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Emails Cast Unflattering Light On Internal Politics of Healthcare.gov Rollout

An anonymous reader writes with this report from The Verge linking to and excerpting from a newly released report created for a committee in the U.S. House of Representatives, including portions of eight "damning emails" that offer an unflattering look at the rollout of the Obamacare website. The Government Office of Accountability released a report earlier this week detailing the security flaws in the site, but a report from the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform released yesterday is even more damning. Titled, "Behind the Curtain of the HealthCare.gov Rollout," the report fingers the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which oversaw the development of the site, and its parent Department of Health and Human Services. "Officials at CMS and HHS refused to admit to the public that the website was not on track to launch without significant functionality problems and substantial security risks," the report says. "There is also evidence that the Administration, to this day, is continuing its efforts to shield ongoing problems with the website from public view." Writes the submitter: "The evidence includes emails that show Obamacare officials more interested in keeping their problems from leaking to the press than working to fix them. This is both both a coverup and incompetence."

392 comments

  1. Emails didn't get lost? by tomhath · · Score: 5, Funny

    Someone didn't do their job.

    But it really isn't a surprise those responsible are now in CYA and finger pointing mode.

    1. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The surprising thing is that people think this is news. I thought this is basically how every failed project went. Broken management like that is why projects fail.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      It's news only because die hard liberals or should I say Obama supporters refuse to accept he or his team is anything less than stellar. It's all Bush's fault or those damn republicans keep blocking or someone other than himself. And when Obama and his supporters started blaming everyone else and anything else as the problems happened, it was blamed on someone else again.

      but more importantly, it appears this broken management and failed project is still being run with broken management but it's being hidden from public view.

    3. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice talking points there. I don't see people claiming that the ACA is perfect, I do see people claiming that it's better than what we had. Which is true. I also don't see a lot of interest amongst the GOP in actually fixing it. If it's really as bad as you think, then why don't you propose things to actually fix it?

      I don't recall people saying that the rollout was stellar, it's mostly braindead morons like you that claim that the other side is saying that becuase you're sumdumass and apparently not bright enough to read what people are actually saying.

    4. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      lol.. Are you but hurt or something? Where in there have I criticized the ACA? It's the administration and their handling/management styles that is being discussed. The ACA could be 100 times better had any other administration been in office.

    5. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone didn't do their job.

      When that happens in the private sector, people get fired. In the public sector they not only keep their jobs, they get promoted. The botched HealthCare.gov rollout specifically and the idiotic non-reform that is the Affordable Care Act, aka ObamaCare, generally prove the conservative and free market point which is, simply put, that the government could F*** up a cup of coffee, never mind something complex and important like healthcare. The argument from the left that, "well, at least we tried" is asinine and unconvincing. Those who want the government to handle the big stuff need to first make sure that it doesn't mess up the small stuff and these days the government messes up just about everything it touches. Whatever happened to the push from the left for greater efficiency in government? Like Obama, they talk a good game about "accountability" and "responsibility" but in the end it's just words, not deeds. That's why they fail and we don't trust them because they always find ways to fail.

    6. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Isn't it cute how he plays off you nickname there, as if it is an indicator of your level of understanding in these matters?

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    7. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by something_wicked_thi · · Score: 1

      It is entertaining to compare a real coverup attempt such as this to what conspiracy theorists say happen, e.g. at Roswell or during 9/11 or whatever else.

      The government can't even keep a few website security flaws secret, but conspiracy theorists expect us to believe they can execute a controlled demolition of the WTC and hide it from everyone except that Loose Change nut?

    8. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Speaking as a die-hard liberal, Obama has screwed up a fair number of things. He was also handed a really bad situation, with the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the subsequent botching of the occupation, and the collapse of the mortgage industry and effects across the whole economy. I'm not sure a president since Lincoln has stepped into a worse situation.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    9. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Speaking as a die-hard liberal, Obama has screwed up a fair number of things. He was also handed a really bad situation, with the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the subsequent botching of the occupation, and the collapse of the mortgage industry and effects across the whole economy. I'm not sure a president since Lincoln has stepped into a worse situation.

      I don't buy it -- that excuse stopped working when he hit term two. GW Bush had to deal with the dotcom collapse. Reagan had to deal with the savings & loan crisis. Many presidents don't have the best starting territory. Some have fantastic starting territory and get lauded in spite of it (see Clinton during boom times).

      Trying to "excuse" a failure in office because of situational considerations is Rationalization at its finest. Always someone else to blame.

    10. Re:Emails didn't get lost? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Obama didn't start the (likely illegal) Iraqi war. He didn't botch the first years of occupation. Yet now he's blamed no matter what he does about it. He pulled out on Bush's schedule, and is now lambasted for doing so. Meddling in the Middle East has long-term effects; the CIA-backed coup in Iran in the 1950s is still having effects. One term was not enough to straighten out the problems in Iraq.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  2. And we're surprised why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cover up, incompetence, and Government. Why am I not surprised at all.

    1. Re:And we're surprised why? by haruchai · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you think it's limited to government, you must be very, very young.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    2. Re:And we're surprised why? by thule · · Score: 1

      Exactly. BUT I will say with a company a person can quit or stop purchasing the companies products. Government? Not so much.

    3. Re:And we're surprised why? by kqs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In my city, one company owes 80% of the hospitals and doctors. The other 20% are owned by another company. The 80% company is now not letting the 20% insurance plans to use their facilities, to drive that one out of town. So in fact, if you want good health care choices, you have no real choice which insurance plan you use.

      Also, 30% of the city has an ISP choice between fiber and cable; the rest has DSL or cable. Get a bit outside of town and DSL goes away. So there is almost no choice in ISPs, and when they have horrible policies they don't care at all what I say.

      On the other hand, with government I can vote to change the people and policies. It's not perfect, and it doesn't always work (especially when most people whine about the govt but don't vote), but it often does work. We've gotten rid of a senator who ran on religious bigotry and hatred, for example.

    4. Re:And we're surprised why? by 7-Vodka · · Score: 2
      How do you take his statement:

      Cover up, incompetence, and Government. Why am I not surprised at all.

      and somehow twist it to interpret it as making the claim that it's limited to government?

      You must be very very dumb.

      --

      Liberty.

    5. Re:And we're surprised why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post is sarcasm, right?

    6. Re:And we're surprised why? by 517714 · · Score: 0

      Please name, "my city", "one company", and "another company", or it didn't happen. If you think being able to vote for the people and policies in government is worthwhile, why does your city have the problems you have described? Those problems exist because politicians see those problems as opportunities and solutions. When a city grants a monopoly, they can put whatever requirements they like on those ISP's, but they don't. Ever.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    7. Re:And we're surprised why? by haruchai · · Score: 1

      If you were slightly more perceptive, you'd know that it was implied.
      If you're as young as s/he, perhaps there's hope yet.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    8. Re:And we're surprised why? by kqs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You really don't believe me? Wow.

      Pittsburgh. UPMC has decided that Highmark (and thus all Blue Cross/Blue Shield insurers) can no longer use their facilities because Highmark is threatening UPMC's near-monopoly status in Western PA. UPMC is trying to crush all competition in this area.

      If you think being able to vote for the people and policies in government is worthwhile, why does your city have the problems you have described?

      So you dislike the government but believe that it should be used to solve every company-vs-company dispute? Huh. No, the local government is finally trying to clean the mess up but they can't really do much to interfere with private contracts between companies. Turns out that anti-competitive behavior is mostly legal, and the state and federal governments haven't gotten involved.

      These problems exist because being anti-competitive is a good way to make money. Seriously, you are blaming a company-vs-company problem on the government... how does that make any sense? If I get mugged, I should blame the police and not blame the mugger?

    9. Re:And we're surprised why? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      BUT I will say with a company a person can quit or stop purchasing the companies products.

      Unless you happen to want to connect to the Internet and you hate the one company in your location that offers broadband connectivity. Oligopolies are the order of the day.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    10. Re:And we're surprised why? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be surprised if it happened.

      In my home town, the one hospital demanded that another not be opened up in the townships surrounding it citing they would be unable to maintain a profit and have to close down. The second hospital was to be placed near a busy highway about 25 minutes from the original hospital and the through was that it could shave 20 minutes off the transport time and save lives.

      Anyways, the other hospital was defeated and the zoning board wouldn't let them build. So the local hospital decided it needed to expand and promptly purchased all the property on the block and started building on to the hospital. The issue about the travel time came up again and another hospital from out of town wanted to open one. Well, the main hospital kicked up a storm again until the outside hospital agreed to only be an emergency room and outpatient surgery hospital and somehow, the two ended up going in as partners. But they located it a little further out but still near the busy highway so transport is still quicker from the highway but you are basically looking at another 30 minutes or so if you drive by the old hospital in order to go to the new one.

      This was about 15 years ago. People in government has changed since then but I think this type of protectionism will still happen today if someone wanted to open another hospital. The new one had been expanded as part of the old one since it's inception.

    11. Re:And we're surprised why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A fringe libertarian calling someone else dumb: that's rich.

    12. Re:And we're surprised why? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Only if he wears short skirts and dances provocatively.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    13. Re:And we're surprised why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dont you have this Federal Trade Comission thing in America ???

    14. Re:And we're surprised why? by 517714 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Wow, yourself. You presented a plausible scenario with essentially no information, it is less than anecdotal evidence, indistinguishable from fantasy. With a city and the parties identified, it actually becomes meaningful and verifiable (or disprovable).

      I didn't say government should be involved in any dispute between companies, so where do you come off claiming I advocate its involvement in all such disputes? You're trying to paint me as being extreme, and I may be, but on the other side from that you accuse me of being.

      You paint UPMC as the villain, but I do not accept your contention. I think you've been watching too many Highmark commercials that have been attacking UPMC. What I see is two companies which are each involved in activities they should have been barred from by state (not federal) regulators. UPMC has been a healthcare provider for a long time, in 1998 it was allowed to offer healthcare insurance, Highmark has been a healthcare insurer for a long time and last year purchased West Penn Allegheny (which had sued both Highmark and UPMC for acting together to stifle hospital competition) to became a healthcare provider. I see two governmental agencies, the Pennsylvania Insurance Department and the Division of Acute and Ambulatory Care, failing to represent the interests of the people of Pennsylvania by failing to prevent the obvious conflict of interest involved in allowing integrated delivery system providers (particularly in companies which already dominated one aspect of that system). The solution is for government to take actions to eliminate its need for further involvement, and the state went the other way, reminiscent of our" too big to fail" banks.

      You portray UPMC as the bully using its position to dominate the market for healthcare when Highmark is a much bigger company in both revenues and profits that dominates the region in providing health insurance, which purchased the plaintiff in the antitrust suit against it to kill the suit, and is in the catbird seat as it has the revenue up front and can direct business to itself for its customers who would have little choice while UPMC can merely cut off its nose to spite its face by not accepting Highmark insurance thereby turning away business, I hardly think that is the abusive position you suggest. It was not the local government that dealt with the mess, it was the Pennsylvania Insurance Department which should have prevented the issue 26 years ago.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    15. Re:And we're surprised why? by kqs · · Score: 1

      I didn't say government should be involved in any dispute between companies, so where do you come off claiming I advocate its involvement in all such disputes?

      The solution is for government to take actions to eliminate its need for further involvement, .... It was not the local government that dealt with the mess, it was the Pennsylvania Insurance Department which should have prevented the issue 26 years ago.

      I'm very confused about whether or not you believe government should get involved here? Or maybe you are saying that it should be involved in THIS dispute but not any other?

      Regardless, the point I was replying to was the contention that you could avoid a corporation which misbehaved, but not government. The UPMC-vs-Highmark is a clear example that anyone with BCBS insurance in western PA (I have Anthem BCBS through my employer) is disadvantaged by UPMC. I can affect my government (a little bit and sometimes); I can have no effect on UPMC (even though my wife works for them). Government is led by people that I help elect; UPMC is led by the people who make it the most money and they make more money by behaving IMO badly.

    16. Re:And we're surprised why? by 517714 · · Score: 1

      the point I was replying to was the contention that you could avoid a corporation which misbehaved, but not government.

      I made no such broad statement. I didn't say we could avoid a corporation that misbehaved or that government couldn't behave properly, only that government hadn't behaved properly in those cases.

      It is interesting that you think UPMC is led by people who behave badly, yet you want their services, and you seem to give a pass to Highmark which makes much more money. Highmark has already demonstrated in central PA that it does not treat other hospitals on an equal basis with its own. Highmark has higher deductibles and copays for Geisinger Health System, and would undoubtedly do the same with UPMC. One of the factors that contributed to the bankruptcy of West Penn Allegheny was Highmark's reduced payment scales to it, so Highmark hasn't demonstrated any concern for sustained healthcare availability in the region, nobody else would buy WPA because they would have to deal with Highmark on its terms and suffer a similar fate. UPMC simply chose not to be the victim back in 2009 or after the WPA acquisition. You were disadvantaged by Highmark.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    17. Re:And we're surprised why? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I think what he's saying is that you should be trying to affect the portion of your government called the "Pennsylvania Insurance Department."

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  3. Really? by wenzi · · Score: 0, Troll

    So the Republican house found something that shows the Democratic president in a bad light. Really? Would have thought.

    Move along, nothing to see here. Another fake scandal invented by politicians that will fade by the time the next 'crisis' comes along.

    --
    -- I doubt, therefore I might be.
    1. Re:Really? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 2

      Pretty sure it's from the non-partisan GAO, not the "Republican house". Anyhow, why would the source matter, what matters is if it is true or not. It seems that's not something you even considered.

  4. Here's the problem ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It looks like the committee itself tasked itself to prepare the report itself. I can't tell (but, to be honest, tl:dr) but it doesn't look like it was conducted by the Surveys and Investigation Division, which is part of House Appropriations. It's that group that is supposed to be the impartial auditors of things. But to bring those folks in requires, in theory, the majority _and_ minority to agree that an investigation/survey should be done. Issa, a staunch Republican, most likely found it easier for his own committee to issue it. Don't get me wrong, the rollout was a joke, terribly planned and executed. But I think this report shouldn't come as a surprise, given the source. And yes, if the situation was reversed and it was the Dems issuing the report dealing with a GOP-run topic I'd say the same thing: the bias would be there, too.

  5. Not surprising by meglon · · Score: 0, Troll

    Not surprising at all. Darrell Issa has attempted to turn everything into some huge scandalous coverup purely for political gain. He's abused his office repeatedly by pushing investigations to discredit the administration, including leaking partial and misleading emails and reports along the way that he spins to show his partisan abuse is somehow legitimate, yet every time, with minimal investigation, he's shown to be taking things out of context and is intentionally trying to deceive the public. This is simply more of the same... a partisan hack attack using (and abusing) his office.

    No one is surprised by this blatant abuse continues, yet those mental midgets who bought into all the rest of his lies and fake scandals will continue to. It's politics, and he's playing to his base.... nothing more than propaganda.

    --
    Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
    1. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very good, you have adjusted the viewing of unacceptable government activity towards mundane, business-as-usual going ons in the government. Please submit your resume to the Office of Personnel Management so that your talents can go to good use in public service.

    2. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said.

    3. Re:Not surprising by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So what you're saying is that: 1) The administration didn't knowingly force people to use a badly designed, insecure web site that wasn't ready for prime time. That's just something the administration's critics made up, out of context. 2) The administration has fixed all of the security concerns, and that the whole platform is now working as they promised it would, and that anyone saying otherwise is lying and spinning the glorious real facts on the ground. I see.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Not surprising by Rich0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      1) The administration didn't knowingly force people to use a badly designed, insecure web site that wasn't ready for prime time. That's just something the administration's critics made up, out of context.

      That is correct. The administration did not force anybody to use the website at all during the period it was non-functional. There were alternative ways of signing up, and the enrollment periods were extended to allow time to use the system once it was in better shape.

      2) The administration has fixed all of the security concerns, and that the whole platform is now working as they promised it would, and that anyone saying otherwise is lying and spinning the glorious real facts on the ground.

      I'm sure that not all security concerns have been addressed. I'm sure that 20 years from now they won't be addressed. In fact, I doubt there is a single government or corporate website functioning anywhere where all security concerns are addressed.

      I think the issue here is unrealistic expectations. This is an incredibly large undertaking, and problems with large undertakings are fairly common.

      If it were up to me I'd greatly simplify the whole mess which would make rollout much less complex. I'd start by simplifying medicare so that there is just one deductible, coinsurance rate, and out of pocket limit for everything. Then I'd just start ratcheting down the eligibility age a few years at a time until everybody is eligible from birth. No new systems to deal with, etc. Then I'd start fixing the provisioning of healthcare services (start opening public providers and gradually transition the system to one where the coverage network is government-run). But, the various vested interests don't want to buy into something like that, so we end up with the affordable care act instead of a system like one of those that has already been tried and tested elsewhere.

    5. Re:Not surprising by KermodeBear · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is an incredibly large undertaking, and problems with large undertakings are fairly common.

      This was not an incredibly large undertaking. The functionality is not complex. Nothing about it is complex or incredible large.

      It has to:
      1. Allow you to create an account;
      2. Verify your identify;
      3. Show you available health care plans in your area;
      4. Let you select one;
      5. Help you pay for it.

      In its basic form, this is something that a group of college kids could whip up in a week or so.

      The only thing even approaching complex is scaling to handle a ton of load during the registration periods - and those are problems that have been solved at Amazon, Google, Microsoft, IBM, and any other high traffic site.

      Maybe you like this health care system, and that's okay. We can disagree on that point. What I cannot allow is for you to tell me that this website is some kind of horrible, complex, unknown beast that simply could not be tamed, a website so complex that few applications could approach it in terms of functional requirements.

      --
      Love sees no species.
    6. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Obamacare website was a total disaster. It's not a surprise that emails showed that the management of the project was a total disaster too. Yet you are claiming that, what, it wasn't really a disaster, that it's all Issa's fault somehow for pushing it into the light of day?

      What would it take for you to admit that a failed project had failed management? Is there any criticism of the Obama administration that you would not try to spin?

      Even if Issa was spinning the facts to make them seem as bad as possible, that wouldn't change the basic reality that the facts are already bad on their own.

      Wake up. Poor management should be punished, even if it's poor management by people who share your political views.

    7. Re:Not surprising by sphealey · · Score: 5, Informative

      There are hundreds of EDI-type transactions behind every one of those "simple" actions. Plus verification, cross-matching with multiple insurance carriers (each with their own system), testing all the interconnections. Just to scratch the surface.

      sPh

    8. Re:Not surprising by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      How sad to be inoculated like this, locked inside your own brain, unable to accept that maybe your side might be the ones who are evil from time to time. It's an evidence-proof worldview, and it's depressingly popular.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    9. Re:Not surprising by sphealey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      - - - - - The Obamacare website was a total disaster. - - - - -

      A site intended to serve up to 30 million people execute complex financial changes in a 90-day window was three months late, went live at ~80% capability, and will probably be close to 95% capability at the beginning of its second year of operation is a "disaster"? Perhaps you don't remember the early days of, say, Amazon?

      sPh

    10. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't forget who controls the comittee that put out the report, and the timing of the report with respect to upcoming elections.

      hatchet job using cherry picked emails to smear political opponents over now solved problems. nothing to see here, move along.

    11. Re:Not surprising by Rich0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      2. Verify your identify;

      And how do you propose to do that?

      3. Show you available health care plans in your area;

      Unless the list is 100% based on geography, this is not a straightforward problem. Also, where does this list come from? What data describes a plan for comparison purposes?

      5. Help you pay for it.

      How much does it cost? I imagine that has a bunch of rules behind it.

      The problem is that the website itself could be relatively simple, but there are layers and layers of systems behind it, and those cost a lot more to build.

    12. Re:Not surprising by ScentCone · · Score: 2

      hatchet job using cherry picked emails to smear political opponents over now solved problems. nothing to see here, move along.

      So you are ALSO saying that the information presented is incorrect ... that the people at HHS had NO idea that the site wasn't full of holes in terms of security and functionality. That the "cherry-picked" emails that show the administration knew the site was a train wreck are referring to something else, because the site wasn't a train wreck when it went live. Right? I see. So if that's incorrect, then what you're saying is that the administration did NOT know that the site was a train wreck. Which makes them stupefyingly incompetent.

      So your idea of "nothing to see here" is either:

      1) The administration knew exactly what a train wreck the thing was, but lied about it. Or...

      2) The administration, at every level, was so foolish and incompetent that it had no idea whether or not the system was useless, and in lacking any sort of knowledge one way or the other, just assumed it was fine.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    13. Re:Not surprising by Livius · · Score: 1

      this website is some kind of horrible, complex, unknown beast that simply could not be tamed, a website so complex that few applications could approach it in terms of functional requirements.

      It depends on what the purpose of the website was. If the purpose was to create employment for contractors, and make the health insurance programme look bad, then the requirements would need to be more complex.

    14. Re:Not surprising by w_dragon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You haven't worked much as a developer. Having built systems used by tens of millions of users I guarantee you that every time Amazon rolls out an update to the store or cloud software there's an ops person biting their nails hoping the system doesn't die. When Google released Gmail they only allowed each user to invite a certain number of friends in order to slowly ramp up the system. Writing any software that is made to have millions of users on day one is really fucking hard.

      On top of that steps 2 and 3 require interacting with external systems who may also not be able to handle load well, and probably use a combination of buggy and poorly documented interfaces, and step 5 requires reading a bill so long that the people who voted for it didn't bother to read it. You're grossly trivializing the problem.

    15. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, when you consider that, by law, people were required to use this website to sign up for a health care plan before the government deadline, anything less than 100% is failure.

    16. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a perfect example of someone who has no business being involved in architecting and designing software.

      The complexity of this site has nothing to do with what you described. It is a massive data INTEGRATION problem to solve. The use case you provide is meaningless to implement without bringing hundreds or thousands of completely different data sources together and trying to make something that can work with all of them, in real time.

    17. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That will surely work: Software engineers mandate laws. What kind of weed do you smoke ?

    18. Re:Not surprising by meglon · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you should be looking in the mirror as you recite your post. The only people that can't see Issa is a full of shit partisan hack are the radically indoctrinated republicans who don't give a fuck about this country, just themselves.... everyone else see's his idiocy for what it is. The ONLY thing Issa has done is attempt to create scandals, just like Ggggnewt and his dickless wonders tried to do with Clinton. The downside (for republicans) is, Issa's so fucking stupid they keep blowing up in his face. Doesn't matter to the tried-and-true mental cases of the teabagger conspiracy base, but they're all fucked in the head anyway.

      --
      Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
    19. Re:Not surprising by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      So, just to be clear, you have nothing of substance to say, because if you were to address the actual topic at hand, you'd have to actually answer the question:

      Was the administration to incompetent that it thought the ACA web site was secure and functional before it launched, or were they simply willing to lie about it, since they knew it wasn't? It's one of those two. You just can't bring yourself around to admitting it because you're exactly the partisan whiner that you're accusing someone else of being. Typical response, though, from Obama's apologists on this: pretend everything was fine, and that the people who point out the incompetence of the administration's project (we don't even have to get into the law itself) are lying. Here's the problem with that tactic: millions of people know the web site didn't work and all sorts of third party security reviews show that it was and still is a security nightmare.

