suffered from disabling back pain for 10 years(the reason I'm unemployed after 30 years in the work force). I currently am getting no medical treatment for any of my health issues.

      I'm against this bill for several reasons:

        1. We cannot afford this with the shape our economy is in.
        2. The true costs of this bill are being hidden behind a veil of lies and deceit.
        3. The government here has never administered an entitlement and come in at anywhere near the estimated cost. They have always been far more expensive than what the politicians say the program will cost.
        4. We are being told that much of the savings will come from getting rid of the fraud in Medicare and Medicaid. However, if that were true why haven't we gotten rid of the fraud already? We need to create another entitlement, and new huge government bureaucracy, to get rid of the existing fraud? What a raft of crap.
        5. $500 million of the "savings" taken from Medicare/Medicaid that is supposed to be used for deficit reduction in the 1st 10 years is money taken from Medicare and then spent elsewhere, not applied to deficit reduction. It's as dishonest as hell to count that money twice and to say it's going to be used as deficit reduction. It's not. So, instead of a $120 billion dollar budget deficit reduction it's $380 billion added to the deficit, and that's before counting all the things in the bill that are supposed to be done later that will never get done as no Congress in the future is going to want to do what this one didn't. Too politically unpopular.
        6. This has been the most corrupt political process I've ever seen in my 56 years of life. If it was all it is supposed to be the process would have been above-board and far more transparent.

      There's more reasons I'm against this bill, but the above will do for starters. Yeah, I'd love to have health insurance and have my medical issues treated, but not at the expense of bankrupting my country. I'm not that selfish.

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    8. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The military *has* been a business in different countries, in different times in history. And what do you think Xe (Blackwater) is? Your argument is historically ignorant on that basis alone.

    9. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I currently am getting no medical treatment for any of my health issues.

      The odds are in excess of 90% that the three medical conditions you describe are a direct result of your own behavior.

      If this is the case, why do you think you have the right to cost-shift the consequences of your own decisions to other people?

      You know that you don't actually need medicine to treat type II diabetes and high blood pressure? Diet and exercise will do the job. Lose some weight and your back will feel better too.

      STFU and get off your ass. Take responsibility for your own health.

    10. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      And now, you demonstrate what a simpleton you are. It isn't just some lone mechanic having to buy a new set of wrenches. It is about replacing trillions of dollars worth of machine tools...

      This idiot doesn't understand a simple metaphor and calls me a simpleton. That's golden. Anyway, it shows the amazing arrogance of these idiots, that they completely neglect the fact that the entire rest of the world somehow managed to do it, a combined economy that is emphatically much larger than ours. But then, most of the rest of the world isn't so boneheaded that, when they see a much better idea, they deliberately run away from it. There are exceptions, of course--witness Myanmar--but then it's sheer lunacy to sit here declaring, "Yeah, we want to be like them!"

      KingSkippus must have skipped history class. Get this buttwipe, Europe and most of the rest of the world had nothing close to the industrial base of the US when they developed the metric system. Then there were a couple of world wars that wiped out a good part of the industrial base they had.

      Why is this important to health care? Because it points out cultural, physical and economic realities that you choose to ignore. I say I have perfectly good wrenches and an infrastructure in place to support them. You whine that I should throw out everything I have and move to your standard. IOW, you're a damn fool.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    11. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      I would ask for a reference, but the entire premise is stupid. Not a single person in all of history has ever died of not having insurance. Still, you might want to do some research to discover where that 45000 number came from. Quoting it doesn't do much for your credibility.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    12. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Not a single person in all of history has ever died of not having insurance.

      ...they just die from not having the money to pay for their care out of their own pocket.

      There's a Anatole-France-like quote somewhere in there.

      And, incidentally, you're wrong. They're dying because they lack money. They're dying because they lack health insurance. They're dying because they lack a 30 kilogram bar of gold. They're dying because they lack a winning lottery ticket.

      They're dying because of they lack any of those things, they lack anything they could use to pay for their care, and it's perfectly correct to blame their death on any specific lack I want to, because if they had that specific thing, they would not be dying.

      Still, you might want to do some research to discover where that 45000 number came from.

      I know where that number comes from. It comes from basic statistics. People who don't have health insurance have approximately a 60% higher mortality rate. (And this includes people who voluntarily don't have insurance, aka, they consider themselves healthy.)

      You're hoping it came from some sort of subjective 'What did people die from, and could it have been prevented if insured?'. It did not.

      It simply looked at people who were insured, and people who were not, and at what rate they died of medical problems. People who are not insured die at a much higher rate, period. It is not some subjective thing, it is not possible to argue with it.

      Of course, this is slightly skewed because of rescissions, where insurance companies drop sick people from their rolls, so they become uninsured on the way to dying.

      But that's a slightly surreal argument to use. 'They doesn't really count, lack of insurance didn't didn't cause their death, their eminent death causes their lack of insurance. They were going to die anyway, so we thought we'd make them poor as they did so.'

      That's one of those 'I couldn't have murdered X, I was busy raping Y at the time' alibis.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    13. Re:ZOMG Socialism! by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      They're dying because of they lack any of those things, they lack anything they could use to pay for their care, and it's perfectly correct to blame their death on any specific lack I want to, because if they had that specific thing, they would not be dying.

      Thank you for displaying your complete inability to put together a cohesive thought, let alone a simple logical statement. People die, because they're sick. The lack of insurance did not cause them to get sick.

      If NASA would fly me to the space station when I'm 80, I might be able to live to 83 due to the reduced gravity. NASA not flying me to the space station would not be the cause of me dying at 81. I do NOT have a right to be flown to the space station. I do NOT have a right to a doctor's time. I DO have a right to purchase a doctor's time. I do NOT have a right to force someone else to pay for me to purchase a doctor's time. I DO have a right to invest my resources into purchasing a doctor's time to attend to someone else's health as I see fit.

      You think that it is ok to enslave part of the population and force them to work as you see fit. I think you're wrong, disgustingly so, but that's fine. I live in a country where people are allowed to disagree. But that doesn't mean that completely illogical statements must be allowed to pass unchallenged.

      Now, if your claim was that "45000 fewer people would die each year if everyone had a doctor's care", your statement would be logical. It would still be completely wrong, but it would at least be logical.

      Still, you might want to do some research to discover where that 45000 number came from.

      I know where that number comes from. It comes from basic statistics. People who don't have health insurance have approximately a 60% higher mortality rate. (And this includes people who voluntarily don't have insurance, aka, they consider themselves healthy.)

      You're hoping it came from some sort of subjective 'What did people die from, and could it have been prevented if insured?'. It did not.

      Thank you for reiterating the democratic talking points and displaying your complete lack of knowledge. The number comes from a study conducted by David Himmelstein, M.D. and Steffie Woolhandler, M.D. It was a completely skewed "study", without any sort of proper controls. The study method did not even make sense. Not that you'll look it up and investigate for yourself, and I'll be damned if I spoon feed it to you. The short story is that it wasn't a study, it was propaganda.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  98. Polotician's greed is never as good as it seems. by boweniant · · Score: 1

    This bill does the following 1. They want to claim a ride to fame, when in reality it will be infamy 2. They want to control America, this is without a doubt 3. This is only the beginning, as several politicians lay claim to it being akin to a "Starter Home" 4. This bill also includes student loans, and it makes the new graduates subservient to the government 5. Through this bill they will be able to control various aspects of American's lives as this and that will have an impact on your government imposed insurance. Things to remember. 1. Healthcare insurance is not a right, but a good / service that is to be purchased. 2. It is in no way constitutional to force this upon Americans 3. Equating this to car insurance is BS, not all of us have cars, but all of us that are alive do not need insurance. 4. Under this imposed system the rich will all the much more have the unequal distribution of health care that they claim to not like. Look at Canada, every time someone rich / powerful needs some health care right now they take a trip to USA. 5. This bill is so bad that it's been stalled by the Democrats for over a year. The Republicans have not had enough senators, until recently, nor enough democrats to stall, or otherwise interfere with the legislation. With most of the legislation being one sided anyway. 6. When was the last time the government budget estimations lived up to what they actually spent?

  99. Tort Reform won't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Studies have been done on tort reform that shows the savings are just not there. For instance, this CBO report shows that, while malpractice costs have risen sharply:

    "Evidence from the states indicates that premiums for malpractice insurance are lower when tort liability is restricted than they would be otherwise. But even large savings in premiums can have only a small direct impact on health care spending--private or governmental--because malpractice costs account for less than 2 percent of that spending."

    1. Re:Tort Reform won't help by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      So, you're saying that only one portion of the cost incurred from out of control tort will save us an entire 2% all by itself?!!

      I love how these studies conveniently choose to ignore the collateral cost (unnecessary procedures) imposed by lawsuits.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  100. The dim, flickering light of rejectionism by tenzig_112 · · Score: 1

    The underlying problem is that we are engaged in a panic economy. As fickle consumers of media, we have a taste for the loudest and the shrillest of voices, and even when we vehemently disagree or even mock them, we lavish hem with our attention. And in the age of 24-hour cable news and the Internet, attention is money. So, we essentially pay people to wave their hands in the air and yell "boo!" at the screen. It seems silly that so many of us are honestly surprised that people are scared.

    The bill is going to be streamlined and fixed over the next few years in smaller bills. But who cares about that? It's so much easier to reject the whole thing out of hand over deliberate lies (death panels) or language that isn't actually in the bill (coverage for illegal aliens). Best of all, rejection gives you the freedom to sit back and complain without accepting any civic responsibility.

    This thing is a long, dull process that's going to require that people stand up and state their case, over and over again, until this thing is right. So, at a time like this you have to ask yourself something. Are you the stand-and-fight sort of person or a rejectionist?

    Personally, I'm spoiling for a fight.

    1. Re:The dim, flickering light of rejectionism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bill is going to be streamlined and fixed over the next few years in smaller bills.

      Where did you get that rock? I'd like to get one. I figure it must be awfully comfortable for you to have stayed under it for the entirety of this country's history.

    2. Re:The dim, flickering light of rejectionism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's shocking how people who complain the most about government know the least about it. Ignorance is a tempting option, I suppose. It makes life comfortable and sure.

      Read this (if you can):

      http://www.forbes.com/2010/03/18/tea-party-ignorant-taxes-opinions-columnists-bruce-bartlett.html

  101. Other reform options by alta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here's an idea, instead of forcing everyone to GET expensive health care, lets try lowering it's cost first. You realize that with the government paying for healthcare, the cost of that care is just going to go up? Prices that companies charge individuals are generally cheap. Prices they charge companies are high and prices they charge goverments are INSANE? We're all going to be getting $800 toilet seats.

    So, instead of the current plan, lets try this first.

    1. Buy insurance across state lines. This gives people the opportunity to search for cheap insurance. Right now you can only get insurance in your state... Imagine if you couldn't buy anything over the internet across state lines.
    2. Limit lawsuit payouts. The lawyers (sharks with lasers) are making a KILLING on lawsuits. Reduce the payouts and the sharks will have less to feed on, there will be fewer ambulance chasers because the $$$ will become reasonable.
    3. Reduce the FDA requirements. Wow, meds sure are expensive. Oh, they aren't in canada? Oh, and canada sells the same meds for much less and they don't have such a stringent approval process? Hmmm
    4. Promote Savings Health Accounts (see 1. first) - If you put in $xxx dollars tax free into an account that's YOUR money. Once you cap it at a certain level you just pay the maintenance (the insurance part in case something catastrophic happens) Now, it's your task to shop around for an affordable healthcare provider. You'll think twice before paying $300 for a checkup.
    5. This topic wasn't designed to discuss immigration, but guess what, that's a major cost in health care. The country will fail if the people paying into healthcare are expected to support every ILLEGAL immigrant that wants healthcare. Especially if the hospitals are charging those goverment rates for it ($30 for an aspirin anyone?) I'm just going to say, if you can't reasonably prove your an american, you don't get american health care, unless you can pay cash.

    Exercise: Call 3 local providers and tell them that you have some common malady and tell them that you have Blue Cross insurance, ask them what it will cost you, and what they will bill BC. The next day, call them all back, same malady and tell them you're paying out of pocket. If day 2 isn't a third of day 1 I will eat my shoe.

    --
    Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
    1. Re:Other reform options by Hobbiticus · · Score: 1

      5. This topic wasn't designed to discuss immigration, but guess what, that's a major cost in health care. The country will fail if the people paying into healthcare are expected to support every ILLEGAL immigrant that wants healthcare. Especially if the hospitals are charging those goverment rates for it ($30 for an aspirin anyone?) I'm just going to say, if you can't reasonably prove your an american, you don't get american health care, unless you can pay cash.

      So, say you traveled to another country far away on vacation, or even some sort of long-term stay. Say you happen to have a heart attack or some other major health event. You're obviously not a citizen of that country, and you may not be able to pay cash for the proper health services. Are you saying that you should be turned away?

    2. Re:Other reform options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The principal reason meds cost less in Canada is that no publicity is allowed, so no publicity budget included in the price.

    3. Re:Other reform options by Negadecimal · · Score: 1

      Totally agree.

      Late last year, I had some "required pre-op bloodwork" done in preparation for minor neck surgery. I drove to the hospital, signed some papers, and was ushered to a back room where a nurse drew two vials of blood, then sent me on my way. My car was still warm when I got back in it.

      I was billed $1,200 for the hospital visit. My insurance, which I send about $7k in premiums each year, found a dozen "reasons" to deny payment on the subsequent claim. I'm still fighting.

      Now, I don't blame the providers for trying to milk insurance for everything they're worth, and for amortizing costs across $30 aspirin and $20 toothbrushes. I also don't blame insurance companies for avoiding payment - they have a bottom line, too. I blame costs. When a blood draw costs as much as a CAT scan, we shouldn't be focused on access to insurance; we should be lowering the cost of the blood draw. Our system lacks efficiency, transparency, and common sense.

    4. Re:Other reform options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of your points are decent, but:

      1. The bill does this. That's what the "exchanges" are.

      2. Already been shown that this only leads to 1-2% reduction in costs. Just look at Texas, which already has many of these reforms...healthcare costs are still extremely high.

      3. Some merit here. All in all though, I would rather have a cumbersome approval process than have to deal with constant recalls as we find out that prescription drugs are often dangerous. I think more government grants for drug research combined with a shorter amount of monopoly time for a drug (ie patent reform) would be better.

      4. HSAs are great if you have a lot of extra money. For those of us who have to tread water, they're really not tenable.

      5. Not treating someone because they're not american is a little callous. Illegal immigrants basically go through the emergency room right now, where they get brought up to "stable" and sent home; this costs more than providing preventative care would. As it stands though, I would prefer making the process of immigrating legally easier; then these people would have to buy insurance under the current health care bill.

    5. Re:Other reform options by Aargau · · Score: 1

      Hope you like shoe, you're going to have to eat it. Paying out of pocket can triple the cost because of a little game of negotiated rates - we know this isn't the real price, so when we reduce it it makes both sides look good, even though it's horribly overpriced. Cash only patients have no leverage since there is no competition based on price.

    6. Re:Other reform options by kehren77 · · Score: 1

      1. Buying insurance across state lines will not reduce insurance costs. What it will do is give insurers incentive to all pick up and move to the state with the most relaxed health care regulations. Then they can charge as much as they want for as little care as they can get away with. This is essentially what all of the credit card companies did in the past.

      2. I'm assuming that you are going to limit payout on a scale based on incident right? $100,000 lose of use of a limb, $300,000 for an eye, $1,000,000 for accidental death. I'm not saying there shouldn't be limits, but I think you'd have a tough time getting a consensus on the amount for each. And I don't think that limiting the amount would lower the number of malpractice lawyers. Even with lowered payouts, there is still a ton of money to be made. What we need is a way to discourage frivolous malpractice suits. You know like the people who sue their doctor after their wife has a c-section and now they don't want to have sex with her because or the scar and other stupid crap like that.

      3. I'm not familiar with the drug approval process of Canada, however, I'm guessing that drug companies could lower prices or devote a seriously greater amount of fund to R&D if we'd pass a law banning drug ads on TV. You know the ones that tell you to ask your doctor about their latest drug that has side effects that sound 100 times worse than the condition it's treating.

      4. Again, I'm not as familiar with the workings of HSAs. I don't really see how this is much difference than not having insurance and keeping a rainy day fund for med expenses, except the non-tax part of it. To me I don't see this as a way of reducing costs. It might eat away at Insurance profits if enough people did it.

      5. Ah yes the illegals. Why stop there? What about the homeless? They aren't contributing to the system. Let's just let them all die too. Look, I'm not a fan of illegal immigrant either. I believe that we have a legal way of immigrating into this country and that people should follow the rules for coming here. But I also believe that those rules are just are draconian and messed up as our health care system. If you want to address the problem if illegals in this country then you first need to address the immigration process.

      And from the sound of it, you want to regulate the payment amounts to hospitals (don't want them charging $30 for an aspirin). So would you also want to regulate reimbursement for insured people? I mean why should a hospital charge the Medicare $30 for an aspirin and only charge Blue Cross $10? Sounds a lot like you want someone to start regulating how much doctors and hospitals charge for their services. This sounds an awful lot like a single-payer system.

    7. Re:Other reform options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prices that companies charge individuals are generally cheap.

      In what alternate dimension do you live, where insurance purchased on the individual market in the US is cheaper than buying group insurance?

      Prices they charge companies are high and prices they charge goverments are INSANE?

      Actually they pay less, because they buy insurance for large groups which spreads the risk around. There's also a volume discount in some cases. One of the reasons for the exchange is to allow individuals to buy insurance at group rates.

      Most of your items read as very partisan talking points, which have some degree of merit, but don't deal with risk discrimination or covering the uninsured.

    8. Re:Other reform options by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      I agree that health care cost is "the" problem and it is not being addressed. But the problem is that private health care wants to charge what the market will bear instead of making a reasonable profit. There is tort reform already in Texas and California and private health care saved a huge amount of money as a result, but did not pass any of those saving on to their Customers. Health care costs the same there as anywhere else. There needs to be changes that private health care cannot game like a Public Option or drug re-importation if the cost trend is going to go down.

    9. Re:Other reform options by alta · · Score: 1

      I'll start at the bottom and go up...

      I don't think any entity should pay $30 for an aspirin, personal, business or government. I don't have the perfect solution. But I think we should work on reducing the $30, as opposed to goverment healthcare where the gov is going to agree to pay $30 for everyone to make it fair. A bad price is a bad price, regardless who's paying for it.

      5. Ok, a few of you have valid points. The bigger problem is not paying for a few illegals or homeless, as you said its the immigration process. Its only slightly enforced at the borders, but part of the problem is free health care is a huge incentive to be an illegal. Catch-22, but we have to start somewhere. Take your pick, I don't care. (actually I do, I'd much rather start at the border itself than the hospital) But we should at least limit what they can be treated for. My wife did her nursing internship in the ER. 3/4th of the people there had minor wounds, or head-colds, and everyone that was there with minor problems had no proof of residency.

      4. There are different types of HSAs, here's the one that we had. Each month you pay, say $100 into your HSA. $60 of that went into your savings account, $40 of it was used for insurance. Once you reached $2000 you stopped paying the $60, so your health insurance went down to $40. When you went to the doctor, you paid them out of the $2000. It benefit you to shop around and get the best price because you want to keep that $2000 topped off to keep your monthlys down. It also benefit you to not go to the doctor for anything frivolous, and to just keep yourself healthy. Anything that comes out of that account was tax free. It had the added benefit of, you can use it with any doctor that accepts cash. Right now my BCBS doesn't pay for vision because the company didn't opt for that. That sucks for me. If anything catastrophic happens that's when the $40 you've been paying kicks in. They'll wipe out the $2000 and start paying your bills via the insurance.

      3. Ok, I stand corrected on why canada has such low prices... SO YES, kill drug advertising here.

      2. Of course it'd be on a (very difficult, complicated, controversial) scale. Yeah, an accidently amputated leg would net you more than a finger.

      1. Before I moved here I had great coverage (transfered in the same company) but now my insurance isn't as good because it's not available in this state. What good reason IS there for not allowing sales across state lines? Well, I do know one problem. Each state has it's own insurance commissions office... They have a lot to keep up with just in-state companies. This would mean more work for them. But hey, that means more hires and that's stimulating the economy ;)

      --
      Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
    10. Re:Other reform options by khallow · · Score: 1

      But the problem is that private health care wants to charge what the market will bear instead of making a reasonable profit.

      Of course they do. The real issue is whether they can get away with doing that and why. My view is that stringent rules on hospitals and care providers have given us (in the US) high quality health care, but it has also restricted supply. More supply would lower costs even if every single one of them wants to charge what the market will bear, due to competitive undercutting by rival care providers.

    11. Re:Other reform options by alta · · Score: 1

      I think my shoe is going to stay where it is... I site this example because I've done it. Sure, if you start by calling the largest hospitals in your area, sure you're going to get a big cost. They only want to deal with insurance because it scales well, and they are in bed together.

      Try calling the smaller medical centers. Do you have those where you're at? I'm talking about places with 5ish doctors. There's more than one place to get coverage.

      Sure, if you need a CT scan you're going to have to go to the place with the million dollar piece of equipment. But if all you need is a tooth pulled, there's a lot of competition for your business there.

      --
      Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
    12. Re:Other reform options by khallow · · Score: 1

      Actually they pay less, because they buy insurance for large groups which spreads the risk around.

      Risk pooling never results in lower costs nor is that its purpose. It simply reduces the volatility of health expenditures. A large health insurer or government agency can reduce costs either through bargaining power or using their legal power to force health care providers to serve.

    13. Re:Other reform options by khallow · · Score: 1

      If you want to address the problem if illegals in this country then you first need to address the immigration process.

      This is part of the immigration process. As I see it, the primary decision for whether or not to immigrate is economic. Government provided services would then encourage immigration, legal and illegal.

    14. Re:Other reform options by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      My experience is that paying out of pocket is way more expensive in some cases because a practitioner (say, a physical therapist) is going to try to inflate your invoice as much as he can under the assumption that insurance is just going to eat it all.

      I could see how the OP's assertion might be true in the case of smaller practices though, where there might be significant time involved in dealing with the insurance company.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    15. Re:Other reform options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5. Ah yes the illegals.

      Yes, the problem that people like you love to dismiss.

      Why stop there? What about the homeless?

      WARNING: STRAWMAN ALERT LEVEL TO DEFCON 3!

      Because the homeless are citizens, asshole.

      Look, I'm not a fan of illegal immigrant either.

      That sounds like when racists say "Some of my best friends are black!"

    16. Re:Other reform options by FunkyOldD · · Score: 1

      1. Buy insurance across state lines. This gives people the opportunity to search for cheap insurance. Right now you can only get insurance in your state... Imagine if you couldn't buy anything over the internet across state lines.

      This is actually a very bad idea. All insurance companies will move to the state that allows them to screw their customers the most. That's what happened when credit card companies were deregulated in the late 70s. Why do you think every credit card company is headquartered in South Dakota and Delaware? Because charging 30% interest is illegal in other states.

      2. Limit lawsuit payouts. The lawyers (sharks with lasers) are making a KILLING on lawsuits. Reduce the payouts and the sharks will have less to feed on, there will be fewer ambulance chasers because the $$$ will become reasonable.

      According to CBO lawsuits account for 1% to 2% of health care costs - so even you eliminate ALL malpractice lawsuits (including legitimate ones), you are not saving enough to make a difference.

      3. Reduce the FDA requirements. Wow, meds sure are expensive. Oh, they aren't in canada? Oh, and canada sells the same meds for much less and they don't have such a stringent approval process? Hmmm

      Why can't we just re-import drugs from Canada instead?

      4. Promote Savings Health Accounts (see 1. first) - If you put in $xxx dollars tax free into an account that's YOUR money. Once you cap it at a certain level you just pay the maintenance (the insurance part in case something catastrophic happens) Now, it's your task to shop around for an affordable healthcare provider. You'll think twice before paying $300 for a checkup.

      HSAs are a great idea. The problem is that many people would rather spend their money, even if it's taxed. For instance, everyone can save for retirement tax free using IRA accounts; but how many actually do it?

      5. This topic wasn't designed to discuss immigration, but guess what, that's a major cost in health care. The country will fail if the people paying into healthcare are expected to support every ILLEGAL immigrant that wants healthcare. Especially if the hospitals are charging those goverment rates for it ($30 for an aspirin anyone?) I'm just going to say, if you can't reasonably prove your an american, you don't get american health care, unless you can pay cash.

      So if unconscious car accident victim does not have a proof of citizenship and doesn't have $10k on him you would throw him out of the emergency room?

      Exercise: Call 3 local providers and tell them that you have some common malady and tell them that you have Blue Cross insurance, ask them what it will cost you, and what they will bill BC. The next day, call them all back, same malady and tell them you're paying out of pocket. If day 2 isn't a third of day 1 I will eat my shoe.

      Would you like some condiments with your shoe? Blue Cross negotiates reimbursement rates with hospitals, and therefore will pay LESS, (as much as 60% less) than you would pay in cash. Check your statement next time: it plainly states what the hospital billed Blue Cross and what hospital accepted as payment.

      Health care is a very complex problem.

    17. Re:Other reform options by kehren77 · · Score: 1

      I'll use your order :)

      5. I guess I'd like to see more numbers on the actual $$$ that emergency rooms spend on the uninsured. I'm sure it's high, but if the argument is that they go because it's free then why don't we hear about all the Americans running to Canada for the free healthcare? Again, I think you have some valid concerns about illegal immigrants, perhaps a solution would be a co-op program between hospitals and INS. Seems like illegals would avoid hospitals if they thought they might be deported.

      4. Okay see, that is the type of system I don't mind. Although, I am curious as to who is holding your $2000 for you. Because whoever is holding it is making a ton of money on the interest. My other concern with this type of system is that it encourages the "wait and see" mentality. People hold off on trips to the doctor because they want to save money. Maybe they get better on their own, but maybe they get worse. And then they find out they now need an expensive procedure that could have been solved cheaper and easier if they'd have caught it early. But I can see the appeal to this type of system.

      2. I'm sure that a leg does net you more than a finger these days. But this goes back to the topic of the $30 aspirin, if you want this all nicely planned out with a $ amount for each item/procedure then someone has to be in charge of picking the pricing. It's a matter of who you want to do the pricing. The insurance company? the doctors? The patients? The government? The first 3 entities have a personal stake in the matter. The government does in the case of Medicare/Medicade and Veteran Health programs. So really unless we have some completely unbiased organization come in and set those levels, you will never get the 4 groups to agree.

      Plus once you set those levels, you've eliminated the ability of the capitalist principles or supply and demand to dictate pricing. At that point, why not just implement a single payer system?

      1. Well as I said, why would an insurance company continue to operate in a state that required they cover a long list of conditions when they can move to a state that doesn't? Perhaps after they moved they would then be forced to compete with each other on price, but the more likely scenario would be informal price setting. It would be like the gas stations in your town. They all charge the same price (usually within a 10 mile radius). When one changes prices, the others do as well. The best explanation I've seen of this can be found here: http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2010/02/selling_insurance_across_state.html

      Plus the current heath care reform proposal does a version of the "buy across state lines" via the health exchange. The difference is that it is a national standard. Which is good. That way the companies can't just offer the crap plan in the least regulated state only.

      You also mention that each state has it's own insurance commission office. This, to me, is another reason for a nation system. Think of the cost savings in government spending if each state didn't need a full department just to deal with insurance regulations.

    18. Re:Other reform options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never lowers costs for whom?

      Actually, risk pooling can reduce costs to individuals purchasing insurance if they are allowed to join a diverse group. That is because a sole individual is priced according to the risk they present, but the group members are priced according to the collective risk of the group.

      So, an individual would save money by joining a group that contains enough healthy group members, because the risk is spread out. This is the reasoning behind the individual mandate (like it or hate it); It gets healthy people into the risk pools too. Without this, you have the problem of antiselection, which is where only sick people want to buy insurance. Antiselection increases overall systemic risk and thus cost of premiums.

      This is also why "high risk pools" aren't helpful in reducing costs to policy holders -- people in those high risk pools would have to pay high premiums, which doesn't really change the status quo. You want to create a big, diverse pool of insured folks to be financially sound, which can allow you to reduce premiums.

    19. Re:Other reform options by Aargau · · Score: 1

      I've dealt with the cash side of the American system since I'm in a startup at Stanford and we can't get insurance until we draw salary. We've had a few folks in recruitment turn us down because they need coverage. Advantage large corporation. There are very few unaffiliated care centers in the Bay Area, and most have prenegotiated fee structures that jack up the price for cash customers, since they are the minority here. We've tried to negotiate, but for large scale health situations (like surgery) you will not have any chance to ask for the anesthesiologists rates (both time and materials), the use of hospital facilities and materials. No joke, we got charged $500 for the hallway we were wheeled into before surgery, and nowhere did we get a preview of that cost. So perhaps you haven't experienced the awfulness of larger health issues. I've been lucky enough (or perhaps unlucky) to use healthcare in various countries (Japan, Taiwan, New Zealand, Palau, various South Pacific islands). Japan was great care, small bill. Taiwan was not covered by insurance, but it cost the equivalent of $8 to remove a pencil eraser from our toddler's ear. Palau's health care didn't even have a thermometer when I came down with a jungle infection. Given a choice I'd take Japan and Taiwan over the US until the US has a true disclosure and competitive system.

    20. Re:Other reform options by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      This is all exactly what we should do, as a first step. This actually addresses the real costs of health care. People like to rabble rouse and lie that it's the Fat Cat (rabble rousers love that phrase) Insurance Companies that are making health care expensive. Odd, then, that they post like 3-4% profit margins. Pretty tiny.

    21. Re:Other reform options by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      maybe you missed the part that private health insurance wants to charge what the market will bear no matter how many get sick or how much they have to actually pay. Private health insurance is not passing any savings when they get it along to their Customers.

    22. Re:Other reform options by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      Prices that companies charge individuals are generally cheap. Prices they charge companies are high

      Does somebody else pay for your medical insurance? You've got it exactly backwards. In the U.S. it is far cheaper if you get in on a plan through your employer than if you buy the same plan on your own.

    23. Re:Other reform options by khallow · · Score: 1

      Actually, risk pooling can reduce costs to individuals purchasing insurance if they are allowed to join a diverse group. That is because a sole individual is priced according to the risk they present, but the group members are priced according to the collective risk of the group.

      If the individual is high risk, then yes, they get a bunch of freebies. If they are low risk, then they get to pay more. The average payout is slightly negative - the cut taken by the insurer. That means if it were strictly a bet on a game like roulette or blackjack, the insurance customer would be better off by not playing.

      The thing that insurance insures against, from the customer's point of view, is sudden, big health care costs.

    24. Re:Other reform options by khallow · · Score: 1

      Private health insurance is not passing any savings when they get it along to their Customers.

      Doesn't happen that way. Health insurance is a competitive market. You might be satisfied with paying more for less insurance, but employers generally are a bit more aggressive about such things.

    25. Re:Other reform options by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Health insurance is a competitive market.

      Hardly. Health insurance companies have an anti-trust exemption, so most states are dominated by a single insurer. And even when they are, they act as a oligopoly, just like cell phone companies.

    26. Re:Other reform options by khallow · · Score: 1

      Hardly. Health insurance companies have an anti-trust exemption, so most states are dominated by a single insurer. And even when they are, they act as a oligopoly, just like cell phone companies.

      As I was saying, competitive market. Just because a market is dominated by a single insurer doesn't mean that you have to buy from the dominant insurer. And an oligopoly is a competitive market by definition. It may not be as competitive as I'd like, but that's too bad.

    27. Re:Other reform options by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      The current private health insurance system is all but collusion

    28. Re:Other reform options by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      As I was saying, competitive market.

      On what planet? Do you know what oligopolies are or what it means to be exempt from anti-trust legislation? Why would Wellpoint get in a price war with Atena or Cigna when they can collude to keep their profits high?

      Just because a market is dominated by a single insurer doesn't mean that you have to buy from the dominant insurer.

      Except the entire point of insurance is to spread the risk into a pool. The larger the pool, the more stable it is. Then there's economics of scale - a large insurer is going to be able to negotiate better prices than a smaller one. And again, since they're exempt from anti-trust legislation, there's nothing to stop United Health from offering killer deals on employer-based plans that will save companies a lot of money - while hosing you individually - to drive smaller companies out of the market.

  102. The US health care system is broken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Much of it due to government regulations already implemented. It needs to be fixed. ObamaCare instead just takes a really bad situation and multiplies it by a huge factor. Why? Because no one is paying attention to the ROOT CAUSES of the broken health care system.

  103. The religious right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I keep hearing from the right that this is bad, but if's your Christian ... if your agnostic, wika or whatever this about universal health care coverage like this... "I am my brothers keeper". No one should lose there house, car whatever to cover serious medical expenses for them selves there wife or husband or child.

  104. What have the Romans done for us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Is there anything that the government runs that really functions correctly/efficiently?

    All right... all right... but apart from better sanitation and medicine and education and irrigation and public health and roads and a freshwater system and baths and public order... what have the Romans^H^H^H^H government done for us?

    just sayin'....

  105. I give up. by 2obvious4u · · Score: 1

    The only reason I am opposed to it is because my taxes will go up; but they are going to go up anyway. If my taxes don't go up it will only be because we are increasing our debt, which will in turn devalue my dollar. In either case I will be poorer because of it.

  106. You guys make me laugh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am from Europe (yeeeaaah Europe) and seriously you americans make me laugh with your hesitations about this...
    On one hand you complain about your healthcare being crap when you are not filthy rich... (even then it is quite crap considering the prices your doctors charge)
    and on the other hand you go "oh but it is unconstitutional! its not the american way!"
    so the american way is to get shafted again and again and complain about it but not do anything about it?

  107. Not Enough Babies by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    First, I don't think anything that shields consumers from prices will bring down costs.

    But even if this bill is conceptually sound, it will still fail and bankrupt the nation. Why?

    We don't have enough young people. Around 1940, we had about 44 people for every 1 retired person. Now the ratio is 3.3 to 1.

    You can't have a welfare state and a low birth rate long-term. It will bankrupt us all. The only conceivable way around that scenario is strong economic growth, but the high taxes needed to pay for the welfare state will snuff that out.

    It's not my place to tell people how many children to have, nor is it the government's place. Ironically, liberals tend to have less kids, the same kids their welfare state relies on.