      Nice attempt to change the subject, though. Probably worked really well on fellow twelve year olds.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    20. Re:Not surprising by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Yes, 90 days late is a disaster! How is it ever not?!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  6. Politics? Seriously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who the fuck keeps posting US politics on this website?

  7. Poor Rollo by JanneM · · Score: 4, Funny

    I feel sorry for Rollo. He seems to get all the blame ever since he stated working for that website project.

    --
    Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  8. This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their job by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 0, Troll

    Writes the submitter: "The evidence includes emails that show Obamacare officials more interested in keeping their problems from leaking to the press than working to fix them

    BTW, this is emblematic of the Obama administration - they simply do not have any clue to anything that they are involved with

    It is not only the Obamacare - everything else, from Syria to ISIL to Afghanistan to Europe to Islamization of America to you name it - everything that Obama has touched on it turned into a mess

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  9. The PR is more important that the website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Making the ACA website work is not insanely difficult if given enough time and money. The more difficult part is getting continuous support from the House, Senate and Presidency. So, yes, the website PR is more important than the actual website, in particular for the 2014 senate elections. If the Republicans get enough of the Senate, all that work will be for nothing.

  10. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Rich0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    US politics at its finest. We select the most popular people around to lead, and then act surprised when it turns out that they're not necessarily the best leaders...

  11. Is Obama King Rollo? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  12. What failures? by thrillseeker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is no failure to see here - move (on) along - the websites have brilliantly served their purposes - they've managed to transfer $5 billion so far from taxpayers to the carefully selected chosen ones - who will carefully contribute to the next group of chosen ones. http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/...

    1. Re:What failures? by kqs · · Score: 4, Informative

      I haven't looked closely at that link you posted, but every similar story I've looked into has gotten big "wasteful" numbers by adding together the entire IT budgets for multiple years and multiple projects, and then presenting it as a "OMG government waste! OMG OMG!!!" story.

      And sadly people lap it up because everyone loves whining about things but refuses to verify the stories. Not that government is perfect, but it certainly won't get better when most individual "government failure" stories are full of lies and misinformation.

      For example, the article you linked to says "As of November 2013, the federal exchange healthcare.gov. is estimated to have cost $677 million". Which is a complete lie: http://mediamatters.org/blog/2...

      It's trivial to find that that figure is a lie, yet that article still listed it. And you believed it. And I bet you'll keep on reading that website and believing their lies.

      Why?

    2. Re:What failures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > $5 billions

      You are a damn liar. According to the CBO, there has been less than $4 billion spent on the ACA so far. You're proven yourself a Republican by your lies and exaggerations.

    3. Re:What failures? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      5 Billion? Hell no. A Washington Post article on the website costs:

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/...

  13. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform by IndieRafael · · Score: 1

    I have not read the report but won't defend the ObamaCare websites. The DC one is beyond awful. For the record, I favor a single-payer system so we wouldn't need all these websites to sign up.

    As former congressional staff and longtime DC guy, I urge everyone to be skeptical of anything issued by House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Led by Chairman Issa, the Committee issues deliberately deceptive reports to grab a headline. They've doctored emails, etc. It used to be a good committee and probably will be again someday. For the record, I'm a political independent fed up with both parties.

  14. Not counting subsequent studies by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    $197 billion for a web site? "Really?"

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    1. Re:Not counting subsequent studies by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      $197 billion for a web site? "Really?"

      I'm sure that figure includes more than just the website. I suspect most large companies pay on the order of a billion dollars for an ERP system, and you can't expect the government to complete with a private operation for efficiency.

  15. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    to Islamization of America

    I don't see how much has happened as far as Islamization of America. Islam is still a super-small minority in America, right? I'd bet the Hindu population is growing faster, and even that's small.....

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  16. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sphealey · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yup, just no clue. I mean, in 2014 alone twelve million Americans who did not previously have health insurance were covered, adding to the estimated 20 million who have obtained some form of insurance benefit and access to health care since the law took effect in 2011. Plus pre-existing condition coverage, lowering overall national spending on health, etc. Horrible, horrible stuff.

  17. Please describe exactly by sphealey · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In your foaming response, please describe _exactly_ what you find so objectionable about the Affordable Care Act. Discuss the 12 million previously uninsured Americans who were able to obtain health insurance and health care in 2014 and what you believe should happen to them. If you were extended on your parents' plan for at least a year post-2011 state how many additional years on your parents' plan you used. If you have corporate health insurance, describe exactly how the ACA affected your coverage. If your response is that premiums went up, you had to change doctors, etc list how many times that happened to you in the 10 years prior to the ACA being passed.

    sPh

    1. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I have corporate coverage. I did not have to change doctors, and never have, however premiums did skyrocket in the past two years. I'm effectively paying double what I was before, which isn't that big of a deal as I can afford that. The difference is in the coverage. Under the old plans I had since I started at the company (about 10 years) there were reasonable deductibles and simple copays for most services. Now, however, the deductible is nearly $4000. This means that if I need tests done, it's coming out of my pocket. If I have to visit a specialist, it's coming out of my pocket. I still have healthcare coverage should something catastrophic happen, and I would only have to pay $4k. Which isn't the problem, it's that now I'll be less likely to use the services as I'll be paying full price for things that used to be handled simply by paying a small copay.

      To me, with a decent job and a decent amount of money, it's a first-world problem though. However, I also know that it has affected the part-time workers and the working poor more significantly than it has affected myself. People considered "part time" who would be working 35-45 hours a week (but still averaging under 40 to be classified as part-time), now get 20-25 hours per week. This has forced many people to take on two jobs to support their families when previously they could get by with only one. Also, these same people (many young and/or otherwise healthy) are now forced to buy healthcare coverage, further stretching their already thin dollar. Yes, they have insurance. Insurance they may not need or want.

      I know, personally, that at the company I work for, every part time/temporary employee who was working over 30 hours now is set at a maximum of 25 to ensure that the company won't be forced to pay for their coverage. It hit them right where it hurts, and it sucks for them. Once again, something championed to actually help people ended up turning around and fucking them, but that's standard procedure these days it seems. I'm not, in any way, shape or form against trying to give healthcare to anyone who wants or needs it. But the way this system is set up and designed is completely ridiculous. It is the same system, essentially, that was proposed by Republicans and written by their Big Healthcare ilk in the 90s and was shot down unilaterally. It only serves to get the most amount of money extracted from people's wallets, by law and hand it to the big insurance companies.

    2. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Informative

      please describe _exactly_ what you find so objectionable about the Affordable Care Act

      I used to have affordable insurance for my wife and I. The ACA killed it. Were forced to go to a new plan that:

      1) Has much higher monthly premiums (we went from roughly $230/month to about $500/month)

      2) Has a hugely higher deductible (we went from $2,500 a year to about $12,000 a year). This means that we are much, much farther out of pocket every year, especially if we actually need medical care beyond one or two simple visits annually.

      3) We are past any risk of pregnancy. None the less, we are being forced to pay for elaborate maternity care that we cannot possibly use.

      4) The new plan forced us to give up the doctor we've been using for 15 years unless we want to pay cash for that in a way that doesn't help with our deductible.

      5) The two best local hospitals are no longer available to us unless we want to pay retail for their use, and get no benefit against our deductible.

      Prior to this "affordable" new act, we had no need to change insurance, doctors, hospitals or anything else for well over 10 years.

      Because of how the math is working out, we're told to expect that next year's premiums will go up by another 45-55%. Thanks, Mr. Obamacare Cheerleader, if you're one of the people who helped to empower the people who snuck this 100% partisan monstrosity through congress on Pelosi's "deeming" technique. Thanks a lot.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    3. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Obama correctly outlawed them. He did them a favor.

      What? Obama's new wonder-plan is what TOOK AWAY our low deductible plan and forced us, for more money, to buy one that will cost us thousands more each year in premiums, and ten thousand more a year in deductibles. The people you're defending - Obama, Pelosi, Reid - forced us to buy a high deductible plan with fewer benefits, minus the doctor we'd used for years, and more. Obama didn't "outlaw" bad, expensive coverage, he just forced us into that exact situation. Thanks for shilling for him, though - it's nice to see that BS so transparently on display for all to see.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Please describe exactly by Xyrus · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I see you have a very selective memory. Please read the original plan and then follow the idiotic path of compromises that Republicans forced onto it rendering it into the watered down ridiculous mess that it is.

      But then again, the democrats didn't help things either since they were so desperate to get SOMETHING through that they were willing to do just about anything without really thinking through the consequences of their actions.

      And of course, the ones ultimately to blame are ourselves. Congress's successes and failures are a direct reflection of the voting population. It's not democrats or republicans. It's this bizarre us vs. them mentality that prevents anything useful or effective being done. It's not a fucking football game. The leaders we elect are supposed to get shit done, not to act like spoiled 2 year olds when they don't get their way.

      --
      ~X~
    5. Re:Please describe exactly by TubeSteak · · Score: 2

      Because of how the math is working out, we're told to expect that next year's premiums will go up by another 45-55%. Thanks, Mr. Obamacare Cheerleader, if you're one of the people who helped to empower the people who snuck this 100% partisan monstrosity through congress on Pelosi's "deeming" technique. Thanks a lot.

      In all seriousness, if the facts are as you claim, go to the media or write your congressman.

      Fox News and Republican politicians have embarrassed themselves repeatedly by publicizing Obamacare horror stories that completely fall apart when verified.
      They'd love to have a solid example of someone who really did get shafted and can't get a lower cost plan.

      P.S. You say "Were forced to go to a new plan," if you didn't go through the exchange, your insurance company may be the one shafting you.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    6. Re:Please describe exactly by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      What? Obama's new wonder-plan is what TOOK AWAY our low deductible plan and forced us, for more money, to buy one that will cost us thousands more each year in premiums, and ten thousand more a year in deductibles.

      Here's a decent article
      http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/10/29/this-is-why-obamacare-is-cancelling-some-peoples-insurance-plans/

      The health law allowed plans that existed back in March 2010, when it became a law, to keep selling coverage. These are known as "grandfathered plans:" They don't meet the health law's requirements, but as long as they don't change much, insurers can keep offering them.

      Insurance companies typically do like to change their insurance plans, making changes to cost-sharing or the benefits they offer. That means that grandfathered plans have disappeared. [...]

      These cancellations are, essentially, a lot of grandfathered plans exiting the insurance marketplace. From an insurance company's vantage point, grandfathered plans are a bit of a dead end: They can't enroll new subscribers and are really constrained in their ability to tweak the benefit package or cost-sharing structure. There's not a whole lot of business sense, for a managed care company, in maintaining a health plan that doesn't meet the health law's new requirements.

      The law took away your plan, only so far as your insurance company decided to get rid of it.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    7. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The leaders we elect are supposed to get shit done

      Why can't I ever vote for someone who will stop shit from getting done?
      Life is better when the government does fewer and smaller things.

    8. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 2

      repeatedly by publicizing Obamacare horror stories that completely fall apart when verified

      But this isn't a horror story. This is just the ACA, doing exactly what it's designed to do. Obviously it's not doing what Obama repeatedly promised it would do, but that was all lies in advance of them ramming the law through. There's nothing shocking (from the point of view of the law) about our situation, it's exactly what was intended - use the higher rates as a new tax to fund a huge entitlement expansion for people who make less money. Self employed middle class people are the beasts of burden in this scenario.

      P.S. You say "Were forced to go to a new plan," if you didn't go through the exchange, your insurance company may be the one shafting you.

      There is no exchange. Our state spend hundreds of millions of dollars, but couldn't get it to work, have decided to scrap the entire thing, and buy a copy of the exchange that another state built. Regardless, by law in our state, you don't get anything by going through the exchange except discounts when you qualify for subsidies. The subsidies aren't meant for people who make >$60k, so the exchange (if they ever get it working) won't apply. Insurers offering ANY plan in the state have to do so at the exchange rates. Essentially, the numbers I mentioned ARE the exchange rates. That's the cheapest plan you can buy. If we choose a lower deductible (say, $5,000 instead of $12,000) our monthly rate would have jumped from our earlier
      The only "shafting" that's going on is by way of the ACA itself and the requirements it places on new policies. And since we work hard to make more than $60k (in an area where that's essentially poverty-level income, given the local cost of living), we get none of the candy they're taking from other people. We're the ones they're taking the candy from. New outlets didn't need special cases like us, because we're not a special case. There's a whole state full of people like us, unless you're in the huge group who have opted to pay the no-insurance-tax/fine and save the money.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    9. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Right. So when any of the normal annual changes take place (the way they handle certain experimental drugs or therapies, the way they handle certain hospital scenarios, etc), the insurer can no longer provide the plan - the ACA shuts it down because it doesn't provide post-menopausal women maternity care, etc.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    10. Re:Please describe exactly by mx+b · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I used to have affordable insurance for my wife and I. The ACA killed it. Were forced to go to a new plan that:

      I used to not have insurance at all because I couldn't afford it, because teaching jobs want to pay you part time salary with no benefits, and two part time jobs don't magically qualify you for benefits. The ACA helped get me that insurance for the first time this year.

      1) Has much higher monthly premiums (we went from roughly $230/month to about $500/month)

      The premiums in my area were about $500/month for a single person (never mind a family plan). They are now about $150/month, and actually cover more medications and scenarios than before.

      2) Has a hugely higher deductible (we went from $2,500 a year to about $12,000 a year). This means that we are much, much farther out of pocket every year, especially if we actually need medical care beyond one or two simple visits annually.

      The deductibles for the plans in the past were, if I could even afford them, roughly $6-10k per year here. After the ACA, our deductibles are down to about $2500-3500 depending on the plan. Again, huge savings.

      3) We are past any risk of pregnancy. None the less, we are being forced to pay for elaborate maternity care that we cannot possibly use.

      This is, from a strictly money point of view, true. But instead of thinking of "I'm paying for something I don't use!", your family tree very likely has some daughters/granddaughters/nieces/cousins somewhere. Your premium helps keep it cheap for them. So why the complaints here? Your maternity care portion of your premium can't be very much, what, 5% of the total?

      4) The new plan forced us to give up the doctor we've been using for 15 years unless we want to pay cash for that in a way that doesn't help with our deductible. 5) The two best local hospitals are no longer available to us unless we want to pay retail for their use, and get no benefit against our deductible.

      I can't visit every hospital in the area either, but this isn't because of anything to do with the ACA, as much as it is a major insurance provider in the area is acting like a huge douche, and refusing to negotiate new contracts with the city and other insurance providers that allow the prices to remain low. This is a corporate decision, not a government one.

      I share my story, not because I am trying to belittle your situation -- I definitely feel for you, having been insurance-less for a long time because of high payments, I understand worrying about costs -- but because I do not like the immediate jump to "I'm having a lot of trouble, therefore, this law was evil and wrong". It has its problems, but two things: (1) it has helped a lot of people, so completely scrapping it isn't helpful, we need to explore ways to keep the benefits in place while lowering your premium so everyone gets help; and (2) a lot of your complaints regarding losing doctors and hospitals and even premiums to some degree rely on the free market. It largely depends on how much competition is in your area, and the decisions made by your employer, the insurance company, and the doctors/hospitals themselves, as to what insurance they will provide or take. Nothing in the law says they are required to drop plans; that was a business decision they made, and businessmen are not always that smart. So instead of directing all the anger at the law, you should also be questioning why your company and insurance feel they need to raise prices so much.

      If you are having trouble with your current premiums, the people on the Healthcare.gov hotline are very helpful. I would call them up and ask about private insurance plans are in your area. They can price check plans for any provider in your area, and check different levels of coverage, and tell you the cheapest one. From there you can contact the insurance company directly if it sketches you out to a

    11. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Please read the original plan and then follow the idiotic path of compromises that Republicans forced onto it rendering it into the watered down ridiculous mess that it is.

      The Republicans forced no such thing. Not a single one of them voted for it. The Democrats were the only people who wanted, and who rammed through, the law they put together.

      democrats didn't help things either since they were so desperate to get SOMETHING through that they were willing to do just about anything without really thinking through the consequences of their actions

      What are you talking about? Everything that's happened was predicted in plain language for everyone involved before they "deemed" it passed in a 100% partisan maneuver. Larger deficits? Playing out exactly as predicted. Huge jump in premiums and deductibles for those that don't get entitlement subsidies? Playing out exactly as predicted. That's what the Democrats WANTED: get insurance for more people by taking more money from one group and giving to another. It's a transfer tax that reduces benefits for those that actually pay in order to give SOME benefits to those that don't, or who pay only part of the way.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    12. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      If you are having trouble with your current premiums, the people on the Healthcare.gov hotline are very helpful.

      They're not going to help here, because our situation is exactly what the law calls for. If you're making more than $60k, you don't GET subsidies, you have to GIVE subsidies to other people (like you). The premiums and high deductibles I mentioned are set up exactly as the ACA calls for. No hotline worker is going to wave their hands and make insurance regulators in a state lower the rates to the point where the insurance companies are forced to lose money on selling an account without a subsidy taken from someone else to pay for it. And they're not going to give subsidies to someone who makes lower-middle-income money (which in our area is anyone under $75k, since things like tiny 1100 square foot townhouses in bad neighborhoods cost $300,000+.

      So unless we deliberately earn less money so we can get subsidies (which still is a net loss in overall cash), we are walking financial organ donors for ... you. And there's nothing to complain to a hotline about, because that's exactly what Pelosi and Reid and Obama wanted. They said as much, they wrote the law that way, and they got one party (and only one) to ram it through congress.

      Let's work toward fixing the ACA's problems for EVERYONE (you and me included) instead of just propagating negativity.

      Who are you proposing to tax, instead of me, to fix it? And we haven't even SEEN the results on employer programs yet, because Obama broke the law and chose to put off actually enforcing that part of the law (he chose to ignore the law's statutory date requirements). When all of THOSE rates and deductibles go through the roof, you'll hear a lot of negativity from more than just people like me - you'll hear it from tens of millions of people whose insurance will suddenly no longer be viable, according to the ACA.

      The fixes for this (cross-state shopping, tort reform, etc) were utterly rejected by the Democrats because their constituents (say, the trial lawyers) didn't want to give up their gravy train.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    13. Re:Please describe exactly by silas_moeckel · · Score: 4, Informative

      BS the new plans have HUGE deductible's and only cover what they are forced to (mostly female and child related bits). Premiums have doubled and are looking like 3x for next year. Dental is a joke if you can even find a plan that offers it. Lets compare:

      Before 400 ish a month now 800 ish.
      Reasonable deduct 5k but only for major stuff all the day to day excluded, now 10k and nearly everything feeds into it.
      Dental and Optics built in, now just for kids and maybe a realy bad tack on.

      It really matters what state your in. But from my point it looks like the rates got jacked up by whatever the max the feds would pay. This is what tends to happen whenever the feds throw money at something, economics kicks in and the cost of goods goes up by whatever the feds tacked on.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    14. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude. Pay attention.

      He said "[T]he people on the Healthcare.gov hotline are very helpful. I would call them up and ask about private insurance plans are in your area. They can price check plans for any provider in your area, and check different levels of coverage, and tell you the cheapest one."

      He did not say "The people on the Healthcare.gov hotline will hook you up with a subsidized plan.". Slow the fuck down and _read_.

      And, for the record, the villain here is the private "health insurance" companies. They weren't prevented from increasing their rates in the run-up to ACA activation, so they increased their rates each year, every year until the ACA took effect. How do I know this? In the two years between the time I quit my job and the deadline to activate a national insurance plan, the very same plan that I had for *years* more than doubled in price.

      It's a crying shame that the text of the ACA wasn't one line that read "All Americans, regardless of age or preexisting conditions are now eligible for Medicare.".

    15. Re:Please describe exactly by eWarz · · Score: 1, Informative

      I can't resist but to feed the troll. This guy claims to pay '$12,000/year in deductibles', but the federal silver plan is about a fifth of that. Even the federal bronze plans don't have deductibles that high. Once again..another republican moron that didn't graduate high school trying to run the company... Before you mod down, educate yourself: https://www.healthcare.gov/how...

    16. Re:Please describe exactly by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 1

      I blame republicans for having the idea, but refusing to do anything to help the black man. It's almost like they just watched it burn so they could make great campaign ads about the tragedy.

      You seem intent on blaming democrats instead of politicians.

    17. Re:Please describe exactly by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      I see you have a very selective memory. Please read the original plan and then follow the idiotic path of compromises that Republicans forced onto it rendering it into the watered down ridiculous mess that it is.

      Your memory isn't so good either. Obamacare was written by Democrats and "progressive" lobbyists*, voted for by Democrats, and implemented by a Democratic administration. They own it lock, stock, and barrel. The Republicans didn't vote for it, you can't blame the Obamacare debacle on them.

      If you're going to create a massive new entitlement program grabbing control of 16% of the economy then you should have a broad consensus and support for doing it, and do it with care. The Democrats didn't have that but decided to force a badly written, ill conceived boondoggle on the country. We'll be paying the price for that for years, and I doubt that the Democrats will pay any real price at all.

      * Center For American Progress President Shares Part In Obamacare: "I Helped Write The Bill"

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    18. Re:Please describe exactly by stoploss · · Score: 1

      Don't worry about the troll. His entire post can be summarized from one line:

      Your premium helps keep it cheap for them. So why the complaints here?

      Which can be trivially restated as:

      Having the government take money from you under color of law is making things less expensive for me. I can't understand why that would upset you.

      I have paid approximately 30k in premiums in 6 years and have never used the insurance at all. It was ludicrous that Obamacare was going to force me to lose my HSA-compatible individual policy and replace it with a non-HSA compatible plan that included maternity coverage. That's "useful", given that I'm biologically male and incapable of maternity.

      Instead, I dropped my plan and saved money by skewing the demographics of a different, low-risk actuarial class pool (a bunch of 20 year olds) that I couldn't join before. Now my premium is $130/month, no thanks to Obamacare.

      Fuck the ACA.

    19. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From where I'm sitting, I see that my "health insurance" company increased the cost of its plans, year over year, up to the run up to ACA's go-live date.

      That's the free market at work. If you don't get price caps, then you get the shit that befell you.

      Sorry, dude.

    20. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More so that the insurance companies are still the problem. They have always charged the actual doctors/facilities in such a way that they have to charge insane prices to balance it out. Doctors are also paid incredibly. They don't want to take a hit on their huge profits, so they're letting the shit roll downhill onto you. This has happened always, in every industry. Stock holders and such seem to believe that there is simply more and more money, some where and that they deserve it.

    21. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the very idea of socialism: transfer wealth. Lefties want it exactly that way. And the Banksters, too.

      All of these have zero respect for property of hard-working people.

      But hey, we also benefit from Sparta finance and from Sparta military. Now eat some shit after you have tasted the fruits. America is god's own country just as much as Guatemala and Iraq. Feel some justice !

    22. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the reduced hours: sounds like a shit predatory company, so why shouldn't they get a second job, or get loans and train for something else? Having their part-time 45-hour weeks with no benefits reduced to 20-hours with no benefits actually gives them time to find something else . . . and if everyone is doing what you say there should be plenty of 20-hour positions out there. . . opportunities for employment would have doubled everywhere.