    We're basically a few years behind Greece.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  108. The military by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Efficiently? Are you sure? I think an awful lot of money is spent on that. And when we attacked Iraq, government beancounters decided to hire companies like Blackwater to kill civilians, instead of using the government-run military to do that. Why was that? PR?

    The military is something where we all take the status quo for granted, and nobody really thinks about whether or not the job is done well.

    To be fair, though, a government-run military is the system we've used, and I don't see any T-72s rolling through my backyard. So yes, apparently it did work. But let's not go overboard with words like "efficienty" without running any comparisons.

  109. My friend will lose his job because of this bill.. by morsmortis · · Score: 0

    and he doesn't work in the health care industry; he does programing for Sallie Mae. Why is his job in jeopardy? It's because the democrats want to kill two birds with one ungainly stone by privatizing the student loan industry. This whole thing is a mistake. No one seems to care about this takeover, because they are obsessed with this health care bill, which isn't even worth the paper it is written on. Sallie Mae takes loans from Bank of America at 5% and adds on 1% to service those loans. That 1% is what the government wants to cut from the picture; attaching it to the health care bill to mitigate the cost of the health care bill! If the government cannot do as well as private company that has done this for decades it will actually lose money. Just like health care and education, I need food and a place to live to survive in this world. So, why can't I get all my goods and services from government centers that get their supply directly from the source? As a former Marine, with injuries, I have faced the VA on many occasions, and in turn, they inundated me with paperwork that would make a welfare recipient surrender. On top of that, I am utilizing the new G.I. Bill, which had a very very ugly start last year. Many veteran's did not see a payment until the end of their first semester, because the system was "too complicated"; they had a year to get it right, but they failed. Some things that have bugged me; individuals who tell you it's not their job and transfer you to another person who says the same thing, endless forms to fax that never get received, telephone numbers that direct you to different dimensions where there is no hold - only a busy signal (what, is this the 90s??) If the federal government cannot even take care of it's veteran minority, then how is it supposed to service the majority Why are my parent's still upside-down 300% in their house value, why are countless American's still unemployed, and why is Social Security on the back burner when it's out of money? Where are viable fixes for these problems? I voted for Obama and so did my friend. So far, Obama has been a colossal failure imo.

  110. There are a few of us left... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...who want the strongest economy possible with the lowest possible taxes and government blockades to success so we can go out, find good jobs, move up when we're ready, and provide for ourselves. The more the government tells me what I can and cannot do and siphons off the fruits of my achievement, the worse my prospects get for living well. There are a ton of places you can go if you want the nanny state to wipe your ass. Let's keep America the place where people manage their own affairs.

  111. Bill will kill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Socialized medicine is a failure. Look at Canada and the UK. You have to wait months and months for a simple procedure. The NHS in the UK is consistently sighted as providing horrible care and using up a very large chunk of change. If this garbage passes, we will have care rationing and Washington bureaucrats deciding on medical procedures instead of doctors. The liberal social agenda is not good for America. Wake up sheeple and see what is happening to America! We are heading towards socialism, higher debt, and an increasing loss of liberty.

  112. This bill make economic sense by JBoelke · · Score: 1

    Currently the U.S spends the largest amount of it's Gross Domestic Product on health care 15%, then any other country. The next largest spender is Switzerland at 11%. So the U.S. spends 4% on health care then next largest spender. With this additional spending does this mean that the U.S. has a higher life expectancy, then any other country? No. The U.S life expectancy is ranked 50th in the world. The current system does not produce good results. Other systems do, and it is good that the USA is going to change to a better system.

    1. Re:This bill make economic sense by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

      If life expectancy is low because I eat at McDonald's too much and don't exercise (and because of high crime rates), I fail to see how that is the fault of the health care system.

      --
      Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  113. Would you buy a used car from Obama/Pelosi? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the answer is no, then why let them have 1/6th of our economy to destroy?

    Look at the list of failed programs our monsterously over-sized government can be held accountable for:
    Medicare - bankrupt
    Medicaid - bankrupt
    Social Security - bankrupt
    Stimulus - are things any better?

    If you did not notice, the government now employs more people than the private sector. This is scary, and the main reason why America is sliding into decline. We have lost our edge on manufacturing, research, technology, space travel - everything tangible.

    Our medical system was pretty good. This attack on the system by Obama/Pelosi will probably lower the available care, create a big strain on the system, grow the deficit, and screw the middle class (who are expected to foot the bill for all of the liberal giveaway/welfare programs).

    If you look at the process used to pass it ("deem and pass"), you realize that the Liberals (epitomized by Obama and Pelosi) literally no longer care about representative government (ie, democracy). They are going to do whatever they want to until we throw their sorry butts out!

    Go look at this clip of Congressman Tom Perriello (D-VA) - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bsIHnyWsaqA - it is one of the few truthful things a politician has said in a long time. And what did he say? "If you don't tie our hands, we will keep stealing!!".

    Fix Capitol Hill. Vote out every incumbent. Keep firing these clowns until we get some in office that actually do more than worry about lining their pockets and getting reelected.

  114. government by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    And the reason why it is linked with employment is because of tax incentives and policy decisions made by government in the 1940's.

    Government breaks your legs and tells you they are the only people to give you crutches.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  115. Worst Bill In History by Ferretman · · Score: 1

    I'm stunned by the comments of those in favor of this mess above me. One can only surmise that they spend their time alternating between coffee shops and the computer in their mom's basement....

    --
    Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc
  116. Your humor is unwittingly accurate factually by FreeUser · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I live in a country that has government-run universal insurance, and I deal *directly* with my doctor, too. I'm not sure why you believe this isn't possible.

    Brain-washing and indoctrination.

    The funny thing is, your tongue-in-cheek post spoofing the right-wing mentality in the US actually answers the question quite factually right there.

    I'm American. I've lived most of my life in the United States, but have lived numerous times, for a number of years, outside of the United States (Germany, France, Japan, Hong Kong, and currently the United Kingdom) and had occasion to use the healthcare system myself, or have one in my family use it, in nearly all those locations (to be pedantic: I did not need to use the healthcare system in Japan).

    The US system is by far the worst system I have used, in terms of delivery of service, cost, and effeciency. The healthcare (when provided) was adequate most of the time, but subpar more often than you might imagine (my wife got a staff infection from a routine vaccination that nearly killed her...mainly because the hospitical couldn't figure out how to diagnose such an obvious problem for an indordinate amount of time. And don't get me started on the weeks-long waiting lists for critical tests like angiograms, and the lab test results that show up months late, the lack of follow-through by doctores, and the billing mistakes that are perpetual to the point of absurdity, and always favor the hospital).

    In contrast, we've had no trouble whatsoever with the medical system in Germany, France, or Hong Kong (though this was back when Hong Kong was a part of the British Empire, so YMMV these days), and with the NHS in England, only the occasional hassle of having to follow up on getting test results (but at least when you do follow up, they show up within a couple of weeks, unlike Northwestern, where they routinely go AWOL for 6 months or longer).

    But try telling that to any of my fellow Americans. They simply will refuse to believe it (and most likely label you a liar for daring to reveal such uncomfortable truths that challenge their world-view of us having the best system in the world). Why? Years of rhetoric and brainwashing, founded on absolutely no facts.

    Want another datapoint? Guess where the richest (non-American) people in the world tend to travel to for their private medical treatment. And I'm talking about Richer-Than-God, I can fly in my gold-plated jet anywhere in the world I like (including the US) and spend more than the GDP of a small country on my medical care people.

    It isn't the US. Not most of the time, anyway.

    The US is a distant fourth, behind France, the UK, and Germany? Why? Because a lot of the leading-edge research Americans (like one who has posted here) think only happens in the US, and excuse our rediculously lousy price/performance ratio on, actually take place and is funded by those countries that are paying 25-50% of what we pay for our substandard medical care.

    But then, we're the best in the world. We don't need to learn anything from anyone else, do we? (cue patriotic music and refrains of "God Bless America" here)

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
    1. Re:Your humor is unwittingly accurate factually by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      my wife got a staff infection

      I hope you meant Staph (as in Staphylococcus) infection. Remind me not to go to that clinic.

  117. Slashdot is packed with OLD people!? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    Slashdot is packed with the entitlement generation

    While there are some 60+ year olds around here (the people who would punish politicians at the polls if they even suggested eliminating Social Security and Medicare) they're still a pretty small minority. Most of slashdot is young enough that SS will be long gone by the time they turn 65. So WTF do you mean by "packed with the entitlement generation?"

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    1. Re:Slashdot is packed with OLD people!? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Most of slashdot is young enough that SS will be long gone by the time they turn 65. So WTF do you mean by "packed with the entitlement generation?"

      SS will be there, they'll probably just have to scale back on how much it pays, and you won't get it until later in life, and they'll probably have to print more money (causing inflation) but something will get paid.

  118. This is a really bad bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here are some comments on just the first 500 or so pages of this 2700 page monstrosity:

    Page 22 of the HC Bill: Mandates that the Govt will audit books of all employers that self-insure!!

    Page 30 Sec 123 of HC bill: THERE WILL BE A GOVT COMMITTEE that decides what treatments/benefits you get.

    Page 29 lines 4-16 in the HC bill: YOUR HEALTH CARE IS RATIONED!!!

    Page 42 of HC Bill: The Health Choices Commissioner will choose your HC benefits for you. You have no choice!

    Page 50 Section 152 in HC bill: HC will be provided to ALL non-US citizens, illegal or otherwise.

    Page 58 HC Bill: Govt will have real-time access to individuals' finances & a 'National ID Health card' will be issued!

    Page 59 HC Bill lines 21-24: Govt will have direct access to your bank accounts for elective funds transfer.

    Page 65 Sec 164: Is a payoff subsidized plan for retirees and their families in unions & community organizations: (ACORN).

    Page 84 Sec 203 HC bill: Govt mandates ALL benefit packages for private HC plans in the 'Exchange.'

    Page 85 Line 7 HC Bill: Specifications of Benefit Levels for Plans -- The Govt will ration your health care!

    Page 91 Lines 4-7 HC Bill: Govt mandates linguistic appropriate services. (Translation: illegal aliens.)

    Page 95 HC Bill Lines 8-18: The Govt will use groups (i.e. ACORN & Americorps to sign up individuals for Govt HC plan.

    Page 85 Line 7 HC Bill: Specifications of Benefit Levels for Plans. (AARP members - your health care WILL be rationed!)
    Page 102 Lines 12-18 HC Bill: Medicaid eligible individuals will be automatically enrolled in Medicaid. (No choice.)

    Page 12 4 lines 24-25 HC: No company can sue GOVT on price fixing. No "judicial review" against Govt monopoly.

    Page 127 Lines 1-16 HC Bill: Doctors/ American Medical Association - The Govt will tell YOU what salary you can make.

    Page 145 Line 15-17: An Employer MUST auto-enroll employees into public option plan. (NO choice!)

    Page 126 Lines 22-25: Employers MUST pay for HC for part-time employees ANDtheir families. (Employees shouldn't get excited about this as employers will be forced to reduce its work force, benefits, and wages/salaries to cover such a huge expense.)

    Page 149 Lines 16-24: ANY Employer with payroll 401k & above who does not provide public option will pay 8% tax on all payroll! (See the last comment in parenthesis.)
    Page 150 Lines 9-13: A business with payroll between $251K & $401K who doesn't provide public option will pay 2-6% tax on all payroll.

    Page 167 Lines 18-23: ANY individual who doesn't have acceptable HC according to Govt will be taxed 2.5% of income.

    Page 170 Lines 1-3 HC Bill: Any NONRESIDENT Alien is exempt from individual taxes.

    Page 195 HC Bill: Officers & employees of the GOVT HC Admin.. will have access to ALL Americans' finances and personal records.

    Page 203 Line 14-15 HC: "The tax imposed under this section shall not be treated as tax."
    Page 239 Line 14-24 HC Bill: Govt will reduce physician services for Medicaid Seniors.

    Page 241 Line 6-8 HC Bill: Doctors: It doesn't matter what specialty you have trained yourself in -- you will all be paid the same!

    Page 253 Line 10-18: The Govt sets the value of a doctor's time, profession, judgment, etc.

    Page 265 Sec 1131: The Govt mandates and controls productivity for "private" HC industries.

    Page 268 Sec 1141: The federal Govt regulates the rental and purchase of power driven wheelchairs.

    Page 272 SEC. 1145: TREATMENT OF CERTAIN CANCER HOSPITALS - Cancer patients - welcome to rationing!

    Page 280 Sec 1151: The Govt will penalize hospitals for whatever the Govt deems preventable (i.e...re-admissions).

    Page 298 Lines 9-11: Doctors: If you treat a patient during initial admission that results in a re-admission -- the Govt will penalize you.

    Page 317 L 13-20: PROHIBITION on ownership/investment. (The Govt tells doctors what and how much they can own!)

    Page 3

  119. False dichotomy much, summary? by obijuanvaldez · · Score: 1

    Will this bill do what the administration claims to do, or is it as bad for the future of America as Fox says?

    Or perhaps it will do neither.

  120. Re:OK, then why doesn't the EU have universal care by Ihlosi · · Score: 2
    France, for example, is demographically and economically the size of the state of Virginia.

    As long as you don't mind the difference of about an order of magnitude in population and GDP, yes. FYI: Population of Virginia: about 8 million, population of France: about 60 million. GDP of Virginia: about $400B, GDP of France: over $2T.

  121. Worst Bill In History . . . really? by SlappyBastard · · Score: 1

    Is it a great bill? Fuck no. None of them ever are.

    Is it the worst bill in history? Um, are you fucking retarded? Have you read a history book?

    I mean, you're saying a very flawed form of universal healthcare would be worse than the Mann Act? The 18th Amendment? The Alien and Sedition Acts? The Missouri Compromise?

    Seriously, dood. The language doesn't wholly belong to you, so please avoid butchering with your titty baby histrionics.

    And for the record, if you don't like what we do in power, don't drive the country into a ditch the next time you're in power.

    --
    I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
  122. hospital charges have nothing to do with payment by spineboy · · Score: 1

    As all ins co. have "deals" with hospitals. If you look at the bill, then you'll see that the ins co only pays a fraction of the charge. Indeed - most doctors only collect about 21-22% of what they bill.
    80% off
    that's right.

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
  123. My Experience by gedrin · · Score: 1

    I have a genetic disorder that requires metabolic and orthopedic treatment, AKA a pre-existing condition. I've never been denied insurance. I've never been denied care. My costs are reasonable, about $600/year for my portion of the plan my employer provides. My out of pocket for my first hip replacement will be about $4000. I have no fear that the current system will provide me with access to additional replacements as these wear out. I'm optimistic that new technology will come about under the current system that will continue to improve on the quality of my care. I have access to specialist care as I desire. I use the current system. It works for me. It works for me with my pre-existing condition. It worked for me when I was in a car accident. It works for my friend with high blood pressure. It worked for my nephew who had a complicated birth, and for his mother. It works for my wife's grandfather who is alive due to heart surgery. My grandfather fell off a roof and broke his back at 70, then lived another spry 15 years in good health because the current system worked.
    Heart surgery, childbirth complications, broken backs, hip replacements...none of these have bankrupted us. We are not weighed down by the burden of the cost of our insurance. So, adjust things incrementally if you like. Let a state or two try it out and see what happens. However, you will pardon me if a sweeping comprehensive rewrite of the current health care system is something I do not embrace. The government has undertaken to radically change the system that has provided good care and life saving medicine to myself and my family. I remain unconvinced. I do not need this. I do not want this.

    --
    Moderation : -1 Conservative Viewpoint
    1. Re:My Experience by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      When you are employed you enter a pool. If the company is large enough, they probably don't consider whether hiring you will increase the rate they pay per employee. When you attempt to buy insurance as an individual ( not though your employer ) then you will be denied because of pre-existing conditions. Also the rate you pay per month will = ( cost of hospital delivered pregnancy / 9 )

      --
      ...
    2. Re:My Experience by gedrin · · Score: 1

      Your point seems to be that if I don't have a job I won't have the money to pay my bills.

      --
      Moderation : -1 Conservative Viewpoint
    3. Re:My Experience by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      No. Insurance is cheaper through an employer because insurance purchased individually is subject to adverse selection where people who know they are apt to need to make claims will tend to buy insurance and people who expect to be healthy will not. Clauses in the coverage terms allowing for denial for 'pre-existing conditions' is an attempt to ameliorate this, but only the patient knows for sure what the pre-existing conditions that have been diagnosed are. It's possible they went to a doctor under an assumed name, and paid out of pocket to get a diagnosis of cancer, then bought insurance to cover treatment. ( not a bad idea by the way if you think you might have cancer, or some other possibly terminal disease, then you can load up on life insurance too before getting it diagnosed where it will go down on your permanent record.

      If you don't have a job, or own your own small business, or are a private contractor, then your employer isn't making substantial contributions to paying for your health insurance that you would be stupid not to partake of. ( some employers give a small rebate if you choose not to partake of the company policy,but try purchasing a policy of your own on the open market with that money ). Purchasing as part of a risk pool is cheaper because there is less adverse selection, and the employer contribution is worth more than the rebate they give you precisely to create the incentives to enroll even if you're healthy necessary to create the risk pool in the first place.

      --
      ...
    4. Re:My Experience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is how group insurnace works. Excellent summary.

  124. Huh? by Slash.Poop · · Score: 1

    "It appears that today might be the end of a very long road to health care reform."

    No it doesn't. They won't even vote until Sunday. Which is not today. Even then, depending on what they actually vote on it might go back to the Senate and then back to the House.

  125. Bogus bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This bill is nothing but a pissing match between the two parties, "We will pass it", "No you won't". That's all it has come down to. I personally believe that it's not even about the issue at hand, it's just about who wins. It's sad to see our government stooping to this level and it's nonsense. I haven't read the latest bill or watched the news about it recently, but my personal feelings on it are mixed. If there is a centralized healthcare system, then it will be their job to regulate the substances we can take into our bodies as part of the health care coverage they provide. They will then crack down harder on tobacco companies, fast food restaurants and many other day to day opportunities that millions of Americans support. Other people say "This works in my country" but have you seen our population or our budget? We're broke and to offer coverage to millions of people is just ridiculous.

    1. Re:Bogus bill by Wildfire+Darkstar · · Score: 1

      I haven't read the latest bill or watched the news about it recently, but my personal feelings on it are mixed.

      I've never tried green eggs and ham, but I do not like them, Sam-I-Am.

      If there is a centralized healthcare system, then it will be their job to regulate the substances we can take into our bodies as part of the health care coverage they provide.

      Well, then I suppose it's a very good thing that "a centralized healthcare system" was never under debate. The current deliberations started with a government-administered insurance plan that would compete with the private industry in order to exert pressure through competition. And even that's been off-the-table for months now.

      Other people say "This works in my country" but have you seen our population or our budget? We're broke and to offer coverage to millions of people is just ridiculous.

      American exceptionalism rears its head again. Our economic situation isn't great, but we're by no means the worst off in the world, nor do we labor under the greatest deficit. That other nations can manage it doesn't necessarily mean that we can manage it, but it suggests that a close evaluation may be in order.

      Besides which, the cost question is a bit misleading. Our current health care industry is eating a huge chunk of our economy, and growing larger all of the time. Part of the point of reform is to stem that growth in order to save the country money: the long-term savings offset the upfront costs. Or so the argument goes, and so the CBO has found each time a new revision of the bill gets punted off to them.

      --
      Sean Daugherty "I have walked in Eternity -- and Eternity weeps."
  126. Dear Liberty by Xiver · · Score: 1

    Dear Liberty, You've always been true to me and loved me unconditionally, that's why its hard for me to write this letter. I've met someone else. She's everything I've ever wanted in a woman, she's educated in European ways and speaks with a sexy accent. Although I don't always understand what she says I'm sure she has my best interests at heart. As soon as she leaves her current lover overseas we are going to run away together and spend the rest of our lives living truely free. I'll always remember the good times we had together, I hope you can find someone that makes you as happy I know she is going to make me. Sincerely, The people of these United States

    --
    10: PRINT "Everything old is new again."
    20: GOTO 10
    1. Re:Dear Liberty by gedrin · · Score: 1

      Dear The People,

      I tried to explain this to you time and time again, but I never loved you unconditionally. I expected things of you. You were supposed to take care of your self. I always wanted you to do more than just survive, but you couldn't even do that on your own.

      Liberty

      --
      Moderation : -1 Conservative Viewpoint
    2. Re:Dear Liberty by stonewolf · · Score: 1

      What liberty are you planning to give up?

      It would help me to understand your answer if you include information about your age, your level of education, and your personal wealth. Oh yeah, since you are posting about the health insurance reform bill it would help to know if you have ever suffered from a long term illness or ever lost a job because of the cost of health insurance.

      Seriously, I want to know where you are coming from.

      Me, I 57. I have a Masters (non terminal) in Computer Science. My net worth is around 3/4 million. I have health insurance through my wifes job. I am uninsurable. I can't buy health insurance for any price. I am currently under treatment for persistent prostatitis caused by prostate stones. I have prostate stones because I changed jobs and did not have coverage for a preexisting condition known as GERD. I have GERD as a result of a hiatal hernia. How did I get a hiatal hernia? I was born with it. So, technically I was born with a preexisting condition. I'm lucky I ever had health insurance. What about COBRA you say? Well I did get COBRA coverage for my child with epilepsy. But COBRA is very expensive and I could not afford it for the whole family. Well then why did I change jobs? Well... it was a start up funded by a Japanese company. I jumped to a contract position at IBM. That also got shut down. I was out of work for a while then but I was able to find a job that paid 60% of what I had been making. That as during the recession in the early '90s so I felt lucky to have a job at all. That also got shut down. Anyway, I could afford the meds I needed for GERD. But then it got worse and I could not afford to see a specialist to get the prescription changed. So, being young and foolish (my early 40s) I just took commercial antacids to supplement the meds.

      Antacids contain a lot of calcium and eating too much calcium can give you stones in the oddest places. You think of stones and you thing of kidney stones or gal stones. You think of lots of pain. But, you also know there are some pretty good treatments.

      You know how you get rid of prostate stones? You might pass a few, they tend to be very small. You've heard of the pain of passing a kidney stone. Well imagine that pain, if you can, happening every time you make love or jerk off. But, short of removing the prostate you don't get rid of the stones. Have you ever broken a bone? Had appendicitis? Been shot? Had a baby? I met a lot of people who can not imagine serious pain because they have never experienced it.

      Guess what? Those stones serve as homes for bacteria. Normally you can cure a prostate infection with 2 weeks of a generic antibiotic. If you have stones... well, the first time I got a prostate infection it took a year of treatment to clear it up. A year of alternating antibiotics. Usually two different antibiotics at a time. I was sure lucky that it was not considered to be a preexisting condition. Wow, That would have been a bitch. The antibiotics cost as much as a $1000 dollars a month.

      All that just because I had an uncovered preexisting condition for one year. Yeah, I had insurance while I was taking all those antacids. It just didn't cover my preexisting condition.

      Oh by the way, if I had been uninsured when I had that year long infection I still would have gotten treatment. It would not have been as good, and it would have taken a lot more time. And, it would not have cost me a dime. You see, I live in the US where we have the most absurd form of universal health care in the world. If you show up at an emergency room and are sick or injured, they must treat you. Then they can try to collect the money from you. If you don't pay... well eventually the debt goes away. Yeah, there is a statute of limitation on debt in most of the US. Here in Texas it is 4 years. So, of course the emergency room would stop serving me if I don't pay, right? Nope, not allowed by law. Guess who pays for all of that unpaid for health care? We do, you and I. Why do you think it costs so much to go to a hosp

    3. Re:Dear Liberty by Xiver · · Score: 1

      You just made my point.

      --
      10: PRINT "Everything old is new again."
      20: GOTO 10
    4. Re:Dear Liberty by gedrin · · Score: 1

      I thought that might be it. Just wanted to toss in my view.

      --
      Moderation : -1 Conservative Viewpoint
  127. Med school Loans are typically around $100K by spineboy · · Score: 1

    And I paid for two years of it with my own earnings and help from my family.

    repaying loans isn't that much of a factor
    Now torte reform - that would bring about some cost savings.

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
    1. Re:Med school Loans are typically around $100K by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now torte reform - that would bring about some cost savings.

      Torte reform? Like making lard-asses eat less torte? Hmm, worth a thought...

  128. This is the wrong way to go by ITJC68 · · Score: 1

    They do need to fix the healthcare system we all know that. But a government take over is not the answer. Social Security as well as other government controlled services are any example when the Federal Government gets involved it usually screws things up even worse. The main stream news media echos this administration on all the information they put out. We have a right to questions these numbers and I am also in full agreement with Mark Levine that if congress passes this bill it should be immediately challenged in a court of law. To pass a bill that is not finished is not constitutionally correct and legal. Just have the up or down vote and you will see this will fail to pass. They know this. They are trying to buy off people to push this through. The whole problem with this program the way they have it setup is the working class will have to bear a lot of the cost. The wealthy will get hit even worse. I am sorry but I don't agree with that. It is not a sin in the country to be wealthy and we should not be able to force them to pay for something more then a fair share. Until this country cleans up the entire system (Welfare, public aid, illegal immigration) this should not pass. I for one have a problem with taking money from my check to pay for healthcare for someone who is not a legal citizen in this country. When this gets passed the flow of immigration will increase even more as we will get over run. Just watch and see if this passes besides bankrupting the country. I know this post will probably get alot of people angry or disagree but it is everyone's right to speak their mind/opinion in this country. I for one will be watching and if my representatives vote for this I will be voting to get them out of office when their terms come up. 70% of polled people are against this but they still want to pursue it. WTF?!?

  129. Procedure is wrong by LittleKing · · Score: 1

    At this point in the process, regardless if you like what's in the bill or not, every US citizen should be opposed to the procedures that are being skipped to "pass" this bill. Here's a history lesson:

    The US government is setup in three branches: Executive (President), Legislative (Congress), and Judicial (Judges). The legislative is broken down into two groups, the senate and house (called congress), and are the only groups that can actually pass a bill. The founders decided that the best way to keep the country from turning into a dictatorship and for everyone to have representation is to split up the law making process. Therefore before any bill can be signed into law by the president both chambers of congress must pass the same IDENTICAL bill, then the president can sign it into law.

    Regarding the current proposed bill, the Senate has voted on and passed the bill while the House has not. What is proposed and is currently happening is that the house has decided that the they will not vote on the original senate bill and are deeming that the bill has been passed. What they will be voting on on Sunday are proposed changes to the bill. This means the president will sign the exact bill the Senate passed not the changes the house is proposing. Then the senate has to decide to vote on the changes from the house before the president can sign the changes into law (which has no guarantees of happening).

    The major problem I have with this is the lack of accountability. When our constitution was created, there was a process put in place for a reason and I am against skipping the process. I realize this has been used in the past but and I am opposed to how those bills were passed as well. I doubt the majority of US citizens actually knew this was taking place. If one process is going to be skipped how long before congress starts skipping other ones and eventually leading to the president basically having sole power of what becomes law. I know it seems like a stretch but it's the little things that add up.

    --
    Art by Mindy Herman, my wife.
  130. Look at the health insurance stocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While the overall market is slightly down today, the health insurance company stocks are flying with people loading up now that the bill looks like it will pass this weekend. That ought to tell you exactly what this bill is all about and who is going to benefit.

  131. Tpes of bills that are passed by JBoelke · · Score: 1

    I teach high school. I run on economics lessons that demonstrates that the types of bill that get passed have the following characteristic. Benefits now cost are later. That benefits are to a few, people but cost are wide spread. The U.S sugar tariff is an example of this. Bill that are unlikely to pass are the reveres. High costs now benefits much later. Radioactive storage, global warming. High tax on a few, small benefits to many. The death tax affects only 0.05% of the population.

    1. Re:Tpes of bills that are passed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After readin that, it scares, me, that you teach. Hi School.

  132. So why don't we try something else... by Gaewyn+L+Knight · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The whole insurance industry for healthcare is based on a flawed premise that normal care need insurance.

    Here's the car analogy... if our cars were done like healthcare:
      1. Gas would cost 10$/gal at the pump for cash/credit.
      2. You would pay 25$ for every time you fueled up and your car insurance company would actually pay them 3.75$/gal for the gas
      3. You would pay 150$/month for this "wonderfully cheaper gas"
      4. Ohh... and if you need roadside assistance you have to pay for the first 5 fully before the insurance company starts picking up the tab.

    So let's go back to why health insurance is flawed. Normal healthy individuals may make 3 (annual plus 2 cold/flu) trips to the doctor in a year. I pay 218$ per month for insurance through my employer (not counting the portion they pay). This means that I am effectively paying 872$ per trip to my doctor... ok... lets let that sink in... even if you count a nurse, doctor and receptionist out front splitting it and them only seeing 3 patients per hour (rough cases might take that long) we are still talking they would be making 1.74 MILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR EACH! Now if you have any friends that are medical professionals I bet you know that there are VERY few that are making that much per year... especially receptionists :)

    Now the argument is that "well this money helps balance out all the catastrophic claims"... fine then why are we using insurance for non-catastrophic claims? I have home owners insurance in case a tornado takes my house out but I don't run my water-softener salt or home improvement projects through the insurance company.

    Why when it comes to health insurance do we loose the common sense that the more people that touch the money the more we have to pay for the same service.

    Leave insurance for catastrophic claims and lets get rid of the day-to-day shenanigans. This should quell a lot of the issues in the industry and make it so that people could pay for what they need instead of padding peoples pockets for day-to-day necessities.

    --
    Telcos have alot of dark fibre in the States. Most people assume that's optical fibre...but it's actually moral fibre.
    1. Re:So why don't we try something else... by DwySteve · · Score: 1

      So let's go back to why health insurance is flawed. Normal healthy individuals may make 3 (annual plus 2 cold/flu) trips to the doctor in a year. I pay 218$ per month for insurance through my employer (not counting the portion they pay). This means that I am effectively paying 872$ per trip to my doctor... ok... lets let that sink in... even if you count a nurse, doctor and receptionist out front splitting it and them only seeing 3 patients per hour (rough cases might take that long) we are still talking they would be making 1.74 MILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR EACH! Now if you have any friends that are medical professionals I bet you know that there are VERY few that are making that much per year... especially receptionists :)

      Now the argument is that "well this money helps balance out all the catastrophic claims"... fine then why are we using insurance for non-catastrophic claims?

      Because catastrophic and non-catastrophic work differently for health than anything else. If I crash my car then yep, that's $20K. Catastrophic. However, I have choices. I can take the $20K and get a cheaper but equivalent used car, I can just not get a car at all and bank it, etc.

      Health can be like that. Yeah, I'll go in for my 'maintenance' visits for physicals and my small problems like colds, infections, etc. I've got no problem with paying direct for that - I'm a proponent of HSAs. And then maybe I break my leg, oops, that's catastrophic, but it will heal. So insurance picks that one up and in a few months I'm good as new. But I don't really have the option not to fix my leg. It's rather necessary. So that comparison is broken - health insurance isn't car insurance.

      But if I have AIDS, or Crohn's disease, how do you classify that? If you had a car that required thousands of dollars of repairs monthly, you'd just sell it for what you could and get a new one, or use a lemon law, or sue the bad repair man who screwed it up like that and get a new one. But of course, you can't get a new body.

      So what do you do? You keep it going. If it gets really expensive, then you have to ask is it worth it? It's a big question, especially with human life.

      So the question isn't catastrophic vs. maintenance because you can't just replace hardware (ie, your body) and get new. Well, not yet anyhow. It's the expensive maintenance that we have to pay for (because otherwise, someone will die) that's the problem.

      Other insurances don't handle that. Flood insurance in the midwest? They got tired of reimbursing people who kept building on flood plains, so the state stepped in, bought the property and razed everything on it. That's the closest analogue I can think of and if we worked the same way with health insurance we'd just buy out the rest of the person's life and kill them. Dunno about that one.

      --
      http://angryee.blogspot.com
    2. Re:So why don't we try something else... by mc6809e · · Score: 1

      The whole insurance industry for healthcare is based on a flawed premise that normal care need insurance.

      No, the insurance industry is not based on that premise. That premise was forced by legislation and regulation on the industry.

    3. Re:So why don't we try something else... by ta+ma+de · · Score: 1

      The only flaw I can see in your argument is that it assumes a low rate of catastrophe. 30% of all people will get cancer. Each will need 6 figure treatment (that is super conservative). 10^8 x 10^5 = 10^13 (that is like 10 trillion dollars -- and it would be working its way toward 100 trillion).

    4. Re:So why don't we try something else... by bdenton42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      (not counting the portion they pay).

      That's a rather large thing to not count, especially since it likely amounts to more than double what you are paying. Your example should be more like $2616 per visit.

      But your car analogy does touch on an important point, which is that your gas (healthcare) provider is gouging you with high rates then giving a discount to the insurance company, which reduces everyone's ability to survive without insurance.

      If the Feds would simply pass a law which says that a health care provider cannot charge different rates to individuals and insurance companies most of the health care reform problem goes away. You would then see a large shift from high cost, high coverage policies to low cost catastrophic policies... which is really what insurance should be about.

    5. Re:So why don't we try something else... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Please note that when the car insurance company is paying $3.75 a gallon, gas is actually costing the gas station $3.60 a gallon. At a profit of $0.15 a gallon, they can barely afford to operate, hence the overcharging of everyone else. They should be charging about $4.50, enough to actually pay staff and whatnot.

      OTOH, they can hardly refuse to stop taking car insurance, as 80% of the people are insured and will totally ignore them otherwise. Regardless, some have managed to opt out of the system, usually charity gas stations.

      Some more:

      5. Because of people being unable to pay but needing gas, gas stations would be required to provide gas to everyone, so there are a lot of driveoffs, so gas stations are not only not breaking even, but actually failing.

      6. Car insurance companies would demand you justify every single mile you put on the car, denying your claims on about half of them and forcing you to pay the cost of gas yourself. (At a magical reduced rate of, oh, $6 a gallon.)