    23. Re:Please describe exactly by drinkypoo · · Score: 0

      since we work hard to make more than $60k (in an area where that's essentially poverty-level income, given the local cost of living), we get none of the candy they're taking from other people

      So because you've chosen to live where your meager skills won't permit you to make a good living, you're complaining? how's about you go someplace where you can get paid? You're whining about how your state handled obamacare, but that's your state. If it didn't come out the way you wanted, you share the blame. Next time, involve yourself in the politics. Now, everything is over for you but the weeping.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    24. Re:Please describe exactly by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      So when any of the normal annual changes take place (the way they handle certain experimental drugs or therapies, the way they handle certain hospital scenarios, etc), the insurer can no longer provide the plan

      [citation needed]

      the ACA shuts it down because it doesn't provide post-menopausal women maternity care, etc.

      That is a separate complaint, an emdash was absolutely the wrong punctuation to use there. If they have to terminate plans and cannot change them by adding onto them, which I doubt, then that complaint is valid. Complaining that plans are shut down because they don't provide comprehensive medical coverage is a separate complaint, and something of a bullshit one as well. Supposedly post-menopausal women have given birth before.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    25. Re:Please describe exactly by sphealey · · Score: 0

      - - - - - The Republicans forced no such thing. Not a single one of them voted for it. - - - - -

      You really don't understand how the Senate works, do you?

      sPh

    26. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I can't resist but to feed the troll. This guy claims to pay '$12,000/year in deductibles'

      You really have no idea how individual states handle this, do you? Please go educate yourself. States that chose to set up their own markets and which regulate their own rates have nothing to do with what you're saying. All they have is the ACA forcing certain new features into the plans sold in that state, and the states set new rules in order to pay for those new federally mandated features. In this state, the ACA-mandated Bronze plan leaves you with a $6,000 deductible per person. Married? $12k.

      Sorry to take the fun out of it for you.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    27. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      You really don't understand how the Senate works, do you?

      Yes, I do. If you ARE going to force compromise to your favor, it's your vote that you offer in exchange for the compromise in question.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    28. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Who says I have meager skills or don't make a good living? I said that I make more than the amount under which the subsides kick in, and so I am in the group that has had their rates jacked up hugely in order to collect the money that is being given to the people who get the subsidies. Many many more millions of people would also be in that boat right now, but Obama unilaterally chose to break the law and push back the date at which the ACA's changes would also impact the rates paid by people who are on employer-provided insurance. He's waiting until after the upcoming election, to help struggling Democrats trying to retain legislative seats. As soon as that's past, and the illegally delayed employer program changes kick in, you'll find (at least) tens of millions more people describing exactly the scenario I have.

      It's simple math: if they want to give billions of dollars of new federally mandated entitlements to one group, they have to take it from somebody else. It's the people like me who DO make a good living that are being handed that bill. Rather in contrast to Obama's promises that no such thing would happen, remember? Remember the assurance that rates would go down, and that having health insurance would be about like paying for a mobile phone account every month? Yeah. If your mobile phone costs you several hundred dollars a month, and never mind the huge new deductibles.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    29. Re:Please describe exactly by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      He did not say he had the silver plan. If you go to the link you provided and follow it to "Out of Pocket Costs" you discover the following: "The maximum out-of-pocket costs for any Marketplace plan for 2014 are $6,350 for an individual plan and $12,700 for a family plan." He clearly states that his plan is for he and his wife, which makes it a family plan. Elsewhere, he says that he could get a lower deductible, but the premiums would go up even more.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    30. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      He said "[T]he people on the Healthcare.gov hotline are very helpful. I would call them up and ask about private insurance plans are in your area.

      And I pointed out that nobody on the hotline is going to be able to point out an insurance plan that doesn't exist. The state regulators don't allow for magic hidden policies that are cheaper than what's been priced for the exchanges. In other words, it was a BS, fantasy suggestion.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    31. Re:Please describe exactly by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      You mean you blame the Republicans for not trying to help someone who, when they suggested changes to the very first major bill he pushed through Congress, responded by saying, "I won" and walking away?
      In other words, they should have helped him pass a law which would not contain any of their ideas, because he told them that he had won and did not need to listen to them. Oh yeah, a law which contained provisions he explicitly campaigned against.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    32. Re:Please describe exactly by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Republicans forced onto it rendering it into the watered down ridiculous mess that it is.

      Let me see if I got this straight. It is the Republicans fault that the Democrats used their majorities in both Houses of Congress to pass a bad law, which the American people overwhelmingly opposed (to the point where Massachusetts elected a Republican Senator in an attempt to stop the law from passing), because the Republicans would not vote for that bad law.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    33. Re:Please describe exactly by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1

      The same thing happened to me. I'd been buying my own health insurance since I sold my company in 2011. It cost me $83 per month. I'm in my early 30's and healthy. Only time I used it was for a sinus infection and annual check ups. Deductible was $3500 with max out of pocket of $11,000. Office co-pay's were $30, $50 for urgent care and drug coverage worked well enough for me. My last antibiotics cost me $20 co-pay. Then I was informed last fall my plan was not "ACA" compliant and would be cancelled at the end of last year.

      So I went shopping on the exchange. The closest plan to what I had was a silver package. It was $280 a month. 3x what I was paying. That was more than I wanted to pay. So I looked at a "Bronze" plan. Still $156 a month and eventually what I selected. It had a $6000 a year deductible and $17,000 max out of pocket per year.

      Then I actually had to use it for an Urgent care visit. Under my old plan, Urgent care was a $50 visit. Well it was $90 co-pay under my new plan. I was prescribed the same antibiotics as the previous time. Cost: $45 co-pay instead of $20.

      Fortunately I got married and now on my Wife's company plan (although they're likely to pay the fine as it will be cheaper than providing insurance so not sure for how much longer). It was about the same as my bronze plan (~$180 per month to add me). But coverage is a hell of a lot better.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    34. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, to sum up:
      - Your state's governor was one of the ones that worked to sabotage the implementation of the ACA.
      - You've identified changes the law needs, but nothing like that has even been discussed since the only ACA votes that Congress will try are about repealing the whole thing.
      - Yet you're still unable to find any blame that should be directed at the Republicans.

    35. Re:Please describe exactly by sphealey · · Score: 1

      Comity. Cloture.

    36. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, weird that the Republicans criticize something that was passed exclusively by Democrats that a majority of the people don't like.

      Weird.

    37. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Your state's governor was one of the ones that worked to sabotage the implementation of the ACA.

      No, my state's governor is a major liberal Democrat, and was a serious cheerleader for ACA. He promised that our state would be a shining example of the law's implementation, and swore that he would use our local tax dollars to make a better web-facing exchange experience than the federal site could ever be. Then he made his deputy governor more or less a full-time ACA guy. He then spent over $200 million to completely botch the whole thing, and it had to be scrapped.

      You've identified changes the law needs, but nothing like that has even been discussed since the only ACA votes that Congress will try are about repealing the whole thing.

      No, these issues were discussed loudly and often BEFORE the law was completed. The Republicans pointed out these and many more baked-in flaws, but were of course ignored. The president keeps saying this is now all a matter of "settled law," and has said he will not accept changes to it. Same thing that Pelosi and Reid say, obviously.

      Yet you're still unable to find any blame that should be directed at the Republicans.

      Right. Because their input was refused, they were not allowed in the writing of the law, and they DID NOT VOTE FOR IT. This resulting mess was created and rammed through entirely by the Democrats. It's theirs and their mess. They are why I'm out thousands of dollars more this year than last for inferior results.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    38. Re:Please describe exactly by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Has a hugely higher deductible (we went from $2,500 a year to about $12,000 a year)

      Ours was initially $3000 a year for the family plan, then it went to $3,000 per person!. After the birth of our son 20 months ago, we ended up paying $6,000 in fees. 3k for pregnant wife, 3k and fees for my son's birth. 6k grand was considered a nice down payment for a house / car back in mid to late 1990's. Oh, except it's free if you're a fucking Mexican that's about to drop an anchor baby. They pay ZERO; it's you and I the tax payer that pays for it all, and then much more later on.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    39. Re:Please describe exactly by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      In your foaming response, please describe _exactly_ what you find so objectionable about the Affordable Care Act.... If you have corporate health insurance, describe exactly how the ACA affected your coverage.

      My problem with the ACA is that it failed to end employer-provided health insurance, which serves to do exactly nothing except make it harder to change jobs.

      My health insurance is paid 100% by my employer. My wife's insurance is paid 50% by my employer. However, as I understand it, because my employer offers health insurance for my wife, she's not eligible for the subsidized rate she would otherwise get for an exchange-based plan. I'm reasonably certain that the 50% of the premiums we pay is more than a subsidized ACA plan would cost, but less than an unsubsidized one would cost, so we're forced to overpay for the "privilege" of having a "choice."

      What the ACA should have done is let employers wishing to offer health benefits pay into a FSA or HSA-like account, which the employee could use to pay the premium of the insurance plan of his choosing.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    40. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah. You just talked about subsidies. You said: "They're not going to help here, because our situation is exactly what the law calls for. If you're making more than $60k, you don't GET subsidies, you have to GIVE subsidies to other people (like you)."

      Nice of you to ignore my other points that can't be addressed with righteous anger and furious words. Especially the one that pointed out that it was those very same insurers that you implicitly praise that raised their rates to where they are now. They *knew* that they had just a few years before those rates became government controlled, so they *all* raised them as fast as the existing law would allow.

      In civilized parts of the world, that would be considered collusion and price fixing.

    41. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Nah. You just talked about subsidies. You said: "They're not going to help here, because our situation is exactly what the law calls for. If you're making more than $60k, you don't GET subsidies, you have to GIVE subsidies to other people (like you)."

      Exactly. If you don't qualify for subsidies, then there IS NO CHEAPER MAGIC SOLUTION than those that the regulated insurance companies in the state advertise. They don't have the option of having secret cheaper-than-the-exchange plans. So if you call a hotline and complain that your new insurance plan is too expensive, their ONLY OPTION is to try to find a way to qualify you for a plan that somebody else is forced to help you buy. Otherwise, the price is what the price is.

      Especially the one that pointed out that it was those very same insurers that you implicitly praise that raised their rates to where they are now.

      For which they had no choice. They are required by law to suddenly provide a range of coverage that was not previously built into their pricing. If you were suddenly told that you had to provide a bunch of new services or else, would you just eat the loss, or raise your prices in order to maintain your business? Insurance companies work on smaller margins than companies in many, many other industries. Remove that margin, and they are out of business. Now, that may be what the ACA backers secretly want, but in the meantime, you raise your prices to deal with the fact that your government has just substantially raised your costs.

      They *knew* that they had just a few years before those rates became government controlled

      They've always been government controlled. Every state in the union has an insurance regulating body to which those companies must turn for approval in order to change rates. And each of those scenarios plays out in something of a vacuum, because laws prevent insurance companies from providing services across state lines. The government has been entirely in control of this stuff for decades (as if you didn't know that!).

      In civilized parts of the world, that would be considered collusion and price fixing.

      No, it's known as state regulation. The companies who have a very innovative way to deliver the same (government approved) class of services with less overhead MAY be able to offer a lower price if they can survive doing so. But there's generally very, very little latitude in the cost/price recipe before the insurer is on intolerably thin ice.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    42. Re:Please describe exactly by causality · · Score: 1

      Right. So when any of the normal annual changes take place (the way they handle certain experimental drugs or therapies, the way they handle certain hospital scenarios, etc), the insurer can no longer provide the plan - the ACA shuts it down because it doesn't provide post-menopausal women maternity care, etc.

      So I am a bit confused about why that is a problem. The cost to the insurer of offering maternity care to post-menopausal women should be about zero. Why not tack that onto an otherwise good plan if that's what the law requires? Wouldn't that make more sense than scrapping the plan for such a flimsy reason?

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    43. Re:Please describe exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I gather that you don't work in the medical billing industry.

      You really should spend a year or two in it; it changes your perspective on a lot of things.

    44. Re:Please describe exactly by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Not that you'd like to make a useful point by actually speaking of substance or anything. No, it's just "you're wrong, and I know secret things that you don't." Which is always a sure sign that you don't, actually. My perspective is shaped by daily reality: higher premiums, wildly higher deductibles, millions of people still not covered, millions of people now covered by charging other people for their consumption, more national debt, and a coming tsunami of yet more rate increases for millions of people. Yay, it's "Affordable!"

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  18. Re:House Committee on Oversight and Government Ref by sphealey · · Score: 0

    Side effect of the adamant insistence by both the Senate Republicans and the Very Serious People(tm) of the Washington power elite that the ACA and the insurance exchanges for the uninsured be handled "by the states". There is always some benefit to diversity, but having 30 different insurance exchanges built at the same time was ridiculous.

    The Republicans of course refused as a body to vote for the bill that was based on Heritage Foundation [hard right wing] principles and modified to suit the (R)'s requests.

    sPh

  19. Are you talking about those large font ones? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those emails with the big colored font, with lots of forward's in teh subject line that are unatributable, unsighed, and reference politFact in tampa for there "facts?'

    Those kinds of emails?

    yeah You should always read them.

  20. Re:Consider the source. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moron.

  21. The Republicans sabotaged it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They didn't allow it to work. Instead of pointing fingers, we should be putting Republicans in prison for not allowing us to have health insurance. The ERs are still turning way too many people.

  22. Was it really so bad? by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To be fair... I have worked on many software projects in my life and have also worked with government software projects. A simple fact of life is that government funded software projects are only given to blood sucking leeches that intentionally underbid and lie their asses off about delivery schedules. Legitimate software houses who actually can plan projects and meet schedules are never evaluated.

    From what I can tell, the site is up and running "mostly" only a year late and not nearly as over budget as I expected. What do you expect from a project initiated by uneducated people like politicians and sales people. They of course ask "computer experts" for help, but let's be honest... Politicians wouldn't know a qualified computer programmer from a Barbie doll.

    I support ObamaCare aka ACA on a federal level simply because it requires one big ass database system to be made by one company with a whole nation of people to kick the crap out of the company making it. And let's be honest... Whether the system is for all of America or just a state, the system is almost the same.

    Imagine if a state like Mississippi or Oklahoma had to get a system made? They'd hire a guy named Jom Bob from church to do it. They'd piss away the entire budget before they even found Jim Bob. They'd run it on index cards and toilet paper in type writers with no correction ink.

    Is there anyone dumb enough on Slashdot to think :
      A) a government sponsored software project can be done without corruption, delays and major budget problems?
      B) all 50 states in America could actually manage to get a system up and running at a state level... Why not ask Florida about their prepaid college project and how bad that for screwed up. I worked at the company writing that one and that project was doomed to fail before it even started. They built the damn thing on Tandem computers with Thomas Conrad ArcNet and had a total of one guy who even knew how to boot the machine.

    1. Re:Was it really so bad? by sphealey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      - - - - - A) a government sponsored software project can be done without corruption, delays and major budget problems? - - - - -

      I'm generally in agreement with what you say, but when we have 30 years of "the government is the problem, the government is incompetent, let's drown government in the bathtub" and Grover Norquist the result is - surprise - government capabilities degraded or destroyed. Look at the Hoover Dam, the TVA [1], the Post Office's tremendous scientific and engineering advances in automated sorting and handling systems in the 1960s, the Iowa class battleships, the reforestation of large areas of the south, etc for examples of highly capable and well-executed government projects.

      sPh

    2. Re:Was it really so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > church...index cards and toilet paper

      Exactly. Those xians are so stupid as you note. They are all racist and want to murder us minorities. That is the way of their kind. They flood the streets with guns to kill young black men, and they know that by denying them ER care that more of us will die. That is their ultimate plan. They are denying us healthcare in order to kill us.

    3. Re:Was it really so bad? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      Your login is "LostMyBeaver". I'm sorry, but I just have to ask... did you have a sex change?

    4. Re:Was it really so bad? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      > church...index cards and toilet paper

      Exactly. Those xians are so stupid as you note. They are all racist and want to murder us minorities. That is the way of their kind. They flood the streets with guns to kill young black men, and they know that by denying them ER care that more of us will die. That is their ultimate plan. They are denying us healthcare in order to kill us.

      I... think you're focusing on a minor bigotry of the GP, which was not really related to his main point.

    5. Re:Was it really so bad? by GerryGilmore · · Score: 1

      Rather than burn a mod point, I'd add on to that that ANY major software project, especially one that has to integrate so many wildly different back-end systems with differing formats, standards, etc. is prone to go through shake-out periods. Has anyone here had Version 1.0 rollout bug-free, ultra-secure, fully scalable, redundant, and on-schedule? Anyone? Hands-up.....

    6. Re:Was it really so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine if a state like Mississippi or Oklahoma had to get a system made? They'd hire a guy named Jom Bob from church...

      Jom? Did you mean Joe you racist piece of shit?

      Also, both of the states you mention were smart enough to use the Obama-led federal ACA web site unlike many of the Democrat-led states that are still in trouble like Oregon. My in-laws still don't have insurance in Oregon because of their problems. I know your kind hates Obama because you still see his race as a race of slaves, but you're a piece of shit for attacking states smart enough to follow Obama. He is a great leader, and your Nazi shit doesn't affect him. Go to stormfront or some other racist web site where your kind is welcome. You are not welcome here.

    7. Re: Was it really so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of these days all the socialists will realize the bought the big lie. Pick up a history book and look where your progressivism is gonna take you.

    8. Re:Was it really so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US Government has been pretty much completely retarded (and/or amoral and corrupt) since at least LBJ.

    9. Re:Was it really so bad? by hey! · · Score: 2

      Imagine if a state like Mississippi or Oklahoma had to get a system made? They'd hire a guy named Jom Bob from church to do it. They'd piss away the entire budget before they even found Jim Bob. They'd run it on index cards and toilet paper in type writers with no correction ink.

      Well to be fair the deep-red state Kentucky had a very successful rollout of Obamacare (rebranded as "Kynect"), including it's own health insurance exchange AND medicaid expansion -- the whole Obamacare enchilada.

      Under Obamacare, the federal insurance exchange was never intended to serve the entire country. In fact ideally nobody would have to use it, because states were supposed to set up their own exchanges that would better reflect the needs of their citizens than a federal one would. If you are forced to use the federal exhange, it's because politicians who run your state made that choice for you.

      Of course some states have had their own exchange rollout disasters -- including blue states like Maryland and Oregon. If you're experienced with this kind of project you'd expect that. But others have had very successful rollouts, including a handful of red states like Kentucky.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    10. Re:Was it really so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rather than burn a mod point, I'd add on to that that ANY major software project, especially one that has to integrate so many wildly different back-end systems with differing formats, standards, etc. is prone to go through shake-out periods. Has anyone here had Version 1.0 rollout bug-free, ultra-secure, fully scalable, redundant, and on-schedule? Anyone? Hands-up.....

      ultra-secure: yes. redundant: yes. fully scalable: yes. bug free: share that shit youre smoking lol...
      that said, nobody is upset about the government's lack of perfection, but they are upset about them sytematically making every mistake possible to the extent of doubtful sanity and criminal neglect.

    11. Re:Was it really so bad? by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      To be fair... I have worked on many software projects in my life and have also worked with government software projects. A simple fact of life is that government funded software projects are only given to blood sucking leeches that intentionally underbid and lie their asses off about delivery schedules. Legitimate software houses who actually can plan projects and meet schedules are never evaluated.

      I'll let you in a little secret. Plans and schedules mean exactly dick on government software projects. You'll have idiots and imbeciles with no technical experience making major changes a week before a deliverable. You'll get reports that your software doesn't work when deployed, and find out a week later that they didn't bother to inform you that they decided to move to a completely different environment. You'll get new requirements on the day of delivery. You'll meet deadlines and won't hear anything for days or even weeks until you get some angry email from somewhere asking why a problem that was never reported hasn't been fixed yet. You'll be forced to use their dev environments, but not given the privileges necessary to actually use them. You'll get countless technical decisions made...without anyone actually consulting the technical team. And I'm just getting started.

      It doesn't matter how competent your team may be. If the government side of the project is managed by a bunch of monkeys on meth, you're going to have a bad time. Double that if your company is hell bent on getting their foot in the door that they're willing to bend over backwards just to keep them happy.

      And guess who gets tarred and feather when everything goes to hell? I'll give you a hint. It's not that G15 manager who needs a Garmin in order to find where to put the Charmin.

      A successful government software project requires competence on both sides. It is a rare circumstance when that is the case.

      --
      ~X~
    12. Re:Was it really so bad? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Yes but apart from those, what did the Romans ever do for us?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    13. Re:Was it really so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > church...index cards and toilet paper

      Exactly. Those xians are so stupid as you note. They are all racist and want to murder us minorities. That is the way of their kind. They flood the streets with guns to kill young black men, and they know that by denying them ER care that more of us will die. That is their ultimate plan. They are denying us healthcare in order to kill us.

      Blame your idols the gangster rappers for violence in the streets. If I was the head of law enforcement in the US every gangster rapper and their entourages would be terminated with a bullet in the head. Then if any African-American male was involved in any crime or did not step-up to their responsibility when they impregnated an African-American woman, they'd be hunted down and terminated with a bullet in the head. As for all the "wealthy and high-profile" African-Americans in the US who refuse to accept their failures as a "community" to beat some manners into the low-level African-Americans, they sold out to Uncle Tom as they suckle at the teat of the ruling class.

      The other evening I went to the convenience store and walked in on an armed robbery. The jackass holding the handgun (on its side like in the movies) was an African-Canadian. The shop keeper was Lebanese-Canadian. The dumbass bitch at jackass's side was a Caucasian-Canadian. Now I didn't notice the in-progress robbery immediately because as usual I just headed to the foodstuff I was intending to buy. As I approached the register the jackass began waving the handgun and threatening to shoot everyone while his bitch laughed. The shop keeper defused the situation by handing over a plastic bag with the money inside...as jackass's attention was diverted I grabbed the handgun and kneed him in the genitals before shoving the handgun into his crotch. He was pinned against the counter, his cunt was squealing, and the shop keeper put a plastic bag over jackass's head. I handed the handgun to the shop keeper before proceeding to smash jackass's head into the pole off to the side. Jackass unconscious. Cunt squealing. Police arrived and carted them away.

    14. Re:Was it really so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That certainly sounds a better solution than fed's RHEL RoR with Jekyll and no Hide.

  23. Re: House Committee on Oversight and Government Re by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You're a fucking socialist. Don't doctor your party affiliation and say your "independent"

  24. Website rollos piss Me off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They always get stuck to the roof of My mouth.

  25. Yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but it's all backend stuff, and the backend stuff should not be running on the frontend hardware. Properly isolate the frontend should be plenty secure while passing the information to the backend needed to collate the idenfied persons medical records. Hell you could even give them a warning 'We can forward this information to you for review, but it runs the risk of being viewed by malicious third parties.

    1. Re:Yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and that back end just writes itself, no?
      Let me guess, you're a 'web developer' who just graduated but you should make 100k per year because you know javascript, angularJS and whatever else is running in the browser... right?

      The product is the _entire_ thing... not just the frickin' web site. Dumb ass

      Now where is my cane so I can shake it at you and tell you to get off my lawn!

  26. Compare and Contrast by Required+Snark · · Score: 0
    Affordable Care Act vs F-35 Lightning

    Program cost increases and delays Some selected examples.

    On 21 April 2009, media reports, citing Pentagon sources, said that during 2007 and 2008, spies downloaded several terabytes of data related to the F-35's design and electronics systems, potentially compromising the aircraft and aiding the development of defense systems against it. Lockheed Martin rejected suggestions that the project was compromised, stating it "does not believe any classified information had been stolen". Other sources suggested that the incident caused both hardware and software redesigns to be more resistant to cyber attack. In March 2012, BAE Systems was reported to be the target of cyber espionage. BAE Systems refused to comment on the report, although they did state, "[Our] own cyber security capability can detect, prevent and rectify such attacks."

    ...

    On 21 August 2013 C-Span reported that Congressional Quarterly and the Government Accountability Office were indicating the "total estimated program cost now is $400b—nearly twice the initial cost". The current investment was documented as approximately $50 billion. The projected $316 billion cost in development and procurement spending was estimated through 2037 at an average of $12.6 billion per year. These were confirmed by Steve O'Bryan, Vice President of Lockheed Martin on the same date.

    In 2013 a RAND study found that during development the three different versions had drifted so far apart from each other that having a single base design might now be more expensive than if the three services had simply built entirely different aircraft tailored to their own requirements.

    In 2014, U.S. Senator John McCain blamed cost increases in the program on "cronyism".

    Concerns over performance and safety The very last item is the best.

    In 2006, the F-35 was downgraded from "very low observable" to "low observable", a change former RAAF flight test engineer Peter Goon likened to increasing the radar cross-section from a marble to a beach ball. A Parliamentary Inquiry asked what was the re-categorization of the terminology in the United States such that the rating was changed from "very low observable" to "low observable". The Department of Defence said that the change in categorization by the U.S. was due to a revision in procedures for discussing stealth platforms in a public document. Decision to re-categorize in the public domain has now been reversed; subsequent publicly released material has categorized the JSF as very low observable (VLO).

    ...

    In September 2008, in reference to the original plan to fit the F-35 with only two air-to-air missiles (internally), Major Richard Koch, chief of USAF Air Combat Command’s advanced air dominance branch is reported to have said that "I wake up in a cold sweat at the thought of the F-35 going in with only two air-dominance weapons." The Norwegians have been briefed on a plan to equip the F-35 with six AIM-120D missiles by 2019. Former RAND author John Stillion has written of the F-35A's air-to-air combat performance that it "can't turn, can't climb, can't run"; Lockheed Martin test pilot Jon Beesley has stated that in an air-to-air configuration the F-35 has almost as much thrust as weight and a flight control system that allows it to be fully maneuverable even at a 50-degree angle of attack. Consultant to Lockheed Martin Loren B. Thompson has said that the "electronic edge F-35 enjoys over every other tactical aircraft in the world may prove to be more important in future missions than maneuverability".

    ...

    --
    Why is Snark Required?
    1. Re:Compare and Contrast by cold+fjord · · Score: 3, Funny

      That the F-35 isn't a perfect warplane is well established. On the other hand the "Affordable Care Act" is absolutely useless against the latest Russian and Chinese combat aircraft. Even the elderly Iranian air force is more than a match for the ACA.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    2. Re:Compare and Contrast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is your whining all about ? The F35 has already fought in countless missions to transport enormous amounts of Pork from every U.S. household to Lockheed Martin !

      There has never been such a successful Pork Bomber as this one. It will never fight either against the Russkies nor the Chinese and to roughen up some helpless tinpot dictator, the good old F18s will do.

  27. Re: House Committee on Oversight and Government Re by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Registered independent since 1995, for what that's worth. But registration matters less than philosophy. Here's mine:

    Make me emperor for a day and I could cut the federal budget by half. I don't know your history, but I've killed my share of wasteful federal spending programs. Meanwhile, if you live in DC long enough, you see every free-market-preaching industry come with a tin cup asking for their subsidy. Every one of them: steel, autos, banks... every one of them. Health care/insurance is among the worst.

  28. More people would have joined up by rossdee · · Score: 1

    More people would have joined up
    if they got free Rollo chocolates

    In a similar way, around here they are trying to promote the annual flu shot.
    You get a free Klondike Bar with your flu shot.

    I think a Klondike bar is something that used to be called an "Eskimo Pie" until some PC folks thought the Inuit tribe would be upset.

    1. Re:More people would have joined up by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      n a similar way, around here they are trying to promote the annual flu shot.
      You get a free Klondike Bar with your flu shot.

      I hear they're bringing them shots right out to the trailer park now. The whole Cuyler clan got them shots, except Early, who said it was all a plot and no goddamn body's gonna give him any flu shot because he don't wanna catch the autism.

      Damn Obama...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  29. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by neglogic · · Score: 2, Informative

    Good thing the health care fairy provided all that coverage for free, or else we'd have to talk about the costs of all that new coverage, which you conveniently ignored.

  30. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > BTW, this is emblematic of the Obama administration

    It's emblematic of EVERY administration going back thousands of years. Right wing present that this is something new but their world view seems to be completely uninfluenced by an appreciation of human nature or history.

    For example:

    Augustus was a shrewd and effective manager of his own public image. Itâ(TM)s now easy to take for granted that images of political leaders decorate our currency â" Augustus was among the first rulers to widely disseminate images of his own face on coins.

    Itâ(TM)s hard to imagine even the most ardent Democrats supporting the literal deification of Barack Obama or erecting small shrines in his honor throughout Washington DC. By contrast, after Julius Caesar was posthumously declared a god, Augustus, as his adopted son, became known as the son of god. Along with the other gods, he received dedications at small crossroads shrines throughout Rome.

    http://www.csmonitor.com/Books...

  31. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Democrats helped the House, the Senate, for years under Obama - what is your excuses for those years?
    The GOP is hindering the bankrupting and distraction of civil rights in America... Yes they are. They tried to block Obamacare, but failed to by one vote. If only Ted, (A blond in every pond) Kennedy had died a little bit earlier, it would have never seen the light of day.
    It's the oppositions job to hinder a radical partisan agenda. Obamacare didn't get a single GOP vote. If the GOP were to shove through unpopular legislation without 'bi-partisan support', they would be condemned. Your cognitive bias is showing.

  32. A crazy notion if I ever heard one! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean to say that if you overly-criticize a group of people for too long, they become distracted/obsessed with trying to hide even the stuff you could legitimately criticize?

  33. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    oh... helped=held typos happen

  34. I_Hate_Oabam.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Yep, now we've heard the truth. It has to be true. It's on www. I_Hate_Oabam.com

    Really, this is just another issue of the day, or hour for the full time Obama haters. It will blow over as far as any reporting or caring by 90% of the population in, well, 10 minutes ago. 10% (or maybe 8.23% or may 21.95%) who love to hate Obama will remember about this issue a week from now. By then we have gone through 3 or 19 other *shocking* (not) *shameful* (not) *horrible* (not) new Obama scares. Comparing him to other presidents, um, let's see: Nixon was mostly drunk during the Arab-Israeli War, and Kissinger was calling the shots, Clinton was getting his whistle wet, Bush II was lying to the country about Iraq having Weapons of Mass Destruction...

    And what has the opposition got. Some problems with The Affordable Care Act (based on a Bob Dole and State of Mass. Republican plan; I don't think Obama wrote any of it. A More Accurate Slue against it than Obamacare would be The Health Insurance Company Protection Act). Yawn.

    I have a recommendation to the fear mongering 24/7 hysterical Obama haters. 1. take you sheets off, and read the story about the boy who cried wolf. One of these days Obama may actually do or not do something that deserves screaming shock, hysteria, and I can be there and sell pitchforks and flaming torches (I'm a businessman). In the meantime, try some horehound candy. Great for a sore throat from all your screaming.

  35. Re:House Committee on Oversight and Government Ref by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2

    Someone who can blame Obamacare on Republicans is someone who can blame anything on them.

    I'm sure Republicans are responsible for every bad thing that's ever happened. Like say the Black Death, Microsoft Bob, and Brittany Spears.

  36. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sphealey · · Score: 1

    The Roman government (both Republic and Empire) built roads, aqueducts, and sewers some of which are still in use today 2000 years later. But you know, governments never accomplish anything.

    sPh

  37. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sumdumass · · Score: 1, Troll

    There seems to be cities in which are somewhat majority muslim. Dearborn Michigan I think is one of them. Youtube that and you will see a lot of videos posted by people protesting it.

    But I think the original poster is thinking of the mosque that the boston bombers attended has produced many radicalized muslims and keeps being investigated but ignored by the FBI.

    http://www.usatoday.com/story/...

    http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfro...

  38. Re:House Committee on Oversight and Government Ref by sphealey · · Score: 1

    The Affordable Care Act is working extremely well, with 12 million Americans who previously had essentially no access to health care having been covered this year alone, so I'm not sure where "blame" comes from in your post. Projection perhaps? The ACA's basic design was the Heritage Foundation plan of 1993 which was claimed at that time by Republicans to be a 'free market-based' alternative to the Clinton health care reform proposals. Between 1993 and 2014 it suddenly stopped being free-market? Huh.

    sPh

  39. Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 million by raymorris · · Score: 3, Informative

    Let's assume that 12 million estimate is correct, that due to Obamacare, 12 million people who weren't insured before are now insured. Of course, other people give different estimates, but let's give Obama the benefit of the doubt.

    The net cost of Obamacare to the federal taxpayers is $1.3 trillion (CBO). $1.3 trillion / 12 million people covered = $11.3 million per person.
    I don't think we got a good deal.

    The $11 million per person covered is of course just the direct cost to the federal government. In 2013, we saw the following rate increases due to Obamacare:
    Connecticut: 37% average rate increase
    Florida: 42% average rate increase
    Illinois: 33% average rate increase
    Michigan: 39% average rate increase
    Minnesota: 35% average rate increase

    The trend accelerates in 2014:
    Delaware 100%
    New Hampshire 90%
    Indiana 54%
    California 53%
    Connecticut 45%
    Michigan 36%
    Florida 37%
    Georgia 29%
    Kentucky 29%
    Pennsylvania 28%

    So there's another trillion dollars it cost average Americans, in the form of much higher premiums. A couple TRILLION dollars to (maybe) cover $12 million people. At a cost of around $20 million per person covered, I don't think I'd trumpet that as a victory if I were a Democrat. (And in fact Democrat most candidates are distancing themselves from the mess.)

  40. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My complaint? My family health cost has tripled. That's 3 times what it did cost. Oh yeah, the level of service we get for that extra is not only missing but the quality has gone down dramatically. I suppose you cold say my problem is with the Education Department, somehow they forgot to teach people about the failures, corruption and down right misery of socialism.

  41. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sumdumass · · Score: 4, Informative

    Umm.. The numbers are not even close to 12 million.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/th...

    http://www.nbcnews.com/health/...

    Obamacare seems to have only helped a little under 3% of the people who did not have coverage previously. Even now, there are still problems with it as one of the largest insurance companies in Minnesota is pulling out of the exchange.

    http://www.nbcnews.com/health/...

    Now before you get all pissy, this isn't a swipe at obamacare, it's the facts surrounding it that you seem to have missed and evidence of the GP's statement that "they simply do not have any clue to anything that they are involved with". Evidently, neither do you unless you were listening to them.

  42. Don't know what you're talking about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My mother's deductibles wouldn't change if she switched to one of the 'ObamaCare' plans. They're already in the triple or quadruple digits (depending on what services she's needing.) It's actually so bad that both my parents have decided to sit on their hands until their SSI/Medicare kicks in within the next year or two. And this is coming from people who had 150/mo and no more than 300 dollar deductibles at the turn of the millenium. THAT is how fucked up the current medical situation is in the US.

    Their provider was Kaiser btw.

  43. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by plopez · · Score: 1

    This is par for the course of many software projects I have been on in the private sector. SSDE, Same *&^% Different Employer.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  44. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > it is believed by 97.3% of health care economists

    Whose ass did you pull that number out of? Is "health care economist" even a real title?

  45. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by plopez · · Score: 1

    Yeah the /. department the article is filed under immediately tipped me off to the bias in the article.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  46. Simple Solution: Executive Order by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obama can pin a secret executive order mandating the killing of all employees of the Government Office of Accountability Office and their near and far relatives.

    U.S. Special Forces detachments in the U.S.A. have already been advise of kill order for U.S. citizens.

    The commanding General responded, "Ö Rah".

  47. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by plopez · · Score: 1

    The Dems only held the House 2 of the past 6 years. Possibly longer.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  48. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by nbauman · · Score: 1

    It's hard to imagine even the most ardent Democrats supporting the literal deification of Barack Obama or erecting small shrines in his honor throughout Washington DC. By contrast, after Julius Caesar was posthumously declared a god, Augustus, as his adopted son, became known as the son of god. Along with the other gods, he received dedications at small crossroads shrines throughout Rome.

    What about Ronald Reagan? He was a God, right?

    http://www.ronaldreaganlegacyp...

    The Ronald Reagan Legacy Project was started in 1997 by Grover G. Norquist.

    The Ronald Reagan Legacy Project is committed to preserving the legacy of one of America’s greatest presidents throughout the nation and abroad.

    One of the ways we work to further the legacy of Reagan is by asking the governor of every state in the nation to make a proclamation declaring February 6th, "Ronald Reagan Day." An average of 30 governors a year over the last few years have made such a proclamation, choosing to honor character over partisanship.

    In addition to ensuring that every February 6th is known as “Ronald Reagan Day,” we work to encourage the naming of landmarks, buildings, roads, etc. after Ronald Wilson Reagan. We continue compiling a list of Reagan dedications that remind American society of the life and legacy of President Reagan. Each one of these dedications serve as a teaching moment for those who were not yet alive during his presidency or to grant those who remember him with the opportunity to reflect on his accomplishments. Whether it be the Ronald Reagan Parkway in Indianapolis, IN or Ronald Reagan National Airport in Arlington, VA; each and every dedication will serve as a teaching moment for generations to come. Our goal is to eventually see a statue, park, or road named after Reagan in all 3,140 counties in the United States. The first project that RRLP worked to name after Ronald Reagan was National Airport, in 1998 renamed Ronald Reagan National Airport.

  49. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sphealey · · Score: 1
  50. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by sphealey · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Can't help but noticing you left the duration out of those Breitbert-ized numbers.

    You also ignored the cost of what happens if we _don't_ have 12 million people in reasonably-managed health insurance plans. While people in the US with no insurance plan may not get much care during their lives they usually get pulled into the standard system in their last years and generate huge costs - which could have been managed or avoided with lifelong basic health care. And of course there is the loss of productivity to the economy when people are unable to obtain basic medical care during the productive years of their lives.

    Also about 1437 other factors you left out or simply put a hard right wing glibertarian spin on.

    sPh

  51. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We don't care about the millions of people who's coverage premiums tripled so that drug addicted prostitute with a pre-existing STD could get coverage. The fact that next year half of those people will BE drug addicted prostitutes just means libs will have more constituents.

  52. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Democrats helped the House, the Senate, for years under Obama - what is your excuses for those years?
    The GOP is hindering the bankrupting and distraction of civil rights in America... Yes they are. They tried to block Obamacare, but failed to by one vote. If only Ted, (A blond in every pond) Kennedy had died a little bit earlier, it would have never seen the light of day.
    It's the oppositions job to hinder a radical partisan agenda. Obamacare didn't get a single GOP vote. If the GOP were to shove through unpopular legislation without 'bi-partisan support', they would be condemned. Your cognitive bias is showing.

    LOL...are you talking to yourself there?

    1) "Democrats helped the House, the Senate, for years under Obama" - What does that even mean? Do you mean "held", not "helped"? Are you referring to them holding a 60 seat, fillibuster-proof super majority in the senate for 2 years? If so, then it shows you clearly don't know what you are talking about. Remember the Minnesota race, where Al Franken's victory was contested in court for 6 moonths? Remember Senator Kennedy and his illness (of course you do...as you so tastelessly wished he had died a little earlier), which caused him to stop voting months before he actually died...all the way back in March?

    2) "If only Ted...Kennedy had died a little bit earlier" - yes, I already addressed this statement, but it deserves addressing again. How tasteless can you be. Have some class, will you?

    3) "It's the oppositions job to hinder a radical partisan agenda" - no, it's not. It's their job to represent their constituency, but unfortunately, even when a majority of their constituency supported health care reform, they did everything in their power to stop it from happening. Where were their ideas? How come every time they talked about repealing Obamacare and replacing it, when they were asked what they would replace it with, they could come up with nothing except a few bullet points they would address, none of which were actually any different than Obamacare. Every time they described what they would replace it with, they described Obamacare.

    Of course, I know why they couldn't come up with any other idea. That's because Obamacare actually WAS their idea. It's what they supported years before. It's what Romney actually implemented. The only thing they didn't like about it was that the Democrats supported it. That's been their only ideological purpose over the last 6 years...anything except what the Democrats want. It's why McConnell actually went as far as fillibustering the very bill he proposed when the Democrats unexpectedly decided they'd be agreeable to voting for it.

  53. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by JMJimmy · · Score: 1

    Politics? Darn, I should have read the article - I thought this was about http://obamacare.com/

  54. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sphealey · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://www.cbo.gov/sites/defau...

    "CBO and JCT project that 12 million more
    nonelderly people will have health insurance in 2014
    than would have had it in the absence of the ACA. They
    also project that 19 million more people will be insured
    in 2015, 25 million more will be insured in 2016, and
    26 million more will be insured each year from 2017
    through 2024 than would have been the case without the
    ACA."

    "Relative to their previous projections, CBO and JCT now
    estimate that the ACA’s coverage provisions will result in
    lower net costs to the federal government: The agencies
    now project a net cost of $36 billion for 2014, $5 billion
    less than the previous projection for the year; and
    $1,383 billion for the 2015–2024 period, $104 billion
    less than the previous projection.
    [...]
    Those estimates address only the insurance coverage pro-
    visions of the ACA, which do not generate all of the act’s
    budgetary effects. Many other provisions, on net, are
    expected to reduce budget deficits. Considering all of
    the provisions—including the coverage provisions—
    CBO and JCT estimated in July 2012 (their most recent
    comprehensive estimate) that the ACA’s overall effect
    would be to reduce federal deficits."

    Forbes? Really? REALLY?

    sPh

  55. All Three by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is both both a coverup and incompetence.

    As well as an incompetent coverup it appears.

  56. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Rich0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Politics? Darn, I should have read the article - I thought this was about http://obamacare.com/

    My point is that democracy doesn't put competent people in charge most of the time. That's just the nature of the beast.

    Do you think that anybody else who has been elected in the last 20 years would have pulled off Obamacare? Heck, put Obama in a different period of time and he probably couldn't have done as well as he did either. The forces that move the nation are far bigger than the president.

  57. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sphealey · · Score: 1

    I just can't imagine the level of cognitive dissonance involved in Mr. Anti-Government Norquist leading a campaign to have government-built and operated facilities throughout the land named after St. Ronald Reagan.

  58. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Why do your figures leave out the increases before the ACA was passed?

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  59. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    So there's another trillion dollars it cost average Americans, in the form of much higher premiums. A couple TRILLION dollars to (maybe) cover $12 million people. At a cost of around $20 million per person covered, I don't think I'd trumpet that as a victory if I were a Democrat. (And in fact Democrat most candidates are distancing themselves from the mess.)

    Your math doesn't work out. Care to show your work?

    And nobody liked Obamacare. That is why it was able to be made into a law. The US political system isn't capable of enacting solutions that actually work.

    What solution that provides universal coverage would you advocate? Or, are you more in favor of a system where you generally do well if your parents did well?

  60. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That's not true. We were already paying for those people, it's just that we were paying for them by way of charity care. So, they'd be using the very expensive ER visits rather than the much less expensive office visits.

    And BTW, I was uninsurable in most states. I'm not really that sick, but I have enough minor dings that the insurance companies wouldn't provide coverage. You might want to do some actual research about this before you make up such outrageous claims. The list of people that were uninsurable includes mostly people that you'd never think were uninsurable. Sure, there are drug addicted prostitutes, but they're hardly representative of the group in general.

  61. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by sphealey · · Score: 1

    - - - - - And nobody liked Obamacare. That is why it was able to be made into a law. - - - - - -

    That's a fundamental characteristic of all human endeavors in which diverse viewpoints are summarized into (conceptually) binary action choices. People disagree on stuff. We need to take actions in some areas where we disagree. "Everyone equally unhappy" is just the other half of the Pareto walnut.

    sPh

  62. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

    I just want to point out that all of your citations are from before the enrollment deadline. I think your latest post was from April.

    How about something a little more recent?

    In fact, if you follow the website attacks on Obamacare based on the number of people enrolled, you will find a deluge of articles leading up to April of 2014 and then...silence. You'll still find other attacks, but none based on the number of newly enrolled. Then, in May, you see a lot of articles saying, "Well, OK, a lot of people enrolled, but how many actually paid?". And then, based on insurance company data, it turned out that the people signing up for exchanges actually paid at a higher rate than the general population signing up for health insurance.

    There are good reasons to criticize the ACA, but the number of people who have gotten coverage for the first time because of the law is not one of them.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  63. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sumdumass · · Score: 0

    Do you really not understand what "project" and "estimate" means?

    Really, and you are complaining about Forbes as a link? Well, Forbes was not the only link I provides and the Forbes link was more kind in regards to what was said. I shouldn't even have to post a link because an internet search is just as easy to find the same numbers. Also, if you look on the Forbes link, you will see updates and foot notes where the author actually takes in criticism and corrects himself and the article- and then notes it.

    But please, by all means, tell us where the Forbes article is incorrect, misleading, or somehow worthy of your dismissal other than your political bias which obviously is filling your head with misinformation and making it necessary for you to forget well defined words like project and estimate.

  64. Re: House Committee on Oversight and Government Re by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money to pay for stuff.

    Lets see here... over 5 thousand years of socialism and the most advanced technology is a horse drawn cart. Under 200 years of private propery laws and private property ownership and we are landing on the moon and curing some types of cancer.

    Keep your socialism, there are plenty of places where you can practice that. Let me keep my private ownership of property and my advanced society. If you want to live in a mud hut and wonder if your leader will allow you enough food to live on, thats your choice.

  65. I am shocked, by Krigl · · Score: 1

    shocked that there's incompetence and coverup in government run bussiness.

    --
    Troll 2.0 Fear my asocial networking!
  66. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sumdumass · · Score: 2

    I just want to point out that all of your citations are from before the enrollment deadline. I think your latest post was from April.

    They are all from april 3 or later. The only deadline they were before is the unofficial expansion Obama gave to april 15 because of the failures in the rollout.

    How about something a little more recent?

    Here is something a little more recent but the open enrollment window is lapsed so your emphasis of more recent is a but misleading.

    In fact, if you follow the website attacks on Obamacare based on the number of people enrolled, you will find a deluge of articles leading up to April of 2014 and then...silence. You'll still find other attacks, but none based on the number of newly enrolled.