      7. Because they are unable to pay staff to actually operate the gas station, often they have no one on duty, and gas is just sorta slopped into the tanks by untrained gas truck drivers. Sometimes, gas stations blow up, and the insurance to operate gas stations has gotten very high, so some people think we should have some 'tort reform' to reduce lawsuits. (Whereas others thinks we should probably figure out a way to stop them from blowing up.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    6. Re:So why don't we try something else... by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Amen. I use an HSA and it works like this. I used to never care about doctors visits, medication costs, etc... Now I do care - as any money I can save stays in my HSA account and I can use it later, even for retirement. And if something serious happens a high deductible plan kicks in.

      Never work, though. People want free shit.

    7. Re:So why don't we try something else... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the Feds would simply pass a law which says that a health care provider cannot charge different rates to individuals and insurance companies...

      And if the unicorns would simply excrete rainbows...

    8. Re:So why don't we try something else... by rujholla · · Score: 1

      This makes more sense than most things I have read on the subject!!

  133. An Odd Endorsement... by gedrin · · Score: 1

    It appears that the majority of /. endorses a solution that has not been subjected to a thorough code review, which they will have little personal ability to modify for their own use, be required to use in specific ways, will appropriate their system resources even if it is not running, has not been subjected to testing, without any readily available ability to rollback.

    --
    Moderation : -1 Conservative Viewpoint
  134. The problem is high costs by ZOmegaZ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The fundamental problem with the American healthcare system is its high cost. That's why so many people don't have coverage, and that's why attempting universal coverage right now is going to cost so much more than it should. Universal access is a noble goal, but far better to lower costs first. This report does an excellent job of breaking down exactly where we spend more money than the rest of the world. My platform is based around lowering costs in four areas: administrative costs, prescription drugs, malpractice insurance, and practitioner conflict of interest. Based on that report, my proposals would lower the average American's health care costs by over $1000 per year, without requiring any new federal spending or expansion of government power.

    If I can figure all this out in my spare time, you know Congress has to know it too. Which means either A) I'm horribly wrong, or B) both parties define the problem differently than I do. Which raises the question, exactly what do they see as the problem?

    1. Re:The problem is high costs by Anonymous+Struct · · Score: 1

      High cost is really just a symptom of the actual fundamental problem.

      The actual fundamental problem with health care is that new breakthroughs make it possible to live longer/better, but that they involve very expensive technology. This leaves us with money on one side of the scale and our lives (or the quality of our lives) on the other, and as individuals, we choose our lives or quality of lives every time. When you're facing terminal cancer, how much does the treatment have to cost before you say 'Nah, that's just too much money.'? A million dollars? A billion? If the treatment is available, you don't care what it costs, and advances in technology are constantly making new treatment available.

      The problem is, to make health care economical, you have to convince people to draw the line somewhere and let themselves die. Pretty tough argument to make.

    2. Re:The problem is high costs by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Focusing on the trees to ignore the forest. We have high medical costs because of our fucked up insurance industry, period. Every other industrialized country has single payer (or draconian regulation), and it's why they have better care for a fraction of the cost.

  135. This is not quite true. by sean.peters · · Score: 4, Informative

    In exchange, there are a lot of parts that are a big giveaway to insurance companies: because we've focused on giving everyone insurance instead of giving everyone health care, individuals are forced to buy insurance, but with inadequate oversight to ensure that insurance companies don't just gouge prices.

    Actually, there are provisions in place to keep them from just charging whatever they want: they have to pay out at least 85% of revenues on actual medical care. Given that insurance companies have their own staff that they have to pay, this puts pretty strict limits on how much they can actually profit.

    1. Re:This is not quite true. by jbeaupre · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If being required to pay out 85% for medical care is the only restriction, then it actually will encourage an increase in medical costs. Look at it this way: If what they pay out doubles, they can charge double and keep double. Staff is a fixed cost, so all that extra dough becomes profit.

      --
      The world is made by those who show up for the job.
    2. Re:This is not quite true. by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't. They can just raise premiums and pay for some of the more expensive surgeries that they already don't. Remember, we're dealing with percentages here, so the more they spend, the larger their profit is allowed to be. There's plenty of mathematical "magic" they can do to increase their profits.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    3. Re:This is not quite true. by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Not remotely, and your naive if you think that's what happens.

      You see 85% of revenues doesn't mean 85% of the money they take in. It just means 85% of what their reported revenue is. Anyone who has any familiarity with wall street knows full well that there are countless loopholes and strategies that can be used to hide revenues and shift money around to make things more favorable to a corporation. Then of course there is all the contract gotchas and shady interpretations that they apply to deny people coverage. They drop their apparent revenue just enough to show an 85% payout, then keep the rest shifted or hidden amongst other assets.

      Cynical? Perhaps. But only fools think that insurance companies are out to help people. They are out to make profit.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
    4. Re:This is not quite true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, there are provisions in place to keep them from just charging whatever they want: they have to pay out at least 85% of revenues on actual medical care

      With that being the case higher cost medical care means more money for the insurance companies.

  136. Malpractice insurance by spineboy · · Score: 1

    Well the rates for malpractice insurance can be pretty high. Neuro surgeons in NYC probably pay around $100k EACH YEAR. And so who do you think gets those costs passed along.

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
    1. Re:Malpractice insurance by porges · · Score: 1

      If they do one brain surgery a day for 50 weeks a year, that $100K is $400 extra for each one. For a procedure that costs tens of thousands of dollars. I don't think the malpractice insurance is driving that cost.

    2. Re:Malpractice insurance by Tancred · · Score: 1

      Why do you think that's "pretty high"? I'll assume your $100k is accurate and figure a neurosurgeon does just a couple surgeries a week. So maybe we're talking about $1k per surgery, which is likely a very low percentage of the overall cost, to cover legitimate and frivolous lawsuits combined.

  137. In Summary... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is not the healthcare reform you were looking for.

  138. isn't perfect but a step in the right direction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is time for some change on this stuff. Because of preexisting conditions. I have held two health insurance policies for months. With my policies getting a single thing done cost me 400-600.

    As a small business health care was the 2nd most expensive cost after salary.

    As a small distributed team try finding health care for 3 employees in 3 states, it is damn near impossible.

    Stop quibling about to much change not enough change... Something needs to happen and this looks like good progress in most of it's changes. (especially preexisting conditions)

  139. Every other European democracy has this. by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 2, Interesting

    1) Virtually every Western democracy has public health care (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_health_care).

    2) By some miracle, they manage to pay for it.

    3) By and large, if you read the blogs of people actually living in those countries, they appear reasonably happy with their imperfect but functioning health systems (http://www.thehealthcareblog.com/the_health_care_blog/international/).

    So, the opponents are essentially claiming that America is too "special" (i.e. lame) to do what virtually every other country can do. That may not be what they say, but that's what they imply.

    Any questions?

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    1. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by ducomputergeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Western Europe also hasn't had to pay to defend itself for the last 60 years either. We pretty much subsidized their defense.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    2. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by Funk_dat69 · · Score: 1

      Many European countries would be more analogous to US States, than to the entire US.

      The larger and more heterogeneous a group of people are, the more difficult it is to find a neat little solution to a problem.

      The US has States for this very reason! But the power of the States has been eroded with the growing power of the Federal Government. And it hasn't helped.

      So please stop comparing the US to your nice little homogeneous mecca in Europe somewhere.

      --
      FUNK!
    3. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Which sort of implies that we, like the Romans and the British, are diverting just a wee bit too much of our resources on military activity, eh?

      You can't have everything.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    4. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No but I have an observation. Spain, Italy, Greece and the UK are already bankrupt. ( or very close to it )

    5. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      The nice little homogeneous mecca I live in is usually referred to as "Texas."

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    6. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by Uberbah · · Score: 2, Informative

      Western Europe also hasn't had to pay to defend itself for the last 60 years either. We pretty much subsidized their defense.

      Bullshit. Not to mention the fact that the Soviet Union has been gone for a long time now. Just what belligerent power is threatening Europe, exactly?

    7. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      And their medical research, which largely comes from the US or is subsidized by the higher prices we pay for drugs here. Also let's not forget the story's not over in Western Europe. We'll see how well all these wonderful social programs hold up over the next few decades with their population replacement/birth rate issues, immigration of poor people from various countries, etc... I predict serious problems, to put it mildly.

    8. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by Funk_dat69 · · Score: 1

      Great!
      Then you of all people should appreciate the importance of the power of the States.

      Texas passed Tort reform in 2003 (Medical Malpractice and Tort Reform Act of 2003) which imposes a limit on non-economic damages in a medical lawsuit. This was a great start.

      The government should follow Texas' lead and then promote more flexible Health Spending accounts, and force transparency on insurance companies cost (ban 'negotiated rates')

      What congress is calling 'reform' is anything but.

      --
      FUNK!
    9. Re:Every other European democracy has this. by Kvasio · · Score: 1

      that's beacause they are not funded by China (unlike US)

  140. Insightful? by copponex · · Score: 1

    the government loses money when it treats people who are sick.

    I had no idea insurance companies were different. It's a good thing! Otherwise, they'd be kicking people off insurance programs and denying payment while their former customer died from treatable diseases.

    Were you involved at all in the public relations debacle around the 2008 death of 17-year-old Nataline Sarkisyan of Northridge, Calif. who passed away after being denied a liver transplant by Cigna?

    Yes, I was. At that time, I was the chief spokesperson for the company. I was the person who was responsible for putting out the company’s statements and answering questions from reporters when they called about it.

    Her request for a liver transplant was denied, and then Cigna reversed itself under pressure, but she ended up dying because the transplant came too late.

    Yes, that’s right. The transplant had been requested by her doctors weeks before her death. Her doctors felt that it was her last resort and had recommended it. Cigna felt that the transplant in her case would have been experimental and on those grounds chose to deny coverage for it. The family sought the assistance of the California Nurses Association and reached out to the media and it became a very, very highly publicized case. And I can’t tell you how many calls I got from all over the world regarding that. Then, in the midst of all that publicity, Cigna decided to reverse itself and decided to cover the procedure. But you’re right. She died just about two hours after the family was told that Cigna changed its mind.

    At the time, some people argued that it was just an isolated incident. But now there is data showing that Cigna denied 33 percent of claims and PacificCare denied up to 40 percent. Does this data cause you to speak about that experience in a new way?

    Well it does. One of the talking points that I used when reporters called was that 90 percent of requests for a transplant are approved by Cigna. I haven’t seen data to know whether that is still accurate...

    Looking back, do you think Cigna was in the right?

    I can’t comment on that. I was not among the group that reviewed the claim when it first came in. What I do know is that I think the California Nurses Association was right in pointing out that this is not an isolated case. People need to realize that there is a corporate executive who often stands between a patient and his or her doctor. That’s the reality. And I think the insurance industry is now fear-mongering during this debate on health care reform, saying that a government bureaucrat could stand between someone and his or her doctor. But the current situation is just as bad, if not worse, because you have people doing that now who are denying care to meet Wall Street’s expectations.

    Wendell Potter is former head of corporate communications for Cigna Corporation, where he worked for 15 years. He is now a fellow at the Center for Media and Democracy.

    http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=33655d70ff9cd7509f16bfd2bfbafa9f

  141. That is simply not true. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    ind any government agency that's tried to do exceptionally well and you'll find that the smaller the scope of their responsibility the better they did. Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Postal Service, any regulatory agency - you get the picture. The federal government simply doesn't have a good resume; you can't blame the unbiased peoples for not loving the idea of the government running yet another program.

    Simply not true. The Defense Department, for example, is probably the most enormous government agency in the world, and by all accounts it does a fine job in providing defense services. And more to the point: which provider of health services gets the highest marks for patient outcomes and patient satisfaction? That would be the VA. Which insurer has the lowest costs and highest customer satisfaction? That would be Medicare.

    The meme of the federal goverment being ineffective is popular, but it has no basis in reality.

    1. Re:That is simply not true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moreover, the DoD which kept the Commies at bay for so long is itself one of the largest command economies in the world.

  142. As I see it, its a mixed bag. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Of course there is the requisite pork. (has any bill ever been past since anyone was reading this has been alive. that didn't include some pork?) But there are also provisions to expand Medicaid to more people(I think this is in there, but I am not absolutely sure). It also makes insurance companies allow parents to keep their children on their policy until they are 26. It prevents insurance companies from discriminating against people with pre-existing conditions (meaning no higher rates or refusing coverage). It will set up exchanges for those who are self employed or don't get insurance from their job. Insurance companies will not be able to cancel insurance because someone gets sick. It will cap total out of pocket expenses for consumers. There will be subsidies for those making up to 400% of poverty level to buy insurance. It will mandate that everyone, the exception of the most poor, get insurance or face a fine. It would require employers with more then 50 workers, who don't offer medical insurance, to pay $2000/employee, if any of the workers qualify for the federal health care subsidy. It would close the "doenut hole" in Medicare by 2020. Those are the highlights of what the bill will do.

    If you are wondering if it will really address the rising cost of health care, I doubt it. The problem with health care in this country is that doctors are paid per procedure. So some, maybe even most, in contravention of the Hippocratic Oath, act in their own best interest preform procedures that aren't necessary. They have little to no motivation to work to make the patient healthier.

    Its a first step. I am hoping they don't stop here. It will at the very least, get more people covered by health insurance.

  143. Are you poor and hurt? by nooodles · · Score: 1

    The States have some great health care as long as you make enough and do not get sick enough to question it. All Hail Faux News! Every single person who votes should disclose how much of their money comes from health insurance companies. That is directly and indirectly.

  144. This is a frequent misconception by sean.peters · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm not a fan of the bill -- the lack of a public option creates, as you say, a major problem by forcing people to give money to insurance companies that have little incentive not to gouge their captive market. A mandate *is* necessary, though, for insurance-based health reform to work. (That's why single-payer was the way to go...)

    In fact, per the bill, insurers have to pay out 85% of their revenues in actual medical care, which means it's more or less impossible for them to just charge whatever they want. Yes, a public option would be better, and single-payer would be better still... but this bill is still a huge improvement on the status quo.

    1. Re:This is a frequent misconception by user32.ExitWindowsEx · · Score: 1

      Well, let's think through what you're saying.

      Assume company A brings in $100 in premiums. They have to pay out $85 in medical care. They have $15 in profits.

      How do they increase those profits so that the stockholders are happy next quarter?

      Simple. Increase premiums...and payouts.

      If you double premiums to $200 and double payouts to $170, they now have $30 in profits...and all their policyholders just paid twice as much for nothing more.

      The stockholders won't care that their profit margin is only 15%...they will just care about the total amount of $.

      The doctors on the receiving end of those doubled payouts will make more than ever.

      The only way you can counter this is to impose price controls but that would lead to doctors quitting which would lead to rationing because there would literally no longer be enough doctors to meet medical needs here.

      --
      "Evil will always triumph because good is dumb." -- Dark Helmet
  145. WTF? by Boomerang+Fish · · Score: 0, Troll

    WTF does this have to do with slashdot? I mean I'm not *that* new here, but this seems to be a new low for (1) having little to nothing to do with technology and (2) creating a forum that will do nothing but create flame wars.

    --
    I drank what?

  146. Re: by tomp1000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't know much about fox news (not being a resident in the US), so I can't comment much about that but what I don't understand it is people are so against this reform. Yes it is a 'socialist' policy but the lives of so many people will be helped by this policy. I know a number of people who have had there lives saved or dramatically improved due to the intervention of the NHS here in the UK. yes the NHS has problems, but rarely is there anything that doesnt. The bill isn't communism, you don't have to have government run healthcare, go private if it bothers you. Granting cheap/free healthcare to those who can't afford insurance isn't a bad thing it would help the US become a better nation I've used the NHS many a time and never had a problem, In fact I've only used my medical isurance for minor little problems that are more annoying than serious. Don't slam government run healthcare. It's a good thing

  147. All you need to know.... by meburke · · Score: 0

    All you need to know is that the bill is an attempt at price controls, and price controls invariably lead to shortages of the controlled goods and quality reductions in the controlled services. This allows you to skip the BS arguments over extraneous details and avoid wasting energy over emotional rhetoric.

    --
    "The mind works quicker than you think!"
  148. Republicans onboard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just declare a war on high healthcare costs, wrap the american flag around it & yourself and commit a $700b/yr budget to bomb the problem to the stone age.
    Just run healthcare like the military! Big bloated budgets, heavy fist shaking, and pour in a whole lot of flag wrapped mccarthyism and BINGO!

    G.W. Bush advocated no nation building and humble foreign policy when campaigning for pres in 2000, and previous stated formula worked wonders to turn the republicans around 180 degrees.
    Thank goodness it worked in catching Binny and boys!

  149. Follow the Money by thethibs · · Score: 1

    Canada's health care bill is over $5,000 per man, woman, or child.

    Anything else you'd like to know?

    --
    I'm a Programmer. That's one level above Software Engineer and one level below Engineer.
    1. Re:Follow the Money by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      "Canada's health care bill is over $5,000 per man" And that is a lot less than the US. US GDP% spent on health care is 17% vs Canada's 9%.

    2. Re:Follow the Money by thethibs · · Score: 1

      We keep seeing that number, but it's never been supported by data and no one takes responsibility for it. It's hard to figure out how over half of average family income going to health care can only add up to 9% of GDP.

      --
      I'm a Programmer. That's one level above Software Engineer and one level below Engineer.
    3. Re:Follow the Money by thethibs · · Score: 1

      Back again--it turns out 9% is in the ballpark, making a few assumptions.

      Interesting that per-capita GDP is the same in both countries. Only ten years ago, the US' was substantially greater than Canada's. Creative accounting?

      If US spending on Health care is already inflated, what will be the effect of adding another 10% of the population to the rolls, given that one of the reasons they are currently off is that they are expensive to maintain?

      --
      I'm a Programmer. That's one level above Software Engineer and one level below Engineer.
  150. Also not true. by sean.peters · · Score: 4, Informative

    The case of Texas is instructive - they strictly limited damage payouts for medical malpractice cases... and their medical malpractice insurance premiums continued to escalate at exactly the same rate as the rest of the country. Nor was there any particular change in overall health-care cost escalation. So I think we can safely ignore this particular line of argument.

    1. Re:Also not true. by phantomfive · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't know what happened in Texas, but this guy says tort reform worked well in Missouri.

      --
      Qxe4
  151. Look at the exemptions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Consider this: The so-called "bribes" to certain members of Congress to get them to vote for the bill.

    1. Lousiana Purchase: $100 million to $300 million in extra Medicaid funding for Lousiana -- while nationally, Medicaid is being cut.

    2. Gator-aid (now defunct) Would have preserved Medicaid Advantage as-is in Florida, while cutting it nationwide.

    3. Corn Husker kick back: (now defunct) Would have allocated extra Medicaid money to Nebraska, while cutting it nationwide.

    The common thread in these, and others, is that in order to get a congressman to vote for the bill, his state had to be EXEMPTED from parts of it. What does that tell you?

    1. Re:Look at the exemptions by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      All it tells us is exactly what you quoted: that Congressmen were willing to vote yes on a bill when it was amended to not harm their constituents as much.

      I happen to think that's silly, given the topic, but many seem to think that wrangling pork out of the mix for one's home state is what they're for.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
  152. Re:Bullshit! by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    Links? Why bother, I'm sure there aren't any. I've read over and over again exactly the opposite of what you are claiming. I could dig up links for you but I'm too busy making money and paying ridiculously taxes to pay for the health care for you and all the other socialist bums on this site.

    Bullshit!! You're posting to Slashdot. You're not doing anything productive.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  153. Luckily, no one is talking about gov't run health by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    This bill, of course, is about health insurance, not providing actual care. And it's really hard to see how anyone could foul up health insurance more than the private companies currently raping us in this business.

  154. Postal Service by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1

    The U.S. Postal Service is really pretty good at what they do. For starters, you can mail a letter anywhere in the country for $0.44 and be pretty sure it will get there within a week. Stay within the same general postal zone (first three digits), and the letter will probably get there overnight, or certainly within two days. I don't believe UPS or Fedex could do first class mail service any better, or for any less.

    Secondly, you don't have to worry about your letter being lost in the mail, as it's a rare occurrence. The U.S. Treasury did a cost analysis for the loss of collectible coins sent through first class mail and found that the cost of the few losses that did occur was well below the cost of insuring or tracking the items. (Source: a friend who retired from Treasury 2-3 years ago.) I can only recall one letter I have sent in the last ten years that did not arrive at its destination. People I know from other countries tell me this is not the case where they used to live.

    Thirdly, USPS is cheaper than the private companies. You can now get online tracking and delivery information for $2.80 beyond the basic postage. With the private companies, you get this as well, but you can't opt out of it to save money.

    The only problems I have with USPS at the moment are that I can't print postage using Linux the way I can with UPS, and because of the Unabomber, I can't just drop a package in the mail if it's over 12 ounces.

    --
    "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
  155. Well, okay by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 1

    1. Buy insurance across state lines.

    The current plans include a national marketplace for selling insurance across state lines, so you're getting that. The Republicans reject this because they simply want the system opened and free, but many liberals are leery of this idea after seeing what good it did to the credit card industry. Simply opening everything up would allow health care companies to move to the state that affords them the least possible regulation and consumer protection and sell to the country from there.

    2. Limit lawsuit payouts.

    A handful of states have already done this, to the effect of not bringing consumer prices down by any appreciable amount. The bill as it was being worked on a few months ago included pilot programs to reduce the number of lawsuits as a whole by providing for more doctor openness and mediation to prevent the cases from going to court in the first place.

    3. Reduce the FDA requirements. ...canada sells the same meds for much less and they don't have such a stringent approval process?

    I'd imagine that Canada also has more stringent price controls, and the government won't pay for drugs for which the price outweighs the effectiveness. Conservatives have consistently opposed negotiating for prices on drugs, however.

    4. Promote Savings Health Accounts.

    We already give a tax deduction on medical fees, and if you already have health insurance, then it's very likely that you already have access to an HSA for smaller amount. There's nothing to stop you from using your HSA and shopping around at doctors right now.

    5. This topic wasn't designed to discuss immigration, but guess what, that's a major cost in health care.

    Citation needed. Many illegals avoid health care for fear that being under anyone's control for a while would give away their illegal status, as they do with other social services. I doubt you're going to see a lot of illegal immigrants will access to Medicare, unless they "prove" that they're natural citizens by providing a stolen social security number or the like, in which case your fixes won't make much difference anyway. I can only imagine that the place illegals might be adding more cost to the system is in emergency room care, and I'm not sure how many doctors will jive with your idea to stop and demand identification from a severely injured person.

    Exercise: Call 3 local providers and tell them that you have some common malady and tell them that you have Blue Cross insurance, ask them what it will cost you, and what they will bill BC. The next day, call them all back, same malady and tell them you're paying out of pocket. If day 2 isn't a third of day 1 I will eat my shoe.

    That actually happens quite a bit, considering that BCBS is a big enough provider that they can negotiate and demand discounts for services. From the anecdotes I've heard, smaller providers, general practitioners and the like, are more likely to give you the discount for paying cash, while larger providers, hospital work, are more likely to provide a discount to the healthcare provider.

    --
    Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
  156. you fail by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    to see the hidden costs

    there are many costs that you do not outline that are hidden, but cost you MORE than all of the numbers you have outlined above

    there are two ways to pay the healthcare bill:
    1. in your face, upfront, and immediate
    2. in hidden ways that hurt you more over time than if you had just bitten the bullet and paid the bill up front

    the difference between the two approaches is also largely the difference between wisdom and ignorance. teabagger and libertarian philosophy is simply based on the ignorance of the hidden costs. that's why its so appealing to the unintelligent rabble

    oh you will pay, one way or another, for healthcare, mark my words

    universal healthcare just happens to be the cheapest way to do it. but its also the most overt. that's the only reason you reject it, because its in your face, rather than in the subtle and hidden costs that are much larger

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:you fail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear circletimessquare You have a compelling case and you stated it pretty well. Better than I would have. However, you damage you argument with your offensive use of epithets like "tea-bagger" and by referring to people as "unintelligent rabble."

      That language gives people a good excuse not to listen to your well stated argument.

    2. Re:you fail by khallow · · Score: 1

      there are two ways to pay the healthcare bill:
      1. in your face, upfront, and immediate
      2. in hidden ways that hurt you more over time than if you had just bitten the bullet and paid the bill up front

      3. in your face, upfront and immediate PLUS there is a direct connection between what you pay and what health care services you use.

  157. Just to pick out one point from this morass by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Comprehensive insurance pays for everything and so people don't shop around for the best deal.

    Right, because when I'm suffering chest pain, or my wife goes into premature labor, or I fall off a ladder and break my leg, obviously I'm going to have plenty of time to "shop around for the best deal". Or when I get diagnosed with colon cancer, I'm certainly going to be qualified to decide which of the various doctors along the price/quality scale are right for my needs.

    This argument is just ridiculous. There are lots of things for which the market excels at providing the best deal for the customer - making cars, say. But for things like basic services - defense, fire protection, and yes, medical care - the incentives behind market-based provision of the service are so screwed up that it's virtually guaranteed you'll get hosed... like we all are now.

  158. Dear nanny stater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    When the government has to pay for your health, they have a rational for controlling your life choices. "I'm sorry sir, the government forbids me to put bacon on your burger. Your cholesterol is too high. May I suggest the garden burger? If you really want the beef burger, you'll have to pay the fatty fat fatso tax."

    1. Re:Dear nanny stater by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      When the government has to pay for your health, they have a rational for controlling your life choices.

      No, they don't. They can simply do what private insurers do already: "We're not paying for X, but you're free pay for it yourself if you really want it."

      That way, they're controlling your life choices about as much as a private insurer does.

    2. Re:Dear nanny stater by khallow · · Score: 1

      No, they don't.

      I'm sorry, but is this a "No means yes" situation? Because the correct answer is "yes".

      They can simply do what private insurers do already: "We're not paying for X, but you're free pay for it yourself if you really want it."

      And how will they come to this decision? What sources of information will they need access to? Once again, when government insures me or pays for my health care costs, they have a reason to decide what I can eat and do.

  159. Metric by Sloppy · · Score: 2, Funny

    But consider this. The U.S. is the only country, other than Myanmar, that still has not converted to the metric system.

    About 3 or 4 hectomegaseconds ago, we started gradually phasing that in, starting with NASA. Probe crashed. Stupid government. We need private industry metricism!!

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  160. Just FYI by Veretax · · Score: 1

    Most Americans think some reform or change is needed in Health Care.
    Most americans also Don't think government managed care is the answer either (and before you say there is no single payer option hold that thought) So many progressives are saying this is a good first step. Even Kuccinic (sp?) who just flip flopped has said as much, and noone was a more vocal supporter of a single payer system.

    Here are my gripes with the legislation:

    1. Slashing Medicare will adversely affect seniors, those least in position to make up additional income to pay for insurance gaps in Medicare
    2. Mandates. Since when has the Federal Government Ever mandated anything like this in all of History? The Mandate is unconstitutional at best, at worst it is a Federal Power grab to weasel in and turn the US into a Big Brother Society where sugary drinks will be gone (sorry coke and pepsi), fun foods will be a thing of the past (Snickers, Hershey, Doritos, etc) and you will eventually see a very plain supply of food offered at higher prices than today and probably breadlines like they had in the USSR.
    3. Puts restrictions and penalties on small businesses who cannot afford to fully fund insurance for their poorest employees. (Yes its fine, the Businesses who already struggle thus killing many small businesses.)
    4. Does absolutely zero to ensure increased supply of providers which right now is an even bigger problem that cost.
    5. Will force more americans into a High Risk Pool that will cost as much as 20% or more than normal premiums, and when that cost overruns those premiums, you can bet that one of two things will happen. Regular premiums will rise, States will have to make up short fall with taxes on policy owners (another way of increasing premiums) or some other way to tax or soak either Sin Taxes, Sales Taxes, Income Taxes, or some other means of basically hitting those that probably can't afford the offset in higher premium on their own but now will get taxed for it anyways.
    6. It is the least transparent bill to come out of congress in a long time. It's negotiation was not conducted in front of cameras of CSPAN as Obama promised, and the moving of assumptions in a rather unchanged bill to get better CBO numbers is like trying to have your grade score based on number of problems completed not the actual number of problems on the test.
    7. The American people don't want it. Polls all across the country show that only about 30% of the population are actually in favor of this legislation, and what's worse a majority oppose this plan, either for reasons of fiscal trouble for the government, its policies, or just in general not liking its provisions.

    So there are probably some reasons I didn't list, but this bill will do very little to cut costs, it will result in increased costs, will stifle insurance competition as more companies just leave the sector entirely, oh and more providers will opt out. How great is that?

  161. My few cents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's my feeling on it...
    1) The Republicans complain about the government not being able to do anything right are being hypocritical in that they believe the military, a government institution, and the intelligence community, another government institution (several actually) - they believe these organizations run just fine and we should give them more money every year.
    2) The Republicans are also being hypocritical about all the "out of control spending". Lets say the price tag is 1 trillion, which is over 10 years. That's 100 billion a year. Fine, lets double it to 200 billion. That's still cheaper than the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and the unnecessary waste from the Pentagon (star wars is still being funded, you know). But instead of doing real cuts there that, lets face it, aren't really helping the public, they want to kill this bill that will actually help some people.
    3) The Democrats aren't much better. The bill has a lot of giveaways, something that's a part of every bill, and I actually wanted a public option (simply because the insurance market is in a state of collusion over prices so the public option will actually make them run for the money). I also don't like the hazy language about illegal aliens being given any care (I'm fine with legal immigrants, not illegal aliens, getting coverage).
    4) The abortion debate is a "flag burning distraction". Abortion, like it or not, is the law of the land. The inclusion of any such services is, therefore, legal. Besides, it's not like money is allocated specifically for abortion, it's allocated for healthcare coverage which includes abortion. It also includes money for amputation and plastic surgery but nobody's complaining about those. This cynical complaint is made to increase support against this bill from single issue voters that want abortion banned.
    5) I like a lot of the ideas that the Republicans proposed, stuff like buying access across state lines and all of that is in the bill. It seems that most people agree with most parts of this bill in parts but they hate the bill in its entirety which is absurd. That to me smell like something, especially when the Republicans are voting against their own ideas. It's not far fetched to say that the Republicans have been blocking most of the things the Democrats have been doing and this is no different. Yes, the Democrats tried to reach out in the beginning but after the Republicans snubbed them, the Democrats did they own thing. Who is at fault? Both of them.
    6) I disagree with tort reform (lawsuits) simply because the data shows that less than 5% of all healthcare costs are tied to lawsuits and its insurance. Why focus on the 5%? It also stands to make sense to include it, since it's such a small thing, just to get Republicans on board, but that won't happen to due to the point above. Besides, the trial lawyers that favor Democrats will be mad and if there's no Republican benefit, why bother?

    The major problem is the Republicans wanted to say no from the very beginning on this. Now that they see that it's important, they want to start over and thereby attach their party to the credit of any bill that comes forward. That's why they want to do that. They agree with 70% or so of the bill since their own proposals are included in it (including removing of the public option - their idea).

    I think having this bill in all its awfullness is better than having insurance companies continue to raise prices without end. I also think that if we do things step by step, Republicans idea, that it will fail because of the shared risk pool that will lower prices for everyone (since most people are not sick most of the time).

    The way to sell this bill is simple:
    1) Remove any kickback provisions by embarassing the senators that ask for them and get the public to yell at those senators.
    2) Focus on the savings benefit. If we have to spend a trillion now to save 1.2 trillion within a decade, that's a 20% return in my book.
    3) Explain and/or write additional language to make it clear to the A

  162. Like me for example by Chemisor · · Score: 1

    > Is really there someone who DONT want to have a health insurance?

    Yes. I don't have health insurance and I don't want it. It's a simple matter of economics; insurance costs too much for no reason. If I were to buy a plan, it would cost me ~$6400/year (national average, probably higher here where I live). A doctor costs me about ~$100 per visit. ~$150 to see a specialist (I went to an ENT specialist to get my throat examined with a fiber optic probe). $300 for a course of brand name antibiotics; about $30 if I were to buy it from an online pharmacy in India. That one year with my throat problem I had paid maybe $1000 for the above plus a few tests. The next year I got a chest X-ray for $250. And that was the entirety of my medical expenditures in the last ten years. If I had insurance, I would have still have had to pay a smaller fee for each of the above, maybe 15%. So that's $1250 without insurance versus $64190 (that's SIXTY FOUR THOUSAND DOLLARS) with insurance.

    Ok, you say, but maybe something really bad were to happen to me? I answer, like what? Of the really expensive treatments there is organ failure, heart attacks, cancer, and spinal injuries. Having an organ failure or a spinal injury is a very rare event, and I'm quite willing to put them in the same category of "death from a falling meteor". Yes, I could die, and so could you, and so shall we all in the end. If I can't afford it, I won't pay for it and I'll die. Tough cookies. Pretty much the same with cancer. First, I really don't have to worry about it until I hit 50. Second, barring breast and testicular cancer, the survival rate is pretty much zero anyway. Yes, you can extend your life for another five or ten years with chemo or radiotherapy, but it always comes back and kills you, except that you'll be a lot more miserable if you let the hospital "fight for your life" to the bitter end. Much better to just let nature take its course, take painkillers or whatever helps. I would much prefer a quicker death to five years of misery. And finally, as far as heart disease is concerned, the treatment is to lead a healthier lifestyle (quit smoking, maintain a normal weight, don't eat a diet consisting exclusively of Cheetos, etc). Surgical interventions usually do more harm than good. Oh, and when they happen, they are expensive, but not THAT expensive. You might pay something like $30000 to get a stent installed. Compare that with the $64000 for ten years of insurance. Or, considering that most people have their heart attacks after the late 40's, that's over $128000 for insurance.

    Overall, people need to stop being so friggin' scared of dying. You'll all die anyway, and the less medical intervention you have, the less you will suffer.

    1. Re:Like me for example by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      You could trip and break your wrist on your next bathroom trip. You could be in a car accident and have any manner of things happen that cost tens of thousands of dollars. Drop a kitchen knife and either catch it by the blade or watch it embed itself in your foot. You're being obtuse by only looking at routine stuff.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    2. Re:Like me for example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For example, a couple of years ago, I broke my leg when I tripped stepping off a curb. Freak accident. I was uninsured. The total bill came to about $40,000. In just a brief moment, my life changed in a way that created a debt larger than any I've ever had. I'm not suggesting that I shouldn't have to pay. But I do believe that a national medical program is a better answer. The whole point of insurance is to spread risk over a large population. If the entire country is that population, the risk is pretty well spread out, yes?