    That is likely because the open enrollment window closed officially march 31 but was extended to april 15 or something like that for people who started to enroll but didn't finish on time because of the roll-out problems. I would assume the reason for a rash of articles discussing the coverage numbers would be relevant more around the time the enrollment window ended and not 5 months later when you have to either lose coverage otherwise obtained or turn a certain age requiring coverage.

    Then, in May, you see a lot of articles saying, "Well, OK, a lot of people enrolled, but how many actually paid?". And then, based on insurance company data, it turned out that the people signing up for exchanges actually paid at a higher rate than the general population signing up for health insurance.

    Yes, it is funny how people progress their questioning along the time lines of something in order to reflect the current timeline and complaints get brought up as they appear in the time lines. Go figure.

    There are good reasons to criticize the ACA, but the number of people who have gotten coverage for the first time because of the law is not one of them.

    Umm.. I never criticized the PPACA in these posts. I corrected a deluded person who didn't buy into reality. The numbers themselves seems to be what you think is criticism. I seriously think that any other president than Obama, and this entire situation would have had 10 times better of an outcome.

  67. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by raymorris · · Score: 0

    > I can't help but noticing you left the duration out

    That's the ten year cost, per the administration plan. So around $2 million per person per year, assuming cost reductions later as per the Obama administration's plan.
    The short term cost is much higher per year, of course. If we recognize that kicking the can down the road doesn't actually work - that a future Congress will kick it again, the actual costs are likely to be higher, but I wanted to give Obama the benefit of the doubt. It's bad enough based on accepting his numbers - we needn't bother trying to be more accurate and figure whether it'll actually be $30 million or $40 million per person.

  68. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by uncqual · · Score: 1

    Americans who purchased coverage are paying for it

    vs.

    Americans who could not previously afford any health insurance and therefore were essentially locked out from most health care are now being subsidized

    In standard usage, "paying for X" means "paying in full" (try telling your mortgage company that you are "paying your monthly payment" when you are only paying 50% of the required payment and see if the agree with your assessment that you are "paying your monthly payment").

    People do love free stuff of course and most don't care if some other person is forced to pay for what they get for free. We could, for example, increase homeownership (something that some think is good) simply by buying a house for everyone and only making them pay 20% (or whatever) of their income on mortgage, insurance and taxes while the American taxpayers pick up the remainder.

    --
    Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
  69. Well duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > "The evidence includes emails that show Obamacare officials more interested in keeping their problems from leaking to the press than working to fix them. This is both both a coverup and incompetence."

    News flash. The peons worrying about the press are *not* the same peons that are actually writing code to resolve the issues.

    The old saying goes: If the only tool you have is a press release, every problem looks like a press conference.

    Let the PR idiots continue PR'ing and let the coders continue coding.

  70. Emails about ObamaCare / Healthcare.gov by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone know whether all the emails about ObamaCare / Healthcare.gov are accessible for download and review? I am feeling a need for some analysis of the behavior of the various parties.

  71. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bigger than J-LO even.

  72. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My complaint is that I startrd at G-4, fuckweed.

  73. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by uncqual · · Score: 3

    I don't know what the AC's situation is, but some plans that were once available are not. Some people can afford to have what Obama considered "junk plans" but can no longer get them and must pay higher rates for plans they don't want or including coverage for events that can't happen to them. What does a woman who has had her tubes tied (and would happily have an abortion if somehow the operation wasn't really successful) or a post-menopausal woman want with coverage for pregnancy?

    It is almost always better to self insure portions of risk if you can reasonable do do -- why pay middlemen? Do you buy the "extended warranty" on every USB cable you buy from BestBuy or NewEgg? No, because you can easily absorb the cost of replacing it OR, perhaps, you only expect to be using it a few weeks by which time you are pretty sure you will accidentally leave it in a rental car or at a Starbucks by accident so you just don need long term protection.

    --
    Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
  74. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by raymorris · · Score: 0

    > Your math doesn't work out. Care to show your work?

    $1.3 trillion (US) federal tax cost / 12 million people = $11.3 million per person covered.
    Does that look right so far, or did I fat-finger the calculation? That's US trillion, which is different from UK trillion, I believe.

    In addition to the $11.3 million indirect cost to the taxpayers, we have the the significant increase in premium costs since insurance companies now have to cover people who wait until something happens before they buy insurance, and the cost of generally moving away from INSURANCE (protection from catastrophic loss) to having a third- party payer for massage therapy. That cost increase could be anywhere from 25%-140%, depending on where you live and which study you use. One person could make a reasonable argument that the total premium increases minus out-of-pocket reductions is half a trillion, and someone else could make an argument just as strong that it's two trillion. My previous post guesstimated around a trillion. That number isn't solid, of course, but we can certainly say "$11.3 million per patient federal tax cost, plus a lot more in increased premiums".

  75. How do you cast a flattering light on this? by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 3

    What I find ironic is that supposedly one big reason for Obama's electoral success was due to his team's deep understanding of technology, the internet, and social media compared to Republicans and yet they couldn't get a website running properly nor did they have the smarts to hire an industry leader to develop it.

    1. Re:How do you cast a flattering light on this? by sehryan · · Score: 2

      This is making the faulty assumption that Obama was able to bring those same people in to play in building the ACA website. The sad truth is that most of the feds that were involved in the development of the website were probably hired back in the Clinton era, if not back in the Reagan administration, and are so filled with hubris that they think they know better than the people they contracted for their expertise.

      Imagine what it is like to come in to a project with 10+ years in building websites, just to have your professional advice overruled by someone because they just finished reading "Websites for Dummies" and so they obviously know better. Then imagine going through that at least once a week for the entire time you are on the project.

      I didn't work on this project, but I was a federal contractor for long enough to be confident that a large number of the issues stemmed not from contractors working the system, nor from partisan BS, but from incompetent federal employees.

      --
      The world moves for love. It kneels before it in awe.
    2. Re:How do you cast a flattering light on this? by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Worse than a faulty assumption. Cmms and HHS were responsible for the site, not the president's campaign team.

      And I doubt the knowledge domain transfers that much to a site with so many interactions with other sites. Nor to do many business rules.

      It is ignorance combined with lack of thought to consider the two remotely connected.

    3. Re:How do you cast a flattering light on this? by sphealey · · Score: 1

      It appeared from the transition forward that Mr. Obama was (and presumably is) also deeply impressed by the big-time consulting culture (McKinsey and their ilk). That inclination tends not to go too well with a need to get actual work completed.

      sPh

    4. Re:How do you cast a flattering light on this? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      What I find ironic is that supposedly one big reason for Obama's electoral success was due to his team's deep understanding of technology, the internet, and social media compared to Republicans

      No, it's due to him not being a Republican. Personal qualifications might matter in party elections, but after that people are voting for a party, not a person.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    5. Re:How do you cast a flattering light on this? by amxcoder · · Score: 1

      That's because when it was his campaign, he was spending HIS money, and on the ACA website, he was spending YOUR money. See the difference in competence, outcome and total cost?

    6. Re:How do you cast a flattering light on this? by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I highly doubt that. I know a LOT of people who voted for Obama for no other reason than to be part of history in voting for the first African-American president.
      But that wasn't my point at all. The Obama team supposedly made extensive use of technology to focus their efforts and spread their message via what might be called an electron-roots effort. You would think that a team that's savvy about that would have known enough to hire the best people to build the ACA infrastructure. Unfortunately, it now appears that political favoritism ruled the day. That suggests that they were less interested in building the best product than they were in being the administration that built any product.

  76. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by uncqual · · Score: 2

    So, they'd be using the very expensive ER visits rather than the much less expensive office visits.

    And that is simply a problem with the law or hospitals not being willing to say "no". When someone presents with the types of problems that result in "very expensive ER visits rather than the much less expensive office visits", the ER should simply tell them to leave (and have them arrested for trespassing if they refuse) because they are not emergencies - if I call 911 because I want a pizza, they won't deliver it and I may well get in trouble if I keep calling with that request.

    --
    Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
  77. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, you die and nobody gives a shit. Tell the lion females to be nice to the gazelles.
    Or, suck a camel,s dick with hoison sauce. Your call.
     

  78. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know, I'm a grammar Nazi troll. Sorry. Notice the capitoal N.

  79. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

    Governments can accomplish a lot.

    That's not the point here. It's a fact that governments always do their best to cover up their mistakes and self-aggrandize.

    Holding up whatever public administration is in place at the current time in scorn for doing that is political gamesmanship at best, and demagoguery at worst.

    It's inherent in the system (cf Monty Python).

  80. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sycodon · · Score: 2

    Think back to High School.

    Remember the people who were popular?

    What did you think about them?

    Yep, that's what we have now.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  81. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

    Ronald Reagan would not be the first President to be deified.

    Look at the monuments in Washington DC to various Presidents. Washington (Obelisk), Jefferson (Pantheon), Lincoln (Parthenon).

    All of these are designs used by previous cultures in the worship of their Gods.

    We just don't call it that because most of our citizens are nominally monotheistic.

  82. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sycodon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is 12 million the number this week? You can never tell. It goes up and down willy nilly depending on the talking head.

    I bet the reality is they have NO CLUE how many people signed up, paid, or used it.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  83. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by mirix · · Score: 2

    Dearborn is supposedly the most Arab and muslim 'city' in the US (pop 100k, not much of a city). It's only 40% arab, and some percent of that group are Lebanese Christians (the earliest Arab immigrants to the area). Suppose there are some non-arab muslims though. I can't seem to find decent religious demographics in a quick search.

    Canada has been sending a few anglo islam converts to go die in arabia lately. I have no idea what would inspire someone who grew up in Calgary or Winnipeg and got a proper first world education to go martyr themselves for Allah in the third world, but nonetheless it does happen on occasion. The amount is so minuscule it's lost in the noise though.

    I suppose the same deal happens in the US on occasion.

    --
    Sent from my PDP-11
  84. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by PopeRatzo · · Score: 0

    [dailycaller.com]

    Tee hee.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  85. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pfft.. If I could I'd buy Bush junior pretzels everyday for the rest of his "natural" life. With what he spent on getting his chums some no-bid oil-contracts in middle-east the current administration could have already been to mars and back. I think I smell astroturf...

  86. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    John Cook?

    Is that you?

    What? ANOTHER consensus?

  87. I'm wrong, shouldn't figure trillions in my head. by raymorris · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My numbers don't work. Now I'm not sure how I got that number. Perhaps I should use paper and pencil when calculating Obama-sized costs.
    I'm going to show my work like this is fourth grade, so if I blew it again someone can easily point it out.

    Direct federal cost: 1 300 000 000 000
    people covered: 12 000 000
    (roughly double the cost once you include premium increases, but let's start with just the cost we'll pay as federal taxes).

    Cost:

    1 300 000 000 000
    _______________
                                12 000 000

    Start dropping zeroes from both to get reasonable sized numbers for numerator and denominator:

    1 300 000 000 000 dollars to cover
    _______________
                              12 000 000 people

    1 300 000 000 dollars to cover
    ___________
                              12 000

    1 300 000 dollars to cover
    ________
                              12 people

    108 333 dollars to cover
    ______
                              1 person

    With premium increases, maybe $200,000 per person. So that's expensive, but not nearly as expensive as I had first calculated.

  88. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

    Let's assume

    Instead of your napkin calculations, maybe you should look for legitimate estimates.
    Here's the Congressional Budget Office: http://www.cbo.gov/publication/45231

    If you dig around some more, you'll find plenty of other people who have actually run the numbers and explained their forecasts.

    In 2013, we saw the following rate increases due to Obamacare:

    And if the insurance company doesn't spend 80% or 85% of those premiums on healthcare, they have to cut a check and return the excess to their customers.
    Thanks Obama!

    Also, here's a fact check for your numbers: http://www.factcheck.org/2014/04/how-not-to-use-a-survey/
    There's a link to the original survey in there.
    Four of fifty states had a sample size of 8 or greater.
    The other 46 states had sample sizes of 6 or less.
    There's either fuck all for competition in 46/50 states,
    or maybe the numbers you quoted aren't very useful for drawing conclusions.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  89. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by mirix · · Score: 0

    The education department did a fine job. That's why at least half of americans call anything they don't like 'socialism', and assume it is bad thing.

    The problem with obamacare is it isn't socialist enough. The US is too backward to cut out all the insurance crooks, and move to a single payer system. So instead you get forced payment to private companies. How very socialist.

    --
    Sent from my PDP-11
  90. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    capitoal

    LOL! Grammar Nazi Fail!

  91. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Just the fact that your ridiculously stupid comment is getting upvotes only goes to prove what a shithole slashdot has become over the years.

    Any halfwit technically oriented person shouldn't take more that 5 seconds to realize there is no fucking way that Obamacare could cost $11.3 million a person. $11.3 million would be more than enough to give someone not just health care, but housing, food and an upper middle class lifestyle for their entire life, cradle to grave, with money left over to spare for bureaucracy. It's a far far greater number than our per capita debt. Could that possibly be true? No. Think about the massive absurdity of such numbers before you go throwing them around. Don't try to do back-of-the-envelope calculations if you have no fucking ability to distinguish basic orders of magnitude. Or if you're going to let your right-wing bias blind you to the obvious.

    Google would tell you in a second that $1.3 trillion / 12 million = $109,000. Yeah that's still a large number, but you see how that's at least in the ballpark of common sense? Yes, you see how you got schooled in elementary arithmetic by an anonymous coward?

  92. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sycodon · · Score: 1

    Government makes a mess of a program
    Government make s a website that touts the success of that program.

    Do you see where I'm going here?

    After all the lies (go ahead...deny they told us lies) do you really have faith that the stuff they are telling you now is true?

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  93. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by s.petry · · Score: 1

    While this administration has no innocence, this behavior is not new or unique. In my opinion this administration may be more blatant, but not necessarily worse about foreign policy than previous administrations.

    This is the hegelian dialectic in action. People behind the scenes own the candidates placed on the ballots, Americans have not had a real choice in politicians for decades (Ross Perot was the last and a fluke).

    Make no mistake, this administration knows what they are doing with all of these foreign policy decisions. Just like Bush knew damn well what he was doing. The "dumb guy" routine should be obvious by this point, but people still fall for it. Politicians are not stupid, they have the best educations money can buy and have massive think tanks helping them with policies. One person does not generate the policies, they just push them along. In other words, even if GW was not the brightest bulb in the box he did not create things like the Patriot act or war policy for the Middle East. He just executed them.

    The Middle East has been intentionally destabilized. I'm sure that you have heard the phrase "Ordo ab chao", and the only way to reorder things is to make it a chaotic mess.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  94. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sycodon · · Score: 2

    They have repaved the road in front of my subdivision 3 fucking times in the last ten years.

    The water Department has torn up the street in front of my house twice trying to fix a water leak.

    Every time there is a thunderstorm the power goes out.

    Where is Augustus when you need him?

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  95. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by kesuki · · Score: 0

    the real reason republicans hate obama care is simple. it eliminates two very important metrics for keeping people poor.

    first off it means buisnesses can't 'manipulate' cash strapped people to make artificial job growth or contraction simply by hiring more or less people for the same total work hours. this no longer works when you are required to provide heathcare then they have no choice but to give people the hours wages needed to live a good life, instead of making them work to boost or contract the economy.

    prior to obama care the working poor had only quacks peddling fake insurance houses constantly shifting locations and doing many unscrupulus methods to keep the poor from being able to pay for care via insurance. if you were poor enough you could hit the jackpot of qualifying for medicare, for the rest it means payday loans to buy meds and such, and the unscrupulis con artists insurance is slowly beginning to fade away, because of the new law.

  96. You realize that revision is just slightly higher? by raymorris · · Score: 2, Informative

    I used the CBO estimate of $1.3 trillion. You linked to their revised estimate of $1.38 trillion. Yes, you're right, it'll be 6% more expensive than the estimate I used. :rolleyes:

  97. Point Wrong Finger by JimSadler · · Score: 0

    The right wing chokes budgets and agencies are thus short of both staff and equipment as well as basic operating funds. Then when agencies bog down due to inadequate budgets the right wing harps that it is all the fault of the democrats as well as big government. Mrs. Clinton pointed that out in regard to an American embassy being over run. Naturally the right wing wanted to defame Mrs. Clinton so they tried to claim it was all her fault. Then she pointed out that congress had denied monies requested to secure the embassies and they shut up rather quickly. In general people get what they pay for and if they strangle government funding they will get lousy government.

  98. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'll support a small shrine to Obama just as soon as he is dead, like Reagan.

    Can we start next week?

  99. Committee Chair is Evil by Etherwalk · · Score: 1

    Hey, remember the whole "War on Women" bit? That was all Darrell Issa's fault, the chairman of that committee. He's the richest member of the house, and he is interested in finger-pointing because he's operating as a political animal.

    Why does slashdot listen to these blowhards? It's a web site, and it was done badly, and that's the tech discussion. Eight damning emails a politician uses to say that people care about the press coverage (in order to get those politicians their own press coverage) is not worth anyone's time.

  100. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2

    ERs generally cannot turn away emergency patients or deny them care under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA). Even if it appears that they have shown up in a non-emergency state, they still have to be assessed, and they are sometimes turned away for minor things, or at least given prescriptions that they have to pay for and which the hospital is not required to provide. The goal was to combat patient dumping that hospitals were doing for patients that couldn't pay even though they had been severely wounded or were in the midst of labor.

    The issue the AC was talking about it a bit different, though. People with insurance (or some other means to pay) can generally go to a doctor when symptoms start to arise instead of only going to the ER when it becomes an emergency situation. This isn't someone who has a sore throat for a few days, but people who have cancer or other illnesses, and by the time the ER becomes a viable option, they're often too far along to treat, and can't pay for the emergency care they do get to stabilize them, which can require ICU or CCU. That cost then gets absorbed by the hospital and passed on to everyone else instead of a much lower cost being covered earlier on when early access might have saved the patient at lower cost.

    --
    You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  101. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But 3% is huge. Just because more people that that lost their coverage doesn't mean that it wasn't a huge success. Most of those people lost the coverage that they wanted to buy that had a high deductible. It was unfair to allow people to buy the coverage that they wanted because the poor couldn't afford to have that high of a deductible. It is better that everyone got screwed than only the rich be allowed freedom.

  102. Re: House Committee on Oversight and Government Re by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money to pay for stuff.

    Lets see here... over 5 thousand years of socialism and the most advanced technology is a horse drawn cart. Under 200 years of private propery laws and private property ownership and we are landing on the moon and curing some types of cancer.

    Keep your socialism, there are plenty of places where you can practice that. Let me keep my private ownership of property and my advanced society. If you want to live in a mud hut and wonder if your leader will allow you enough food to live on, thats your choice.

    Where's my '-1 ignoramus' mod when I need it?

    You have absolutely no historical perspective, none of the "points" you're making have any basis in reality. For pity's sake, this should be your motto.

  103. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If a hospital ever turns someone away for what is perceived to be a non-emergency, and then that person ends up having complications from said issue and loses life or limb, you can bet that someone is going to own their ass in a lawsuit. The alternative is for the hospital to do enough of an evaluation to make an adequate diagnosis, by which point, they might as well just complete the treatment and evaluation.

  104. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by _0x783czar · · Score: 1

    But undoubtedly not bigger than Beyonce. Nothing is.

    --
    ~theCzar
  105. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

    Obamacare seems to have only helped a little under 3% of the people who did not have coverage previously.

    The NBC News article says that 5 million people had insurance who did not have it before. If that's only 3% of the people who didn't have insurance, it would require that approximately 166 million people--half of the country--not have insurance before.

    What happened was there was a drop in the uninsured rate of about 3% from around 15% to around 12%. That's about 20% of the people who did not have insurance before now having it. As the penalties go up, the uninsured rate is expected to go down even further.

    --
    You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  106. Partisan bickering by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

    Fingerpointing is more important than solutions. This is a common and deep-rooted problem in politics, one that crosses party lines without pause. We have to stop this incompetence... What's the best way to accomplish this? I know! Let's start bickering about whether the Democrats or Republicans are at fault!

    --
    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    1. Re:Partisan bickering by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      At least this is a simpler case than most for assigning responsibility. Obamacare was written and voted into law purely by Democrats, and a Democratic administration executed the law. The Republicans had no hand in it.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    2. Re:Partisan bickering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only a deluded fool would think like that. The Democrats watered it down as much as possible to try and get the Republicans to go along with it. A pure Democrat bill would have been far far different. It's just a pity they were so cowardly and didn't have the balls to do it properly.

    3. Re:Partisan bickering by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      You're deluded if you think that. The Progressive lobbyists and Democrats that wrote the bill are the ones that had to water it down and put state level bribes in it to get Democrats to vote for it. The Republicans couldn't be bribed, and knew better than to vote for it. It is a bill owned by Democrats, lock, stock, and barrel.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    4. Re:Partisan bickering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HaHaHa, the democrats at least tried to drag you into the 19th century knowing the republicans would resist all the way. Because of 'freedoms' or 'terrorists' no doubt. Every other country in the world can get something like this done but yours. The idiotic republicans (like theres another kind) even gave up on free money just so they could say they were against the plan, so they could pander to their knuckledraggers come election time. It's comical :)

    5. Re:Partisan bickering by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      The US already has a system like "the rest of the world" with its Veterans Administration hospital system. Just like "the rest of the world" people die waiting for care, and the employees try gaming the system to make their stats look good. You see similar things going on in the NHS, and other similar systems.

      Patients facing eight-hour waits in ambulances outside A&E departments

      I don't think everyone wants that.

      And you're right, the Democrats did drag the US into a 19th century plan, unfortunately before that the US had a 20th/21st century system. The Democrats tried to "fix" what was at most a 15% problem by seizing control and screwing with 100% of it, and making a hash of it. But at least they own it.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    6. Re:Partisan bickering by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Maybe you could look into this too.

      France heat wave death toll set at 14,802

      The new estimate comes a day after the French Parliament released a harshly worded report blaming the deaths on a complex health system, widespread failure among agencies and health services to coordinate efforts, and chronically insufficient care for the elderly

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    7. Re:Partisan bickering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are just falling further and further behind. The rest of the world can't wait until you get a republican back in charge of everything, it will be soooo funny to watch. Like one of those very bad reality tv shows people watch just too see how messed up Americans truly are. Take away healthcare and food stamps for the poor and watch 10's of millions of Americans starve and die of easily preventable diseases. It will be like Africa all over again, maybe the Europeans or the Chinese will give you some of their left over food, send a few doctors over to treat your sick and dying for you.

    8. Re:Partisan bickering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you could look into this...
      During a severe heat wave that hit Chicago between July 11 and July 27, 1995, 800 heat-related deaths were recorded on death certificates in Cook County over a period of 5 days.
      Hmm 1 county and only 5 days and only official medical reports.
      It is well-documented that many deaths associated with extreme heat are not identified as such by the medical examiner and might not be correctly coded on the death certificate.
      Scale that up to a country and a few weeks and you've got yourself an even bigger disaster on your hands than the French. What was the US's excuse?
      Obama not doubt, and his liberal agenda?
      No, aggravating factors were inadequate warnings, power failures, inadequate ambulance service and hospital facilities, and lack of preparation.

  107. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

    So what you're saying is they should delay care until it becomes an emergency? Or are you saying if they don't get treated the problem will go away?