    3. Re:Like me for example by Chemisor · · Score: 1

      If you paid $40000 for a broken leg, you're either an idiot, or you had no idea that's how much was spent. Did you even ask the doctor how much the proposed treatment was going to cost? No? Of course not. We're trained by insurance not to do that. A broken leg is fixed by realigning the bones (which may need an xray) by pulling on the leg, and then placing the whole thing in a plaster cast. We're talking ~$300. If there was nothing available for less than $40000, heck, I'd probably mix the plaster and fix the leg myself, with the help of a friend. Sure, it might heal a bit crooked, but it will heal. People have been fixing broken bones since the stone age; it's not rocket science.

  163. It'll be great ... for 10 years. by bkeahl · · Score: 1

    Okay, the system is broken. There are things that should be done. But what is on the verge of passing now is the entirely wrong thing on moral, constitutional, and economic grounds.

    Our system is broken because the consumer (patient) isn't the purchaser (the employer) of the insurance. The provider of benefits (the doctor) is paid by a party (insurance company) hired by someone other than the consumer (the patient). If the consumer (patient) is unhappy it does not good to talk to the provider of service (the doctor), he calls the payer (insurance company) who knows that the consumer (the patient) isn't the purchaser (the employer) and therefore isn't all that likely to be cooperative with the service provider (the doctor) or the consumer (the patient). The consumer (patient) can go the the purchaser (HR at his company) who didn't receive any service and has no direct relationship with the provider (the doctor), but wants to keep the cost of the payer (insurance company) down. No wonder its messed up. The private system is pretty much a more efficient version of a government one!

    So we replace that with a system where we pay taxes for four years before most of the benefits kick in. Then the thing balances out for the next six. But what happens when that four-years of pay-without-service money isn't there to cover the costs? Tighter regulation and 'prioritizing' of patients (ie rationing). We've yet to see the governments health-care systems: Medicare and Medicaid come in anywhere near on budget while providers are running away from them. VA hospitals are great as long as you don't get too sick, but they don't have the resources to provide consistent high quality healthcare.

    This is really about co-opting a big chunk of nearly free-market money to cover the failure of the other programs. Medicare is broke, Medicaid is busting the budget, and Social Security is at cross-over - we'll be paying more money out to recipients than we've taken in AND there's no more money for the government to take from it to fund the budget, AND we have to start paying Social Security "Trust Fund" back. Think about how many times Pelosi will make odd references to medicare and medicaid. Less so Obama and Reid, but they still do it. It's because they know the only way to save those programs is to get more resources redirected from the healthcare system the rest of us use.

    Get employers out of providing healthcare (let them offer a reimbursement or stipend to employees as part of the incentive package). Now we all go out hunting for health insurance like we do for our house, car, and death. I'll bet the health insurance companies get much more client friendly when its the client who can take their money elsewhere and not some drone in HR. Yeah, we'll need to tweak pre-existing conditions to deal with portability and the transition to a real independent system.

    We'll need to fix tort. The lawyers won't like it, but the system is too litigious. We have to allow for doctors to not be perfect, and they can quit trying to act like they are. I'd rather have a doctor, especially in an emergency, more worried about how to save my life than cover his butt from a lawsuit later.

  164. A good idea AND a red herring by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    Why not just do that in a separate bill? It's not like it wouldn't get bipartisan support.

    And that's just it: where's the bill? People have been bitching about this for decades. The people bitching about it, must not be voting in congressional elections, because Republicans and Democrats in Congress sure aren't serious about it. If they are, then I repeat: where's the bill?

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  165. Maybe you should read the actual bill by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Since it answers all these objections.

    1. An overwhelming number of Americans will not see any changes to their health care plans under this bill. They'll just get protection from fun industry practices like "recission" and lifetime caps.

    2. Which is why this bill changes the way government taxes health care plans - so-called "cadillac" plans will now be subject to excise taxes.

    3. Your point is incoherent: you are simultaneously claiming that Medicare spends too much, and that it doesn't spend enough. In any case, this bill saves TRILLIONS of dollars over 20 years.

    4. As pointed out below, Switzerland is one of the least cost effective systems in the world - only ours is worse (and ours is a LOT worse).

    5. By almost any measure, Americans pay more and have worse outcomes than anywhere else in the civilized world. We're way down the list in life expectancy. We're way down the list in infant mortality. We're way down the list in outcomes of a whole slew of conditions.

    Our current system sucks hard. This bill is not perfect, but makes it better.

  166. Can't let you troll that, Fox News! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't let you troll that, Fox News!

    Side note: I've never felt the need to negatively rate an article as "Stupid". Congratulations trolls, you have reached new heights in power. Enjoy your 15 minutes.

  167. Kudos to CmdrTaco by EQ · · Score: 1

    Look at all the +5/-1 moderations! Full of Heated, irrational and emotional responses! Trolling and counter trolling! Massive amounts of comments, Full of sound and fury signifying nothing.

    And best of all it has nothing essential to do with News for Nerds, its purely political, and US oriented. SlashKos is now in session, Bravo!

    Rob Malda, you astound and amaze! You finally beat out John Katz, Goatse, NataliePortman+HotGrits, a beowulf cluster of Soviet Russias, and the GNAA...

    Kudos to Taco -- This article is the all-time biggest meta-troll ever on SlashDot

    --
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  168. Can We Implement Socialized Medicine Effectively? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a big question that has gone (relatively) unaddressed in this whole healthcare debate. Virtually every other government that has implemented socialized medicine has done it with a population that is equivelent to one U.S. state and even there, they have had significant problems (particularly in the UK.) So beyond the question of whether socialized medicine is a good idea or not, the larger question is whether the United States can implement it and have it work on a scale that is an order of magnitude larger than any other socialized medicine program. The U.S. track record so far is:

    * Postal Service --- Broke
    * Amtrack -- Broke
    * Medicare -- Broke
    * Medicaid -- Broke
    * Social Security -- Broke
    * U.S. Park Service -- Broke
    * The recent daylight savings time changes that were supposed to save us a huge amount of power (and which broke a nations worth of software and hardware) -- didn't save a dime's worth of power.
    * Then you have entire states such as: California, New York, Hawaii, etc etc. -- All Broke.

    Additionally, it is really interesting that none of the programs listed above have been reformed and we have known about their financial problems for decades. So if socialized medicine is implemented and IF there are problems, will we as a nation have the courage to fix any problems that arise. Clearly not. In fact, we are afraid to reform the current medical system. Some things I'd like to see are:

    * If someone in your family is sick, you can contribute your tax money to their medical expenses. Clearly if your sister has cancer, she needs the money more than the Park Service does to build a new latrine in the woods. This would also have the affect of helping pull families together.
    * Indemnify all doctors from lawsuits. 20-50% of what your health insurance pays for is the doctor's insurance. So why not eliminate the need for the doctor's insurance? Then as a rider to your insurance policy, you have the OPTION of coverage that will cover damages if something goes wrong due to the doctor. (Put this on the individual rather than the doctor.) This way you have the option to have your health insurance 20-50% less. The rider could be purchased generally or for a specific procedure.
    * If you are an organ donor, you get first dibs if you need an organ.
    * The ability to purchase coverage that will cover your future health insurance payments if you get sick and are unable to work.
    * The ability to purchase coverage that will cover your future health insurance payments (for a given period of time) if you are unable to work for any other reason.
    * An Ala Carte program for what you want covered under your health insurance or not.
    * The ability to put a family member on your insurance coverage for as long as you want if you want (this would affect your rates however.)
    * Obvious: Tort Reform
    * Obvious: Purchase insurance across state lines.
    * Obvious: Break the AMA's hold on specifying how many new doctors that there can be per year, number of medical schools, etc.
    * etc. etc.

    Instead of implementing reforms, the current administration wants to dump the entire current system and try something completely new that is a huge power grab and which will completely destroy the old system in the process.

    If this were private industry, this would be worked out through huge numbers of studies and quite a few small scale trials until just the right formula was derived. Instead, it is hard to believe that a program can be MORE successful simply because it is negotiated in a series of back room deals with no trials and no significant studies to back it up. (In fact, the closest "studies" seem to indicate it will be a failure such as the public health systems in Massachusetts, Hawaii and Oregon would indicate.) It is hard to think that the president of GE would get together with his friends / advisors / etc. and rewrite 17% of G.E.'s entire corporate structure without a huge number of studies to ensure that it would actually work -- rather than a series of

  169. How to have Healthcare that a Republican would lov by scorp1us · · Score: 1

    I don't know why the democrats have pursued the avenue that they have. It makes the least amount of sense. Its is basically an adaptation of Massachusetts' mandated program. "Have health care or else" If you do not have health care then the IRS can withhold your tax refund. I am a libertarian, fiscally conservative but socially progressive. The USA should be able to use its wealth provide healthcare and make this an even better country. It is inevitable that the more prosperous a country the better it should treat its inhabitants. health care is a human issue (not a right but a privilege) but that should not stop us fro having a common-sense plan.

    I have constructed a simple plan that would give everyone in the nation health care at a level that will appease liberals while not irritating conservatives. It is a simple 3 part plan, with Step 4 being profit.

    • 1. Collect a tax that is proportional to the expected premium for the nation, for the given coverage. Define the coverage as only those MOST COMMON things that we need/are entitled to. This means basic and routine care,
      emergency hospital visits and life-necessary prescription medications.
    • 2. Contract out the policies to several insurance carriers. Per annum, review the policies, and compare the expected coverage with the provided coverage. With clear benchmarks to provide treatment, award those companies that both provided the expected level of care with how cheaply they were able to do it. Re balance the policies between the providers such that the cheapest insurers are rewarded with more customers.
    • 3 .Finally leave all controversial services to be paid for by a private supplemental policy. Viagra, abortions, cosmetic procedures, lifestyle liabilities (lung cancer of smokers) would all be paid by the optional private policy
    • 4. Profit!

    Using that system has several advantages:

    • The most common problems of everyone are taken care of. People involved in accidents are afforded the best change of reattachment surgery to keep them productive in society. This is the moral argument of the left
    • No one is put in the position for paying for someone's lifestyle choice or mistake, or to fund a morally reprehensible act (as they see it) This is the moral argument of the right
    • It preserves competition among the insurers. By awarding more policies to the cheaper, less wasteful insurers. This is the fiscal argument of the right.
    • The government can use its size to negotiate competitive rates, which is much better than private companies that under the current plan would have to find and negotiate their own policy rates. This is the fiscal argument of the left
    • The insurers can still sell directly to customers, with policies for the optional coverage, which everyone should be arguing for.
    • This works with the least amount of changes needed to our insurance industry.
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  170. 20-40% profits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    now they're raking everyone over the coals while still pulling down 20 to 40% profits.

    Actually no, its quite easy to look up. Their profit margin is 3.3%

  171. Re:OK, then why doesn't the EU have universal care by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

    So you're saying that only two countries in Europe have proper universal health care?

    It seems your zipper is wide open; it's showing your stupid.

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  172. Capitalist Ideas by rpguru · · Score: 1

    I've seen a lot of posts wanting capitalist reform (some would say republican ideas). FYI, alot of these things are in the bill. http://www.whitehouse.gov/health-care-meeting/republican-ideas

  173. So much for "Obama vs FOX talking points", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as this topic has been framed in the summary.

    Slashdot has demonstrated that the progressive talking points re healthcare are quite popular, in spite of hearing so little about those from either FOX or Obama.

  174. Yes. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    The US spends more money in percent of GDP in health care than any other country in the world [wikipedia.org].

    Yes, and we also spend more per capita than any other country in the world... and we don't even freakin' cover everyone! And we are pretty far down the list in effectiveness too - far from being number one, we're in the low teens in life expectancy, infant mortality, and a host of other measures. The system we have is a total mess and needs to be fixed NOW.

  175. What?! by xdor · · Score: 1

    I fail to see how narrowing some choice among health insurers (or the choice of not having insurance and paying cash) compares remotely to single-payer (no choice) government snail-mail health care.

  176. Re:How to have Healthcare that a Republican would by DigitalSorceress · · Score: 1

    Your newsletter: I wish to subscribe to it.

    This is possibly the best Health Insurance Reform idea I've seen.

    Too bad what we're going to get instead is a giant giveaway to the Insurance companies that the democrats will pat themselves on the back for getting sumthin done, and the right will get pat on the back by their insurance company funders.

    Win-Win-Lose (left, right, the people in that order)

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    The Digital Sorceress
  177. This bill is so wrong. by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Let me count the ways:
    Constitutionality:
    The constitution says people cannot be coerced into signing a contract. By anyone. If you don't like it amend the constitution, but you cannot just make up your own laws. That's called anarchy. So right there the bill is dead. But let me go on.

    Common sense
    The kings of inefficiency. The same people who spent so much of your social security and medicare money on things besides social security and medicare, to the point that the two programs have unfunded liabilities of over $100 trillion, are now going to, according to the bill, take 500B from medicare to pay for the new program and supposedly expand the roles of people on medicare and the new plan. Do some simple math! If you have a system that's already out of money, and you take more money from it to start a similar system, more than triple the number of people receiving benefits, it's going to cost more not less! You have to be insane if you think adding people to the government's dole will somehow lower costs as progressives claim. Keep in mind that in 1965 lawmakers predicted it would only cost 9$ billion by 1990, unfortuanly the real cost was $67 billion. But don't worry they were only off by A FACTTOR OF 7. I'm sure they are better and more trustworthy in making cost estimates today. Congress would never deceive us!

    This bill causes lack of care (not coverage)
    Sure the government will cover you for all preexisting conditions, there will just be no faciliteis or doctors to treat you! OH BUT YOU'RE COVERED!!! Tell it to the people in the UK or Canada who are waiting 6 months for a CT scan, where here in the U.S. it's unusual to wait for more than a few days. The New England Journal of Medicine estimates that a full 1/3 of doctors will "QUIT PRACTICING MEDICINE" if the bill passes, further eroding our resources. So ya, you're covered, but you're going to have to wait a few years for that liver transplant now. People other countries will no longer have a "capitalist health care system" to save them, unfortunately nether will we. We will have a government panel deciding who is worth said liver transplant and deciding who gets to live and die, instead of your doctor or a panel of your doctors. A healthy 19 yr/old kid, who hasn't put a dime into the system will be placed higher on the list than say a 60 yr/old man who has paid into the system his whole life. In essence the 60 yr/old man worked his whole life paying into a system that will deem him unworthy and spend his money on someone whom he has never met while he suffers and dies while younger "more economically viable" people will get treatment first. In the existing system, the same 60 yr/old man would be able to do whatever it takes for him to get his liver (insurance,debt,sell car/house etc.). While dems try and portray private insurers as evil for turning down procedures, drugs etc. keep in mind that the number 1 denier of care per capita is medicare! So there's another false argument made to try and pass this bill.

    How much is too much?
    People in this country continue to live longer and longer. This is attributable not to better diets or healthier living, but as a direct result of having invested such large sums of money into our health care system. I've heard 17% from democrats, decrying the amount. Dems say that our private insurance is increasing at too fast a rate (3%/yr) but they want to change us to a system that is similar to the unfunded medicare, but medicare is increasing at a rate much faste

    1. Re:This bill is so wrong. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The constitution says people cannot be coerced into signing a contract.

      So then all laws requiring motor vehicle insurance are unconstitutional? That would be interesting.

      The kings of inefficiency.

      We spend 17% of our GDP on health care right now. Other nations get the same or better overall results spending less than half of this. Yes you might have to wait for some services but there is clearly huge inefficiencies in the current system, so much so that it is easy to argue that even a government run program would be better.

      Tell it to the people in the UK or Canada who are waiting 6 months for a CT scan, where here in the U.S. it's unusual to wait for more than a few days.

      There is quite a bit of evidence that the US has a huge and expensive overcapacity in exotic medical devices brought about by our current insurance system. We also clearly pay far more for the same drugs than people in other countries.

      We supposedly pay 17% now, and we live longer lives

      People in Canada, France, Germany, UK, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Sweden, Switzerland and Italy all have longer life expectancies than Americans and pay far less than 17% of their GDP for that life span.

      Your article is full of factual errors. Try doing some research next time.

    2. Re:This bill is so wrong. by tobe · · Score: 2, Informative

      "We supposedly pay 17% now, and we live longer lives, have better medical care, and are generally heather than our contemporaries in other countries" Except you're not and you're just making shit up: The US is 38th in life expectancy. Even Cuba does better than the States. Almost every other 'European' nation (plus Japan) does better : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_life_expectancy Your infant mortality is higher also and you're *much* more likely to die before you're 60. http://www.who.int/countries/usa/en/ vs http://www.who.int/countries/gbr/en/ And to get that inferior level of healthcare you spend about 3x per capita as a comparable European nation. Good job.

    3. Re:This bill is so wrong. by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So then all laws requiring motor vehicle insurance are unconstitutional? That would be interesting.

      Some do make that argument, yes. I am unaware if it has been formally challenged on that basis, though. It could be argued that not having auto insurance could wind up affecting others financially while not having health insurance only screws yourself (the financial burden on your next of kin notwithstanding).

      life expectancy

      There's only a 6 year span covering the life expectancies of the top 50 countries. That really doesn't seem like much, and trying to read *one* factor into it, like health care, is pointless. I could just as easily declare the USA has a lower number due to bad diet and in *spite* of our health care.

      Note: I'm actually not opposed to the single payer concept. I just would like someone other than our Congress to hammer it out. ;-)

      So what parts of the current health care bill do you think will have the biggest and best effects?

    4. Re:This bill is so wrong. by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So then all laws requiring motor vehicle insurance are unconstitutional? That would be interesting.

      The car insurance analogy is like comparing apples and oranges. First of all the government does not make you drive, but if you do drive you need insurance to have the privilege of using public roads. But to further tear up your argument. The government can revoke your license if you drive poorly, can the same be said for health care? Wouldn't that be like telling people who smoke that they can't go to the doctor anymore? Driving a car on public roads is a privilege that can be revoked. Living is not. Simply being born under this bill will require you buy something, and if progressives get a single payer plan, you will most likely buy from the government.

      We spend 17% of our GDP on health care right now. Other nations get the same or better overall results spending less than half of this. Yes you might have to wait for some services but there is clearly huge inefficiencies in the current system, so much so that it is easy to argue that even a government run program would be better.

      If you are diagnosed with a disease like cancer, time is your #1 enemy, and oftentimes it is how long it takes to get a CT scan or see an oncologist that makes the difference between life and death. So, you see, this is a really major issue. If you had a sucking chest wound would you want to wait more or less time? For that matter, if you had anything wrong with you, would you want to wait a longer time? You say there are huge inefficiencies in our system, but then fail to point out a single one. Here's a link that pretty much blows that whole argument out of the water though: Most Cancer Survival Rates in USA Better Than Europe and Canada. This is due to our better health care system. By the way, can you produce a list of high profile individuals that flew from the U.S. to the U.K. or Canada to receive medical treatment? Because they sure come here in droves! You also fail to point out how out health care system will compare when 1/3 of the doctors quit, and incentives (high pay) to practice medicine decrease.

      Other nations get the same or better overall results

      I'm going to have to call you on that one. Maybe you can point out another country that has a better medical system, since they are so numerous and all. Be nice if you provided a link. Something real too, I don't want to hear about how the U.K. has more coverage, even if they have to wait for 6 months for a CT scan. Coverage delayed is coverage denied.

      it is easy to argue that even a government run program would be better.

      I pointed out in my earlier post that medicare is the #1 denier of claims. I pointed out how medicare costs are rising almost 2x as fast as private insurance, And cost estimates were wildly underestimated (predicted $9b actual $67b). How does that jive with your argument that the government run program is better? We have the proof that it is not run better right there! Where is your proof that the government is going to be more effective? Seems like you just want to debate the points you think you have a shot at winning, or so you thought!.

      There is quite a bit of evidence that the US has a huge and expensive overcapacity in exotic medical devices brought about by our current insurance system. We also clearly pay far more for the same drugs than people in other countries.

      If there is quite a bit of evidence, I'm sure it wo

    5. Re:This bill is so wrong. by schm0 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The constitution says people cannot be coerced into signing a contract. By anyone.

      Which is why you can receive a subsidy to purchase insurance if you can not afford it or "opt out" by paying a fine. Moving on...

      Do some simple math! If you have a system that's already out of money, and you take more money from it to start a similar system, more than triple the number of people receiving benefits, it's going to cost more not less!

      Unless you are simultaneously reducing costs for Medicare by similar amounts or funding the proposals in other ways (i.e. the "Cadillac" plan tax and Medicare tax increase.) Please read the CBO report, which is party-neutral and sanctioned by both parties to do its analysis.

      Keep in mind that in 1965 lawmakers* predicted...

      *(not professional governmental accountants or the CBO) Your point? Long distance forecasts are entirely less than accurate. Which is why they call them "official estimates." There are also provisions within the bill to take steps to meet the necessary reductions should the plan not work as intended. Next?

      Tell it to the people in the UK or Canada...

      Who have a single payer, government run system entirely unlike what is proposed in the bill?

      The New England Journal of Medicine estimates that a full 1/3 of doctors will "QUIT PRACTICING MEDICINE" if the bill passes...

      http://mediamatters.org/blog/201003190027 The "estimates" you refer to were not "conducted, commissioned or published" by the NEJM.

      We will have a government panel deciding who is worth said liver transplant and deciding who gets to live and die, instead of your doctor or a panel of your doctors. A healthy 19 yr/old kid, who hasn't put a dime into the system will be placed higher on the list than say a 60 yr/old man who has paid into the system his whole life. In essence the 60 yr/old man worked his whole life paying into a system that will deem him unworthy and spend his money on someone whom he has never met while he suffers and dies while younger "more economically viable" people will get treatment first. In the existing system, the same 60 yr/old man would be able to do whatever it takes for him to get his liver (insurance,debt,sell car/house etc.)

      Really? Your example truly shows the lack of understanding and confusion perpetrated about this bill. Please cite to me the section within either bill that states a government panel will hear cases on liver transplants and decide their validity, expediency, etc.

      ...the feigned outrage at %3/yr is totally false when the alternative they suggest is higher.

      Comprehensive Medicare reform is not the core of this bill. However, cost-saving measures that will affect Medicare are included in its provisions. Will it solve the Medicare crisis? No. Will it provide health insurance to the uninsured? Yes.

    6. Re:This bill is so wrong. by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      Cancer survival rates are a much better indicator of the quality of the medical system than the life expectancy. And since the top 50 countries are within 4 or 5 years of each other there is no way anyone can say that "this one thing" is the reason for that disparity.

      The U.S. infant mortality rate is not higher; the rates of Canada and many European countries are artificially low, due to more restrictive definitions of live birth. There also are variations in the willingness of nations to save very low birth weight and gestation babies.

      Definitions of a live birth, and therefore which babies are counted in the infant mortality statistics very considerably. The U.S. uses the full WHO definition, while Germany omits one of the four criteria. The U.K. defines a still birth "a child which has issued forth from its mother after the twenty-fourth week of pregnancy and which did not at any time after being completely expelled from its mother breathe or show any other signs of life.

      You are being deceived, but not by me.

    7. Re:This bill is so wrong. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      So then all laws requiring motor vehicle insurance are unconstitutional? That would be interesting.

      You will notice that the laws requiring motor vehicle insurance are STATE and LOCAL laws, not FEDERAL laws. That is the difference.

      We also clearly pay far more for the same drugs than people in other countries.

      Because we end up subsidizing those countries. Those countries say to the drug companies "You can only charge X." and the drug companies say "No problem, we will just charge more in the US". This is why the drug companies fight anything that could lower the amount they charge in the US.

      Your post is full of misconceptions and misrepresentation. Try doing some research next time.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    8. Re:This bill is so wrong. by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      Which is why you can receive a subsidy to purchase insurance if you can not afford it or "opt out" by paying a fine. Moving on...

      You can't just breach the constitution and say "moving on..." it does not work like that. The fact that you total ignore the rule of law speaks volumes of your ideology.

      Unless you are simultaneously reducing costs for Medicare by similar amounts or funding the proposals in other ways .

      I actually did read the CBO report. They claim that they will save money by cutting reimbursements for medicare by %20 and add that into the bill as a savings, but there is already legislation in place that will reimburse medicare doctors that %20, canceling out any savings (300b they estimate for that line alone) made from the cut. Then they say that they will use 500b from medicare to fiance the new plan, and write that up as a savings, as if taking money from medicare is somehow magically saving money. Maybe you should read the CBO report.

      Really? Your example truly shows the lack of understanding and confusion perpetrated about this bill. Please cite to me the section within either bill that states a government panel will hear cases on liver transplants and decide their validity, expediency, etc.

      It's called the "Medicare Advisory Panel" And it's in the Senate bill
      From one of the Doctors on the MAP:

      Unlike allocation by sex or race, allocation by age is not invidious discrimination; every person lives through different life stages rather than being a single age. Even if 25-year-olds receive priority over 65-year-olds, everyone who is 65 years now was previously 25 years.
      -Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel

      *(not professional governmental accountants or the CBO) Your point? Long distance forecasts are entirely less than accurate. Which is why they call them "official estimates." There are also provisions within the bill to take steps to meet the necessary reductions should the plan not work as intended. Next?

      Your trust that the government will manage this system effectively are not only unsupported by evidence, but is actually contradicted by hundreds of years of the government being totally infective in doing just about anything. Not only did they get the estimate wrong, they also blew all the medicare and social security trust fund money on... well not social security or medicare to say the least. You're told that the government is running a total 9 trillion dollar deficit. But that's not counting the over 100 trillion in unfunded medicare and social security liabilities. What on earth makes you think that the government can now be trusted with this third trust fund that dwarfs the other two? Isn't the definition of stupid doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result? If they couldn't be trusted then, and obviously they could not be, what makes you think that the situation has changed for the better?

      Your trust in the government scares the crap out of me. Maybe it should scare you a little too.

      I would continue but I need to get some sleep sooner or later. I look forward to your response.

    9. Re:This bill is so wrong. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      You are wrong under every single bolded point. It's incredible, you would almost have to be trying to get it that wrong.
      Your example are straw men, and rife with logical fallacies.

      I posted a long rebuttal, but by the end I realized two things:
      1) You haven't rad the bill

      2) Everything you posted is based on logical fallacy's to support a preconceived belief.

      Let me know when you have rad the bill and can make a post that doesn't have almost every conceivable logical fallacy in it.

      Of course you can come up with 10 more reasons, hell you can come up with a thousands because they are ALL MADE UP and have no basis in reality. Just like my young daughter can come up with 100's of reason why her magic Unicorn is the best.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    10. Re:This bill is so wrong. by schm0 · · Score: 1

      You can't just breach the constitution and say "moving on..." it does not work like that.

      We can argue constitutional law, but most likely the decisions for the basis for an individual mandate will fall back to the Commerce Clause and it's associated precedents regulating interstate commerce that constitutes a "substantial effect." (Gonzales v Raich, U v. Lopez, et. al.)

      It's called the "Medicare Advisory Panel" [hhs.gov] And it's in the Senate bill [cbsnews.com]

      From your link: "The committee will review and evaluate medical literature, analyze technology assessments, and examine data and information on the effectiveness and appropriateness of medical devices and procedures. Based on the medical evidence reviewed, the committee will advise and make recommendations on Medicare decisions, but HCFA makes final Medicare coverage decisions. Each of the six advisory panels is organized to roughly parallel Medicare benefit categories, enabling HCFA to obtain the most pertinent technical advice. The panels will be asked to evaluate scientific evidence to assist HCFA in making coverage decisions." Nothing here to suggest that a US Government panel will be making individual case decisions. They are set up to review policy and provide technical advice regarding medical benefits under Medicare, not organ donor decisions. Your example, at the very least, is exaggerated. I posit this to you: Is it really worse that a government panel make these types of decisions (with congressional oversight, mind you) than some profit-hungry CEO in a board room!? Profits should not dictate health care.

      Your trust that the government will manage this system effectively are not only unsupported by evidence, but is actually contradicted by hundreds of years of the government being totally infective in doing just about anything...

      I refer you to this post. It's a bit snide, but I think it points out some of the flaws in your argument: http://ask.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1588498&cid=31536338

      Isn't the definition of stupid doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result?

      By your own argument, wouldn't the status quo be even more ill advised? It's not about trust, it's about action. Dems and Repubs alike have maligned social security and medicare over the decades into the monster it is today. It requires direct intervention. But this bill is about providing Health Care to Americans, not revamping either of those social systems. It addresses specific concerns within Medicare as it applies to certain benefits (i.e. the Donut Hole, Medicare commissions, etc.) It also mandates that steps be taken to reduce costs in Medicare, and provides the means to do so if the provisions do not work out as planned. If, as you say, the estimates are not correct, the legislation provides for a committee whose sole responsibility is to enforce and enact cost saving measures to meet it's goals of spending reduction. If Medicare spending is what is out of control, then why is this such a bad idea? (Read some of their immediate proposals yourself: http://www.medpac.gov/documents/Hackbarth%20Statement%20SFC%20Roundtable%204%2021%20FINAL%20with%20header%20and%20footer.pdf. Not nearly as insidious as you suggest.)

      Your trust in the government scares the crap out of me. Maybe it should scare you a little too.

      You're missing my point. What is needed is reform. While the proposed bill don't go as far as I would like, it provides for much needed change to the health insurance industry and an opportunity for individuals in dire need of health care. I trust private industry as much to "do the right thing" as I do our own government. In the end

    11. Re:This bill is so wrong. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      You will notice that the laws requiring motor vehicle insurance are STATE and LOCAL laws, not FEDERAL laws. That is the difference.

      Since when do state and local laws override the Constitution of The United States?????

      Hint: They DON'T.

      Because we end up subsidizing those countries. Those countries say to the drug companies "You can only charge X." and the drug companies say "No problem, we will just charge more in the US". This is why the drug companies fight anything that could lower the amount they charge in the US.

      Yes, and this is an argument against reform HOW? It is clear statement of how the current system is BROKEN.

      Your post is full of misconceptions and misrepresentation. Try doing some research next time.

      You have given NO evidence of that assertion.

    12. Re:This bill is so wrong. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      The car insurance analogy is like comparing apples and oranges.

      No, it is not. The assertion was that it unconstitutional for the government to require anyone to enter into a contract as a reason why this bill is ill-conceived. I gave a clear and accurate counter-example. All you did was throw up a bunch of red herrings to try to confuse the issue. In the case of health coverage I am sure the end game will be to adopt something like a tax credit which you will only get if you have health coverage.

      Massachusetts has had this exact system in place for years and has had NO constitutionality issues.

      If you are diagnosed with a disease like cancer, time is your #1 enemy, and oftentimes it is how long it takes to get a CT scan or see an oncologist that makes the difference between life and death.

      This survival rate thing is total baloney. The US runs more screens so it detects the disease earlier. So obviously if you detect the disease before it progresses much the n-year survival rate will be better even if you do no treatment what-so-ever.

      This article discusses the issue and why it is mortality rates, not survival rates that count:

      http://mdcarroll.com/2009/09/23/survival-rates-versus-mortality-rates/

      I'm going to have to call you on that one. Maybe you can point out another country that has a better medical system, since they are so numerous and all. Be nice if you provided a link.

      That is a cream puff. Here are over 30 examples.

      http://www.photius.com/rankings/healthranks.html

      And people in the U.S. are overweight, eat fast food all day long, sit on their asses and smoke like chimneys. But like the aforementioned google link, people's medical care is better here.

      Actually US smoking rates are about average compared to the rest of the world.

      The real question is, if the U.S. is so far behind in medical care/technology why aren't any rich American's traveling to foreign countries for treatment?

      How about people living in America today who have to travel abroad for treatment because they cannot get coverage or pay for the treatment here? It does no good to have great care if it is unavailable to you. According to this article 750,000 Americans traveled abroad to get care last year.

      http://articles.latimes.com/2008/nov/02/business/fi-cover2

      I bet that's a MUCH higher number than rich people who came to the US to get care. Who is our health care system supposed to be serving anyway? Rich foreigners or the typical American?

      The idea that rich foreigners travel to the US to get care when we have 30 millions that are uninsured is morally repugnant to me, and should be to you as well. It is one of the best arguments that the current system is BROKEN.

      If there is quite a bit of evidence, I'm sure it wouldn't trouble you too much to find a single example, much less a list of examples so egregious that we should sack everyone in charge and put the government in charge. I challenge you to find an entity in the U.S. more inefficient than the government.

      The US government's level of efficiency is a common whipping boy when it comes to the question of whether or not government run health care is a good idea. But the fact is that most EVERY OTHER developed nation on Earth manages to run a government controlled health care system for a far lower percentage of GDP and 30+ of them with better results (at least according to the WHO study I provided a link to). You assertion is now reduced to the idea the US government is the least efficient of any developed nation. That is patently ridiculous. In fact we have one of the lowest national tax rates despite having a military bu

    13. Re:This bill is so wrong. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Hint: They DON'T.

      Since when do state and local laws override the Constitution of The United States?

      Hint: They DON'T.

      1. Please state where in the Constitution it says one may not be required to have insurance or may not be required to sign a contract
      2. State law may not be less restrictive than federal law, but it may be more restrictive.
      3. The auto insurance requirements are for the privilege of driving and not a general requirement. Don't own or drive a car and you don't need to have insurance.
      4. I can't speak to all states, but in Florida the requirement is for "financial responsibility". Specifically, one either has insurance or posts a US$10,000.00 bond with the state.

      Since auto insurance requirements are not interstate and thus don't fall under the rubric of the Constitution.

      Yes, and this is an argument against reform HOW? It is clear statement of how the current system is BROKEN.

      There is nothing in the current reform bills that will fix it.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    14. Re:This bill is so wrong. by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      No, it is not. The assertion was that it unconstitutional for the government to require anyone to enter into a contract as a reason why this bill is ill-conceived. I gave a clear and accurate counter-example.

      You pointed out another example where the government is violating the constitution. You're making a logical fallacy called "begging the question". Because it is being used elsewhere without legal contest is not proof of its constitutionality. In fact dozens of AGs from various states are suing the federal government on the constitutionality of the bill. Here's one.. So maybe you can point out where in the commerce clause it says the government can force you to enter into a contract. Last time I checked the commerce clause only effected TAX. And I will also argue that the SCOTUS got that decision wrong. The idea that you can't grow your own food without the government taxing you because you're "effecting interstate commerce by not buying food" is ridiculous and more than a little tyrannical. If you support that decision it really speaks to your ideological background.

      Massachusetts has had this exact system in place for years and has had NO constitutionality issues.

      Just because it wasn't challenged does not make it automatically constitutional. And it's completely broke, totally out of money, and yes, it is exactly like it. If you read to the second page they're even skirting around the issue of rationing out care because " it cannot fall back on the strategy used by other states in hard times -- to simply remove people from the public insurance rolls by restricting eligibility. ". Why don't you think the same thing will happen here? Perhaps the same way the government has bankrupted social security and medicare? The examples are pretty obvious, just watch the line on your paycheck, hope you don't think you're getting that social security back when you retire. It's already gone. And now we're bowowing money from generations that have yet to be born, so we can start paying for a program for 10 years, but it only starts after 4? Non of this stuff troubles you?

      This survival rate thing is total baloney. The US runs more screens so it detects the disease earlier. So obviously if you detect the disease before it progresses much the n-year survival rate will be better even if you do no treatment what-so-ever.

      If you're a cancer survivor, as I am, I think survival rate is everything! I really don't understand how "survival rate will be better even if you do no treatment what-so-ever." The only example given is completely made up, there is no 5yr toe cancer. The breast cancer example is just really stupid. The guy points out how the U.K. doesn't screen for breast cancer till 50 as a cost savings method, yet at age 40 you have a 1 in 68 chance of getting it before your 50.. And the U.K. has determined that if you live in the U.K. you simply cannot have the screening till you're 50 even if you really want it. I guess 1 in 68 are just fucked? I'm sure the 1 in 68 care a lot about how soon they get screened. That's probably why our breast cancer survival rates are so much better than the U.K.'s. Just because you're covered does not mean you're going to get care, the U.K. is a great example of that. Care denied is coverage denied. Think of the Donner party, they were on the right track, they just didn't get there in time. Even the hack who wrote the article admits at the end "UPDATE: This in no way means I'm opposed to mammography and/or early detection for breast cancer. That can absolutely make the difference in outcomes." Which is to say: His hypothetical is totally made up

    15. Re:This bill is so wrong. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      So maybe you can point out where in the commerce clause it says the government can force you to enter into a contract.

      Here is a discussion by a series of law professors that basically presents the prevailing opinion that current Constitutional Law allows Congress to do anything it damn well pleases under the Commerce clause, and the Supreme Court would uphold this legislation.

      You haven't presented any legal precedent, authoritative argument or existing law that gives an example where regulation of this sort has been found to be unconstitutional, while I've given examples of EXISTING laws that make the same requirements that this bill would.

      I really don't understand how "survival rate will be better even if you do no treatment what-so-ever."

      It's very simple. Let's say a disease takes exaclty 8 years to kill someone. There is no effective treatment for the disease. If you screen everyone once every 4 years, some of those people will be found to have had the disease for more then 3 years, and will not survive 5 more years. However if you screen everyone once a year, nobody found to have the disease will be dead within 5 years of detection of the disease and you have a 100% survival rate.

      What good does the one year testing regime do? Well, it generates nicer looking survival rates, but no improvement in mortality rate (always 100% in this example) or actual survival of the disease.

      This is why 5 year survival rate is not a good statistic absent further information - it is heavily aliased with testing rates, and other measures like mortality rate are just as if not more important.

      We're like, #1 by a huge margin!

      Now you are just making up BS. Some of the countries listed are within a few percentage points of the US. That is not a huge margin, especially given the vast differences in spending between the two.

      This is ridiculous. I've said it again and again, coverage does not mean care.

      I know you have said that, but it doesn't dispel the fact that a very prestigious organization like WHO thinks we aren't doing that well in terms of health care. You asked for an example, you got it.

      The nice thing about our system vs. a government run system (single payer) is if you don't like your insurer you can go to another one, and another one,

      That is a straw man argument. We aren't getting single payer, and many of the other socialized programs that are doing well are not single payer either.

      You think, based on the WHO report I guess, that health care in "any developed nation" as you it, is better than health care in this nation, but that is demonstrably false, as in the example of breast cancer you brought up earlier.

      Breast cancer is a cherry picked statistic that you are flogging. I could bring up some very powerful counter examples such as the rates of low birth weight infants in the US. The WHO report is far better because it reviews the entire system.

      Did you even read it? It says Americans traveled abroad to get cheaper treatment, not better treatment.

      You are seriously missing the point here. In the US many of these people would get NO treatment because they are not insured or could not afford it. Treatment in other countries may not be the same quality as cost-no-limit care but it is FAR FAR BETTER care than NO care.

      You have not addressed the issue of large numbers of Americans traveling abroad to get care because the current system in the US leaves them unable to afford the US system. Giving the example of foreign billionaires coming to the US is ridiculous. We need a system that treats Americans, not rich foreigners.

      You think, based on the WHO report I guess, that health care in "any developed nation" as you it, is better than health care in this nation, but that is demonstrably false, as in the example of breast cancer you brought up earlier.

      This is a ridiculous argument, and I have already countered it. There are many other nations that hav

    16. Re:This bill is so wrong. by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      How the freaking hell was this flamebait? You ideologues need to all drop dead and let the rational humans have a crack at things.

      Of course that will depopulate most of the Earth.

      There. How's that for flamebait?

  178. Fox News/MSNBC by mgandalf · · Score: 1

    I'm tired of hearing the opinions of Fox & friends as well as MSNBC. The stations call themselves news stations, but really their nothing but pundits. If either one really wanted to be a REAL new channel, they would report on both sides of the debate and LEAVE IT UP TO THE VIEWERS to form THEIR OWN OPINION!

    - Mark.

  179. No. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    The election where this was in question was LAST YEAR. It was, you know, the biggest topic of the entire election season? People sent THIS CONGRESS to DC to do HCR. It's time for them to do it.

    1. Re:No. by sunking2 · · Score: 1

      Don't be silly. The last election was about getting rid of Republicans. Otherwise there wouldn't be this backlash, things would have been passed, and there wouldn't be a Republican Senator from MA right now. The idea of health care reform may have helped, this current mess of it deserves a new pulse to be taken.

  180. You are mistaken by Tancred · · Score: 1

    There is still a vote. The "self-executing rule" combines what would have been the vote for the Senate bill with a vote for amendments to that bill. When the Republican party is the majority, they use this rule too. And more often than the Democrats do.

  181. Could KISS be applied to the medical sector? by master_p · · Score: 1

    Could the KISS principle be applied to the medical sector? ("Keep It Simple, Stupid"). For example, how about a simple system without insurance in which everyone pays the doctor or hospital a price that is proportional to their income? would that work? would it be fair? would it create problems?

    1. Re:Could KISS be applied to the medical sector? by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1

      The KISS standard has not been used since the original Decoration of Independence, The Constitution of the United States, and the Bill of Rights were written. After that it's all lawyerly crap and complex need-an-arm-to-sort-it-out-gonna-be-in-court-a-million-year style.

      --
      -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
  182. Reality vs Impressions in Healthcare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The simlpe truth is rarely what anyone sees. The debate about a single-payer system is a non-started; everyone understands that the US government is too beholden to corporate money to ever consider taking away a profitmaking opportunity. The "Public Option" simply is a base healthcare plan SOLD BY THE INSURANCE COMPANIES that meets a standard established by congress, which is considered a "Pool" of members, not individual coverage. Your employer can offer that as their basic package, or you can buy it for yourself, but it is the same cost and features to everyone taking that option. As for the choice of doctor, etc; the healthcare companies tell you who you can see now, based on their "preferred provider networks" and on charging you more to see anyone else, up to the point of not paying at all for doctors they don't want you to use. The same would undoubtedly apply, but the healthcare companies would have to meet some much more stringent and well defined criteria to exclude doctors from their "networks" and there could be a national certification or recognition that would mean they had to accept those doctors as qualified for anyone on the "public option" plans.
    The last piece, but the most significant, is that the regulations would eliminate the tricks the companies use to deny coverage - "pre-existing condition", lifetime caps, etc would not be a factor, and portability of your healthcare choices would no longer be an issue for people changing jobs or seeking new ones after being laid off, etc.
    In short, the changes that this is the first strong step into are nothing but good for the people, and it is the health insurance industry that does not want them; the republicans are simply seizing on this as an opportunity to block the democrats from doing something the people want, so they can prove that the democrats never do anything good for the people, and unfortunately the current climate in washington means that if the numbers were reversed, the democrats would be trying to block the things the republicans want to do.
    I think the final answer might be that in order to serve in the Congress or in any branch of the US government, a person would have to renounce membership in any political party for the duration of their term.. As long as we're dreaming, might as well dream big :)

  183. This is a really dumb argument by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Number one, it's a complex topic and the law is not exactly going to fit on the back of a goddamn cereal box. Number two... have you ever looked at an actual bill? The use enormous fonts and huge amounts of white space. A resolution honoring National Dogcatcher Recognition Day would fill up a hundred pages.

  184. Conservatives no longer exist. by copponex · · Score: 1

    We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

    Many people believe that the federal goverment's entire set of authorities is enumerated in the Constitution, and that it has no legal basis for making federal law in this area

    There's a clause about general welfare and a clause about common defense. We didn't have to get constitutional amendments for the Air Force, and the CIA is certainly unconstitutional. I hear no complaints on constitutional grounds on either issue. We know some founders believed in publicly funded education. I don't think publicly funded healthcare is much different.

    Why can't this be done by the states, individually, as each state sees fit? Having it be a federal law is, in some senses, anti-democratic, because there are more localities in which it lacks the consent of the governed.

    Because states couldn't survive the inundation of health care costs from citizens of states that decided to keep private care. Federal funding spreads the cost over the whole country, from areas like New York and California, which are economically vibrant and already pay for roads and other infrastructure in states that couldn't possibly afford them, like Louisiana.

    Having it be a federal law is, in some senses, anti-democratic, because there are more localities in which it lacks the consent of the governed

    I'd buy this argument if the conservatives paid it more than lip service.

    Is it automatically the case that the Federal government is the best agent to fix this situation? They've fsck'ed up a lot of other areas of governance in the past.

    Well, the evidence from every other western nation in existence points to yes. Of course, those are scary communist stalinist nazi fascist states, like Belgium, Denmark, and Spain.

    Why should people who earned their wealth through hard work, careful investment, and self-sacrifice have to pay for lazy people?

    The American aristocracy is no different from the old French aristocracy. Wealth inequality is way up, which means that the middle class mostly failed at the illusion of the American dream. They work twice as hard and make the same amount of money as they did in 1980. They have spent their savings. They can afford health care, or safe housing, or fresh fruits and vegetables, or college tuition for their kids, but not all of these things. 45% of American households make less than $40,000 a year. Subtract taxes, two vehicles for two working parents, gas, and rent, and you're not left with enough to have what your parents did.

    I'm not saying that all poor persons are lazy; I'm referring to the fraction of poor persons who truly don't deserve to have other people pay for their bills

    We are all on welfare. No American would be willing to pay at the pump for the true price of gas. And the fact is, providing for basic needs of food and health care is much cheaper than criminalizing poor behavior and then paying for 1.5 million of your countrymen to rot in jails for the rest of their lives. Most of these people are mentally unstable, and should be in state-run halfway houses or hospitals where their behavior can be monitored and hopefully improved through counseling, instead of mixing them with violent criminals where they are raped and beaten, and then thrown out into the streets again so the cycle can repeat itself.

    Example: should I have to pay for treating emphasema in a smoker?

    You could make tobacco products illegal. They kill millions of people worldwide ever year. But I guess that clashe

  185. Over my dead body! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess after they shoot me for being a tax resister they'll have to shoot me again for paying for health care without the use of government force!

    They can have my fat stinking corpse, but not my obedience!

    (Signed: Alex Libman's sock-puppet.)

  186. I don't see too many highlighting... by ScientiaPotentiaEst · · Score: 1

    ... the mandatory requirement to purchase a product.

    I have wondered in times past what would drive me to drop out. I think this is it. I shall not be forced under pain of fine and imprisonment to purchase another's private product. No. Enough.

    Worse still than this bill's moral absurdity is the precedent it sets. There are legal scholars now who promote the idea of mandatory tort liability insurance for everone ([1]). No doubt they would be pleased to see this camel's nose lifting the tent's edge.

    Mandatory medical insurance or go to prison? The irony is too rich.

    [1] http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=844210

  187. My take by Hausenwulf · · Score: 1

    Three points:

    1. The healthcare bill will likely be the bill that brings the country to financial ruin. We can't afford to maintain what we have now, let alone pay for a huge, new program. Even if you think this is otherwise a good program, is it fair to destroy your children's future over it?

    2. Historically, the government has a bad track record running public services. Since there is no competition, there is no incentive to excel. While some on the low income side who couldn't afford it will receive healthcare, the overall quality of healthcare will drop. There will also be little incentive for major medical and pharmaceutical companies to innovate.

    3. On the other side of things, just saying "no" to this bill is not enough. America needs healthcare reform, just not as presented in this bill. It's shameful for those opposing the bill not to provide alternatives.

  188. Are you making up facts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where do you get this BS? There has been a substantial reduction in malpractice insurance costs since Texas reformed tort's a few years ago.

    Stop getting your "facts" from the trial lawyers.

  189. Or... by bjk002 · · Score: 1

    You could argue that those people who feel "entitled" to earn money to another persons detriment are the supposed "Entitlement Generation".

    Every damn time I hear someone slander a concept such as universal health care as an "Entitlement", I want grab a bat and hit some balls...

    We are, after all, still all human here right?

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
  190. Health Care analysis by aretae · · Score: 1
    Assumptions behind the question are not quite right.

    The health care problem in America is not what is being said in most discussions. There are actually 6 problems, 1 big, 2 little, 2 unsolveable, 1 crazy, and 1 hidden.

    The big problem is that the government spends at least about 1 in 2 health care dollars, and the prices are going up..so the government is going to have a money problem around health care real soon here. If we don't cap the $ spent by the government on health care, we're all up a creek.

    The first little problem is that in healthcare, there are no real incentives to cut costs. The consumer, the provider, the payer, and the decider are all different people, which makes things bad. In addition, costs are hidden further by the fact that most Americans with insurance have the insurance paid by their employer (not seeing the full cost of the insurance), insurance regulations which don't allow (real) competition on which services are covered, and huge tax advantages for employer-provided insurance.

    The second little problem is that in America, 50% of healthcare spending occurs in the last 6 months of a person's life. A big portion of our cost vs. other countries costs is sitting right here.

    Unsolveable problem #1 is that the supply of medical care is massively restricted in the US. In some other countries, there are Bachelors' of Medicine who can do simple stuff like give shots, draw blood for tests, etc. There are not huge scary FDA "effectiveness trials" which insanely increase the price of drugs (well, and they piggyback off the drugs developed by relying on US profits).

    Unsolveable problem #2 is that new medical procedures, which sometimes work better, are often more expensive. Basically, all older care is dropping in price, just like all other products...but there's so much new stuff....

    The crazy problem is that no one actually knows what works/is cost effective. It's well known in medicine that about 50% of all medical spending has no discernable impact at all.

    The hidden problem is that it remains important to get new procedures and drugs, so as to continue (despite not knowing which ones work, some do) getting healthier.

    Data comparison:

    • The US spends about 17% of GDP on health care, and it's growing at ~8%
    • The single payer systems (Commonwealth, Europe) have better health results, and spend between 9-13% of GDP on health care (from a much poorer base), and it's growing at about 8%.
    • Singapore's system has even better health results, spends ~4% of GDP, and it's growing at ~4%. They use required, tax-financed HSAs, with catastrophic government-provided insurance.
  191. They can't be done separately by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    If you require insurers to cover everyone who applies, but don't force everyone to get coverage... you get the so-called death spiral. Healthy people don't get insurance until they get sick... then apply and get covered. Premiums have to go up as a result. More people decided not to get covered until they get sick. Premiums go up more. Before long, insurers go out of business because no one can afford their product.

    To be successful, the plan has to include all three elements: 1) no rejections for pre-existing conditions, 2) an insurance mandate, and 3) subsidies for those who can't afford the mandate. Of course, single payer would be simpler and better, but it's not politically possible right now.

    1. Re:They can't be done separately by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      You prove my point...

      Now that I broke it to individual issues you can point out and debate a problem with an issue... Now you solution may not be the only fix. Perhaps a more hybrid approach may help the problem.
      For example except for everyone to join in. But if a company offers health insurance the employee will need opt in unless they show that they have insurance elsewhere.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  192. True, but I still oppose the bill by einhverfr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The insurer will probably place the burden of proof on you that your heart attack wasn't related to your diabetes. Meanwhile, you're in the hospital and racking up five-figure bills and, oh yeah, you've just had a heart attack. Have a nice day!

    That's the problem, and it is a real problem. However this bill is not the answer. The answer is regulation at the state level.

    The US health insurance industry is currently regulated by individual states. Different states have different rules. However, one element to the current system is that the state government (which is more responsive to the needs of citizens usually than the federal government) tends to have offices for dealing with these sorts of complaints. Additionally, the same offices take complaints from doctors about lack of authorization for procedures. While this means that some states have better health insurance requirements than others, it means there is a clear point of contact when a problem exists that needs to be resolved quickly.

    The problem with this bill is it entirely supplants the state health insurance regulation structures and replaces them with a shiny new federal system. There is no way that the main protections that the states offer against insurance abuses will work right away in the federal system. By pre-empting a fairly mature system of state regulation, this bill will not save lives but rather cost them.

    The secondary problem is that the bill has inadequate cost control provisions. In Massachussets, after they passed a similar bill, health insurance rates went up. We can expect the same here. Quite frankly, I have no idea how I will afford it when the rates go up. Right now, when insurance companies raise their rates, I can drop off until they lower them again. This bill makes me part of a captive market.

    The real underlying problem left unresolved is that we have inadequate consumer protections in the areas of health care and health insurance. While this bill purports to improve these conditions, it fixes, IMO, the wrong problems and leaves major issues unresolved. Why is it that I have more consumer protections when getting my car repaired than in obtaining non-emergency medical care?

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:True, but I still oppose the bill by beej · · Score: 1

      Right now, when insurance companies raise their rates, I can drop off until they lower them again. This bill makes me part of a captive market.

      They're not under any obligation to take you back. I know several people whom the insurance companies do not want back.

    2. Re:True, but I still oppose the bill by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      They're not under any obligation to take you back. I know several people whom the insurance companies do not want back.

      This bill still dramatically shifts the balance of power towards insurance companies and away from individuals.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    3. Re:True, but I still oppose the bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The answer is regulation at the state level.

      There are times when, for the good of everyone in the nation, we decide that federal policies are a necessary solution. Like when Kansas decides it's school children would learn about invisible pink unicorns, and slashdot explodes. Because, honestly, those children don't get a choice about where they go to school.

      It's too often that the poor also don't have a choice, or much of one. Moving is expensive, and jobs aren't always easy to find. So USians without much in the way of resources (and who may make up a part of the 30 million uninsured) may not have a choice about which state they live in, health care or no.

      This bill makes me part of a captive market.

      I agree, and that's why I wish a public option were available. It makes me uncertain as to whether I support this bill, as I don't want insurance companies gouging the shit out of me. A public option also makes sense in my above case, where the plan is federally managed, as it increases the "buying power" of the people opting into the plan.

      m!

    4. Re:True, but I still oppose the bill by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      There are times when, for the good of everyone in the nation, we decide that federal policies are a necessary solution. Like when Kansas decides it's school children would learn about invisible pink unicorns, and slashdot explodes. Because, honestly, those children don't get a choice about where they go to school.

      It's too often that the poor also don't have a choice, or much of one. Moving is expensive, and jobs aren't always easy to find. So USians without much in the way of resources (and who may make up a part of the 30 million uninsured) may not have a choice about which state they live in, health care or no.

      Sure, and since change is good, I bet you are upgrading your production DNS servers to BIND 10 tonight, right?

      The point is that when you supplant one system with another, it's going to take a while before the bugs are worked out. Anyone who thinks this will save lives or control costs in the short term is kidding themselves. Maybe, if we are very lucky, we will get things working as well as they are now within the next decade. My prediction though is for more difficulty contesting necessary care being declined in advance by an insurance company and as a result more people dying.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  193. Difference between law enforcement and health care by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    Why is it the people electing representatives who tax us and provide the service of health insurance is "not freedom" but people electing representatives who tax us and provide the service of arresting serial killers is?

    The public has a compelling interest to unify and use force to prevent private individuals from arresting suspected criminals. Yet the job still needs to be done, so we have no choice but to form government and stick it with that responsibility.

    If you're out there, working on your own with no oversight or due process, to capture and punish suspected serial killers, you actually might (yourself) be a serial killer. I have to stop you; I might even be your next victim. Maybe that's "not freedom" either, but it's a justified limitation.

    The public has no compelling interest to unify and use force to prevent people from obtaining health care on their own.

    If you're out there, working on your own with no oversight or due process, obtaining or failing to obtain health care, you pose no risk no any innocent third parties. I'm not worried about you. Using government to make you do it how "we" want you to, is "not freedom" but also not justified.

    I think there are some good reasons for "reform." There are anecdotes out there about just plain fraud: someone pays for insurance and then their claims are denied. Years of tech advances happen and yet costs are going up instead of down (that is utterly damning proof that the current system is somehow malfunctioning spectacularly). Government is backing and creating monopolies (whether we're talking about the AMA, or medicine patents) without regard for getting the public a quid for its quo. And so on.

    But supporting public-funded health care finance because it's "like" public-funded law enforcement, is just absurd. The two are nothing alike at all, when you look at it in terms of the people's relationship with government. That isn't a good reason to support the current efforts.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  194. You must be kidding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is ANYTHING on Fox true?

  195. It has to do with our culture by Xaedalus · · Score: 1

    America does not have a super-majority cultural/ethnic enclave as does most of Europe or the rest of the world. Yes, us whiteys are the majority, but we are not the supermajority we once were. We are also founded on the notion that a man (or woman) is responsible for his/her own success - and while we're willing to give a hand out to help someone up, we will not prop someone up for a lifetime

    There are two big problems with America adopting a single-payer system: 1) It gives "the other" equal access to resources, and 2) it encourages the government to take a greater interest in our personal affairs. The first point has to do with the lack of a ethnic super-majority in the US. While we've made great strides against racism, we still have a problem with granting "free" health care to those who are "not like us". If we did magically go to a single payer system, our news channels would be filled with stories of welfare queens and illegal immigrants hogging up all our health care - which would do *wonders* for our race relations. We don't want to give free stuff away to those not like us if it means we ourselves don't get it. The second point is that Americans intrinsically have a distrust of intrusive government. All-in-all, our government is one of the least-intrusive systems in the world, when compared to Europe and Asia. We expect that our fellow citizen is responsible for him/herself and his/her success/failure. We don't like the idea of a welfare state or a dole because we were a frontier nation and part of our culture is based on the idea that we do things ourselves.

    For the US, it's too much to expect a single payer system, absent a massive catastrophe that forces us to it. The best we can do is manipulate our private health insurance sector to provide good medical coverage at a fair cost - and that is what this reform package is going to start doing. It won't do it all... we'll actually need a Republican President with a Democratic congress to make the changes that really need to be made (or vice versa - the US has only really ever done well when one party controls the Presidency and the other Congress - they have to work together then to get anything done).

    --
    Here's to hot beer, cold women, and Glaswegian kisses for all.
  196. Just unbelievably stupid. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    to provide health care for the lowest percentage of folks who mostly don't have insurance because they would rather have multiple TV's, cars and luxury items rather than buy health insurance.

    Do you have even the faintest idea what health care coverage costs on the individual market? I was looking into starting my own business at one point... until I researched individual medical coverage. The costs for a plan equivalent to my employer provided plan was going to cost more than my freaking mortgage. I'm really pretty sure that the "lowest percentage of folks" are not spending enough on TVs and "luxury items" to cover even a catastrophic plan. And in any case, insurance companies will rescind your coverage at the drop of a hat the minute you come down with any expensive condition.

    So yeah, keep bitching about those lucky poor folks. That makes a lot of sense.

  197. Correlation not Causation by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

    Modern treatments for tuberculosis (TB) may have changed this but for a long time, among all the states Arizona had the highest rate of death from TB. This wasn't because the climate of Arizona was bad for TB sufferers, but because the climate was good for TB sufferers. Thus lots of people with TB moved to Arizona to help their health. Thus many people with TB lived and eventually died in Arizona.

    I hope you see the parallels with health care costs. High spending could mean inefficiencies or it could mean high quality of care or it could be we are just a country of fat people who are of course less healthy or it could mean any number of other things. The GDP number on its own means next to nothing.

  198. I thought SlashDot had smart people for posters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently that level of intelligence falls off a cliff on social matters. Healthcare as an entitlement? Do you even know what an entitlement is? Tort Reform to fix healthcare costs? Where did you get your accounting and finance degrees? They owe you your money back. Government has a shitty resume and cannot run organizations? Well that statement is so obviously full of shit and retarded I won't even respond.

    Stick to computers nerds. You know jack shit about social issues.

  199. Re: by psm321 · · Score: 1

    The media makes it look like people are opposed because government is involved, but in reality most people are opposed because they don't want to be forced to buy from the same corrupt insurance companies. There's very little "socialist" in this bill, just corporate welfare

  200. You need to get your facts straight by sean.peters · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It amazes me that with the high percentage of negative public opinion on the health care bill that congress is still considering it. This is supposed to be government by the will of the people, right? To me, the will of the people is not being executed here.

    Current support for the bill is running about even - around 45-45, with the remainder undecided. And if you ask people whether they're in favor of what's actually in the bill, they're overwhelmingly in favor. It's just that the Republicans (and their benefactors, the insurance companies) have done a good job of making the bill look bad in the public eye.

    Also, this is apparent in the back door manner in which they are trying to pass the bill by some trick of house/senate rules. This isn't some bill to appropriate a few million dollars for federal park support but a bill involving a trillion dollars of outlay.

    The republican house in 2005-06 used the same "back door manner" to pass almost a third of all the legislation they passed, and no one said a word. This argument is just dumb. The house is just going to vote on the original bill and the reconciliation fix at the same time. There's nothing "back-door" about it.

    With respect to tort reform - this is nothing more than a thinly veiled attempt by the Republican party to get back at a group of people that traditionally gives more money to the other party (lawyers). Study after study has shown that tort reform would have a negligible effect on medical costs.

  201. Nice try, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mandating that people buy health insurance is wrong. They already had to add an exception to this proposal for groups who are opposed to this mandate based on religious grounds (the Amish... etc.). Many states are also already starting initiatives to exempt their constituents. Any group or individual who wants to care for themselves through other means than for-profit insurance companies deserves this basic right. True health reform would provide an option for people who are unable to care for themselves due to financial poverty (through use of insurance or directly paying their own care costs) or who are rejected by the private insurance companies for whatever reason (pre-existing condition, etc.) to gain assistance through an alternative non-profit government program, and also directly address cleaning up fraud and waste in the existing Medicare system. The problem is, how to fund such a measure, and how to get such a measure passed when the existing system has too many insurance industry lobbyists and controlled politicians (Lieberman, etc.) fiercely opposed to upsetting their collusive monopoly. I don't have the answer, and I don't think this proposal is the answer either. The "flip" answer is to re-budget : stop spending so much tax money on defense (where a LOT of waste could be trimmed with no adverse impact on national security) and instead use a small fraction of it to care for the underpriveleged/unfortunate in society. I honestly do not mind at all, and am actually happy, that some of my tax money goes to help underprivileged people. I would much rather have that than send the money to a bunch of fat-cat insurance companies by decree.

  202. Still a step in the right direction by FridayBob · · Score: 1

    Disclaimer: I'm an American, but live in Europe.

    Right now the situation with health insurance in the USA is so awful that any change is welcome, just as long as that change does not actually come from the health insurance industry itself.

    The problem with the health insurance industry in the USA is that it is hardly regulated at all. It's unforgivable that the law currently allows them to choose not to insure people based on their personal medical histories, and even worse that people who are insured (and pay the highest premiums of any developed nation) can be (and often are) given such a hard time when health insurance companies decide that they simply don't want to pay.

    Still, so many people in the States seem reluctant to accept any new government proposals for change, because they fear that their already bad situation may actually get worse. They shouldn't be. The only ones who really have anything to fear are the health insurance companies, who are, incidentally, fighting the proposed legislation tooth and nail. That alone should allay people's fears, but amazingly, few seem to notice.

    This coming weekend, if Obama fails to pass his health care plan, it will be a very sad day indeed for the American people. But, I won't blame Obama: as president, he can only do so much when congress refuses to cooperate. I want to see that Americans are still capable of helping themselves, but I fear they are not.

    Let's face it, America has been a plutocracy for decades: it's run by the rich top percentile who cynically manipulate public opinion to their advantage... not hard to do in a country where most people have a pretty miserable education. Wake up, Americans: your country's star is fading fast.

    1. Re:Still a step in the right direction by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      You don't understand how insurance companies are regulated. Oh, they are. Quite severely, I might add.

      The biggest problem is that 50 years ago health insurance was "insurance". It was risk-based. If you were had poor health, smoked and didn't take care of yourself and wanted health insurance it was expensive. Someone much healthier got lower rates.

      This was deemed to be terribly unfair. Instead of addressing the source of the problem - which in a free society isn't really something you can fix - the politicians at the state level decided to really fix the problem. They made it so the rates all had to be pretty much the same. So now the insurance company couldn't adjust rates based on risk. They could adjust them based on some other criteria which substituted for real risk assessment.

      Then the states required coverage for special things. Some states said you had to cover psychiatrists. Other states decided that "alternative therapies" had to be covered. The end result was that 50 separate sets of requirements evolved over a fairly short period of time. Of course, this was reflected in the rates. What if you were in a state that mandated coverage for acupuncture and you didn't want it? Too bad, in order to do business in that state acupuncture had to be included.

      Then the reasons for denial of coverage were steadily reduced to the point where coverage could only be denied for a few specific reasons.

      The end result of this is the sort of back-end management that you see today. An insurance company is saddled with unknown risk and the only way to manage this risk - because insurance is a risk-based investment practice - is to deny claims and drop people when they actually have a claim. The politicians have tried, without any real success, to change health insurance into a prepaid health plan, like prepaid legal service only with doctors and hospitals. The insurance companies haven't gone along with this and have kept the risk-based investment strategy. The end result is that whatever tools are left for managing the risk are being used because otherwise it would just be a prepaid health care fund.

      While a prepaid health care fund might be what people are interested in, that isn't what they are getting. No matter how hard the politicians seem to want to push it in that direction.

  203. Luckily... by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    ... nothing in this bill has anything whatsoever to do with your relationship with your doctor. It has everything to do, however, with your relationship with your health insurance company. And if your insurer isn't screwing you already, you can bet they're about to. With respect to your choice: you almost certainly don't have one. Your employer is deciding for you which company you'll use, what benefits you'll get, and what you'll contributed to the costs. And more and more, they're deciding not to offer coverage at all, which leaves you to the tender mercies of the individual market.

  204. Insurance is not the problem by NicknamesAreStupid · · Score: 1

    The problem is the lack of doctors. If there were ten time as many physicians in the USA, the cost of health care would not be an issue. Instead, we make getting an MD the hardest and most expensive of all professions, and our medical educational institutions' output is limited to the point that NOW one third of all practicing doctors are foreign trained. Today the trend among private practices is to stop taking insurance, including Medicare. When you have a lock on the market you can make the rules.

    So, why don't politicians pass laws to make it easier/cheaper to open medical schools and get medical degrees? When was the last time a politician got elected by promising a solution to an immediate problem that would take 20 years to implement?

    Imagine if Microsoft were the only operating system -- no Mac OS, Linux, anything else -- and Microsoft could restrict the development of other OSes AND they could charge whatever they wanted without government restrictions. They would be Dr. Microsoft. Would having an OS insurance policy help you?

    1. Re:Insurance is not the problem by nido · · Score: 1

      The problem is the lack of doctors.

      This was the intended result of actions taken by the medical-industrial complex.

      One consequence of the Flexner Report (1910) was the closure of most "substandard" medical schools. State medical boards were established in the late 1800's, and before long the medical monopoly shut down any medial school that wasn't affiliated with a university.

      By 1965 there was much hand-wringing about a doctor shortage.

      Today the problem with medicine is not one of insurance, but lack of imagination. My disabled father-in-law came to visit recently, and brought a bag of pills with him. I believe he'd be better off with some proper nutrition (no soda, no white bread, no candy, more vegetables, more protein, etc) than drugs to manage the condition, but his doctors don't know any better because they were indoctrinated in a pharmaceutical-based approach to medicine.

      These two articles should be required reading for anyone who wants to discuss health care today:

      100 years of Medical Robery
      Real Medical Freedom

      There are options for achieving better results, but the debate doesn't talk about them.

      --
      Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
      www.teslabox.com
  205. Already broken... Don't break it more! by Anomalyx · · Score: 1

    I think healthcare is broken already, and the gov't is certainly not the one to fix it. In fact, what is planned will break it even further. How many people have healthcare costs that are because they chose to smoke, or chose to eat crappy fast food every day instead of something decently healthy? I don't want to have to pay for other people's unwillingness to take care of their own bodies. Maybe we should have government-run car insurance. If I drive for 2 years without changing oil and the engine blows up, oh well, the government will fix it out of the taxpayers' pocket. Ridiculous, right? Government health care carries the same scenario. Don't even get me started on the abortion stuff. If I say any more though, it'll just start a flame war and that will be anything but productive, so i'll leave it at that

    --
    No, there is no "-1 I'LL NEVER ADMIT BEING WRONG!!!" mod.
  206. Anonymous Coward. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let no one get public supported medical insurance including all congressmen, government employees, and the only exception is the army/navy/air force and other veterans. Then we can accept the crookish GOP's claim it costs too much to insure all. If the poor people die, we can import more Mexicans to replace them. Trillion $, whose money when the GOPs are talking when the congress men taking bribes and squander our tax dollars and allow the insurance companies to collect the bribes back by distributing the corruption charges among all the insurance policy holders.