    What you really want to say is that they don't deserve to be treated and should rot in the streets. Go on, let it out.

    --
    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
  108. Re:I'm wrong, shouldn't figure trillions in my hea by Iamthecheese · · Score: 3, Informative

    You forgot to include the economic boost from the people now able to return to work faster/not dying/getting preventative care so they never get sick. Also the lowered cost of care for people who now can get treated before it becomes an emergency. Most of the cost of Obamacare is recognizing costs that were, until now, hidden.

    --
    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
  109. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Jeeeb · · Score: 1

    It is not only the Obamacare - everything else, from Syria to ISIL to Afghanistan to Europe to Islamization of America to you name it - everything that Obama has touched on it turned into a mess

    I'm sure there are lots of valid criticisms of the Obama presidency but I'm not sure his foreign policy is so easy to fault. I mean, what exactly would he have been better of doing in any of those places?

    What exactly was he meant to do in Iraq/Syria? Undo the decision to invade Iraq? Fix hundreds of years of tribal and religious divisions, which had already torn appart other neighbouring countires? Pump weapons and cash to some different assuredly better rebel group in Syria?

    Building a coalition of local forces and providing aerial support / special forces support seems to be about the only sane path that doesn't get America (and its partners) even deeper into a massive mess.

    Ditto for Ukraine. What should he have done? Or to put it differently what actions should he have taken to better suit the national interest of the United States - a very powerful but still very limited player? The reality is the problems have existed since long before Obama became president and he is ultimately as powerless to influence events as his predecessor was to influence events in Georgia. He has actually come out far more forcefully than Bush did in 2008. Current American sanctions are actually damaging to Russia and America has managed to lead an unwilling Europe into sanctioning Russia as well.

    Then there is Afghanistan. What would you consider the right path there? The original objectives of the war - kill Osama and neuter Al Qaida had been achieved and he chose to withdraw. Was this the wrong decision? If now was the wrong time then when would have been the right time?

  110. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Clearly, you have not met Iggy Azelea yet...

  111. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    so you want the people who are really sick to use the jail / prison system to take care of them at an even higher cost to us all?

  112. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To be so full of shit, you must live in a septic tank.

  113. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Jeeeb · · Score: 5, Informative

    $1.3 trillion (US) federal tax cost / 12 million people = $11.3 million per person covered. Does that look right so far, or did I fat-finger the calculation? That's US trillion, which is different from UK trillion, I believe.

    As has already been pointed out you were off by a factor of 100 and that's assuming the basis of your calculation is correct. It isn't.

    Here is the actually CBO report: https://cbo.gov/publication/45...

    They estimate 1.4 trillion over the next __10 years__ with a net cost of $36 billion in 2014. 36 billion for 11 million people is approximately $3300 per person per year. Without considering inflation that is about $33,000 per person over 10 years.

    For comparison the US goverment in 2012 spent $4075 per person on healthcare (http://stats.oecd.org/index.aspx?DataSetCode=HEALTH_STAT#).

    On a side note, European nations providing free healthcare to their entire population spent about $3500 (Purchasing Parity USD) per person in 2012. Adding in private expenditures and the US spent about 2~2.5x the amount per person on healthcare as comparible nations in Western Europe / Australia / Japan and generally achieved worse out comes in pretty much all categories.

  114. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do thei by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're right. It's not socialism. It's fascism.

  115. Why didn't we know?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If only someone in congress could have told us beforehand that Obamacare would cause so many problems - like told us that before it was finally passed. ... Oh wait.

  116. Re:I'm wrong, shouldn't figure trillions in my hea by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

    You forgot to include the economic costs of people having their hours cut so they no longer qualify for benefits and end up working two part time jobs without benefits to make ends meet. You left out the costs of businesses cutting jobs and locations, and refusing to expand, to avoid the fines, penalties, and costs associated with Obamacare. You left out the costs of people that had benefits but lost them due to companies being forced to drop benefits due to the unnecessary costs forced on them if they offer healthcare due to Obamacare. You left out the stifling of innovation due to the punitive costs and structure of the medical device tax. You forgot to include the cost of trying to force people to violate their conscience as Obamacare is doing.

    And perhaps most important, you forgot to include the dangerous precedent of allowing the Federal government to directly force nearly everyone to go buy a very expensive service specified at the whim of the government and its bureaucrats.

    What will you have to say if the next administration decides to enforce the militia clause by requiring every adult not convicted of a felony to purchase a $800 rifle and 200 rounds of ammunition and keep it locked in their homes, available for yearly inspection? Not much different than Obamacare, which is now enforced by the IRS. Well, actually that is probably a lot cheaper than most people's Obamacare bill.

    . Most of the cost of Obamacare is recognizing costs that were, until now, hidden.

    Obamacare is creating plenty of new costs all by itself. It is been a debacle and it has barely started. It will be inflicting plenty more damage on the economy and society in the years to come baring a repeal.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  117. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

    My point is that Government doesn't put competent people in charge most of the time. That's just the nature of the beast.

    FTFY

    --
    Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
  118. Re: Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mil by Bartles · · Score: 1

    Why are you acting like the ppaca is a good law? Like HHS did a good job of enacting the law. Like the administration has done a good job marketing the law. Are you nuts? This law and everything about it is utter shit. This law hurts people. It hurt me. Please. Move to Canada.

  119. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

    $1.3 trillion (US) federal tax cost / 12 million people = $11.3 million per person covered.
    Does that look right so far, or did I fat-finger the calculation? That's US trillion, which is different from UK trillion, I believe.

    As has already been pointed out you were off by a factor of 100 and that's assuming the basis of your calculation is correct. It isn't.

    Here is the actually CBO report: https://cbo.gov/publication/45...

    They estimate 1.4 trillion over the next __10 years__ with a net cost of $36 billion in 2014. 36 billion for 11 million people is approximately $3300 per person per year. Without considering inflation that is about $33,000 per person over 10 years.

    For comparison the US goverment in 2012 spent $4075 per person on healthcare (http://stats.oecd.org/index.aspx?DataSetCode=HEALTH_STAT#).

    On a side note, European nations providing free healthcare to their entire population spent about $3500 (Purchasing Parity USD) per person in 2012. Adding in private expenditures and the US spent about 2~2.5x the amount per person on healthcare as comparible nations in Western Europe / Australia / Japan and generally achieved worse out comes in pretty much all categories.

    Also to be factored into those long term costs is the proportion of people in the population who will be coming of the age where they need to purchase healthcare - currently circa 15-20 million or so. Factor that they're distributed along the same demography and that's a 800,000 people a year who can be expected to directly benefit (i.e. have health insurance, where they previously wouldn't) each year over the next 10 years, not accounting for people who are likely to benefit from increased competition etc. via other mechanisms (of which the healthcare.gov website is one of them).

  120. Re:You realize that revision is just slightly high by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

    Few trillion here, few trillion there... starts to add up to real money.

    --
    Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
  121. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    Forbes? Really? REALLY?

    It's called "journalism." Maybe you've heard of it? There's a whole amendment to the Constitution devoted to protecting it.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  122. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by cold+fjord · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I wouldn't worry about it. Once a Republican is back in the Oval Office the MSM will be interested in journalism again so there will be more places to find corroborating stories. Besides, the MSM won't have much choice, they'll need a break - carrying all that water wears on the arms and Obama has called for more than most. If only his presidency had turned out as well as Jimmy Carters. If only ...

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  123. Keep in mind who controled the report by ZeroSerenity · · Score: 1

    Because of the political dynamics in the House (Republicans who are critical of the ACA outnumber democrats), be sure to take what is written with a canister of salt.

    --
    For those who seek perfection there can be no rest on this side of the grave.
  124. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you smell isn't "astroturf" but bullshit, coming from you. Why don't you look into Iraq's oil contracts and who won them? I'll give you a hint: check Europe and China. I hope all of your politics aren't based on similar BS.

  125. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you think that anybody else who has been elected in the last 20 years would have pulled off Obamacare

    They were smart enough not to try.

    Heck, put Obama in a different period of time and he probably couldn't have done as well as he did either

    Obama is hands down the worst president so far in my lifetime. Even Jimmy Carter was better and that's saying something.

    The forces that move the nation are far bigger than the president.

    What a lame excuse. President Obama is a pompous, preening and vainglorious windbag, in the best Harvard tradition, who doesn't know a damned thing about how to run anything, least of all the United States. The only bright spot is that the people who voted for him are still taking it on the chin economically while the rest of us enjoy our stock profits. Maybe they'll learn their lesson this time and think more carefully about it before they vote in 2016, but I'm not holding my breath. After all, the working class seem to be suckers for self imposed economic punishment with their recent election choices.

  126. Re:Ha ha ha ha ha !!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Millions of people that had health insurance lost it due to Obamacare. Some companies that had been offering it to entry level and part time employees were forced to drop it as a result of the Obamacare mandates. At the same time many others kept their health coverage but cut the hours of many emmployees below the level needed to qualify for coverage. Now the people that had coverage and lost it due to hours being cut are having to work two jobs and still have no benefits. You can add to that jobs lost when companies cut jobs to get under the Obamacare thresholds to avoid fines and added costs. The list of FAIL from Obamacare is far longer than that. It's almost as if they didn't read it before passing it, and had lobbyists writing it. Well that's right, they didn't read it before passing it, and did have lobbyists help write it.

    Center For American Progress President Shares Part In Obamacare: "I Helped Write The Bill"

    There is plenty of major FAIL there, and it all belongs to the Democrats.

  127. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by fustakrakich · · Score: 2

    And then... you vote for them again, and AGAIN! Is this a face palm moment or not?

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  128. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this no longer works when you are required to provide heathcare then they have no choice but to give people the hours wages needed to live a good life, instead of making them work to boost or contract the economy.

    Which explains perfectly the explosion of part time work and software controlled dynamic scheduling. Would you say that the newly hired part timers at Walmart have the hours and wages needed to live a good life? No? Well then, perhaps you need to take a look around. You may believe or want to believe that that will be the result of ObamaCare, but you know what? That's not what's actually happening.

    prior to obama care the working poor had only quacks peddling fake insurance houses constantly shifting locations and doing many unscrupulus methods to keep the poor from being able to pay for care via insurance

    Before ObamaCare the working poor either had no insurance or they were on Medicaid. The "fake insurance" meme is a myth of the left. The market for individual insurance before ObamaCare was miniscule to the point of insignificance. Most people either had coverage through their jobs, if they were lucky, or Medicare if they were poor enough or they did without. The suggestion that large numbers of poor people were being tricked into buying "fake insurance" is laughable. They had no money to spend on insurance, bad or otherwise, and most of them still don't to this day.

    and the unscrupulis con artists insurance is slowly beginning to fade away, because of the new law.

    If you think that this will improve your access to healthcare, think again. That's a big problem with ObamaCare that most people don't yet understand. Your insurance buys nothing if there aren't any doctors or hospitals willing to sell you medical care at the mandated prices. Have you noticed the large numbers of concierge medical centers being opened recently without emergency rooms? This is the American answer to the checkbook clinic in Canada. Those with money to pay for it will get good care, while those on Medicare or ObamaCare will get crappy rationed care. It's already beginning to happen. In ten years or less the people will finally understand that the Affordable Care Act was nothing of the sort.

  129. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by nbauman · · Score: 0

    Nancy Reagan: I'll have the meat loaf.

    Waiter: And the vegetable?

    Nancy Reagan: He'll have the meat loaf too.

  130. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

    It's the magic 97% consensus. Because 99% would be too obvious.

    --
    If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
  131. What???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "War on Women" is a Democrat campaign scam - the Obama administration itself (and the Democrats in congress too) have been caught paying their female staffers less than their male staffers.

    As for Issa's wealth... and whether it's "bad", let's see here:

    Issa built his own wealth by starting and running businesses BEFORE going to Washington

    The Kennedys (beloved by Democrats) all inherited their vast fortunes from their prohibition-era alchohol smuggler patriarch (whether you like that law or not, Joe senior was a criminal and the family fortune was built on crime dollars). This would be like somebody today building a financial empire on drug money, then after drug legalization pretending that the money was "clean" without regard to all the crime and dead bodies that contributed to the stash.

    former Senator John Kerry (now SecState) got rich by marrying a rich widow.

    Senator John McCain got rich by marrying a girl rich with inherited wealth

    Senator Jay Rockefeller (D-W. Va.) inherited a MOUNTAIN of money from a so-called "robber-baron" and then, in one of the planet's most hypocritical acts, struts around pontificating against the wealthy (while hanging-onto that inherited wealth and all the power it bought him).

    Politics is an expensive game, so more and more of the members go there already wealthy, but most politicians who go to Washington NOT rich, (and spend MILLIONS on campaigns for jobs that pay $174K per year) somehow amazingly end-up quite wealthy after only several years. There are many ways this happens; members of congress, for one example, are exempt from "insider trading" laws (they can hear things about companies and markets, even in closed-door meetings, and then call their investors and place orders). Many of them sit on comittees where they direct taxpayer funds... and direct those funds to companies run by their relatives, like Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) is an example, Former Speaker Pelosi (D-CA) and congresswoman Chellie Pingree (D-Maine) (Who both have rich husbands who are investors - remember that insider trading exemption??).

    1. Re:What???? by Etherwalk · · Score: 1

      "War on Women" is a Democrat campaign scam

      Of course, but it happened because Issa was stupid enough to use an all-male panel (e.g. priests) to have a hearing on women's issues.

  132. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BINGO. Leftist pussies never care about results; all they care is about "selling results". Or the "spin".

    That is also how HP Co went into the drain. Engineers who talked about real problems were ostracized. But there obviously is justice.

  133. Ok, Obamabot, I'll give you a few hints: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. I and every single person I know now pays MORE for crappier coverage than before.

    2. This law and this Supreme Court jointly established a new power of the Federal Government: you may now be forced to buy whatever commercial product the government orders you to buy. This is the biggest leap forward for crony capitalism in human history and you'd better hope nobody you dislike ever becomes President and decides to force you to buy stuff his supporters and friends want to make you buy

    3. This law destroys the basic idea of insurance. Insurance is a bet; the person buying it bets he will have a disaster he cannot afford, and the person taking that bet is betting that the person has enough self-interest in avoinding the disaster that he will do his best to avoid it. Under Obamacare, the insurer is required to "take the bet" even after the disaster has occurred (when it's clearly a 100% certainty). This is the "pre-existing condition" garbage... pre-existing conditions are a real problem but it SHOULD have been handled as a separate issue (perhaps as a national "high-risk" style program. If you forced insurance companies to sell policies to people who have already crashed their cars, or home owners who have already burned their homes down you would completely trash those markets as well. It will take years (thanks in part to Obama's illegal delays in implementing all the bad parts that would politically harm him) for this all to "shake out" but the ACA will have really nasty long-term implications for the entire economy.

    4. The law stripped hundreds of billions of dollars out of Medicare in order to pay for other parts of the program, eliminating certain forms of coverage (this hurt my parents)

    5. The law introduced so much uncertainty into business that it has fundamentally shifted the nature of the US workforce - now many people hold multiple part-time or temporary jobs (due in part to Obamacare mandates that kick-in in varying levels of severity based on how many people a company employs

    6. The law requires insurers to only offer certain types of policies and then orders Americans to buy them (so much for "choice" and freedom). This is evil and anti-American to the core.

    7. The law introduces a new concept in America: months of the year when Americans are forbidden from buying health insurance. In 2014 it was against federal law for an Americna to buy health insurance during the summer unless they had a "life-altering event" (like marriage, divorce, a baby, a death, etc). We USED to be a "free people" living in a "free country". You can buy car insurance, house insurance, boat insurance, life insurance, etc... but NOT health insurance. This alone is despicable and fundamentally un-American.

    The real problem most Americans used to have with healthcare was the COST (which the Obamacare law does not directly address). Insurance was just the way most people covered that cost - and what Obamacare primarily does is screw with the way people get that insurance, the specific coverage people may lawfully buy, and then forces them to buy it (to the benefit of many of Obama's cronies who met behind closed doors with Obama, Reid, and Pelosi during the months the plan was crafted)

    I could go on, but if these examples alone are not enough, your brain is so pickled in Obamajuice that you will never "get it" (you should probably go to what you no-doubt would see as paradise: North Korea)

  134. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, they also invented Secret Police, Backstabbing an Sexual Perversion. Stuff which destroys Germanic Peoples to the present day. Should I say "fuck that" ?

  135. You are dangerously dishonest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, because you claim the Republicans "sobotaged it" - a proven lie: NO REPUBLICAN has been prosecuted for any activity related to "sabotaging" it... every Republican governor who did not step into the trap of creating a "state exchange" and "expanding medicare" dod so in strict compliance with the Obamacare law. Democrats and their lawyers and lobbyists wrote the law with those escape clauses to trick the public into thinking that they were giving people "choice" instead of totalitarian dictates, and they assumed that if they front-loaded the monster with federal dollars a bunch of short-sighted governors would happily step into the trap. In the years ahead, as the federal dollars are removed from the states (by order of the Obamacare itself) any state that went along with Obamacare will have SERIOUS financial problems and need to boost state taxes.

    Second, you want to put "Republicans in prison for not allowing us to have health insurance". This is VILE; it's improper to jail people without a conviction, which we do not do without a trial, which we do not do without evidence a law has been violated. It's also extremely dishonest: Republicans want everybody to be ably eo choose and buy the insurance they want in a free marketplace (it's called "freedom" and "liberty") and have proposed many plans over the years to enable everybody, even the poor, to do just that.... but Democrats have opposed many of these plans because they have had a decades-old dream of government-run "national healthcare" that they have always wanted to implement. Nothing gives politicians more dreams of power over the poulation than the idea of controlling who lives and who dies... The politician who controls your access to doctors and medicine has you in his hand.

    1. Re: You are dangerously dishonest by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 1

      Politics sabotaged it. Representatives on both sides added as many ear marks as possible and otherwise too many cooks spoiled the soup.

      If you look at the original proposal, it wasn't nearly this bad. In fact, most of the current issues with the system weren't likely to have been issues with the original system. Instead of ditching and and saying "fuck it", the administration got a system in place that hopefully can be patched and fixed in the future. I have little faith in that.

      Obama's mistake wasn't that he wanted people to be healthy and he wanted everyone to have to pay instead if just giving free healthcare to anyone who couldn't afford it (how it was before). His mistake was not bullying back.

      I hope whoever is next... Republican or democrat can show more strength and say "this isn't working... We're going to fix it. Anyone who argues with me, I'll destroy in the press".

  136. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Barsteward · · Score: 0, Troll

    "Obama is hands down the worst president so far in my lifetime." fuck me, you think George W Bush was better when he left such an economic mess for the next person to clear up, not to mention starting illegal wars? Please don't vote next time

    --
    "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  137. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by khallow · · Score: 2

    A single payer system like Medicare/Medicaid?

  138. Do you even know any facts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The right wing chokes budgets and agencies are thus short of both staff and equipment as well as basic operating funds.

    Has not happened. This is why TEA Partiers are so mad at John Boener... in the four years he has been Speaker of the House, Boener has fully-funded everything (including Obamacare) and that even includes last fall. In the fall of 2013 when the House GOP tried to limit Obama, he refused to negotiate (and publicly announced this on national TV) and he shut the government down. Boener collapsed in tear and gave Obama ALL his funding. The final demand on Obama the GOP had made was a legal delay to the implementation of part of Obamacare - something he refused, but did himself anyway months later out of political expediency WITHOUT the legitimacy of a law enabling the action (the employer mandate, had it not been delayed, was going to kick-in now and cause millions to lose their employer-sponsored health insurance NOW, before the November congressional elections but will now happed next year and hw will dishonestly blame the Republicans...)

    "Then when agencies bog down due to inadequate budgets the right wing harps that it is all the fault of the democrats as well as big government. Mrs. Clinton pointed that out in regard to an American embassy being over run. Naturally the right wing wanted to defame Mrs. Clinton so they tried to claim it was all her fault. Then she pointed out that congress had denied monies requested to secure the embassies and they shut up rather quickly."

    This is a total documented lie, Obama's state department people testified under oath that funding had NOTHING to do wth Benghazi - they had plenty of money and even spent some on electric cars for embassies in Europe

    "In general people get what they pay for and if they strangle government funding they will get lousy government."

    This sounds right... but is not. Like so many simple sayings it is untethered to reality. Our government is currently taxing and spending hundreds of billions of dollars more per year than at any time before in history. The US Government used to spend a much smaller portion of GDP on government, and most of that money was spent on national defense. Now the government eats nearly 40% of GDP and much of it is social spending.

  139. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear Retard,

    It's called a "Shift" key. You might have heard of it. It was in all the papers.

    HTH

    (BTW, I am glad to see you are at least using paragraphs now. The adjustment to your meds is really helping)

  140. Committee Headed by Darrell Issa? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    ...get out the big-grained salt shaker.

  141. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think your village is looking for you.

  142. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You forgot your faggy little "sPh" sig.

  143. Apollo 11, or 13? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Let's have some perspective here: this is the first time a website of this magnitude and complexity has been created on the federal level, at least any that had to be completed within a relatively short time-frame.

    1. Re:Apollo 11, or 13? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Who gives a flying fuck?! First time or not, the private sector has and does complicated software for a living. It in fact defines the industry. But somehow because the Federal Government is a clusterfuck, they deserve a pass with some grand prestigious comparison to Apollo 11 or 13? If that's the case, Google and the rest have already invented Warpdrive that can go to 8!

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    2. Re:Apollo 11, or 13? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Actually, private sector projects of this magnitude tend to not entirely succeed. From what I've read, the ACA website is actually coming in a bit better than average.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  144. F-35 vs. ACA by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    F-35 did at least one thing right: didn't depend on a big website.

    1. Re:F-35 vs. ACA by Required+Snark · · Score: 1
      Wrong again. The software is screwed up as well. From the same Wikipedia page:

      In November 2010, the Center for Defense Information estimated that the program would be restructured with an additional year of delay and $5 billion in additional costs. On 5 November 2010, the Block 1 software flew for the first time on BF-4. As of the end of 2010, only 15% of the software remained to be written, but this was reported to include the most difficult sections such as data fusion. In 2011, it was revealed that 50% of the eight million lines of code had been written and that it would take another six years to complete the software to the new schedule. By 2012, the total estimated lines of code for the entire program (onboard and offboard) had grown from 15 million lines to 24 million lines.

      Wikipedia doesn't have any more recent information about how the software is going, but according to the above the expected completion date is 2017. The estimate for the number of lines of code was to have gone from 15 to 24 million as of 2012. Have you ever heard of a project of that size getting smaller and finishing on schedule? Or actually working on the delivery date?

      If you RTFA you will also find out about how early incorrect software design/simulation causes significant problems, delays and higher costs later on in the program. So the software troubles were of the same scale as the other failures.

      So the ACA is worse how? And who is raising hell in the congress (except McCain)? Go any search you a Google, and you will come back empty handed. But whining (and lying) about the ACA is the Republican national pastime, rather then, say actually trying to govern the country.

      And that is why it's called "Compare and Contrast".