  207. My experience working in healthcare insurance... by darkvizier · · Score: 1

    From my experience, healthcare insurance companies are disgustingly inefficient from an IT standpoint. I've worked at two, including one major national provider and one that is the main provider for state employees where I live. Both of them were using outdated technologies and hiring entire departments of people to manually push claims through the system, since their software was consistently unreliable. Quality software in this industry would cut out a huge amount of overhead. It would also force a lot of lazy people to find new jobs, so there is a big political force in these companies opposing this sort of change. I think the best hope for this market is competition. The industry needs some startup companies who are doing things smarter, faster and better, and are taking huge swaths of customers away from them. That's the only thing that will actually motivate them to change. I'm looking for a bill that actually finds a way to encourage and help new companies get started in the industry.

  208. My two cents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I pay an awful lot in health insurance right now, and I don't have a particularly good income (technically below poverty-line). In a purely theoretical sense I think that a properly managed single-payer system would be wonderful.
        That said, the US government hasn't managed medicare or medicaid very well. They're going bankrupt, and have some particularly troubling policies. They may not get as much publicity for denying care, but they do their (un)fair share. They also take the lead when it comes to unfairly treating doctors and hospitals, giving excuse to private insurers to act only slightly better.

        Our current system is broken and in desperate need of fixing. That being said, it could be worse. I see nothing in this bill that would fix the problems in a long-term way. I do see some things in this bill that make me worry that it could make things worse. Decreasing the number of physicians would make actual coverage worse, even though more people are "covered".
        A bad "fix" is worse than no fix at all. A reasonable fix is better than no fix at all. I have no confidence that this fix will come even close to reasonable. If it passes, I hope it surprises me.

  209. In substantive agreement by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    There are a number of problems with the GP, including the fact that nearly every country that has a single payer system ALSO has a private insurance option.

    This entire argument is a total fallacy. It starts with the assumption that health insurance and single payer regulation will somehow control costs. The only way that will work is through rationing, and that's not really controlling costs - it's lowering services.

    True, but the current system rations based on affordability. Rationing wouldn't necessarily be anything new.

    The reason health care costs have gotten so out of control in the first place is because patients never look at the costs, because the vast majority of health care is paid for by third parties. So patients demand all the best care and all the tests they want and costs be damned. Then they complain when insurance companies want to deny some services that seem unnecessary or reduce coverage.

    I agree with this, btw. Real reform would make non-emergency medical care subject to similar consumer protections as, say, getting your car fixed. You know, make you get an estimate, check with your insurance as to whether it is covered in advance, etc. and put the consumer in the center of that. This bill doesn't really address the place of the consumer relative to cost control and hence it won't work. My prediction is that costs will increase. Furthermore, the 9.5% cap doesn't include addional taxes needed to pay for everyone's subsidies, so it is a bit disingenuous.

    Anyway, my prediction is higher costs and higher mortality rates from this bill. The higher mortality rates don't come from rationing per se, but rather from the fact that state regulators tend to be more responsive to complaints by a doctor that a given treatment wasn't authorized than federal regulators are likely to be at least while the bugs are getting worked out.

    There are reforms that need to be done. This bill however is deeply misguided.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:In substantive agreement by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      Chances are, if your family is making under $88k a year, you're not going to see a tax increase due to the structure of the tax plan. It's financed primarily by increased taxation on unearned income (rent paid to you, capital gains) and that's not the income bracket that needs to be subsidized. This is far from a neutral source, but the point-by-point breakdown seems to address funding.

    2. Re:In substantive agreement by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I get a small amount of royalties on works I have authored. Also as far as rent paid to you, that is cost you pass on to renters, right? Which means higher rent rates, right? IOW, unless you own your own home, you are paying more taxes directly or not.

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      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    3. Re:In substantive agreement by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      Agreed, basic macroeconomics explains this very well. The party paying the tax is determinable only by the supply and demand curves, which fall outside the realm of government control. Where they government takes the money from is really just an accounting trick to hide the true costs from the people who really pay them.

  210. Just remember what Pelosi said: by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Funny

    "We have to pass this bill so you can find out what's in it..."

    To quote Eugene Volokh, "It's going to be very, very exciting!"

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    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Just remember what Pelosi said: by LRNG_LNX · · Score: 1

      Gotta love surprises from the government!! Next from capital hill . . . "You're gonna love this new gun control package once we've passed it and take your guns away so you can't revolt when we increase your taxes again and remove more of your freedoms."

      She's said that health care is a right. Last time I checked the US Constitution . . . it wasn't there. "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness." [Not so] Strangely it's in the former Soviet Constitution.

      --
      If you don't like this . . . MOD someone else up.
    2. Re:Just remember what Pelosi said: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gotta love surprises from the government!! Next from capital hill . . . "You're gonna love this new gun control package once we've passed it and take your guns away so you can't revolt when we increase your taxes again and remove more of your freedoms."

      You had more than enough freedom removal from the Bush era yet you didnt revolt. The government doesnt have to take your guns away - they know all you need is to sit at home saying "well, we have guns and COULD revolt".

      The more I read about your country, the more I think "American Freedom" just means "the government lets us have guns".

  211. Piggybacking on U.S. Pharmaceutical Development by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know it's popular to criticize U.S. healthcare because of its cost relative to other developed countries. I wonder if the cost differences would be so substantial if other countries weren't piggybacking on U.S. pharmaceutical development. According to this article, http://www.annals.org/content/140/8/677.full.pdf+html, as of 2004, the U.S. was shouldering roughly 50% of drug development costs worldwide.

  212. It's not what I hoped for... by ears_d · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm a conservative. Sucks sometimes, but that's the way it is. Fox news is evil.

    Needless to say, I was against health care reform from the start. But, I listened, and thought about it. At some point it occurred to me that it would be nice to separate my health insurance from my employer; changing jobs should not impact the coverage I provide for my family and myself. My current job is with a DoD contractor, which provides plenty of evidence that I wouldn't be happy with the government in charge of health care. If there were a free and open insurance market, one where price levels could be tied to services provided, and costs were not hidden, then buying medical insurance would be similar to buying auto or home insurance. Oh well, it didn't happen.

    I think this bill will help, some. I also think more is needed. Getting rid of the pre-existing condition cop out is a big gain. But, we've just provided the insurance companies with millions of new customers, some of whom are young and healthy and won't use their insurance, and we haven't significantly changed the way they do business.

  213. Re:Capitalism and competition re health insurance by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

    Your points are good ones, but health insurance, even with competition is still going to be overly expensive.

    This is because market forces do not primarily drive competing health insurance companies to control costs to the customer, but rather their own payout costs.

    Insurance companies employ an army of bureaucrats whose main function is to avoid paying out. Doctors offices must employ their own bureaucratic warriors to fight their customer's insurance companies to get paid. A doctor's office who made the customer do this would find itself with no patients fast.

    This pointless bureaucracy war is paid for in the price of insurance premiums.

    If ever an insurance company tried to control costs by cutting bureaucracy, it would still find itself paying for the bureaucracy on the doctor's office side of things included in the price of care, and that bureaucracy would then saddle the insurance company with as large a bill as possible, negating any possible gain. Competition among insurance companies is competition to cut the cost of supplying insurance (via bureaucracy and dirty tricks) so as to be able to collect the going rate.

    An insurance company that fights over every asprin raises the rate for medical care for everyone, even those that fight less, increasing their costs to the point where the insurance companies prices and what they deliver and how they behave is largely indistinguishable. This ever escalating an pointless bureaucracy war means prices for consumers tend toward infinity.

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    ...
  214. A big miss on point number 3 by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    3) provide insurance to 30 million people who now lack it

    This bill doesn't actually do that. It is designed to help some fraction of those 30 million purchase insurance, it doesn't provide much of anything to much of anyone beyond that which is already provided to those who already have something.

    So while

    Obama is instituting a new national policy - health care, a basic fundamental right ina civilized society

    Sounds great and all, it has already been stricken from the bill.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  215. Re:Capitalism and competition re health insurance by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    This bill actually makes these problems worse by requiring 90% of premiums to go to payouts. The end result will be more emphasis on payouts, but this will mean higher insurance rates.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  216. you lie! by brennz · · Score: 1

    Your description of the CEO of United Healthcare receiving a 1 billion dollar bonus is false.

    He received options from a time period when the stock was much less valuable. Over several years the company's value rose dramatically, and he exercised the options.

    I like how you followed your falsehood immediately with a string of discombobulated emotional arguments, socialistic ranting and wealth redistribution ideas.

    1. Re:you lie! by raddan · · Score: 1

      I'm going to assume that you've never taken a civics or rhetoric course, and so I'm going to premise this with a small admonishment that if you treat the person you're debating with a little respect, you'll get your way more often. Starting with "you lie" is no way to make friends. In fact, it just makes me want to say "fuck you". But I'll give you the benefit of the doubt.

      I'm going to counter your argument with this: it's still compensation. Where do you think the money came from? It didn't magically appear. In what way does a person taking $1 billion not act as a drain on the rest of us? I can't think of any job that deserves that kind of compensation. BTW, a 40-fold increase in value (which is what the article says) is still $25 million, in 1991 dollars. Seriously, you think that's not disgusting either?

      Notice how I didn't call your argument a "knee-jerk conservative name-calling" or some-such? I actually refuted your point. Try it sometime.

    2. Re:you lie! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You didn't refute his point at all, you scaled your number down to 1/40th of its original value.

  217. What a bunch of hypocrites. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I find interesting is that many on slashdot who advocate open source and technology choice/freedom from technology monopolies do a complete 180 on this issue. Instead of espousing freedom and choice in health care, they support the government requiring everyone to have health insurance, many desire a government-run single payer system.

    What a bunch of hypocrites.

  218. Re:Difference between law enforcement and health c by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    The public has a compelling interest to unify and use force to prevent private individuals from arresting suspected criminals. Yet the job still needs to be done, so we have no choice but to form government and stick it with that responsibility.

    We don't have to. We can have corporations form private police forces and hire them either individually or as communities. We just choose to hand that over to the government because people aren't stupid enough to trust for profit companies to do their job.

    The public has no compelling interest to unify and use force to prevent people from obtaining health care on their own.

    It has a great compelling interest to hand health insurance (sort of a twisted term these days) over to the government because like police work, our individual lives are on the line. We don't trust the funds to actually be there when this duty is performed by for profit companies, because realistically they often aren't and because the private companies are refusing to provide service to a lot of us.

    If you're out there, working on your own with no oversight or due process, obtaining or failing to obtain health care, you pose no risk no any innocent third parties.

    Companies that refuse to pay when their clients get sick are failing, but it is not an oversight it is a business plan. The same goes for people who cannot get insurance at all.

    I think there are some good reasons for "reform." There are anecdotes out there about just plain fraud: someone pays for insurance and then their claims are denied.

    We're not talking about anecdotes, we're talking about an endemic problem effecting a significant portion of our society and reflected in the numbers of uninsured and in the cost we pay and the relatively poor results compared to public systems.

    But supporting public-funded health care finance because it's "like" public-funded law enforcement, is just absurd.

    This is yet another strawman argument. No one suggested supporting it because it is "like" law enforcement. I made comparison between the two challenging why healthcare was fundamentally different from a legal perspective from law enforcement in response to comment claiming this was transforming our society into a non-free society like a feudal system, instead of just applying the same legal and ethical principals we already apply, but in a different area.

    Look at the portion of my comment you quote. Does it say we should support healthcare because of my comparison or does it simply ask how one is freedom and the other is tyranny?

    The two are nothing alike at all, when you look at it in terms of the people's relationship with government.

    I disagree completely. Both are service based markets that can be provided by the private sector, but which many feel is too important to our very lives and should be handled as a public service by the government. You've provided no reason why private police forces regulated by the government are qualitatively different from private insurers regulated by the government.

  219. Take out the middle man by GastronomicalEvent · · Score: 1

    If you have insurance and you don't use it, the money you spent is going to another consumer of insurance for that company who does use it. I don't see why people are against the idea of a public option for this. It's the same idea, but the "insurance company" has no profit motive. Insurance has nothing to do with capitalism because it is a service which produces no innovations. All they can do is change what they cover and how much it is.

  220. It isn't reform. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a payoff to health insurance companies and a way for Democrats to gain a foothold towards completely socialized medicine. It won't lower the cost of health care to the consumer or to the federal government. They can say that it does and that it will reduce the deficit. It's a white lie. It will do the exact opposite, and anyone who's paid attention to government expenditures over the years knows that.

  221. They already have, it's called offshoring. by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    It's called offshoring to the Third World and has been used against IT after the dotcom disaster.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  222. Yet more fascist propaganda by Chemisor · · Score: 1

    > Did you also resent having your money taken at gunpoint to go into Iraq? Afghanistan?

    Damn right I do! Neither Iraq nor Afganistan have any ambition to invade the US, nor did they ever. We're in Iraq to control the oilfields and to build huge military bases there. We do that to keep telling the Middle East to do our bidding and to create profits for Haliburton and its ilk. We're in Afganistan because US oil companies want to build a pipeline there. Or, at least, they did, before it became obvious that Afganistan will never become the sort of stable country where such a project can succeed. Neither of these goals does anything to enhance my personal safety and security. They're just about the power elite grabbing more power. Why should I pay for that?

    > To fund your local fire and police departments?

    To fund them to oppress and terrorize us? If you have ever had to deal with the police, you'd swear not to ever, under any circumstances, call them again. And as for the fire department, why should I pay to put out your fire? In most cases, it will have been your own stupid fault for leaving candles around (it's the single major cause of fires).

    > To provide clean drinking water in your community?

    Clean drinking water is not free. Maybe you don't know that if you live in an apartment, since the landlord pays the city water bill for you. Out in the country many people have their own wells and don't have to pay for water. If the city government did not provide the water service, someone would start a company doing it if it were cheaper to do so than to have everyone install their own well.

    > To provide education for the children in your neighborhood?

    Who's providing education? The quality of public schooling is atrocious. And with all the government propaganda children are exposed to in public schools, there is no friggin way I'm sending my child there, and I certainly don't recommend anyone else to do so. Instead get together with your neighbors and homeschool your kids. If you stagger your days off, four adults could educate their children while working full time. Your kids will likely have a better relationship with you and be happier too, if you just spend more time with them.

    > It is THE COMMUNITY that you live in, that allows for a rule of law, so that when your neighbor
    > decides that he doesn't love you as much as he loves his other neighbors and decides that he
    > should roll up in your house and take all your possessions in the dead of night, that there
    > is a system in place to protect you from that.

    Contrary to what you government advocates belive, most people respect private property. I have no interest in robbing my neighbors, and I know they have no interest in robbing me. If you live in a neighborhood where they do, maybe it's time to move.

    Furthermore, you don't need an official police force to prevent such things, even if you do decide you need to. Back in the middle ages, a small village in the middle of nowhere would have been able to handle the above situation just fine. The neighbors get together and confront the thief, and he'll probably apologize and never do it again.

    If you really want to have a police force, a private police force works much better than a squad of government goons. For an example see the special police of San Francisco; it's a private police force (although it does have official recognition), funded entirely through subscriptions by individuals and business in the area.

    > The COMMUNITY is what allows you to live a non-third-world existence.

    The lack of excessive population growth is what allows me to live a non-third-world

    1. Re:Yet more fascist propaganda by iamhigh · · Score: 1
      Some of what you say seems illogical.... let me explain.

      Out in the country many people have their own wells and don't have to pay for water. If the city government did not provide the water service, someone would start a company doing it if it were cheaper to do so than to have everyone install their own well.

      See in the city, we can't have a well every 100 feet to accomodate each house... that wouldn't work. So there MUST be some form of collaboration. Also for profit corporations will always care much less about the earth and long term damage. Jefferson said that as we "pile on top of each other" we will create a bigger government. He was right. There is no avoiding the fact that as we over-populate this earth, we must form some body to govern what happens as interactions with other increase and the ability to "live off the land" is reduced. Or we just start euthanizing people.

      I have no interest in robbing my neighbors, and I know they have no interest in robbing me. If you live in a neighborhood where they do, maybe it's time to move

      I believe in a free-market system, where anyting goes... so I'll rob you for the gain. I also think if you try to police yourself, robbers would just become migrants, moving from area to area to avoid prosecution. See, the world has evolved since we lived in small remote villages... maybe you should too.

      The neighbors get together and confront the thief, and he'll probably apologize and never do it again.

      Really? Have you ever met a crook?

      If Americans started have twelve children in each family (my great-great-grandfather had that many), our per-capita income would become six times lower

      Except they would pull in income, so your math is off (maybe not the whole point, but that's an idiotic statement).

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      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
  223. I don't like it because it's crap. by Buelldozer · · Score: 1

    I register as a Republican and self identify as a Libertarian. I dislike this bill because it's crap.

    The only thing we should be talking about is how we're going to fund the "Public Option" that starts 1/1/2011.

    For me it's a business issue. We can't continue to saddle our companies, and workers, with our tremendously high health care costs and expect them to remain competitive with other 1st world nations...all of whom have publically funded health care.

    The "reform" needs to be scrapped and they need to start over with how to pay for the public option being the ONLY discussion. Period.

    1. Re:I don't like it because it's crap. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      How about you read the bill, point out specific point and stop looking like an idiot?

      DO you really think how to pay for it isn't in the bill? You are a tool for the insurance companies, congratulations.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  224. IMHO, the root of the problem: by spammacus · · Score: 1

    health care just costs too darn much.

    Individuals can't afford it anywhere.
    Corporations can't afford the insurance premiums for their employees in America
    Governments can't afford if for their citizens in other countries.

    The problem is not who pays for it (taxpayers vs. insurance companies). The problem is that no entity of any kind can properly afford it.

    This is what happens when you insist on using the market to assign equilibrium pricing to something which is not a luxury good or service - if you're dying, you'll take on as much debt as you have to. If you're a democracy with an unhealthy and unhappy electorate, you'll take on as much government debt as you have to.

    There is no equilibrium price in this situation - the only market pressure points upwards, and encourages price gouging at every step of the supplier chain.

    Pharmaceutical companies overcharge for prescriptions. Makers of medical equipment overcharge for machinery which in many cases is orders of magnitude less complicated than a commodity desktop computer. Doctors and their practices overcharge for consultation time. Labs overcharge for test results. Insurers have to actually pay all these costs and therefore resort to high premiums and really sketchy reasons for denying coverage.

    This is a dramatic failure of the market to regulate prices and benefit anyone, least of all the consumer of health care services.

    This flies in the face of market capitalism.
    This flies in the face of economics.
    And yes, it flies in the face of common sense.

    Finally, as a non American, I'm tempted to argue that the USA's insistence of following this abuse of the market not only drives up costs for American individuals, but it drives up costs for the government-run systems in other countries. Why would Canadian or Australian doctors stick around when they can price-gouge with impunity in America, for example?

  225. You have it backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "you rarely if ever have much choice when dealing with health insurers"

    You always have a choice with insurance companies. With the government, you have no choice. I'd like to change to a different DMV, but I can't.

  226. Huge government giveaway by cdrguru · · Score: 1

    Anyone believing that the so-called reform of the health insurance industry is going to be positive needs to understand the numbers. My wife read something yesterday from an Arizona politician that said this would give insurance to 33,000 people in Arizona and improve insurance for over 300,000 people in Arizona. Not only that, but it would give $54 million dollars to hospitals that no longer had to treat people that couldn't afford to pay.

    Let's see... Today, if you do not have any health insurance you are working but not at a great job - making enough so that you don't qualify for assistance (which would include Medicaid) but not enough to actually pay for insurance. So how are these people going to get insurance? Goverment subsidies.

    Since the payout to the hospitals is going to be coming from insurance premiums, that means in one state with mostly a rural population $54 million is going to be coming from the government and going to the hospitals. Because of some administration costs, this is actually likely to be more like $60 or $70 million. Multiply that by 50 (at least - Arizona is a pretty small state population-wise) and you can see on an annual basis this is a huge investment by the government. Probably the biggest single investment ever made by any government anywhere.

    Obviously, this is going to pass - even if nobody votes for it, it will pass because of sidestepping the actual voting process for it. So we are going to get this no matter what.

    The money for it is going to come from somewhere. Probably cuts in Medicare and Medicaid. Today, health care spending in the US is focused on end-of-life treatments to (perhaps) extend the life of people. This is fairly unique in the world. As much as 90% of all health care spending in the US is spent in the last year of life, regardless of the person's age. There are plenty of people that believe this is a horrible way to spend money. I believe with the passage of this reform act we will see this spending end. It will create an extremely large amount of social turmoil because Americans have a different outlook on life and death than most of the rest of the world, which is why the spending is skewed in the first place. I don't think Obama and most of the other politicians understand this at all.

  227. How About Killing Subsidies for Fattening Foods? by SteveFoerster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Similarly, the overall level of health might be improved if the feds stopped subsidizing meat, dairy, and corn (as in high fructose corn syrup). But not only is that not something being done outside of a healthcare reform bill, that's not even in this bill. You would think if the problem is how much it costs to make fat people not die, the first step would be to stop spending money that helps make them so fat in the first place.

    --
    Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
  228. Anyone who listens to Fox "News" is an idiot by wevets · · Score: 1

    Fox "News" has shown repeatedly that they cannot seperate opinion from fact. I have now problem with them having any opinion they want, but they cannot make up their own facts, which they habitually do. That makes thier opinions suspect.

  229. Seriously screwed up bill by Sheik+Yerbouti · · Score: 1

    It's a bad bill even liberals should concede that. It basically says the federal government will MANDATE that you buy health insurance in exchange for their corporate masters in the insurance industry agreeing to not withhold coverage due to a pre-existing condition. Never mind that you are self employed or can't afford health coverage unless you are incredibly poor and qualify for Medicaid you will get no help. There will be no public option so there will be no pricing pressure on private insurance providers. And if you don't get coverage how will they enforce it? The IRS of course, and since IRS agents carry guns and have the authority to charge you with crimes that could get you sent to one of America's humane pound me in the ass anal rape prisons. It is basically enforced by the threats of the barrel of a gun and potential anal rape and complete loss of freedom, USA USA USA!

    I am betting most people reading this think I am trolling and don't believe that's what it says. Don't take my word for it go read the bill. And you might be thinking why would sane reasonable senators vote for that? I think they know it's a badly broken piece of legislation. I think even Obama knows that. I am guessing the point is to get something anything passed. And if it is broken so be it the resulting cluster fuck and outcry will create the real crisis necessary to pass a real healthcare bill with some public option and maybe eventually work towards single payer or a national health service type of situation. It's totally fucked.

  230. The Canada thread by Akoman · · Score: 1

    Post here if you think the entire healthcare 'debate' in the States is completely fucked. Hell, did I read right that there is no public option? What the hell is the point of this entire exercise!

  231. Crux of the matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The salient point is that an individual should have the right to choose whether to participate or not. This includes whether his money and or other property is seized against his wishes. It is one thing to be fined (punished) for doing wrong. It is an entirely different matter to be punished for not doing anything wrong whatsoever. This bill does exactly that.

  232. Neither... It'll just move the shells. by scatmull · · Score: 1

    Like most thing political most ideas are never as bad as they are characterized or never as rosy as they are triumphed to be. I suspect that the increasing sense of entitlement will be a drag on our society going forward but things like mandatory coverage is a really good thing to have.

    Interestingly things like pre-existing conditions could be done away with with a three-prong approach:

    1. 1. Require every one gets coverage applicable to their age group and health history.
    2. 2. Separate health insurance from employment (like Wyden-Bennett). That way it is portable and don't have to deal with pre-existing conditions on any switch.
    3. 3. Stop using insurance as healthcare account. We don't use our auto-insurance to pay for our gas. Routine things should not be covered by insurance.

    Where are conversations like this in the political arena? Instead of trying to get to root causes, we make it a debate of force vs. choice and then nothing but posturing gets done.

  233. Re:IMHO, the root of the problem: by cdrguru · · Score: 1

    The principal problem with "overcharging" is two things:

    1. Pharmaceutical and medical equipment companies strike deals with other countries and shift the cost to the US where, supposedly, we can afford it. This cost-shifting permeates the system as well, where if a hospital can only get 40% of their costs reimbursed by Medicare, they make up for it with non-Medicare patients. Managing this cost shifting is a huge problem.
    2. 90% of US health care spending is in the last year of life, regardless if the patient is 90 years old or 90 days old. Americans want to "preserve life at all costs" and will find ways to do this. We have moved away from the idea of having 8 or 10 children because some are going to die. We have abandoned construction projects with the idea that some workers will die during them - better not to bother so we can "save lives".

    This style of thinking is quite different from much of the rest of the world. Between the cost-shifting and the "at any cost" philosophies we are in a difficult position. Unfortunately, to fund the program that is going to be enacted government folks are going to have to change this, virtually overnight. This means telling the daughter her father is just not worth saving. This means telling the mother that the government can't afford to fix her child's heart problem and the child will die now instead of in 10 years. Americans are not used to getting this kind of news, especially from some government person.

    This is going to change things in a big way in the USA. Probably a lot bigger than people in Washington understand.

  234. Re:A false choice, of course... Mass here... by pgaston · · Score: 3, Informative

    Mass here. Self-employed, using the state mandated marketplace. - Costs were up 38% last year, year over year (not to mention the obvious, but on top of already having the highest cost in the nation...)

  235. The gov should run the claims process by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

    Each insurer should publish what they cover electronically in such a way that a single connection to a single claims settlement system will allow all claims to be resolved in one pass. Otherwise it takes hours of my time, my wife's time and the doctor's support staff time to get things approved and paid for. That would be a great step toward better efficiency.

    --
    Nullius in verba
  236. My HC payments up 76% this month by tchdab1 · · Score: 1

    My health care payments, for the same coverage and the same provider and the same source (everything the same) went from $670 to $1184 this month.

    I am trying to decide, quickly, what to do about it.

    Secondarily, I wonder if this increase actually reflects cost increases, and if it has something to do with positioning profits of the provider in advance of the limits that will be invoked if HCR passes.
    Right now I am at their mercy.

    1. Re:My HC payments up 76% this month by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Is it individual insurance or did you get it through your employer? Did your employer lower the amount they were paying towards the premium?

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  237. An actual, FACTUAL, list of myths... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://fdlaction.firedoglake.com/2010/03/19/fact-sheet-the-truth-about-the-health-care-bill/

  238. As a Canadian... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would like to see the Americans get universal health care. Welcome to the 20th century! (Now that it's over...)

    But, I have a feeling it won't happen. This is for the simple reason that you cannot help someone who does not want to be helped.

  239. Re:Somewhere in between. -- CBO study disagrees by llamafirst · · Score: 1

    I don't understand how someone could say that tort reform is a red herring.

    In terms of the direct financial impact of malpractice insurance and litigation costs, tort reform doesn't help more than a few percent or so. But in terms of the hundreds of billions of dollars wasted on unnecessary treatment because doctors are paralyzed to do anything besides order the extra tests and procedures, tort reform would make a HUGE difference.

    The Congressional Budget Office studied this and agrees with you that the savings for "less utilitization of health services" due to tort reform is important... 150% bigger than the direct financial impact. But it disagrees with you about the amount... and says that even combined, it's less than 1 percent of the total cost of health, all things considered.

  240. Don't worry... by bjk002 · · Score: 1

    First, we're going to get the insurance companies' profits and doctor's salaries reigned in. Then we are going to vote out the dems. THEN we are going to make sure the repubs get tort reform in place. It's all good...

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
  241. Comparing the US to Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would like the US to have the same health care system as Europe which is of course none. Each country in Europe has it's own system and that is what we should do in the US. To all Europeans on the board would you want the EU to run your system? Each state can run it's own system as their population sees fit. Of course the states have to stick to a budget and can't print money the same as the EU states.

  242. Re:Somewhere in between. -- CBO study disagrees by llamafirst · · Score: 1

    I don't understand how someone could say that tort reform is a red herring.

    In terms of the direct financial impact of malpractice insurance and litigation costs, tort reform doesn't help more than a few percent or so. But in terms of the hundreds of billions of dollars wasted on unnecessary treatment because doctors are paralyzed to do anything besides order the extra tests and procedures, tort reform would make a HUGE difference.

    The Congressional Budget Office studied this and agrees with you that the savings for "less utilitization of health services" due to tort reform is important... 150% bigger than the direct financial impact. But it disagrees with you about the amount... and says that even combined, it's less than 1 percent of the total cost of health, all things considered.

    Also, the Congressional Budget Office says in their analysis that "Those estimates take into account the fact that because many states have already implemented some of the changes in the package, a significant fraction of the potential cost savings [of the federal bill] has already been realized."

  243. Re:Comunisam by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    For some reason SOME people are ok with spending all of our money on military defense, but when it comes to spending it on health defense... certain people cry communism.

    The reason is that the federal government contracted with the people to provide for a federal military when the country was created. We did not contract to have the federal government provide doctors. Yes, the military is a form of communism. We accept that as a necessary evil. It's a compromise with reality. The "need" for federal health care is just "compromised reality".

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  244. control by sbeckstead · · Score: 1

    Clearly the only proper way to control the Insurance Industry is to start a coalition and begin buying their stocks in small pieces, so the poison pill doesn't kick in. Proxy the shares to a non-profit regulation organization (that's a tough nut to crack though) which will control the companies through stock holder action. It will also funnel their ridiculous profits back into the organization. I think this could work for all but Kaiser which is already non-profit.

  245. you're absolutely correct by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Insightful

    a politician, for example, cannot afford to call people teabagger morons

    however, i am not a politician. i am not trying to appeal to anyone. i traffic in ugly truths, not serene lies

    i am simply stating the facts. and the simple facts are, plain as day evident to anyone except themselves, the tea party philosophy is the philosophy of the low iq

    you won't find those words on any lips of any politician, at least in public. either those politicians gleefully courting their easily manipulated votes, or those politicians loathe to deal with the cesspool of mental filth that they are, or both, at the same time

    so: thank you for the advice. at the moment i become a politician (meaning, never), i will begin to worry about offending teabagger retards

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  246. Others disagree. by Kludge · · Score: 1

    Many would disagree with you, including the worlds' most famous economists.
    See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Medical_Association#Criticisms

    There is no artificial supply shortage.

    Then why have doctor costs risen so much in the last 30 years? (No, it's not all malpractice insurance. No, it's not all insurance companies).
    Why do I always sit for an hour in the doctor's waiting room?
    Why are 1/2 of doctors in the US millionaires?

    I am a medical student, by the way.

    I guessed that before I read your whole post.

    1. Re:Others disagree. by tpjunkie · · Score: 1

      None of those cited criticisms is at all recent. 1975 was 35 years ago. Litigation against D.O.s ended in the 60s.

      Wait times vary considerably from practice to practice. Emergency care will usually pre-empt patients coming in for routine visits, just like triage at a hospital will code someone having a myocardial infarct before someone who crushed their hand in a hydraulic press. Please, find me a citation saying 1/2 of all us docs are millionaires. Dermatologists and radiologists are near the top of the pay scale, and their average salary is quite good, when they finish the 4 years of medical school and 3 years of residency where you make less than minimum wage. These are the most competitive specialties to get into, and they in no way constitute anything close to even 10% of doctors, let alone half. But internists, family medicine and pediatrics are at the bottom of the pay scale, making on average about 165,000 a year. Which is nothing to sneeze at, but hardly millionaire status, especially considering the fact that if you only look at the cost of medical education, not undergrad, they are finishing school with an average debt load of about $150,000. Personally, if you are a pediatric neurosurgeon, who has completed 4 years of medical school, followed 5 years of surgery residency, and an additional 2-3 years of fellowship where you make around $50,000 annually and work about 80 hours per week, I don't a salary of upwards of $350,000 a year is out of line. Then again, ask the parents of the kid who had a life threatening brain tumor removed if they feel differently.

    2. Re:Others disagree. by Kludge · · Score: 1

      1975 was 35 years ago.

      And so the supply of doctors is no longer being kept artificially low? No. You still have not addressed this point. Doctors organizations do tightly control the number doctors in the US. More:
      http://reason.com/archives/2009/08/27/the-evil-mongering-of-the-amer

      Please, find me a citation saying 1/2 of all us docs are millionaires

      Here's one: http://mediwire.skyscape.com/main/Default.aspx?P=Content&ArticleID=165292
      Your can look around for yourself.

      Dermatologists and radiologists are near the top of the pay scale ... pediatrics are at the bottom of the pay scale, making on average about 165,000 a year. Which is nothing to sneeze at, but hardly millionaire status

      The bottom is 4 times the median salary in this country! And it does not take a rocket scientist to figure out that it only takes 6 years to earn 1 million dollars at that rate. Even if you spend twice as much money as the average joe, you can still be a millionaire in 12 years.

      4 years of medical school, followed 5 years of surgery residency, and an additional...

      Blah blah blah. I'm sick of hearing this, oh I spent so much time training I deserve all this money crap. I spent 6 years in grad school getting paid even less, and 3 years doing a fellowship too, but I'm not making as much as the most lowly paid MD. Why? Because a cartel does not control how many people get PhDs.

      Then again, ask the parents of the kid who had a life threatening brain tumor removed if they feel differently.

      Think of the children! What I'm going to do is ask the families what they think of being forced into poverty by having to pay for such an operation, when they could have paid much less if there had been more doctors trained to do such procedures.

  247. I will go for this when.... by kgroombr · · Score: 1

    Just give me one Government program that has worked as planned. If you can do this do, then I might buy off on it.

    1. Re:I will go for this when.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Roads, Internet, Moon landing, and many, many others.

      In fact, almost all of the government plans work well. Some don't and that's what you here about.

      Just so you know: People who are experts and have studied things social security have said that while minor adjustments will always be need, Social Security is not going to bankrupt Us?

      have you read ANYTHING buy experts? can you even name the experts? I will wager you can not names them and have never actually read in reports or studies. You only here what your pundits and friends tell you.

      Learn to think for yourself.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:I will go for this when.... by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One? You're joking.

      How about the Rural Electrification Administration, without which much of the US would still be in the nineteenth century because electrical utilities companies weren't expanding beyond cities? Or the federal prison system? The government runs that. There's also the Eisenhower Interstate System, which believe it or not was created by the government and not some "Eisenhower Interstate Corporation."

      If you care more about healthcare specifically, Medicare is the reason our elderly and disabled have medical coverage, particularly useful to the elderly if their personal savings were invested in Enron or MCI or one of the many companies that were walloped over the past few years (particularly in 2008). Medicare is a great example because it provides healthcare coverage more cheaply than private insurance companies do. So does the VA system, which covers our veterans. They do excellent cost control according to the CBO.