      --
      Why is Snark Required?
  145. Government is the definition of icompetent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think we should want less government simply because they do anything so poorly. Besides the fact that the Affordable Care Act affected not only a few in a positive way, we should also realize the negatives such as how many lost health care, how much per person the subsides cost, and how much wasted money was appropriated to the ACA in order to fix what should have done right in the first place. Their is no doubt Obama and his staff are more about image then substance.
    Its all been smoke and mirrors from Obama's campaigns to his abilities as a leader. We as American's deserve a President with better credentials then just a speech maker. Obama's biggest mistake was to appoint people incapable of doing the job they were appointed too. Then it was Obama's mistake not to realize these bad appointments and fire them for his own saving grace. He basically created the problems of his administration then preceded to do nothing about it. That is incompetence at its best! We could have found much cheaper ways to offer health plans to those who needed them without the excessive waste of a government program. This only adds to our debt and reduces the effectiveness to those who truly need help. It will of course be supported by a uneducated and government reliant society who see no other solution in life then from their government.

  146. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

    That's not the point here. It's a fact that governments always do their best to cover up their mistakes and self-aggrandize.

    As opposed to companies which self aggrandize and do their best to cover up their mistakes?

    Seriously you can generalize that to:

    PEOPLE do their best to self aggrandize a corollary of which is covering up mistakes.

    Singling out the goverment (made of people, just like Soylent Green) as opposed to companies (also Soylent Green) makes it look like you have an axe to grind. Do you?

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  147. fedgov incompetence due to affirmative action by leftistconservative · · Score: 2

    I work for the fed govt. Affirmative action/racial preferences is why fed govt cannot do anything. Blacks are way way overrepresented in fed govt employees, and many if not most of them do not do as much work as whites because the managers are afraid of racial discrimination complaints. Same goes for contractors.

    1. Re:fedgov incompetence due to affirmative action by Required+Snark · · Score: 0

      My stock question for the likes of you: do you keep your KKK robes hung up in the closet where they will not get wrinkled but someone might see them, or do you fold them up and put them in a drawer so they will remain hidden and need to be ironed?

      --
      Why is Snark Required?
    2. Re:fedgov incompetence due to affirmative action by binkx · · Score: 1

      I've worked for the feds for 44 years. This is absurd. You're just another racist moron spewing nonsense. Back to your cave.

  148. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's the difference between Bush's illegal wars and Obama's illegal wars?

    In terms of the economy, Obama has done at least as much damage over time, based on his own administration's charts, even. Remember all those rosy predictions?

    --
    The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
  149. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Back in 2008, I only expected Obama to be as bad as Jimmy Carter. He surprised me by having all the badness of Bush (Dubya), Carter, and Nixon.

  150. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Also, the "economic mess" at the end of Bush's term was in large part due to the collapse of securities based on bad mortgages that were encouraged by Democrat members of Congress, in particular Barney Frank. In particular, they wanted to call it racist to deny loans to people who clearly had no ability to pay them off, using the race card by claiming it was "redlining". And it is also possible that they expected the timing of these loans imploding to happen at the end of Bush's term. While you can blame Bush for our presence in the mid-east because he was actively leading that, it's a much farther stretch to blame the economy on him. However, I do put the blame that we are still in such a bad economy almost six years later on Obama's policies. And now he wants his own "illegal wars".

  151. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > http://www.md-health.com/Pregnancy-After-Tubal-Ligation.html

    Sometimes, the surgeon screws up.

  152. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you want to come up with your own numbers or do you just want to bitch? "Common sense"? This is the US government you're talking about. We had to pass it to find out what was in it (thanks, Nancy Pelosi), and now you don't even want to take the time to find out what's in it.

  153. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In what span of time did your costs triple? My insurance costs have gone up every year for the last 17 years (since I graduated from college). There was no noticeable increase in that increase this year.

    Sounds like you have a shitty provider.

  154. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

    What solution that provides universal coverage would you advocate?

    1) Leave the private health insurance market completely alone.

    2) Lower the age of eligibility of Medicare to zero. Do that gradually (five years per year, for instance) if politics require such a compromise. Raise Medicare taxes as required to cover the increased number of people.

    Change Medicaid eligibility so that anyone under 18 is eligible, until such time as they're eligible for Medicare (see caveat previous para.).

    Done. Net effect should dramatically lower the cost of private health insurance, since Medicare would cover most (if not all) common problems, leaving private health insurance for edge cases.

    Adjust Medicare taxes as required to pay the bills.

    Note that this isn't quite a National Healthcare System (see UK), but it could easily transition into one later if it works reasonably well.

    Done. Simple law, expanding existing program, so unlikely to meet as much opposition from fanatics. No odd cases like "he makes $XX, so he gets 80% subsidy on his health insurance, she makes $XX-1, so she has to pay 100% cost of her health insurance.

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  155. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    ERs generally cannot turn away emergency patients

    Bull shit. ERs turn away emergency patients all the time, then they drive them from hospital to hospital until they die. Since I live in bumfuck, if that happens here, I'll almost certainly be dead.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  156. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    No argument from me. But, this is exactly the sort of sensible reform that is impossible to turn into a law, because it steps on the toes of a bunch of special interests.

    While I was at it I'd fix up the patchwork of medicare laws and just have one premium/deductible/coinsurnace/limit for everything, instead of the maze of gaps, per-incident deductibles, and all that stuff that we have today.

    To get a law passed you need to spend $5 on the problem you want to spend, and another $10 in handouts to people that won't do anything to solve the problem but who have a financial stake in maintaining the status quo.

  157. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    > Your math doesn't work out. Care to show your work?

    $1.3 trillion (US) federal tax cost / 12 million people = $11.3 million per person covered.

    That is just repeating yourself. Showing your work means showing where you got the two numbers, not repeating yourself.

    How about this. You earn $100 trillion (US). There are only 300 million people in the US. So, you can afford to just write everybody a check for $300k and they can just buy their own insurance. Do you need me to show my work? If I did you would discover that I obtained your earnings by multiplying $10/hr by 40 hrs/wk by 52 wks/yr by 5 billion years, which is about how long you'll have to work before the sun burns out to pay for that one-time payment.

    Incidentally, that is the same error you made in taking point-in-time figures and cost-over-long-periods-of-time figures and combining them.

  158. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Rich0 · · Score: 2

    Do you think that anybody else who has been elected in the last 20 years would have pulled off Obamacare

    They were smart enough not to try.

    Great, then count yourself among the very small minority of people in industrialized nations who think that not having a universal system of health insurance is a good idea. The issue is that people complain about the execution of Obamacare, when in reality they objected to having any kind of solution to the healthcare problem at all.

  159. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sphealey · · Score: 1

    Read 'em and weep. Then look up epistemic closure.

    http://www.cbo.gov/sites/defau...

  160. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    The forces that move the nation are far bigger than the president.

    So, let's make them even bigger and more powerful so that they are even less responsive to the will of the people? That seems to be the approach the current Administration is taking, "The government is too large and powerful for the President to hold it accountable (or for the President to be held accountable) for its misdeeds, therefore we should make it larger and more powerful."

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  161. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, having health insurance is not the same as actually having access to health care (or being able to afford it when one does have access).

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  162. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    There's a whole amendment to the Constitution devoted to protecting it.

    Actually, that is not true. The piece that has been misconstrued as protecting journalism** is only part of the First Amendment and is does not protect the "press" as we use the term today (to refer to the news media). When the First Amendment says "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press,..." it very intentionally links the right to say what you want to the right to publish what you want. The "freedom of the press" is not a right for journalists, but a right for every citizen to publish, if they have the means, whatever they wish (with the edge cases of slander and libel, although even there the original understanding was that the person slandered or libeled could not prevent you from publishing, they could merely receive punitive recompense if they could prove that it was slander or libel). **the misconstrued part is that it is ABOUT journalism, not that it protects it. It does protect journalism, but only as a side-effect of protecting everyone's right to publish.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  163. Re:I'm wrong, shouldn't figure trillions in my hea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean the health care coverage businesses used to provide years ago, but scrapped in favor of a stock dividend and other profits? And why we should not hold these businesses in moral contempt for callously skirting around the law so they can continue to abuse their employees?

    If new "costs" are being incurred: It's because Life and the Pursuit of Happiness are expendable to American business. Hard to have either when you're dying from lack of preventable treatment or sick.

  164. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by BringsApples · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's great, healthcare, YAY! I mean, unless you were one of the people that had a healthcare plan from blue cross that covered your entire family at $400/month, and then were told by blue cross that the government has mandated that policies have to change and include things that you don't even care about, and now it will raise the price to $800/month, and you cannot afford it. So you get with healthcare.org folks, get your tax break, and have a blue cross plan that only covers you and your wife, while your kids now have to be on medicaid, where no doctors will see them.

    --
    Politics; n. : A religion whereby man is god.
  165. Re:I'm wrong, shouldn't figure trillions in my hea by BringsApples · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the club of non-perfect-people! I think that, like you, Obama had a good intention, but somewhere down the line, shit went south. But unlike you, he didn't not correct the problem once he noticed that it was wrong.

    At some point it went from "You will be able to keep your current plan" to "Oopsies!" But he didn't stop and do anything to correct his mistake.

    --
    Politics; n. : A religion whereby man is god.
  166. Re:I'm wrong, shouldn't figure trillions in my hea by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    You mean the health care coverage businesses used to provide years ago, but scrapped in favor of a stock dividend and other profits?

    That would be the health care coverage that was in place when "Obamacare" was deemed passed (remember that one?). Just kidding about the "deemed" part, it actually did pass on a party line vote. When a business fails the problem is even worse. Then there is no health insurance and no job.

    And why we should not hold these businesses in moral contempt for callously skirting around the law so they can continue to abuse their employees?

    Because it was the Democrats that passed Obamacare and forced bad choices on everyone?

    If new "costs" are being incurred: It's because Life and the Pursuit of Happiness are expendable to American business.

    Your life and pursuit of happiness (note: pursuit) are your responsibility, not your boss's.

    Hard to have either when you're dying from lack of preventable treatment or sick.

    I wouldn't worry too much about that, Obamacare is preventing a growing amount of treatment.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  167. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Your not agreeing with a President's actions didn't make them incompetent.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  168. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by raymorris · · Score: 1

    The Obama administration chose to publish the ten-year cost number, because that makes them look better than any other choice. Too short and the startup costs aren't amortized much, too long and you get into the time period where we're scheduled to actually pay for much of it. Those 12 million people wil need insurance for the next ten years, so it's perfectly appropriate to talk about what it will cost to cover them for ten years. 12 million isn't a one-time number, as if they only needed coverage for one day. The number of previously uninsured people may covered may fluctuate a bit, but not by order of magnitude or anything like that.

    No, that's not a mistake I made. I made a much simpler mistake, though - I lost track of the number of zeros ehile trying to calculate trillions in my head.

  169. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    Your not agreeing with a President's actions didn't make them incompetent.

    When did I claim to not agree with any president's actions?

  170. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    The forces that move the nation are far bigger than the president.

    So, let's make them even bigger and more powerful so that they are even less responsive to the will of the people?

    Uh, the will of the people is half the problem here. I was in no way intending to imply that the will of the people wasn't one of the forces that moves the nation.

  171. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Romneycare is not Obamacare. State solutions would be entirely acceptable to Republicans, since state have substantial powers under our Constitution. Article 10.

    My first objection to the ACA is that it is unconstitutional. States have regulated insurance of all types, and the federal government even administers Medicaid on a state level.

    Comparing the U.S. to other nations should be an exercise in misdiagnosis. States have seen their powers and authority diminished, in return for federal money and diminished responsibility. The cost of this is central control and failed programs. Has the ACA improved healthcare access in America in measurable way? Really?

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  172. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    Yes, but the affordable care act affects far more than 12 million people, or it certainly is intended to do so. It really is just a stopgap measure - I never thought it would work in the long-term. However, I think people needed to be convinced that the current mess of the status quo just wasn't tenable before they'd be willing to move onto something more sane, like a single-payer system.

  173. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by ultranova · · Score: 2

    My point is that democracy doesn't put competent people in charge most of the time. That's just the nature of the beast.

    No known organizational model puts competent people in charge most of the time. Even the strickests of meroticracies are subject to the Peter Principle, even if they somehow fail to promote people who are best at promoting themselves. Democracy is superior because it lets outright lunatics to be constrained and removed as well as succession handled without bloodshed.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  174. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Was it the 2nd? Nobody in America cares unless it was the second.

  175. A word from someone who actually has an ACA policy by binkx · · Score: 1

    Campers: Unlike everyone commenting here, my wife and I actually have an ACA policy we signed up for through Covered California. No problem whatsoever in the sign up. We kept the same doctors we'd always had. Our premiums went from about $11,000/year on an income of $33,000 -- and an out of pocket max of $5,200 -- to $1,000/year and $2,200 out of pocket. While many of you rant about subsidized health care for us poor and unwashed, I've not noticed any other solutions to the problem offered here other than stepping over the sick and injured on the way to your tech job that has a health care plan. I'm sure we'll now see bankruptcies as a result of health care debt go down as well as other benefits to society. Think of it as a new federal highway system or disaster relief -- both government programs that work incredibly well. I also notice a lot of grousing that somehow the critical number of ACA signups is to reduce the numbers of uninsured. That's definitely important and the number of uninsured is clearly going down. But the other benefit are people, like my wife and I, who can finally afford health care. That's the overall idea and it's working. Move on people.

  176. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by uncqual · · Score: 1

    This is rare. However, if that's a concern for enough women in the market for insurance, insurance companies could offer, if it were not for PPACA rules, pregnancy coverage for women who have had a (potentially unsuccessful) tubal litigation at a vastly reduced rate (a few dollars a year would cover it given how rare such pregnancies are).

    This is not unlike, for some strange reason, PPACA rules allow charging a additional premium for smokers - or put another way, a discount for not smoking. Why can't insurance companies offer similar discounts for those who take steps to avoid other conditions such as pregnancy by having a tubal litigation? Note that non-smokers still get lung cancer (much more likely I suspect than women who have undergone a tubal litigation getting pregnant).

    Why not allow insurance companies to charge more for people who engage in "extreme" sports - their odds of getting expensive injuries at a young age are much higher than someone who doesn't engage in them.

    --
    Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
  177. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 2

    It is almost always better to self insure portions of risk if you can reasonable do do -- why pay middlemen? Do you buy the "extended warranty" on every USB cable you buy from BestBuy or NewEgg?

    No, but that's a useless analogy. There is NO medical equivalent of the USB cable I buy from NewEgg. Readily available, universally applicable, and most of all, cheap. There is nothing whatsoever in the US healthcare system that qualifies as cheap. Anywhere. Even the most trivial of routine checkups required by law (e.g. college admissions) has a cash price of hundreds of dollars. It only costs less than that if you (or your employer) has paid money into the protection racket called health "insurance." Which a) is not insurance and; b) serves as nothing other than a profit-taking gatekeeper to the services you actually want.

    The Affordable Care Act, better known as RomneyCare, because that's the closest system that had previously been enacted in the US, is indeed a travesty. It's a giant giveaway to an industry that does not provide health care! The insurance industry. It's crony capitalism at its finest, sold to the American people with the carrot dangled by the Democratic party and the stick wielded by the Republican party. Only in America can a population of 300 million be fooled into paying so incredibly much for so very little.

    If we were a civilized nation, we'd have enacted single-payer when Canada did in 1966 and we wouldn't be having this conversation. But we're not. We're blind and stupid and consistently vote against our own interests by voting for the interests of oligarchs.

  178. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by gewalker · · Score: 1

    The clear comparison would be RomneyCare. While certainly smaller, it was more more successful, at least in terms of administrative snafus, etc. The high costs of RomneyCare are very similar however. One obvious difference was that RomneyCare has a higher level of bi-partisan support, thought it is difficult to see how this would account for the difference in administrative competence.The other differences are that Romney has proved competence in a few executive roles and was probably a lot more focused than Obama -- presidents have to wear a lot of hats being at least part of the problem. ObamaCare is arguably a larger structural change that involved more fiefdoms.

  179. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by uncqual · · Score: 2

    And, that's a problem with our laws that should be fixed. If a competent PCP would not have referred the person to an ER, the ER doctor/PA/NP should be able to tell the person that their condition is not a medical emergency and advise them to see their primary care provider and the ER should suffer no more risk than the PCP would have. It should also be a crime to misrepresent your medical condition at an ER in order to get preferred or priority treatment (yes, this would rarely be prosecuted, but the occasional prosecution would deter people from doing it).

    There is a good social reason for NOT completing treatment and diagnosis after evaluation determines the problem not to be an emergency -- the next time that person (and their friends and family) probably will not clog up the ER with what is obviously a cold or minor sprain that can be dealt with during normal business hours by their primary care provider.

    The system, expectations, and culture is broken -- requiring ERs to act as PCPs is not the answer and the liability laws should reflect that.

    --
    Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
  180. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the correction. I worded it badlybut didn't realize just how bad until i read your reply.

  181. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

    Hey now. Remember Jimmy Carter was the one who had the foreign embassy taken over, and all those people take hostage. It can't get worse than that, can it?

    --
    If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
  182. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by jigawatt · · Score: 2

    Back in 2008, I only expected Obama to be as bad as Jimmy Carter. He surprised me by having all the badness of Bush (Dubya), Carter, and Nixon.

    If Obama completes his two terms, then Richard Nixon should get an apology. Watergate would rank pretty low on the list of scandals if it happened now.

  183. Incompetence Happens by Malachias · · Score: 1

    Incompetence happens, but arrogance, cowardice, and an overwhelming desire to escape blame transforms simple incompetence into an epic failure. Poll everyone involved in healthcare.gov from the lowest to highest and few will admit any personal responsibility. Some will confess helplessness, just following orders. Some will point fingers at others, the "real" culprits. Some will just say that software is hard, normal people just don't understand. It is in our nature to reach beyond our grasp and that aspect of our character is noble and inspiring. Perhaps, deceit and treachery are also in our nature, but that aspect of our character is anything but noble and to be shunned. Simple honesty and humility can contain a great deal of the damage that incompetence would otherwise create.

    What I see in this administration is a epic combination of hubris and incompetence that has left us with a president that has checked out because he is disappointed with us as a people and a nation. I honestly believe the president thinks we have failed him. Is Healthcare.gov just another testament to our failure as a people in the mind of President Obama?

    1. Re:Incompetence Happens by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      And this would be different from other administrations in what way? Or private industry? Is there some large organization you can point to that doesn't try to cover up its mistakes?

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    2. Re:Incompetence Happens by Malachias · · Score: 1

      I think many organizations operate this way, but that doesn't make the behavior any less dysfunctional. The damages resulting from mistakes, incompetence (willful or otherwise), negligence, and so on are greatly magnified by moral failings (e.g., arrogance, cowardice, etc). The larger point is that we can do far better and should expect far better regardless of our political stripes. Basing one's standard of excellence on the other guy often amounts to having no standard at all because the competition is truly dreadful. Perhaps I am destined to live a life of disappointment, but I expect better.

    3. Re:Incompetence Happens by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      I'm not basing my standard of excellence on the other guy, so much as the other guys. It would be nice not to have the moral failings, but we almost always get them. Blaming individual people for what is a species-wide failing is a losing game.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  184. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

    What's the difference between Bush's illegal wars and Obama's illegal wars?

    is the answer "What did Bush start and fail to finish, leaving Obama holding the bag?"

    In terms of the economy, Obama has done at least as much damage over time, based on his own administration's charts, even. Remember all those rosy predictions?

    All kidding aside, Obama inherited an incredibly horrible situation from arguably the worst administration in history. But I think we can all agree we're better off now than in 2009.

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  185. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 2

    Most of them are pretty successful. One is even a Republican representative. *shrug* Good leaders are people who know how to take advantage of people smarter than them and build a grounds up organization with pragmatic decision making from top based on good data. That doesn't always happen because not everyone believes in the same end goal. That's the hard part.

  186. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by linuxrocks123 · · Score: 1

    The only bright spot is that the people who voted for him are still taking it on the chin economically while the rest of us enjoy our stock profits.

    I don't understand. You think he's responsible for the stock market increases? If so, wouldn't that indicate competence of some sort?

    I remember reading a few years ago during the "great recession" that someone was going all-in shorting the market thinking there was going to be another 1929. I wonder how that worked out for him. Guess it wasn't you, but if you think he's so bad ... why DID you go long?

    --
    vi ~/.emacs # I'm probably going to Hell for this.
  187. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

    Good, because it seems Obamacare is working and getting public support. So, fairly happy that Republicans get no credit. Of course, nothing is stopping some Republican senators taking credit for the American Healthcare Act, but not that evil Obamacare. Funny that.

  188. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

    The supreme court (the one that leans conservative mind you) did not rule ACA unconstitutional. So, I think you're wrong there. That's why there was an entire legal battle over it and it is decided.

  189. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by linuxrocks123 · · Score: 1

    Drug addicted prostitute was probably on Medicaid to begin with. At least now she can get free birth control.

    --
    vi ~/.emacs # I'm probably going to Hell for this.
  190. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

    Hey everyone is happy. They get their jollies going against the powers and the western powers gets to get rid of one troublemaker. If some idiot wants to go fight in a war, and spend his life in heat, no running water, and what not.. more power to them. They aren't going to get much respect from anyone who wants a stable life.

  191. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    None of this is news. What would be news is to hear that someone in politics did something good for the country. I don't give a damn which side of the "aisle" they are from politicians are ass hats.

  192. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

    Of course, jail is always the best... it's what they are willing to spend all their taxes on rather than social programs. It doesn't matter that it costs more under prison system or ER.. sigh.

  193. Re:I'm wrong, shouldn't figure trillions in my hea by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

    Also the fact that people are actually mobile and can move from job to job because quitting would mean that they might not be covered because of pre-existing conditions.

  194. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Are you talking about the War in Iraq, which Obama boasted continuously about ending, despite loud criticism at the time that he was creating the conditions for what's going on right now with ISIS?

    I wouldn't be boasting about that anymore, his related words are now one of those things his opponents publish on Twitter so as to illustrate how incompetent he is.

    --
    The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
  195. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do thei by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    I didn't say that SCOTUS did find ACA unconstitutional. They could it, among other things, permitted as a 'tax'.

    My complaint is that I believe it is unconstitutional. Yes, I believe most of SCOTUS got it wrong.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  196. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by ultranova · · Score: 1

    There are good reasons to criticize the ACA, but the number of people who have gotten coverage for the first time because of the law is not one of them.

    Unless, of course, your very ideology is to make the gap between rich and poor as wide as possible. Then it makes perfect sense that you'd be upset that everyone can afford medical care. And you can always explain away any attacks of conscience by claiming you simply want everyone to be personally responsible for themselves, even as your policies take away the means to do so from the majority of people.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  197. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    I think you need to put the bong down and stay away from it for a while. It is rotting your mind to the point you might actually believe these delusions.

    first off it means buisnesses can't 'manipulate' cash strapped people to make artificial job growth or contraction simply by hiring more or less people for the same total work hours.

    despite clear evidence that Obamacare has actually caused full time people to become part time and most of the hiring for unskilled labor (the working poor) has been part time, what exactly benefits companies doing this as you think they are?

    this no longer works when you are required to provide heathcare then they have no choice but to give people the hours wages needed to live a good life, instead of making them work to boost or contract the economy.