      Or was the point of your comment that it "has worked as planned?" That's a tall order. Name some private company initiatives that have worked as planned. Most don't. I've worked for private companies most of my adult life and I see the same waste and errors people complain about in government.

  248. You don't understand what would happen... by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Insurance sales across state lines (surely a real interstate commerce item)

    As far as this one point is concerned, I can tell you why this is unlikely to ever happen. The individual state laws regarding insurance companies and what they have to cover/can't cover/etc varies wildly from state to state, even between neighboring states. It would be nigh impossible to do this.

    Say you live in Maryland, and want to buy Insurance A from New Jersey. Say Maryland has a law stating insurance companies have to cover a specific condition, but they DON'T have that law in New Jersey. You will have bought insurance that isn't guaranteed to cover you the way it should because the laws are different in the two states...this is why companies have different "arms" in every state, because every state has vastly different laws.

    It actually wouldn't be like what you describe, because all of the insurance companies would set up shop exclusively in the states with the least regulation. So in your example, you'd only have the choice to buy your policy from New Jersey. And remember that most people don't actually choose their insurer--their employer chooses it for them.

    The whole "buy insurance across state lines" is a health insurer proposal to crassly deregulate the market in their favor, turned into a Republican talking point by a flimsy claim that it would lower costs. (Which it easily would, by reducing the insurers' operating costs while further enabling them to not pay your claims.)

    1. Re:You don't understand what would happen... by Pojut · · Score: 1

      It actually wouldn't be like what you describe, because all of the insurance companies would set up shop exclusively in the states with the least regulation. So in your example, you'd only have the choice to buy your policy from New Jersey. And remember that most people don't actually choose their insurer--their employer chooses it for them.

      I know that is the "real world" reason, I was just talking about from a practical and legal standpoint.

      The whole "buy insurance across state lines" is a health insurer proposal to crassly deregulate the market in their favor, turned into a Republican talking point by a flimsy claim that it would lower costs. (Which it easily would, by reducing the insurers' operating costs while further enabling them to not pay your claims.)

      Pretty much -_-;;

  249. and you get PREVENTIVE medicine by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    the way the usa currently works, the economic incentives are to treat diabetes and heart disease when they are extremely expensive end stage deadly conditions. that's why american health care is "better": it delivers lavish expensive care when you are extremely sick. other countries PREVENT YOU FROM BECOMING THAT SICK IN THE FIRST PLACE. imagine fucking that

    in a country that actually *gasp* values the health of its people, there is economic inventive to PREVENT people from becoming dangerously diabetic or with heart disease. gee, what a radical fucking concept

    of course, the teabagger morons will complain the government is trying to run their lives. you know, they should be free to weigh 400 pounds, chain drink 42 ounce big gulp soft drinks and chain smoke. and that anyone should suggest this is unhealthy and that they should change their lifestyle to save society cash, well this is of course deeply offensive and freedom destroying socialism, right?

    as patriotic americans, they should have extremely expensive end stage heart failure care at a relatively young age... that they can't even afford. see, its ok to expect lavish services... just not ok to pay for them

    fucking teabagger morons

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  250. Re: by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

    Most people are opposed because 1) they're selfish and 2) they have no compassion, because they have never had to deal with devastating medical debt.

    --
    If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
  251. There is an easy fix to all of this -- by dwiget001 · · Score: 0, Troll

    -- Just cut the U.S. federal budget, as a start, 50 percent across the boards, every agency, bureau, department, program, etc. The whole shootin' match.

    Then, after the dust settles, start surgically removing any left overs that have no useful benefit to society whatsoever, namely: any and all subsidies in whatever form.

    After that, completely dismantle the current tax system, make a flat income tax where everyone pays, the poorest of the poor, the richest of the rich. If you are below the poverty level, you can have your taxes cut by no more than half, same on the richer end of the scale when it comes to charitable contributions, you pay, but no less than half your total tax owing.

    The above would be a good start to really reforming health care and the entirety of our increasingly tyrannical U.S. federal government.

    1. Re:There is an easy fix to all of this -- by geekoid · · Score: 1

      You seem to think no money is accounted for and everything is twice what it should be.
      Care to name any studies? show in examples?

      "After that, completely dismantle the current tax system,"
      Why? it works pretty well.

      " make a flat income tax where everyone pay"

      Flat tax has been throughly debunked as a working tax strategy. Unless you goal is to divide everyone into the very rich and very poor category. It would take about 15 years for that to happen. Simply mathematics can show you why, but I suspect you head is so far up Ron Paul's ass you can be bothered to actually think.

      The only major tax change I would make would be to remove charitable contributions deductions as well has taxing charitable organizations.

      in 2009 there was 308 billion dollars in deductions. Put that money into science education.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:There is an easy fix to all of this -- by dwiget001 · · Score: 1

      || You seem to think no money is accounted for and everything is twice what it should be. ||

      Nope, no studies.

      The U.S. federal government, by my own estimate is more than twice the size it needs to be to fulfill its constitutional mandated actions/activities. Period. Nothing more, nothing less. On top of that, taxes should come down drastically, as a result of this drastic down-sizing of the U.S. federal government.

      Health care reform and any other numerous problems touted by the U.S. federal government are, in large part, problems that the U.S. federal government either A) created or B) greatly exacerbated. On top of this, the U.S. federal government is trying to cram their solutions down the U.S. citizenry's collective throats. And that, my friend, is tyranny, plain and simple.

      It's not just a problem with the current House, Senate and Administration, the last set had their part, but the current set is hell bent on making sure it gets a whole lot worse.

  252. i recognize and accept by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    every criticism you have delivered and do not in any way deny the negatives you cite

    i would like to clue you into to one small teensy weensy point you seem to have overlooked:

    even with all of those negatives you elucidate...

    ITS STILL WAY FUCKING BETTER THAN OUR CURRENT SYSTEM

    duh!

    "compare and contrast": its a useful mental skill. examining government run healthcare in a vacuum of all other choices, and it looks like shit. but examined in the context of other possible systems, it simply comes out better

    oh sure, i'm certain you can find some small avenues where government run healthcare is worse than what we have now, but as an OVERALL system, examining the overall web of costs and benefits, it comes out ahead of what we currently have

    next time:
    1. compare and contrast with other choices
    2. examine it in the universe of all financial and societal effects, not small avenues of loss or gain

    then you have wisdom. but right now, whether willfully or out of honest ignorance, you only have propaganda: half-truths

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:i recognize and accept by khallow · · Score: 1

      ITS STILL WAY FUCKING BETTER THAN OUR CURRENT SYSTEM

      Unless it isn't. Given the US government's track record with things like Medicare, I think this will be a massive clusterfuck not an improvement.

      oh sure, i'm certain you can find some small avenues where government run healthcare is worse than what we have now, but as an OVERALL system, examining the overall web of costs and benefits, it comes out ahead of what we currently have

      My take is that the "small avenues" include anyone who is currently free, people who don't have massive health care costs looming in the next few years, and every single entity that employs US workers. So if you're in jail for a few decades with HIV and diabetes, this is the plan for you. Everyone else might not like it so much.

  253. this thread... by ta+ma+de · · Score: 1

    is bigger than the Health care bill. Who has time to read it?

    1. Re:this thread... by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      is bigger than the Health care bill. Who has time to read it?

      Probably not anyone in Congress.

    2. Re:this thread... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      If anyone actually cares about a debate, then they should read it. I took the time to read it. In fact, when any pundits starts to talk about it they should have to have an affidavit proving that read it, and they should have to give specific reference to back their claims.

      So many damn lies are bing spread by people who oppose it. They have no actually argument, so they rely on FUD.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:this thread... by ta+ma+de · · Score: 1

      I was referring to reading the entire /. thread. Congress people should read the bills they vote on.

    4. Re:this thread... by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding? The entire system would collapse. How would they have time to both raise money for their reelection campaigns AND actually do their jobs?

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  254. let me get you straight: by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    you object to the term teabagger because of negative connotations

    but fascist is perfectly acceptable to describe government run healthcare

    hey, asshole: is canada fascist? is denmark fascist?

    in many objective measurements of freedom, these countries, with universal socialist healthcare, and high taxes, are much more free than the usa. the usa, in fact, is already highly fascist, according to your methodology, in a number of ways, while socialist countries are more free in the avenues you care about

    so you play your retarded propagandistic game of label-making for the purpose of smearing. i'll tell you what: as an objective measure of maximizing my freedom in this world, i see many "fascist" "socialist" countries besides the usa doing a much better job of that (how about FREEDOM FROM DISEASE you fucking ignorant "patriots")

    you meanwhile keep up the good fight... for maximizing corporate profits. pffffffffft

    fucking teabagger morons

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:let me get you straight: by inthealpine · · Score: 1

      I see you didn't argue that I was wrong in labeling the current US bill fascist, you just spewed hatred.
      My point stands that government directed healthcare/insurance is fascist (again, not saying anyone is Hitler). Single payer is more socialist.

      (how about FREEDOM FROM DISEASE you fucking ignorant "patriots")
      What kind of BS is that? Freedom from disease? You must be one of those idiots that thinks medicine and medical technology just magically appears and no company invests millions upon millions to research and develop any of it. Unfortunately people like you will only understand that you have to take the bad of a capitalist system to get the good (which would be hundreds of millions to pour into research for medicine).

      Now I'll stop, because I know you don't want to have a real discussion all you want to do is put anyone down that doesn't think like you... Like a real intellectual...

      --
      "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash"
  255. Please stop spreading this meme by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

    Insurance is supposed to be a hedge against catastrophe. You know, brain cancer. The kind of thing where the expense is so astronomical, that it would ruin you. Instead, we have insurers covering viagra (only actually necessary in very rare cases-- I have a friend with a rare pulmonary disorder, and strangely enough, viagra is an effective treatment for her) and elective surgery, because people don't want to pay for them themselves.

    I wish people would stop spreading this meme that "insurance is supposed to be a hedge against catastrophe." No, insurance is simply risk transfer; some kinds of insurance protect only against catastrophic risk, but other kinds protect against much milder risk.

    I'm not going to pick apart your two examples (viagra and "elective surgery"); however, I will point out that much of the care that people who make your argument claim is not "catastrophic" and should not be insured, overall, reduces the risk and cost of catastrophic care. The insurer can afford to spend $1,000 per person on some relatively minor non-catastrophic care if this prevents 2% of them from requiring later catastrophic care that would cost them $50,000 bill later on.

    One of the usual analogies here is to compare health insurance to a hypothetical and absurd auto insurance policy that paid for your gas. However, the thing is that while a health insurer that pays you for routine care decreases your chances you'll need catastrophic care, an auto insurer that paid for your gas would encourage you to drive more, which would increase your chance of having an accident, and therefore, the insurer's costs.

  256. Re:How to have Healthcare that a Republican would by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

    Apparently, you need to do some research into health insurance and insurance law.

    1. Collect a tax that is proportional to the expected premium for the nation, for the given coverage. Define the coverage as only those MOST COMMON things that we need/are entitled to. This means basic and routine care, emergency hospital visits and life-necessary prescription medications. ...
    3 .Finally leave all controversial services to be paid for by a private supplemental policy. Viagra, abortions, cosmetic procedures, lifestyle liabilities (lung cancer of smokers) would all be paid by the optional private policy

    OK, we pay a tax AND have health insurance policies. But, who decided whether a specific disease or injury is "lifestyle liability"?

    • You mention lung cancer for smokers, but what about mesothelioma? How about someone who smokes, but comes from a family of smokers in whom there is no history of lung cancer?
    • Or, a smoker who comes from a family of NON-smokers but in whom there is a family history of lung cancer?
    • Is HIV a "lifestyle liability" for homosexuals?
    • What about prostitutes and drug users?
    • Are gun shot wounds a "lifestyle liability" of gang members and criminals?
    • How about ODs for drug abusers?
    • Heart attacks, diabetes, etc for fat people?
    • How about heart attacks for thin people who work out, but have high stress jobs, have a high intake of salt and fat, and smoke a pack a day?
    • How about high blood pressure in black people?
    • Broken bones for people who work in dangerous industries?
    • Injuries related to a motorcycle crash? Ask any motorcyclist and you will be told it is a "lifestyle".

    Which of those will or will not be covered?

    It preserves competition among the insurers.

    There is no real competition among the insurers. In almost every state, there is one insurer who has over 85% of the market. From state to state, the majority insurer may change, but in each state that majority insurer has an effective monopoly. This is because one does not buy insurance from "Blue Cross/Blue Shield" but rather "Blue Cross/Blue Shield of [insert state here]". And, this state by state monopoly system is not just allowed but actually encouraged by the current laws.

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  257. Answered with a simple question by wmtrexler · · Score: 1

    If the Bill is the answer then why hasn't it passed long before now, when the Democrats had super majority in both House and Senate?

    --

    Hey what can I say i'm weird
    1. Re:Answered with a simple question by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Fear monger among the populace.
      Religion among the Dems. i.e. the abortion issue. Which the bill won't impact, but hey, why start actually use facts now?

      That said, your question is based on a logical fallacy. Specifically If it was good then everyone would already be doing it fallacy. Kind of a cross between argument from Personal Incredulity and ad ignorantiam.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  258. two points: by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    1. what you are describing is what is currently done right now by private insurers. so exactly what is your point?

    2. fatty lard ass and his chain smoking and his 42 ounce big gulp soda IS COSTING ME MONEY. so why don't i, through my govt, have the ability to force fatty lard ass to not cost me so much money?

    you're worried about the govt telling you to eat the garden burger? why the hell aren't you worried about fatty lard ass costing your health insurance premiums to be so high? and finally, WHY THE FUCK INDEPENDENT OF ANY OTHER CONSIDERATION AREN'T YOU CONCERNED FOR YOUR OWN FUCKING HEALTH?

    you want to talk about impinging on freedoms? fatty lard ass COSTS ME MONEY, and therefore IMPINGES ON MY FREEDOM

    its pretty much a constant problem with people fighting for their freedoms: there are genuine freedoms which hurt no one else, like freedom of speech, or freedom of religion, and then there are "freedoms" which have a solid qunaitifiable real cost on society and on me. so yes: i have a RIGHT to tell you not to smoke because it COSTS me money and therefore LIMITS my freedom. WHO is paying for your healthcare asshole, in ANY healthcare system. and i have a RIGHT to tell you to eat responsibly because IT LIMITS MY FREEDOM

    there is no such thing as a freedom or a right to LIMIT OTHER PEOPLE'S FREEDOMS OR RIGHTS. limits on your freedom is not always from your government, its also from your fellow ignorant, selfish citizens, no matter WHAT your government's policy

    so, in the name of freedom: fuck you fatty, eat the fucking garden burger, asshole

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  259. Large font by pdjohe · · Score: 1

    I had no idea the font size in a bill was so large. It really makes it seem as though the media networks exaggerate the size of the document. I wonder how large it would be if given in a standard font size.

    1. Re:Large font by Pojut · · Score: 1

      I have heard estimates of about 400 pages, if it was set at a "normal" font and spacing. Using the 400-page number just for the sake of argument, that isn't all that unreasonable.

      The reason why bills like this have such huge margins is to allow legislators and their underlings plenty of room to make notes...or at least, that's what I assume it is done for.

    2. Re:Large font by Taevin · · Score: 1

      I haven't read through the whole thing yet, but I did some counting and it seems that the widest paragraphs have an average of about 8 words per line. Of course many lines have even fewer (e.g. line 16 of page 4 has 1 word "forms;"). The whole bill is 2309 pages long, with 25 lines per page which gives us 57,725 lines which at 8 words per line gives us 461,800 words. Comparatively, Atlas Shrugged is approximately 540,000 words.

      So, I don't want to hear any bitching from conservatives (among whom a majority will have read or claim to have read Atlas Shrugged) who say it's too long to read.

  260. Great comment by Kludge · · Score: 1

    There is much criticism of insurance companies. But the fact is that they are just providing a service to people. People don't have to buy that service, but they do. Why? Because doctors and health care is so freaking expensive!
    Insurance companies have worked to reduce this expense. A hospital charged my insurance company $1500. The insurance company paid them $600 and the hospital took it. Whoa! If had not had insurance I would have had to pay $1500! And people say insurance companies are the problem? I don't think so.

  261. Been there, done that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not a single state in the nation that implemented mandatory car insurance saw their rates reduced. What makes anyone think that forced medical insurance will reduce premiums? When everyone is forced to buy, the sellers have no incentive to lower prices and every incentive to raise prices.

    Same goes for doctors and hospitals. The guarantee of payment by a third party pretty much ensures that both doctors and hospitals will be raising rates to take advantage of the newly found wealth created by forced coverage.

    The net effect of this bill will be higher rates for all and fewer jobs available because of the costs faced by small business owners.

  262. Re:A false choice, of course... Mass here... by StuartHankins · · Score: 1

    My health care is renewing, and I have a choice to reduce my costs by $1000 per year for a disaster-only high deductible plan or raise them by $1000 by taking the HMO. The PPO is $2000 higher. That's after we switched health insurance companies to try and save costs. So the prices are up for everyone I assume.

    The real question is do these changes provide a method to reduce individual costs by enlarging the pool and providing more power to the government to rein in these insurance companies? Recently I saw an ABC News article about some college kid who took out a health policy at the beginning of the school year and tested HIV positive later that year. The company dropped him on a technicality and after investigation it was found to have embraced that tactic for scores of others. It makes me sick that this is someone who did the right thing by paying for insurance and then had to go through this brouhaha. The stigma of the disease is one thing, not receiving care you need is heartless.

  263. Who? by waspleg · · Score: 1

    I assume you mean the baby boomers who started this shit in the first place. Aka the greediest generation.

  264. Waste of time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    About the only thing this bill will do.. is put a foot in the door to continue making changes down the road and its the Democrats hope that one day leads to a single-payer system by knowing that most companies will drop their coverage for employees due to continual insurance increases. I think the biggest issue with the cost of health care is not the insurance companies or lawyers. It's because we have a society that wants to use heath care like a mall. They want pain pills or anti-depressants or viagra. They have some gas pain and run to the doctor to run a bunch of tests and since the doctor cant find anything conclusive the person isnt happy unless they are leaving with meds or have their gall bladder removed. The meds all have side effects which keeps the cycle of symptoms coming. People are overweight contributing to Diabetes and a host of other illnesses. Our poor diet and lack of exercise is really the cause of the whole problem. If we want low health costs..then become healthy! Don't use the system and costs will come down. Supply and Demand..its that simple.

  265. First off by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Read the bill. I have, and I see nothing the backed what the people who don't want it claim. not a single thing.

    If someone can point out something, I would be glad to discuss it. If you have NOT read the bill, then STFU about what's in the bill.

    Secondly, Shame on you CmdrTaco. You know damn well this will only cause a huge flamewar. Are you really so stupid as to think /. is where to go to get honest well read opinions?

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:First off by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      Even the Speaker said "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it"

      So how did you find out what is in it?

      Share the actual bill with me and I will discuss it with you.

      Using "deem and pass" they will never actually vote on the bill. They will vote on 150+ pages of amendments, then the baseline bill will ride on the coat tails.

      So we do not get to see the final bill until AFTER it passes.

      How is that for buying a pig in a poke?

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
  266. It's a perfect plan. by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1) You get to deal with the IRS and they get to know you much better.

    2) You pay now and it doesn't take effect until 2014

    3) It's called the biggest deficit reduction bill ever signed!

    4) Your money will as safe as your social security payments are(their locked away awaiting our retirement aren't they).

    5) Clerical error never happen in government agencies and they always care about the captive^h^h^h^h^h^ustomer.

    It has the feeling of a tax passed to keep the Federal government afloat so it can continue to operate, but with some health care tacked on. Basically, they lost me at IRS.

    --
    -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
  267. Re:How to have Healthcare that a Republican would by scorp1us · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, you have to foregive my brevity. It was written for ADD-enhanced Slashdotters. I avoid the detailed discussion.

    While I won't run down the list exactly, but the general principal is that:
    Personal choice that increases risk will have to be judged accordingly. If a behavior marginally increases cancer rates then it should be covered. If a behavior markedly increases rates then it should not be covered in the national coverage. What this is exactly, but 5% seems a good cut-off. Also to be balanced with this is by how many people are engaging in the behavior. If we all do it as Americans, then monetarily it makes sense to include it in the national policy.

    Then your questions dive into gunshots crashes. These are not medical conditions. These are discrete unpredictable events requiring medial treatment. The insurance industry has already made the actuarial tables and decided what factors are statistically relevant to the premium. We can simply re-use these.

    Yes, over time the plan will change. The government will try to reduce coverage, but it also will be balanced by keeping the costs low. If the government sheds responsibility, then we transition back closer to where we are today. But remember, the insurance companies don't want to pay out, so they will push coverage back on the government. I expect that we would be informed by people crusading for coverages to be added to the plan that "Coverage for XXX will save $YYYM by including it in the national plan". And I expect that the hallmark of the national plan is that it would provide the widest services at a lower premium than the insurance companies can provide today.

    There will never be an end to the debate of what the national plan covers, and that is just how it is. It will allow it to change to meet the needs of Americans, as those needs change over time.

    There is no "perfect" plan, and I don't for an instant think this is perfect. But it is a compromise that will be effective. If you read the current bill, and compare with what I describe here, which do you want to vote for?

    But look at what this sets up - some framework for government coverage, which is competitive and expandable, while capturing the best of both sides.

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
  268. Is this even legal? by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1

    Congress passes all kinds of law which get tossed out. The heal care bill seem like it should be one, because I don't know what the foundation of Constitutional right granted to the Federal government which would allow this. I reserve the right to be completely wrong. But please listen for a second.

            In the Constitution is clearly states that those powers which are not reserved for the Federal government belong to the states should they want them, and anything which they do not claim goes to the people. The default here is to clearly narrow the power of the Federal government, so that it cannot assume too much power. Health Care doesn't seem to have any mention in the Constitution, so the state of Massachusetts enacted health care for all. It could not do this is that Federal government had the ability to also do this.

            So, there it is. I'm no lawyer, but it seems to me the Federal government is not the place for this. Health Care is important, and we need to be able to take the fight to the right people(legal fight, not literal). It's easer to work within your own states since you are more significant a vote. At the Federal level you are as nothing, and some are further away from Washington DC than the original states were form England.

          Take a gander through the Constitution and see if the 10th amendment has any meaning when it comes to the Federal Government, and don't give the old catch-all "commerce clause" argument.

    --
    -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
    1. Re:Is this even legal? by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      It WAS passed on to the "people," in this case, insurance companies (they're legally people now, how's that for fucked). They completely fucked it up by involving profit motive in a system that should NOT be about profit, it should be about taking care of REAL people. That's why the government is now involved. And expecting a state like, say, Ohio, to jump in and fix things is just fucking naive. Ohio can't even come up with a constitutional way to fund it's schools. So where else is left to turn?

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  269. xMrRocknRollx by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Simply put, anyone in favor of universal healthcare is not American... this is a capitalistic country... nothing should be universal here, this is not Sweden, if you don't like it, move there and enjoy 50% taxes taken out of your paycheck every week. Blah blah yes it's sad some people have to suffer, but that's life, sorry we all can't be rich and be in perfect situations, unfortunately there's not enough resources in the world for that to happen, nor is it even passable to consider such a wild idea. This is America, you keep what you earn, you don't earn anything, all well, can't always blame everyone else and expect the government to rescue you.

    1. Re:xMrRocknRollx by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      Everything you just said is complete and utter bullshit. I'd pick it apart point by point, but I don't have time.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  270. Re:A false choice, of course... Mass here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Agree completely on the heartless part.

    Btw, in Mass I was forced out of a high deductible plan I was happy with (for 5 years) and into their 'pool' as my plan didn't fit their parameters. Needless to say with higher costs.

  271. Re:Capitalism and competition re health insurance by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

    I think you may be right, since insurance companies were the only force against unrestained marginally useful care designed to cover doctor's liability asses and pad medical bills. If health insurance companies are forced to lay down and accept abusive billing practices, then rates will still rise until almost nobody can afford health insurance.

    I hope a failed attempt at reform doesn't cause reversion to what we have now, or a hopeless mindset where we don't believe reform can work. Emperically a single payer limited budget pool works elsewhere much better than what the US has now. The alternative is eventually almost nobody is insured, and medical consumers ( without the benefit of MDs in their employ ) are faced with deciding whether to A) get angioplasty to lower the risk of a heart attack or B) keep their house. ( those without a house/money would presumably get the angioplasty and also a lien against their future income if any in the case of B).

    Elsewhere, even if it's far from perfect, I believe they do better than that last alternative.

    --
    ...
  272. the constitution is open to interpretation. your interpretation of it is not the only plausible legal interpretation that exists. legal rulings, in fact, have drifted and contradicted each other over the years owing to this tension. the constitution paints broad concepts that people interpret on their own, and then a few us, as if in a fundamentalist religion, say that their interpretation is the only constitutionally valid one. bullshit. there is NOTHING in the constitution that says universal healthcare is not a valid constitutionally sound concept. if you describe a legal avenue in which it is made it unconstitutional, i will find some other modern governmental practice you hold dear that defies the constitution in the same way, but you make an exception for, because its simply common fucking sense. much like universal healthcare is simply common fucking sense. finally: the world changes, the challenges change, and the constitution's broad important concepts must be adhered to... NOT some minor clause that when creatively expanded upon can maybe block this common sense legislation, simply because you don't agree with it, at first. like the eras surrounding the abolishment slavery: the legal precedents ran fast and furious in either direction. simply put: in a generation or two, the majority of the children and grandchildren of those reading these words, including those who violently oppose universal healthcare, will agree its a no brainer common sense obvious facet of sound society and sound government

    #2: you want common sense?

    ok: goverment run healthcare is extremely inefficient

    ready for some more common sense?

    its STILL BETTER THAN THE INEFFICIENCY OF WHAT WE ALREADY HAVE. examined in a vacuum, government run healthcare sucks. examined amongst other possible choices, its simply the LEAST suckiest choice

    #3: that this bill will cause coverage to fall is fearmongering. the doctors who threaten to leave medicine are whining much as the democrats who threatened to go to canada when bush was elected in 2004. when the for-profit companies parasitically siphoning off cash, and all the inefficiency that goes with their insertion is finally removed, doctors will make out the same, or even better, under a one payer system. sure the government could mandate doctors get paid little. and doctors, as you suggest, will disappear or suck in quality. so the government needs to mandate good standard of living for doctors. you tell me about the quality of life for doctors in the uk, canada, denmark, etc.

    #4: you don't think we're spending enough on healthcare?

    ok

    well why don't we spend some money on HEALTHCARE. rather than some parasitically inserted companies that siphon off cash, insert inefficiences (paperwork storms worse than govt bureaucracy), work hard to make sure you get LESS healthcare, and are accountable to no one except the almighty buck? govt bloat inefficiency and indifference looks FAR better to me than a corporate entity actively attempting to make sure less goes to my health than i deserve. how does it look to you?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  273. Foxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Never trust a.

  274. Healthy Person Pool by cordivae · · Score: 1

    Is it wrong to want to be in a pool of health conscious individuals? I eat healthy, exercise, and don't smoke ect. Why the hell should I have to pay for those who do?

    1. Re:Healthy Person Pool by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      Because you don't get to decide how your tax money is spent. If you don't like it, stop paying taxes.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  275. Re:Comunisam by ScottyB · · Score: 1

    Fascism? Maybe oligarchy would be more appropriate. Not sure how you end up subordinating your life to the state by having to buy health insurance. I'd say you, my friend, just violated Godwin's law.

  276. Is so by bobobobo · · Score: 1

    Uhh, insurance companies make about a 3% profit margin on average. Google for yourself if you don't trust this link.

  277. in other words by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    the innumerate are numerous

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  278. Then we'll need to reform the reform by gujo-odori · · Score: 1

    If this poorly crafted bill - which is going to cost far more than they say and is making its numbers with guesses and sleight of hand - passes, we are going to be fixing it - that is, reforming the reform - for decades to come.
    This was rushed through far to quickly and is too poorly considered for something this important. What both the House and Senate need to do is scrap the current versions, go back to the drawing board, get input from their constituents on what *they* think needs to be reformed, rather than a bill done primarily in response to what the White House asked for, and then pass *that* bill and send it to the President.

    Sure, there are some things in the current bill that are good: the first thing that comes to my mind is doing away with pre-existing conditions. That's unconscionable. So is charging people more if they actually use their insurance. I don't like lifetime maximums, either. Some treatments are very expensive.

    There are countries that have reasonably well-run national health insurance systems (Japan, for one, which is a single-payer country) and countries that have terrible ones. One thing they have in common is that the standard of care covered by insurance tends to be non-great. I've been hospitalized in Japan and can speak from experience about that. Doctor care can also be hit or miss, although that seems to have more to do with general culture and standards and little or nothing to do with insurance.

    Some other countries have really poorly run national health care systems that result in serious rationing of medical procedures. I have a friend in Winnipeg who is on a waiting list right now, whereas if she were a US resident, she would have had it done long ago. Lest someone start up some BS about "What if she needed surgery but didn't have insurance?" every hospital I have ever been to, or that any member of my family has been to, has had an explicit written statement that inability to pay will not keep you from treatment. They have programs and foundations in place for that. Yes, those programs make my own bill higher - I'm sure the two weeks one of my kids spent in the pediatric ICU last year would have been cheaper otherwise, but I'm also certain of two things:

    1) The cost increase to me would be even worse with the government involved.

    2) I'd much rather have that between me and the hospital and the poor who are receiving help from the hospital than between me and the government and those parties. Anything that puts more layers between patient and caregiver is bad. It's kind of like the reasons that start-ups are more nimble than large, established companies: at every start-up I've worked for, the CEO not only knew me by name and face, I had no more than two levels of management between myself and the CEO. At the company I currently work for - which is pretty nimble as big companies go, but it's still more oil tanker than speed boat - I can't even tell you how many managers are between me and the CEO, or who they are. I know who the managers are three levels up from me and who the last one before the CEO is, but there are some more in between.

    Look at point 2, above, and remember that to err is human; to really screw things up requires a bureaucracy. To screw things up so badly that there is no reasonable hope of ever fixing them properly requires a government bureaucracy.

  279. This post is so wrong by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    Constitutionality:
    The constitution says people cannot be coerced into signing a contract.

    This part you got right - there is nothing in the Constitution that suggest the federal government can require citizens to sign contracts with private companies. Nothing. But don't expect that to stop hacks like Alito and Roberts from rubber stamping it.

    Common sense
    The kings of efficiency.

    FTFY. Social Security and Medicare have 2%-4% overhead. Compared to the 20%-30% for private insurance. Because with Medicare, you get what you pay for - health care. As opposed to private insurance, who's entire business model depends on charging you the most they possibly can for premiums while denying your claims as much as possible. And federal officials are paid far less ($400,000 for the president vs $10 million for an insurance CEO) and their salaries aren't tied to the aforementioned business model.

    to the point that the two programs have unfunded liabilities of over $100 trillion

    Lies, damned lies, and statistics. These are based on pulled-from-the-ass numbers over an indefinite timeline, while only looking at "entitlements" - how about that Pentagon spending?

    This bill causes lack of care (not coverage)

    This bill doesn't cause the lack of care, it just doesn't help it any. Because Obama and the rest of the corporatist Democrats in power decided that extending the broken insurance industry to the non-insured (by force/taxpayer subsidization) rather a public option, or even better, single payer.

    Tell it to the people in the UK or Canada who are waiting 6 months for a CT scan, where here in the U.S. it's unusual to wait for more than a few days.

    Ah, the old "you'd have to wait in lines" canard. This is a batch of sophistry, as it's comparing non-emergency wait times in other countries to ideal conditions in the United States - where we have plenty of lines ourselves.

    We will have a government panel deciding who is worth said liver transplant and deciding who gets to live and die, instead of your doctor or a panel of your doctors.

    A right wing lie with zero basis in reality. Seriously, pull your head out of Sarah Palin's hypocricial ass.

    How much is too much?
    People in this country continue to live longer and longer.

    Actually, it's barely budged for decades, and we're far behind other nations in both life expectancy and infant mortality.

    Dems say that our private insurance is increasing at too fast a rate (3%/yr)

    3% on what planet?!? We've seen double digit increases in the cost of insurance just about every year in the last decade. And insurer in California announced an increase of 39% this year.

    and are generally heather than our contemporaries in other countries, so much so that when people in other countries can afford it they come here, from all over, the U.K., Canada, Cuba.

    That the wealthy can afford to travel all over the world to find the best specialists says....what exactly about the level of care in this country?

    Cancer survival rates are a much better indicator of the quality of the medical system [google.com] than the life expectancy.

    Not when it only looks at those who are treated and not thrown off their insurance because of a job loss or benefit cap, it's not.

  280. Some great summaries of what's really in the bill by jimgagne · · Score: 1

    I practice internal medicine near Los Angeles (http://drgagne.com). It's clear to any physician currently in practice that the health care system is broken and falling apart rapidly. If reform fails to pass, unless you work for a Fortune 500 firm, you will almost certainly lose your insurance within the next few years. Opponents of reform are using FUD to scare you, but almost all of their claims are lies. For example, there NEVER were any "death panels." Here are some great descriptions of what's in the bill and what's not: 1. Quick summary from the Washington Post: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/politics/health-care-reconciliation/ 2. Nice graphic of how much it costs and why it lowers the deficit: http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-031910-sc_health_care_costs-g,0,6098627.graphic 3. Fabulous answers to "twenty questions" about what's REALLY in the bill: http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-oe-kmiecweb19-2010mar19,0,6451390.story ---Jim Gagne, MD---

  281. Government inefficiency vs. Corporate malfeasance by Aargau · · Score: 1

    Why do you believe corporations have a better track record regarding your interests? They don't. Money is power (re gaming using Markov processes to examine probability of success). Why wouldn't you want an advocate for your rights?

  282. The alternative *is* people dying in the streets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do I think people with preexisting conditions deserve some help? Of course I do - stop pretending the alternative to government take over of 1/6th the economy is people dying in the streets.

    But the alternative to your so-called "government takeover" actually does involve people dying in the streets. You know, after getting sick, being denied insurance and losing their jobs.