    You see, reality doesn't seem to match your misconceptions.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/...

    The only reason companies hire part time instead of full time is to control costs. They have no direct impact on the economy or for the most part intent to manipulate it outside of being able to sell their goods and services for a profit.

    prior to obama care the working poor had only quacks peddling fake insurance houses constantly shifting locations and doing many unscrupulus methods to keep the poor from being able to pay for care via insurance.

    Bullshit. Insurance is one of the heaviest regulated industries in the country before and after Obamacare. If these fly by night operations actually existed, the states would have arrested, prosecuted, and imprisoned the scam artists behind it. And yes, it's pretty easy to track them down because there always has to be a place to send the payments and then collect them else they don't benefit from the scam.

  198. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by ultranova · · Score: 1

    ItÃ(TM)s hard to imagine even the most ardent Democrats supporting the literal deification of Barack Obama or erecting small shrines in his honor throughout Washington DC. By contrast, after Julius Caesar was posthumously declared a god, Augustus, as his adopted son, became known as the son of god. Along with the other gods, he received dedications at small crossroads shrines throughout Rome.

    What are flagpoles but shrines?

    It's important to remember that our concept of divine is very different from a Roman's concept. Any fool could all but feel the omnipresent might of Rome, a pattern behind all the roads and aqueducts and legions and whatever. The Emperor was an easily identifiable focus point, giving name and face to something indescribable. But make no mistake, while we don't call them as such we too treat our nations the same way, waving flags, swearing allegiance and if called for, killing or dying for our gods.

    So no, people don't deify Barack Obama personally. They deify his position. Power rests in the system itself, and Obama is simply the human currently most closely associated with it, hence any problems in said system get blamed on him. It's actually quite fascinating, the way our institutions take on lives of their own, escape from their founder's control, and all too often display a very human tendency towards megalomania and petty cruelty. And unless we learn to keep them focused on human good, rather than their own self-aggrandizement, and fast, I fear we'll meet the Great Filter.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  199. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obama went to Harvard... So we should have voted for Romney?

    Working class screwed themselves by voting for Obama... even though the working class is majority republican?

    Obama is the worst president... But you've enjoyed soaring stock prices?

    You believe some silly things.

  200. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do thei by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amendment 10 (there is no article 10)

  201. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obama: Screws up a web site, millions inconvenienced.

    Bush: Starts an unnecessary war, hundreds of thousands dead.

    Yeah, I guess I see your point. Obama sucks.

  202. Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 million by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry but as much as I dislike our little Hitler, you are off a few orders of magnitude. The cost is ONLY :> $108333.33 per person. even DC can't screw up that much.

  203. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by sphealey · · Score: 0

    Can't help but noticing you left the duration out of those Breitbert-ized numbers.

    You also ignored the cost of what happens if we _don't_ have 12 million people in reasonably-managed health insurance plans. While people in the US with no insurance plan may not get much care during their lives they usually get pulled into the standard system in their last years and generate huge costs - which could have been managed or avoided with lifelong basic health care. And of course there is the loss of productivity to the economy when people are unable to obtain basic medical care during the productive years of their lives.

    Also about 1437 other factors you left out or simply put a hard right wing glibertarian spin on.

    sPh

  204. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by sphealey · · Score: 1

    Wow - a very large attack of hard right wing hide raters today.

    http://www.vox.com/cards/obama...

    Americans who purchased coverage are paying for it (payment rates running a bit higher than privately-placed insurance, so yes "they paid for it"). Americans who could not previously afford any health insurance and therefore were essentially locked out from most health care are now being subsidized at a level about 40% of all the US' G8 peers. With that subsidy they are able to obtain reasonably-priced basic medical service thus greatly enriching their lives and - it is believed by 97.3% of health care economists - lowering the overall cost of medical care to the entire nation.

    Your complaint is?

    sPh

  205. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

    The War in Iraq was something Obama wanted to end. It wasn't a war we were supposed to be in in the first place. I'd state that it hasn't ended yet but the hostilities were largely under control. Still a turd from the Bush/Cheney era, and started by the British, but that's another tale. However the current problem isn't Iraq so much as it is the spillover of the nutbags from Syria taking advantage of the weakened state of Iraq.

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  206. Whats up with all the right wing astroturfers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can tell the right wing cry babies are out in full force today.

  207. Re:House Committee on Oversight and Government Ref by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, this is working extremely well, that's why it's so unpopular!

    This plan, guy, the ones that the Democrats EXCLUSIVELY designed and implemented, barely very little resemblance to what the Heritage Foundation made.

    Also, just because a few Republicans said something 20 years ago, doesn't mean it's a Republican plan. The fact is, neither plan was free market. I'm sure if anyone that voted on it, and really cared if it was free market, they'd probably had taken the time to read it before making it law.

    You OWN this. One hundred percent. Time to stop blaming Republicans every time your socialist utopian ideals fail.

  208. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People complain because it failed to meet any of it's goals, and is one the most corrupt examples of a political party getting in bed with big business to buy votes at the expense of the taxpayers in the history of the modern world. It's a giant give-away to the insurance companies - that in public they proclaimed as evil and heartless -- while behind closed doors they were licking each others asses - in return for - big surprise - huge donations to their PACS that don't have to be disclosed.

    Why do you think this was drafted behind closed doors without a single Republican involved? Because the evil Rethugnicans are obstructionists, right? No, because that way they got all the spoils for themselves.

    What do you think the Clintonistas were trying to pull the first time around - also behind closed doors? The same exact thing.

    Those back room secret meetings - both sets of them - will be secret forever. Wonder why? YOU got screwed, that's why.

    Nearly EVERYTHING that's wrong with the U.S. Healthcare system can be traced directly back to the Federal Government and greedy politicians.

  209. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One Medicare fraud case... in 2006, I believe... cost the Federal Government more than the TOTAL PROFITS OF ALL OF THE INSURANCE COMPANIES PUT TOGETHER.

    No shit.

  210. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same as the "stimulus" creating jobs that paid $50,000 a year for a cost of 1.1 million each. But remember, folks, liberals NEVER look at results and SUCK AT MATH.

  211. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    People complain because it failed to meet any of it's goals

    That is certainly false. One of its goals was to require coverage for pre-existing conditions. That goal was met.

    Another goal was to provide an affordable insurance option to everybody, and I'd say that was met even if many didn't sign up. The reason for that was that the penalty for not signing up was lower than the cost of signing up, which is one of the reasons I think the law will have to be amended before nobody wants to participate in the exchanges any longer. You can't require coverage for pre-existing conditions without providing coverage to everybody - it just isn't sustainable. If they charged a penalty of $5k/yr for anybody without insurance then that problem would go away, since it is cheaper than that to just buy insurance. Of course, it would be far less regressive to just give everybody insurance for free, and then recover the costs in income taxes.

  212. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by will_die · · Score: 1

    That number of 12 million is totally wrong. On Aug 15 the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services released the first set number and that was about 7.3 million people.

  213. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    And you can always explain away any attacks of conscience by claiming you simply want everyone to be personally responsible for themselves, even as your policies take away the means to do so from the majority of people.

    I wish I'd written that.

    It's sort of like claiming your view represents the majority while trying to disenfranchise hundreds of thousands of legal voters.

    http://www.bradblog.com/?p=852...

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  214. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll just leave this here.

  215. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by cheater512 · · Score: 1

    Most of these people have nothing to do with Obama. They'd still be there if the republicans won.

    Incompetence is incompetence, its not limited to a single political side.

  216. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You must have been a dev on healthcare.gov.

  217. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But I think we can all agree we're better off now than in 2009.

    Only because we now know that the tinfoil hat conspiracy theories about the NSA and IRS are true. In nearly everything else that originates from the political sphere, my life has been made worse.

  218. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by bhiestand · · Score: 1

    Are you talking about the War in Iraq, which Obama boasted continuously about ending, despite loud criticism at the time that he was creating the conditions for what's going on right now with ISIS?

    I wouldn't be boasting about that anymore, his related words are now one of those things his opponents publish on Twitter so as to illustrate how incompetent he is.

    So you're telling me we wouldn't be at war now if only we hadn't ended the war? It's not enough that my friends did 5-10 tours? How many more did you want us to do?

    --
    SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
  219. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

    Setting aside that the Republicans controlled all three branches of government from 2001 - 2006, this narrative assumes that the federally backed loan buyers (Fannie and Freddie) were the drivers of the speculative bubble, but they weren't--the wall street firms were way out in the lead on this and Fannie and Freddie were just following along after the party was most of the way over.

  220. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

    Name one worse than watergate.

  221. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by amxcoder · · Score: 1

    Is that 12million before or after subtracting the millions of people who got cancellation letters and booted from their existing plans?

    Or what about the millions of people who had a plan "and liked their doctor/plan" but couldn't keep it, and got switched to more expensive plans, or plans with less coverage than they had before?

    As someone who foots the full bill for my own insurance coverage, I have a great HMO plan, abeit expensive. Luckily I've had this plan for a while and because it met the minimum requirements under the new law, I was grandfathered in (albeit at an additional higher cost in order to keep it). However, because it's now a "grandfathered" plan, I cannot make any changes to it, move up or down in coverage without completely loosing it altogether, and I'd never be able to get it back. I consider myself lucky on one hand that I got to keep it, but not so fortunate that it's now even more expensive than it was, and I face the possibility of loosing if I make any changes to it. I feel like it's the same situation that I'm in with my cell phone data plan, grandfathered unlimited data. It's more than I need, but I pay the high rate because it's not an option that is available anymore, and I need to hang on to it, or loose it forever. The only difference is my cell data plan is $30/mo where my current full HMO coverage runs me about $1800 /mo (or $21,000 per year) (far more than the $800/mo when I originally signed up for less than 10 years ago).

  222. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by amxcoder · · Score: 1

    Actually, you usually get better rates at clinics and small family doctors if you self-pay, or pay cash rather than insurance. Yes, most big hospitals will print out those invoices for hundred's or even thousands when an insurance company is involved, because they can, but at smaller offices, if you are un-insured, you can get routine visits for a fairly affordable price. Before you call BS on me, I have done this before, as me and my family went without insurance for a year or two when I was getting my own business going. We couldn't afford insurance, and self-paid when we needed doctors. Now for big disasters, you should probably have some catastrophic coverage to help cover the cost in the case of something like a car accident, or other big injury, but routine exams were not that bad. Same with the dentist offices around town, many of those would give us the lowest rates they charged, and would help make it cost affordable. The upside to them was they didn't have to bicker with the insurance company and fill out all the paperwork to get re-imbursed for these visits, so it was less of a head-ache for them by having the person pay them in full on the spot at a discount rate.

    The problem, is that for many big hospitals, their overhead is so much, they have vastly higher rates than family doctors, and in many poorer neighborhoods, there are too many people that come in that get classified as "self-pay" due to no insurance, but which really means "no-pay". They don't expect the person who claims to want to self-pay to actually pay their bill because in the majority of cases, they don't have any intention to pay their medical bill.

  223. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by amxcoder · · Score: 1

    I agree with you to a point, at least on the surface, however I don't want to have to tell my doctor/insurance company everything I do activity wise and have a $$$ sign attached to it. Not great for privacy being the first thing I can think of.

    To answer the second part of the question, as a smoker, the reason why other activites don't get penalized like smoking is because currently smoking is considered "out" and the powers that be are trying to regulate it into oblivion. From all angles, the shame smokers to quit, they tax smokers to quit, and they penalize smokers with higher premiums for life ins. and health insurance. Society accepts it, because "it's for their own good". The last step will be to outlaw it in all public places similar to what San Francisco has tried to do for several years now.

    I'm sure these same people who like to butt into other people's business will eventually move on to other groups of people after they have "conquered" and beaten down the smoker group. Just give it enough time, you may get what you asked for. They've already been asking about gun ownership in doctors visits for awhile, so I'm sure that will be their next target to raise premiums or deny coverage for possibly.

  224. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

    ...but at smaller offices, if you are un-insured, you can get routine visits for a fairly affordable price. Before you call BS on me, I have done this before, as me and my family went without insurance for a year or two when I was getting my own business going.

    I know you can, if you're quite lucky, find a cheap primary care physician, especially pediatricians. I heavily emphasized cheapness, but "readily available" and "universally applicable" were also in there, and your post is full of exactly how neither of those apply.

    USB, it ain't. It's a travesty is what it is.

  225. Re: This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by amxcoder · · Score: 1

    Considering that I already explained the price, and payment method, I don't know how cash payment isn't considered "readily available" nor "universally applicable". I would have to say, when you self-pay, you actually have MORE options available to you, than if you have insurance. My super expensive HMO insurance that I have now, doesn't let me go to anyone I want.

    how would you define "readily available"? or is your code word for "FREE"? In which case, no I did not describe how to get routine visits for free.

    Also, to add to my post, for routine visits, there is also a new startup company that is employing doctors and webcams that for a nominal fee ($30-50 I can't remember the exact amount), they will perform a video conference (like skype type session) with you and diagnose you for basic ailments etc and I believe can prescribe basic medication to you if needed (like antibiotics, etc.). This would be something considered affordable, and readily available. I will admit that services like this are for basic needs, and limited in scope, they can be utilized by anyone, and it could cut down a person's overall cost of needing a full insurance package. If you combined this type of service, along with self paying for mid-sized needs, along with catastrophic insurance for the "major accidents", you'd have a fairly affordable healthcare "package" for fairly cheap. Not perfect for all, but neither are these "Silver", "Bronze" and "Gold" packages people are getting forced into either.

  226. Re:House Committee on Oversight and Government Ref by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    Someone who can blame Obamacare on Republicans is someone who can blame anything on them.

    First of all, Obamacare is the Republicans' fault. You can tell because A) they liked it when it was called Romneycare, and B) it's a shit solution (compared to "single payor" where said payor is either the government (i.e., a socialist solution) or the individual patient (i.e., a libertarian solution)) that only serves to entrench and enrich the middlemen. The Democrats would have designed a much more socialist program had they not been trying to appease the Republicans.

    Second, your claim is a fallacy. There is absolutely no reason why, just because Obamacare is legitimately the Republicans' fault, that any of the other stupid shit Obama and/or the Democrats have done could be also. For example, here's a partial list of things for which the Republicans can not be blamed:

    • Treasonous NSA totalitarianism after 2009 (just because Congress passed a bill that purports to authorize and fund it, doesn't mean Obama, as Commander-in-Chief, actually has to do it. He could have unilaterally ended it 5 seconds after being inaugurated but didn't, and that's entirely on him.)
    • Parallel construction after 2009 (a concept entirely made up by the executive branch, as far as I know)
    • Benghazi and most other foreign-policy screwups since 2009
    • IRS scandal
    • the Obamacare website (note: distinct from Obamacare itself)
    • etc.
    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  227. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

    Why yes I do. I also seem to be in the small minority of people with intelligence and common sense. First of all, universal health insurance is a scam. Insurance is a shared risk pool so putting people with preexisting conditions into that pool to be covered just hurts everyone else. If you want the government to treat people with preexisting conditions go ahead and do so, but don't bring in an additional layer of bureaucracy for no good reason.

    Furthermore, people seem to not understand healthcare is a scarce resource. That means not everyone can be treated for everything. The resources need to be divided amongst the population. Socialized medicine puts control of this decision into the hands of politicians. I'll tell you how that plays out: first, politicians get the best healthcare because "good of the country" or some such excuse; second, constituents of the loudest politicians get the next best care, because they need their supporters to live long healthy lives.

    Our system is already corrupt and in need of a good overhaul. Unfortunately, socialized medicine was the wrong move as it will just lead to more corruption.

    --
    Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
  228. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll name 3 and I won't even try too hard:

    1. Fast and Furious gun running - weapons were used to kill over 100 Mexicans and at least 1 US border agent - nobody got killed in Watergate. Massive coverup and stonewalling of investigations.

    2. Benghazi. Numerous requests for additional security were denied. Pleas for help during the attack were denied. Requests from regional military forces to render aide were denied. Administration fabricated story about the video being the cause. Administration agents allegedly destroyed documents that cast Obama and Hillary in a bad light. Massive stonewalling of investigations. Oh, and nobody got killed in Watergate.

    3. IRS abuse of conservative organizations. Nixon only dreamed of using the IRS to attack his opponents; Obama has done it and continues to do so. This use of the IRS was one of Nixon's articles of impeachment (written by Hillary, I believe). In a strange coincidence, nearly everybody of interest in the investigation has had their computer crash, losing all of their emails for the period in question. Nixon's 18-minute gap in the Watergate tapes was taken as PROOF of a coverup.

  229. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    First of all, universal health insurance is a scam. Insurance is a shared risk pool so putting people with preexisting conditions into that pool to be covered just hurts everyone else. If you want the government to treat people with preexisting conditions go ahead and do so, but don't bring in an additional layer of bureaucracy for no good reason.

    Coverage of pre-existing conditions without universal coverage certainly can't work, because that isn't insurance. People have the incentive to not sign up until they're sick, and then drop coverage once they're healthy again, which bankrupts the insurance system.

    However, with universal coverage there is no such thing as a "pre-existing condition" other than during a transition period. If somebody is insured from the moment they are conceived, then no condition can pre-exist conception.

    Of course, universal coverage isn't really "insurance" as much as a socialized benefit. And I'll certainly agree that the ACA as it currently stands doesn't achieve universal coverage.

    Furthermore, people seem to not understand healthcare is a scarce resource. That means not everyone can be treated for everything. The resources need to be divided amongst the population. Socialized medicine puts control of this decision into the hands of politicians.

    No argument with any of that. However, EVERY insurance system puts control over coverage in the hands of somebody. For most in the US it basically resides with your employer, without a great deal of visibility into how decisions get made. One of the advantages of a government-run plan is that the decision logic can be subject to the democratic process. As you point out, that can also be a disadvantage. I have no illusions that the well-connected will get the same care as the average person under any system.

    I don't have an objection to people with money paying for their own services. However, the way the US system really doesn't make this a real option for all but the most wealthy for any problem of any significance. From hospital bills I've seen the list prices for serious procedures often work out to upwards of $100k, with insurance companies paying 8-9% of that, and individuals paying 1-2% of that, and the hospital discounting the other 90%. If you pay cash they'll offer you a "nice" deal of maybe 50-70% off and then bankrupt you, and most people think they were getting a good deal when this happens.

  230. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    Actually, I was disappointed in Obama for not pulling out earlier.

    How long were we supposed to be sending US soldiers to prop up a weak Iraqi regime? What would have changed if we'd decided to stay as occupiers for another five years?

    Iraq, like the economy, is a real mess that he inherited from the Bush administration. I'm not real impressed with some of the things he's done, but he really stepped into a bad situation.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  231. Call me a cynic but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll bet that if you audited the internal communications of 95% of large projects, defined as anything $1 million in budget or more, you'd find dissention, back-biting, political disagreements, strategy disagreements, personality conflicts, and much more.

    In project terms the ObamaCare project was "challenged" and not a "failure". That's not all that bad an outcome, all things considered. The politics of the day prevent most objective analysis of this project.

  232. Meanwhile at my work... by StevenMaurer · · Score: 1

    We've been working on a very involved website redo, including service oriented architecture, RESTful interfaces, responsive design on the front end, a number of integrated Hadoop clusters on the back end, etc., and it's been nearly two years, and it still isn't done.

    One of our directors said, "I just hope when we finally get this thing open for business, it's at least as good as Healthcare.gov".

    He wasn't being ironic.

    Slashdot has gone terribly downhill. Apparently instead of software engineers, it's filled with partisan morons who only know how to cut-and-paste spin and blatant falsehoods cribbed from FOX, or on the other side, absurd cynicism because their radical-left vision of unicorns and rainbows isn't possible in the real world. Neither seems to have any appreciation, or intellectual capability, to understand the complexities of large-scale architecture and systems design, much less able to offer any cogent commentary on it.

  233. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

    1. there is no fast and furious gun running blame on anything but lax gun laws. Were there laws that allowed one to jail suspected gun runners, they would have been enforced, but law enforcement don't waste their time when they know they can't get a conviction. The real fast and furious debacle is on the gun lobby that keeps those laws lax.

    2. The notion that the President of the United States (and I mean any President) would appoint an ambassador to another nation and then intentionally bring harm upon them is insane. You would, at a minimum, need some sort of motive here to get me interested enough to research this.

    3. I didn't see any indication that Obama or even the WH had anything to do with this, instructed this to happen, or that it wasn't a rogue employee / office. Plus, in the end here, you're talking about tax exempt status being on the line. How could that possibly raise to the level of Watergate?

    As for watergate, you are correct, it was far from the worst thing Nixon did--but it is still 100 times worse than the worst Obama has done.

    Don't get me wrong, Nixon did some great things (creating of the EPA among them). But he and Johnson really abused the power of the presidency and both continued a war purely for political gain at an enormous cost in lives. I mean, you're worried about a delayed tax exempt status while Johnson / Nixon had the NSA spying on MLK.

  234. tech success was in the ELECTION by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obama's people were genius in the way they canvassed for their candidate, used social media and 'big data'. Doesn't mean they are genius in everything tech. However, if we waited for a Republican administration to provide any sort of health-ANYTHING reform, we'd still be waiting.

  235. Re:Only $11 million per person! (Actually $20 mill by sphealey · · Score: 1

    But how many paiiiiiiid???

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/...

    7.2 million, a higher conversion percentage than private industry expects. Call the whambulence for the hard radical right.

    sPh

  236. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

    Did Obama end us being at war in Iraq? Apparently not...

    Giving up and removing U.S. forces isn't the same thing as ending a war. The other guys were still in the neighborhood waiting for our announced removal.

    Who looks really stupid now? The Iraqis who trusted the U.S. after we took down Saddam's government. They have a pretty good gripe about our government making promises to them and then not supporting them.

    We ended the war against Germany and Japan in such a way that it didn't start back up again a few years later. That took time and leaving troops behind to maintain security and help rebuild the countries in a self-sustainable way so they're good friends of ours now and positive influences on the rest of the world.

    Iraq? Not so much...

    --
    The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
  237. Re:This is supposed to be the *WAY* they do their by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

    a real mess that he inherited from the Bush administration

    And someday (perhaps after he's out of office?), Obama will start being held responsible for his own actions by those who supported him. It's what, only been almost 6 years now? That's longer than many presidents serve in office. Obama's off to a really fast start, isn't he?

    --
    The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
  238. Good summary by sphealey · · Score: 1

    Good summary by Ezra Klein, who has been tracking health care reform since at least 2008:

    In conservative media, Obamacare is a disaster. In the real world, it’s working.

    "On the whole, though, costs are lower than expected, enrollment is higher than expected, the number of insurers participating in the exchanges is increasing, and more states are joining the Medicaid expansion. Millions of people have insurance who didn't have it before. The law is working. But a lot of the people who are convinced Obamacare is a disaster will never know that, because the voices they trust will never tell them"

    1. Re:Good summary by sphealey · · Score: 1

      The graphs (note now split into two: one for exchange-based signups and one for Medicaid-based.

      http://acasignups.net/graphs

      But how many have paaaaaaaid?!?

      http://acasignups.net/14/03/21...

      sPh