  283. post office ? highway system ? public schools ? by curri · · Score: 1

    Don't know where you live, but I think it's amazing that you can send a snail mail for less than 50c; the roads are ok where I live and my public schools are great. In the US, government is reasonably efficient and it provides a different price/performance/access point that private industry.

    You want next day delivery ? use FedEx, but pay $20 (or more ?). Have you seen private toll roads ? I grew up in Mexico, where they're common; you pay about $40 to go from Merida to CanCun (about 200 miles). You want to go into a good private school ? be prepared to spend $15000/yr, and make sure your kid is really good, or he/she won't get in. I'm not saying private companies offer bad choices, but they're *different* choices, I like that the govt provides decent basic services.

    1. Re:post office ? highway system ? public schools ? by Sircus · · Score: 1

      I'm English and live in Germany. I'm mostly amazed that, even if I'm misinformed about the odd thing here and there, I have a better grasp of the proposed reform than most of the Americans I speak to.

      Incidentally, I think your post was more replying to the grandparent post, not to me.

      --
      PenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
  284. Well... by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Sure, if they could force a bunch of people to get more expensive surgeries, they'd make more money. But really, how would that work? Insurance goons show up at my door and drill out my kneecaps if I don't get my appendix removed?

    If what you're saying is that this rule would force insurers to pay for insurance that they should have been paying for all along... um, what was the problem again?

    1. Re:Well... by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

      That's quite simple: only employees of the company would get the expensive surgeries.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
  285. Absolutely correct! by jayveekay · · Score: 1

    I agree. From what I've read, the 85% cap provides an incentive for the health care industry to become even more expensive and less efficient.

  286. It's a Door Opener by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    The Health Care Reform Act is a door opener. Apparently in order to overcome fears or resistance from the right wing this bill simply gets the ball rolling for better and cheaper health care for Americans.
                      Obviously the bill will be altered as time passes so that areas that need more attention can be taken care of. Getting everything just right in one draft is next to impossible. And the only reason it is so convoluted is right wing resistance. For example simply extending the Federal Employee Health Care Insurance to every American would have been better and a far,far, shorter bill. But the right wing wants more protection for big businesses such as hospitals and wealthy doctors.
                      But even more important than saving countless lives and preventing needless suffering this bill may keep America from total collapse as the current medical system is bankrupting America. That truth is blatantly conspicuous. As an example our returning soldiers who are severely wounded in combat often get poor medical treatment because the government can not afford to repiar these people. And then because they get poor medical care they often are doomed to stay on military disability forever at several thousand dollars a month for decade after decade.

  287. I know how to pay for it all by crsuperman34 · · Score: 1

    I know how to pay for healthcare and more quite simply: end the failed, horribly antiquated 'war on drugs' (+$19 billion) save on jail and federal prison sentencing and jailing (+10 billion) legalize pot & tax the bejeesus out of it (+ 3 billion) monitor, legislate and control other narcotics (+1 billion) That wouldn't be a bad start. You would end alot of violence, broken families and the unemployment rates would go down since future 'convicts' will be able to land jobs. Being that they're not a 'criminal' anymore.

  288. The low class needs to stop leeching by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

    Our country is going into a tailspin because government promises more and more money to more and more poor and old people. Once again, the middle and upper classes will be funding a program designed to 'pull' the millions of poor, uneducated, oft-unemployed or otherwise economically idle lower class out of the shithole they're in.

    This is unsustainable. We need to stop letting low-tech workers into this country. We need to document (not necessarily deport; too much work) all illegal occupants of the country, and keep more from coming in illegally. We need to stop providing myriad social services to those who not only don't pay in, but aren't even on the books as being in this country!

    It is a true problem, and I don't wish ill health on anyone. Any normal, decent human wants everyone to be healthy. That doesn't make it feasible to tax the life out of one group of people to fund a marginal increase in living for another.

    Lifeboat Ethics: There are only so many resources for a given number of people. Not only are some resources (jobs, money, land, food) in a balancing act or being depleted, huge numbers of both low- and high- skilled workers (and a lot of unemployed parasites) come to this country every year. At least the high-tech ones contribute to useful research and are a valuable commodity. Get rid of the minimum wage so legal workers can compete with the Mexicans.

    HOW DOES THIS RELATE TO HEALTH CARE REFORM? This is just one more example of government doing what I'm talking about: subsidizing a service that will continue to cost more (the government did nothing to fix health care costs) while paying for it by printing money, borrowing from China, and stealing from the top two classes.

  289. BINGO by Funk_dat69 · · Score: 1

    In a way, yes.

    Their market was completely untapped by the other mainstream news outlets. The market demanded it.

    If you don't like it, I have a suggestion for you: don't watch it!

    I avoid all cable news like the plague myself - it's turned into a parody of talking heads desperate for ratings.

    --
    FUNK!
  290. We have already crossed that bridge. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We've already decided that forcing the public to pay for helping their fellow man was a good idea. If you want to belong to this particular (and popular) society, you have to pay your taxes so we can have things like police departments.

  291. Not Reform by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reform would be to FIX the actual problems, not "band-aid" the symptoms.
    This bill only attacks one or two of the symptoms, and leaves all the actual problems as they are.
    And it allocates billions (which will prolly go to friends and families of the Democrats passing the bill)
    And threatens to send people to jail if they don't comply.
    Sorry, that is tyranny.
    I cannot support it.

    Now, if it fixed the problems with waste and fraud, corrected the issues with insurance and litigation, and provided for the few that actually cannot afford healthcare, or "don't qualify" for some reason, then I might support it...

  292. Ron Paul has been on 3 times in last month by jayveekay · · Score: 1

    Don't even get me started on MSNBC. When was the last time you saw a conservative on Olbermann's show?

    Ron Paul (a conservative) has been on MSNBC 3 times in the last month. He was on the Rachel Maddow show, Morning Joe, and the Dylan Ratigan show.

    There are very few fiscal conservatives around these days. The Republican party mostly abandoned fiscal conservatism back in the 80's, if not earlier.

  293. In a democracy, the government is the people by jayveekay · · Score: 1

    For every retard elected POTUS or Governor of Alaska, there are millions of retards who cast ballots for them.

    Don't blame the elected for the failures of the electorate. You get what you vote for.

    When you point your finger at government, there are 3 fingers pointing back at you!

    We are the retards we've been waiting for. Hope and retards. Retardation we can believe in! RetardNation.

    Mod this post "retarded".

  294. Don't hold your breath... by pubwvj · · Score: 0

    Don't hold your breath...
    And don't get sick...
    Even if it passes...
    Even if you are covered...
    Even if your illness is covered...
    Even if your treatment is covered...
    It won't kick in for four years.
    Still holding your breath?

  295. Will this bill do what the administration claims.. by maddash1946 · · Score: 1
    ...or is it as bad for the future of America as Fox says?

    Um. Neither?

  296. Free healthcare for all or none by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

    I personally think healthcare is one of the few fundamental rights the government should provide. However if the government does not want to provide it then be equal. Take it away from the elderly and the poor or give it to everyone

    The US talks about equality but it's time to put up or shut up. Now give it to everyone or take it away from everyone.

  297. Selling across state lines is a bad bad idea by dachshund · · Score: 1

    and go with a more basic one that has things most everyone can agree on? Insurance sales across state lines (surely a real interstate commerce item)

    Nobody agrees on this idea, because it's a rotten idea. Implemented the way it's usually been proposed, what it means is that insurance companies can move to whichever state offers them the sweetest regulatory and tax treatment, i.e., is small and hungry, and willing to rubber-stamp whatever laws the insurance companies propose. Their customers (i.e., residents of other states) don't get to vote on the regulation of those companies, and they don't get to ban them.

    Ever wonder why so many credit card companies hail from South Dakota? Because it's a tiny state and they can more or less buy the rules they want. Ever wonder why the credit card industry is so completely unfair to the typical consumer? Same reason.

    The fact that this is your number one suggestion, and you think everyone can agree on it, that worries me. I like some of your other ideas, but I definitely don't think we need to hash this out anymore. The plan in Congress is basically the Romney plan which passed in MA several years ago, and has been quite successful. We've been debating the plan for over a year now! It could use lots of tweaking, and I hope once it's passed the Republican party will help with those efforts.

    If you don't like the plan, take it to the voters in November. Let's get Congress done with this and move on to other work.

  298. Summary Recap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's a different summary recap:

    * Your tax dollars will slowing get back-end squeezed to maximum by 2014
    * Loss of dependent care tax exemption
    * Major reduction of medical care tax exemption
    * Major restriction on getting pre-existing medical condition exemption
    * Loss of nearly all Federal student loan programs; (It'll be privatized @ higher interest)
    * Restriction of Pell Grant (not a loan) to first 100,000 student
    * Physician can only choose ONE of three payment methods
    ** Direct
    ** MediCare
    ** Federal Health Exchange (WTF is that?!)

    Benefits:
    * Health insurance industry gets more profits (lower margin but more volume)
    * People without insurance, but suddenly need one; benefits the MOST.

    Down-side
    * Big Middle-Class Squeeze in down economy.
    * Rampant increase in demand for medical service (influx of new patients)
    * Rampant increase in cost for medical services (not enough doctors/nurses)
    * People without insurance, and wants to remain self-sufficient, suffers the most.

  299. Bottom Line, We Cant Afford It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US health care system is broken and needs to change. I dont believe I have heard anyone on either side of the aisle dispute that point. Medicare and Medicaid costs grow exponentially every year and become a larger and larger part of GDP expenditure and burden to taxpayers. Large portions of the US population have no access to medical insurance, so when something does happen that necessitates medical care, either they find a way to pay for it, or the tax payer does. With each default on a medical bill by an uninsured individual, the medical costs for the rest of us go up. It now costs me over 500 dollars a month to insure my family, and I only pay a portion. My employer covers the rest. And it increases by double digits every year. The system is broken and needs to be fixed.

    Having said that, we as a nation find ourselves in the deepest recession in 2 generations. We have deficits that are spiraling out of control, a federal reserve that is monetizing our debt so we can keep spending, 2 expensive conflicts and an administration and congress who seem to have forgotten how to balance a checkbook in the last 20 years. In this present state, we literally cannot commit to spending another trillion dollars on a watered down "reform" bill that will take years to have any effect, good or bad.

    Then there is the arguement over whether this is the governments domain at all. I know it is difficult for members of most european countries to understand, but our constitution specifically spells out the rights and the responsibilites given to our government. In no way does providing health care for the people fall into the pervue of the federal government. Not only can they not "reform" health care in a fiscal sense, but they are not allowed to in a constitutional sense. The 10th Amendment gives all other powers not specifically granted to the federal government to the states and to the people themselves. Let each state enact its own health care legislation and worry about how to pay for it.

    I think most of the American people want health care reform, but we want an open transparent discussion about it. For years if need be. Saying that the republicans had 8 years to enact this legislation is a misnomer. After 9/11, no one was talking about it. No one cared about health care. Security was and remained the main concern until Obama brought Health Care into the limelight and made it his campaign platform. Democrats have ignored it. Republicans have ignored it. No one has talked about it and now Obama says that "the debate is over"? This bill sitting in congress is 2000 pages long, and no one knows whats in it. The Democrats have not released it all, and yet they want a vote on it and are pressuring the moderates in the party to vote for it, sight unseen. And this is a good thing ? Seems a little underhanded to me personally. This is the biggest, most expensive piece of legislation to ever enter the house, and they want a vote on it without study and debate ?

    We are not europe. We are not Canada. If it works for you all, thats great. But we need a health care overhaul that is created out in the open, for all to see. We need each piece studied. We need to hear the arguements on both sides. We, the people, need to be able to make an informed decision on this massive change in our lives.

    Just my two cents. Have a good day.

  300. Option A or Option B by OrwellianLurker · · Score: 1

    Option A or Option B is how the health care "debate" is being presented. I don't mind a single payer system. I just don't want the Federal government doing it. If your state wants it, fine. However, the polls are clearly showing that health care reform as it is being presented by Congress is NOT wanted by the American people.

    --
    'Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.' - Mao Tse-tung
  301. You've got it backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you can switch insurance companies. you can't switch gov'ts. Try doing that with the DMV

  302. Don't take any guff from those swine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can be pretty sure if fox says it's bad then it has at least some merits. If fox says something is good then it has something seriously wrong with it. The are ways of empirically checking bias and truthfullness in media sources, if you try it with fox you will find that you should never believe a word they say.

  303. Re: by psm321 · · Score: 1

    I disagree. Polls have repeatedly shown that the public is in favor of this sort of bill if a strong public option is included, but opposed if it is not. This is not because they're selfish, but because they don't see the point in having insurance if the insurance company is randomly going to deny treatment anyways.

  304. Medical treatment = communism! by psinet · · Score: 1

    I thought Americans were already aware - providing publicly subsidized medical treatment of any kind automatically turns the patient into a communist nazi drug-zombie hell bent on feasting upon small, patriotic, human brains.

    In my country, I can see any doctor, any time, including specialists, psychologists etc, for free. Totally free. Bulk billing means you never give them anything besides ID. Finally, all prescriptions cost me $5.30. For anything. Even for nicotine replacement therapy drugs.

    And do you know the worst thing? Per capita, our economy is absolutely destroying the US's on almost every measure.

    You guys need to invade Texas. Impliment "regime change" - knowwhatimean? Ey? Wink wink ;)

  305. Healthcare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Fox says that health care reform is not good, it is because is not good for healthcare enterprise, then is GOOD for people. You must go to opposite to Fox words.

    Regards,

    Oscar.

  306. Going to the DMV by frankgod · · Score: 1

    I enjoy the claims that universal health care will make doctor's visits like going to the DMV. When I moved states in 2008 I had to go to the DMV to switch my license and registration. There was a convenient online appointment system. When I arrived the staff helped me take care of my business and I was out in about an hour. When we switched healthcare plans this year we had a problem getting a prescription filled. The pharmacy preferred to use a mail-order system but they got our address wrong. In trying to resolve this my wife had difficulty reaching a real person. There was additional difficulty reaching a _competent_ real person. It took about a dozen phone calls and a lot of headaches over several days. So I am actually looking forward to health care becoming more like the DMV.

  307. OK, here is the answer to all those below... by gbutler69 · · Score: 1

    You say the 20 to 40% is a made up number. That instead they have 3 to 5% profits. Well, maybe on paper that they're reporting. Why is it that the latest health care bill mandates that by 2012 (I think) that Health Insurers must have no more than 15% overhead (85% must go to health care and health improvement programs) including administrative costs and profits. Social Security operates with 2% overhead. So, they're allowing for 13% profit. The insurance companies are screaming like it is the end of the world. Why? Because currently they're yanking down way more in profits. They're hiding the profits in bullshit "Administrative Overhead" (like taking Golf trips to Bangladesh to have sex with underage children). I don't trust this industry as far as I can spit!

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
  308. Re:Bullshit! by gbutler69 · · Score: 1
    http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=&q=Healthcare+Tort+Costs&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&oq=&gs_rfai=

    The entire first page of references on Google when I search for "Healthcare Tort Costs" say that Tort is not a big factor in the overall costs of Healtchare

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
  309. Funny you should choose that example by jvonk · · Score: 1

    Is it? Are you a constitutional expert? Is it unconstitutional to collect income taxes? (I see this as the same thing)

    Well, it was unconstitutional until they passed the 16th amendment. Unless, of course, one believes that they decided to pass that amendment "for the lulz".

    There is a reason that we have an amendment procedure in the Constitution. If we really feel that it should be legal to have the Federal government force people to obtain health insurance, then an amendment is required. I know the 10th amendment isn't popular anymore, but that doesn't mean it is void.

    Of course, the Feds could always use coercion (that is popular) to force the states to fall in line. This is what they have done with RealID (threaten states who don't comply with denial of their citizens access to domestic air travel without a passport), or forcing states to increase the minimum drinking age to 21 by threatening to cut off their highway funds:

    Less than a week after [the Louisiana Supreme Court] decision, the Clinton Administration warned Louisiana to find a way to reverse the ruling. The state will lose $17 million in Federal highway money if it does not comply with the 1986 National Minimum Drinking Age Act, which requires states to set their legal drinking age at 21.

    The Constitution doesn't illegalize coercion. Threatening highway funding is very popular. It's dirty to sidestep the Constitution with coercion, but that's life in the post-Progressive era--government money always comes with coercion. The best way to avoid being coerced is to never accept the money in the first place.

    1. Re:Funny you should choose that example by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I agree if you don't like something that is unconstitutional, then do an amendment, but I don't see anything in the current Constitution that would make mandatory insurance illegal.

    2. Re:Funny you should choose that example by jvonk · · Score: 1

      I don't see anything in the current Constitution that would make mandatory insurance illegal.

      Your statement is posed incorrectly. The Constitution does not form a list of prohibited actions for the Federal government; rather, it forms a comprehensive list of everything the Federal government is allowed to do. The founders of the country were very concerned that the Federal government would become all encompassing and supersede state and local authority in day-to-day life.

      I counter your comment with a question of my own: where in the Constitution do you see that the Federal government has the right to force individuals to obtain health insurance? Please notice that in my comments I have not yet weighed in on one side or the other of the health care debate. I am merely asking under which Constitutional theory the Federal government has been granted the right to mandate individual health coverage.

      Amendment IX
      The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

      Amendment X
      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

      It is very clear: if the Federal government cannot link their authority for the health insurance mandate to an explicitly Constitutionally-granted Federal power, it is illegal. As I said, this is the reason why they were forced to pass the 16th amendment in order to assess individual income tax--they did not have an explicitly Constitutionally-granted authority to assess individual income tax. Same with Prohibition.

      The Constitution is designed to tie the hands of the Federal government--not the people.

    3. Re:Funny you should choose that example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1st and 2nd amendments clearly state what the gov't CAN'T do. "Shall make no law..."

    4. Re:Funny you should choose that example by jvonk · · Score: 1

      Haha, fair point. However, the substance of my comment stands: the Constitution enumerates all of the powers that are granted to the Federal government. Any authority that the Feds wish to claim must be linked to an enumerated power or the claim is illegitimate.

  310. Euro-hippies by juventasone · · Score: 1

    Next thing you know they'll be invading American schools and teaching metric.

  311. they're evil, anyway... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and will lead to the demise of insurance companies.

    Where do I sign up?

  312. You should read more by DavidShor · · Score: 1
    "I'm quite worried that they are going to be adding a TON of new people to the medicare roles...a program which is already WAY in the hole. I believe Medicare is already, as is, slated to be many trillions of unfunded entitlement in the next 15 or so years. How are we going to help it by adding millions of new people? Where will the money come from?"

    .

    If you had made any effort to read about the actual bill, you would know. Mainly from a payroll tax expansion, cuts in the Medicaire Advantage program, and a bunch of pilot programs to move us away from a fee for service model. This more then pays for the medicaid expansion and subsidies for employer insurance, which is why the bill ends up cutting the deficit by a massive amount over the first ten years and over 1.2 trillion in the second.

    "Why can't they do a simple bill, with some main points everyone can agree on...in about 10 pages of simple language everyone can understand and agree on? Start from there and build on it?"

    Legislative language is like coding in assembly. It literally denotes the exact instructions to modify previous laws. Stuff like "Insert article B after clause C in bill X". Because of this, any bill that does...anything, has to be really long if you want to avoid lawsuits and legal ambiguity later. But that has nothing to do with the actual complexity of the bill. It's really simple! I can describe it in a paragraph:

    The bill sets up an exchange where companies competitively bid on standardized health insurance plans. The government bans discrimination based on pre-existing conditions, but in order to avoid an insurer death spiral (Prices drive away healthy people which drives prices up which drives away healthy people...), people are mandated to buy insurance. But, the government provides generous subsidies to pay for this insurance. Money to pay for these subsidies is found by slashing the Medicaire advantage program passed by the Bush Administration, a payroll tax expansion on people who make more then $250,000 a year, and a fixed excise tax on extremely generous health-care plans. The government will also begin a bunch of pilot programs on things like bundling and electronic medical records in order to find ways to make health care cheaper. There are also a couple of regulations on health insurance companies that prevent them from raising premiums without cause and a rule saying that administrative expenses can't take up more then 15% of premiums. (This is necessary because due to the fact that pricing power is proportional to size, there are going to be local monopolies or duopolies in most health care markets. Without government, there wouldn't be anything preventing insurers from jacking up premiums once everyone was required to buy insurance). Lastly, some more community health centers will be set up, and there will be a expansion of medicaid to people who make less then 133% of poverty, or $14,000 a year. ((Which actually saves money, because medicaid has the lowest health-care costs of anything in the US outside of the VA). And yes, there is a lot of mal-practice and tort reform and the ability to sell insurance across state lines. (And no, neither of those things are remotely as important as Republicans like to claim)

    And that's pretty much it. Actually implementing that is going to take a lot of pages, but any bill would! Laws are like code for the executive to execute, and anything that gives instructions to the entire federal government is going to be complicated. But the actual ideas are quite simple! There really isn't simpler opposing ideas out there sort of single-payer that would accomplish anything of the same scope.

    "I'm also concerned about what will happen to what is left of this bill after the SCOTUS challenges to it with regard to the Federal Govt. mandating that individual citizens be required to buy health insurance. "

    Doesn't strike me as different from the mandate to buy auto-insurance, and that's been held up a bunch of times. And it's not really a mandate, if you don't have health insurance, you just pay a relatively small fine and still get the right to use emergency rooms. They don't send you to prison or anything. There's a reason no serious legal scholar thinks that it would get struck down...

    1. Re:You should read more by bar-agent · · Score: 1

      I'd mod you up if I had points.

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
  313. Such a lame discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I live in Australia. I hit my head surfing early last year, and received a dangerous brain bleed. I spent 13 days in hospital and had major surgery. I also required 3 months supervision for seizures and surgery recovery. I am 100% now thank god. I went into hospital on the very same day we had over 200ppl killed in one day in bushfires nearby, and this hospital was receiving burns victims. It was 46.7 celcius (116F) that day. I had a CT scan within 20-35mins of arriving. I was then transferred by ambulance to a nearby hospital with a suitable neurosurgeon available, and received emergency brain surgery. The nurses and doctors were exceptional. Food was good, had a playstation and TV to myself. No complaints.

    And guess what. It didn't cost me anything. Zip. Zero. All i had to pay for was my take-home opiate collection for pain relief (one months worth was $20). I don't have "health insurance" either, although you can get it here.

    And here's the final nail in the coffin of you anti-universal healthcare freaks - our economy is streets ahead of yours in almost every way. Our national unemployment is 5%, land prices are still rising, and consumer confidence is soaring.

    In 2007-08, Australia spent 9.1% of GDP on health care, or AUD$4874 per capita. In the US, you spend over 16% of GDP on healthcare. Work it out yourselves.

  314. no-one wants to do things that will actually help by jonwil · · Score: 1

    If I walk into a store and buy a shirt off the rack, it costs a certain amount no matter how I choose to pay (cash, card, whatever). Same for most goods and services.

    Health care should be the same. The government should mandate that a given item must cost the same amount no matter how its being paid for. Medicare. Corporate health plan. Individual health plan. Cash payments. Also, ban insurance companies from saying "we will only give benefit if you go to OUR hospital or see OUR doctor". And ban insurance companies from saying that they will give benefit for treatment X but not for treatment Y (even when treatment Y may be a better option or in fact a cheaper option than treatment X). Oh and this applies to drugs, operations, surgery, hospital stays, doctor visits, tests, x-rays/CTs/MRIs/etc, implants, prosthetics, transplants, everything that the health care provider provides.

    Change and simplify the tax rules for health care. Every American would be allowed to take up to $x in pre-tax income (the amount would be the same for everyone no matter their actual income) and that amount would be able to be used to buy any health insurance policy anywhere OR to put into a special health savings account that can only be used to pay for health expenses.
    The amount would be identical no matter whether you are earning hourly wages, fixed yearly salary, commissions, self-employed, business owner or any other source of income.

    Right now many medical tests are done that are likely not necessary due to the risk of lawsuits. Pass whatever laws are required to put an end to these unnecessary tests, if that means medical malpractice reform, so be it.

    Make it easier for people to switch providers without penalty. Ban providers from declaring something as a "pre-existing condition" if you have had health coverage for that item in the past year from any provider (Medicare included). They can still stop someone who hasn't had health coverage in years getting hit with something major and signing up for insurance just to get coverage for their sudden injury/illness.

    Make it easy for people to choose from any insurance company anywhere in the US. Remove red tape and paperwork required in the running of health insurance and make it easier for new providers to enter the market. Put pressure on the states to remove or reform any state legislation that applies to health care and insurance. Remove any rules governing what insurance companies are allowed to charge, who they are allowed to insure and what they are allowed to give coverage for.

    And finally, eliminate the corporate health plan. If all the other stuff is done, it should be possible for people to get insurance on their own without a corporate health plan. With my points about increasing competition, it encourages new players to enter the market that can offer better service (including actually paying decent benefits when people get injured or sick and giving coverage to people who have been rejected in the past due to previous illness which may or may not still be a problem)

    No need to force people to get insurance, if the market is opened to competition (anyone who thinks the health system is anything like a free market right now has no clue about economics) it will solve a lot of the problem.

    People who cant get insurance right now (the "uninsurable") may be able to get insurance from a new player. Or they could opt for a health savings account instead if they think the amount they could put in (both the allowed pre-tax amount and any extra post-tax amount they can afford to put into it) would be enough to cover health costs in the future.

    To cover those unable to afford regular insurance, the government could run a subsidized insurance scheme for these people that provides them coverage. Anyone who can demonstrate a low enough income that they cant afford even the most basic insurance would be eligible.

    Also insurance companies would be encouraged to offer coverage for preventative health measures such as regular checkups at a doctor that can pick up health problems BEFORE they turn into major dramas requiring a long stay in hospital.

  315. Re:Bullshit! by gbutler69 · · Score: 1
    From the CBO Report that studied, in depth, just this issue:

    Rules governing medical malpractice claims are one of a host of factors potentially affecting the delivery and cost of health care services in the United States. Although this analysis provides some evidence of links between tort limits and health care spending, the results are inconsistent and depend on the particular relationships and specifications tested. The mixed results also demonstrate the difficulty of disentan- gling any effects of tort limits from other factors that affect levels of spending for health care. CBO continues to monitor the work of other researchers and conduct its own research on the issue.

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
  316. Re:Bullshit! by gbutler69 · · Score: 1
    From the CBO report on this matter:

    Rules governing medical malpractice claims are one of a host of factors potentially affecting the delivery and cost of health care services in the United States. Although this analysis provides some evidence of links between tort limits and health care spending, the results are inconsistent and depend on the particular relationships and specifications tested. The mixed results also demonstrate the difficulty of disentan- gling any effects of tort limits from other factors that affect levels of spending for health care. CBO continues to monitor the work of other researchers and conduct its own research on the issue.

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
  317. Fear of deflation is nonsense by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

    The price of computers has been deflating pretty uniformly for the last 30 years. By your theory, consumers will stop spending when their money is deflating because anything they could buy would cost less later. Again, in your system of economics (Hi, JMK!), it's stupid to have bought a computer at any time, because you could get a better computer just by waiting. And yet, here you are on Slashdot, disproving your own theory at about 3 billion cycles per second.

    In the long run, Keynes' theory is dead.

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    1. Re:Fear of deflation is nonsense by amplt1337 · · Score: 1

      Uhh, right, okay. So when I purposefully put off purchasing a new computer for eighteen months, because I knew I could get better performance for the price in the near future, I was doing what exactly?

      Oh, sure, I bought one eventually. But I kept the old one longer. And I'll buy fewer computers over my lifetime as a result. Multiply me by several million and what do you have? Decreased aggregate demand over the long term.

      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  318. Yeah, I kind did. by gbutler69 · · Score: 1

    In trying to make the point that Tort is not the problem, I used a little hyperbole with respect to insurance profits. My Bad!

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
  319. What about the other side? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about all the MINORS and ILLEGALS on MEDICAID that covers 100% of their expenses? So many people milk the system. It was supposed to help people when they are down on their luck, not be a way of life as it has become for so many.

    Seniors have paid into the system their entire working life, and in their golden years still have to shell out $$$$ and medicare only covers 80%. Doesn't seem fair. The other have the rest of their life to pay back having a kid, etc. Swapping these two would make sense.

    The biggest problem with the health care/ insurance system today is the INSANE cost of everything. Lawsuits went out of control that caused malpractice insurance to skyrocket which caused prices to go up. Only in america can you be charged $250 for an ice pack. Snowball effect.

    Changes need to be made, but the current administration does not seem to be looking in the right places.

  320. Unconstitutional!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is what the pseudo intellectual college morons should be shouting about.

    Talking about party lines and right wingers is purely retarded and only a liberal socialist
    jackass will bring this out..
    This is NOT a bill and will NOT be a law because it flies in the face of constitutional government.
    I personally will hold this bill treasonous and in contempt.. Our founding fathers would have
    slapped every moronic-anti American politician in the face for this socialist garbage!!

    And what do you know, perfect timing, a pro amnesty march, wow what timing the democrat-liberal jackasses have..
    doesn't surprise me at all, shit we might as well give our country- intellectual property
    and fucking jobs to the world because the world says they demand it.. Screw the sacrifice and
    tax dollars we shell out to these deadbeat assholes worldwide..

    I'm sick of the liberal ass clowns in this country..
    anti constitutional ass holes and political traitors deserve a bullet and nothing more!!

    1. Re:Unconstitutional!! by stonewolf · · Score: 1

      Dude, the Republicans already did that. Go look at the changes that were made to our patent laws by the Republicans. Look at the tax laws they passed that makes it cheaper for a company manufacture a product outside the US and import it that to manufacture it in the US. Look at the banking rules they killed off and the collapse of the economy that resulted from their actions. The Republicans, with a little help from a few particularly corrupt Democrats have already done everything you are worried about.

      I don't know you and you don't know me. You may well be someone I would enjoy drinking beer with and going shooting or hunting with. My family were ranchers until the great depression. My father wound up working on a crew where he was paid 25 cents a carcass to gut and skin his, and everyone else's, heards. Most of my Uncles were underground coal miners.

      But, my father went to college and I went to college. So I guess you would call me a pseudo intellectual college moron. You know what? One advantage of a pubic school education back in the '50s and '60s is that I actually learned the meaning of the word "socialism" and I have enough background in history, logic, and law that I can read the Constitution and understand what it says. I didn't get that in college. I got it in junior high and high school. Since then the Republicans in the state I grew up in have gutted the school system and dumbed down the curriculum to the point that high school graduates are lucky if they can read, let alone understand something as complex as the Constitution.

      Yeah, I'm no fan of the modern Republican party. I was one once. But they don't want people who ask questions. They just want people who follow orders.

      As far as I can see this is by far the least socialist way a bill like this could be written. And, it is at least as constitutional as social security and Medicare. Both of those have been challenged all the way to the Supreme Court and stood up as constitutional. If it were socialist there would be no health insurance companies left after it was signed into law. But, not only are the health insurance companies being left in place, their stock price is zooming up because they are going get 30 or 40 million new customers. That is not socialism.

      Here is the definition of socialism:

      Main Entry: socialism
      Pronunciation: \s-sh-li-zm\
      Function: noun
      Date: 1837

      1 : any of various economic and political theories advocating collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods
      2 a : a system of society or group living in which there is no private property b : a system or condition of society in which the means of production are owned and controlled by the state
      3 : a stage of society in Marxist theory transitional between capitalism and communism and distinguished by unequal distribution of goods and pay according to work done

      This bill will not result in any government owning the health care industry. Doctors will not be forced to work for the government. Counties like the UK do have socialized medicine. In the UK the government owns the hospitals and clinics and the doctors work for the government, where the government says they will work for a salary set by the government. There is nothing like that in this bill. It is a major change in business regulation, but there doesn't seem to be any "socialism" in it anywhere.

      You obviously care about America. I'm glad for that. So many people I meet don't seem to care about anything but themselves. But, you might want to look up words to see if they mean what you think they mean rather than what some radio DJ says they mean.

      If I had my way they would just have lowered the age for Medicare down to conception. That would be a good way to go.

      By the way, I would much rather be called a "Tax and Spend Democrat" than to be a "Borrow and Spend Republican". At least the Democrats want to pay for their programs. The Republicans just seem to want to borrow and borrow and b

  321. Re:Comunisam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How do you know how well he speak's English, you bucket of shitskin cuntjuice?

  322. Sold! by stonewolf · · Score: 1

    How hard is it to immegrate to Australia? My wife and I qualify for Canada but it is really cold there...

  323. Wake up you idiot, moron, corrupt, democrats! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wake up you idiot, moron, corrupt, democrats!

    The health care bill and the 'fix bill' are as CORRUPT, ILLEGAL and BAD as those of us with common sense know it to be!

    b.o. and the idiot, moron, democrats do lie, cheat and steal - everyone knows that!

  324. This legislation is crap. by Khyber · · Score: 1

    While we need major health care reform, THIS was NOT the way to go. First off, this violates our 4th amendment rights. Let me explain. Our money that we have worked so hard for is our property to spend as we see fit. It is also a MAJOR component to our security. It is, in effect, an essential core component of the 4th amendment. This is an unreasonable seizure of our personal effects and papers, and a violation to our personal security.

    Next off, this is nothing more than a thinly-veiled handout to the HI Industry. Requiring us to purchase health insurance "in case something happens" is like requiring us to purchase condoms "in case we have sex.' It's already happened with car insurance. With an adequate universal health care system in place, car insurance wouldn't really be necessary, except to repair the vehicle, not pay for damages done to a human being.

    But next thing you know, they'll be passing a law requiring us to buy a car by the time we are a certain age, which of course comes with the prerequisite that you must get insurance for the car - instant handout/bailout to the car/truck and insurance industry.

    Don't celebrate your 'victory' too hard, now. Really you're just fooling yourselves.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  325. Re:A false choice, of course... Mass here... by stiggle · · Score: 1

    And after being diagnosed - whats his chances of getting health cover from anyone else?

    I know a number of people who have moved out of mainland USA due to being unable to get health insurance due to medical conditions. Fortunately they were able to move to places where social healthcare is provided.

  326. Doh by rpjs · · Score: 1

    s/No, I was expecting someone else to pay for it/No, I not was expecting someone else to pay for it/