3RA1N1AC
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Burgerville.
definitely not the worst ever
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Burgerville.
Greed doesn't necessarily have to be about profits. Greed can be about expansion and domination. Or nice offices for the administration.
Yes, unfortunately, today's doctor lives in the city and doesn't have anywhere to put a pig, so he wants to be paid in cash.
Government didn't cause medical insurance companies to exist. That's baloney.
The point about the consumer not having a motivation to seek efficient care is a good one. However your solution to that is an awful one. The 19th century might look real nice to you but the rest of us don't want to go back there.
So, you want a free market for the inexpensive part of care, but want to preserve the current situation for the expensive part of care? So someone who needs a $20 treatment will shop around and get the best deal, but someone who needs $20,000,000 of treatment will seek the best, highest price treatment available? Seems like sort of a half-ass solution, if you don't mind me saying so.
I guess if flu shots and the like make up the majority of healthcare spending, your plan could work. Do they? I've not seen data on the ratio of current spending on maintenance vs. non-maintenance.
My understanding is that HMOs came about because the health insurance companies decided it might be cheaper for them to pay for maintenance so that they would get stuck with fewer major medical bills. Apparently you think that somehow the insurance companies are being forced by the government to pay for maintenance?
I don't know of any regulation that says that individual insurance companies can't just drop all their plans except catastrophic coverage. So if they thought that was a good business model, I guess they probably would.
The auto insurance analogy doesn't work because auto insurance doesn't cover blowing up your engine because you never changed the oil. If health insurance companies could deny you coverage for a heart transplant because you are fat and lazy and didn't exercise, then they'd have no interest in covering maintenance. Likewise, if auto insurance companies had to pay for a new engine if you ran it out of oil, you can be sure that regular oil changes would be covered.
barfo
You describe the govt. perfectly, but even now they're giving themselves big bucks salaries and massively generous benefits.
Actually, today's doctor specializes because the govt. took all the incentive out of doing the general care thing.
Read the articles I posted again. 700 health care insurance companies started up after the govt. started funding care and regulating the industry. Like I said before, it only takes a modest bribe to get the govt. to look the other way while you bill them $600 for a hammer.
There you go again with the strawman. Nobody says the 19th century looks better.
Seems like it solves exactly the right solution.
90% (yeah, I looked it up) of the population doesn't require hospitalization or extended care.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_Maintenance_Organization_Act_of_1973
HMOs are another product of government.
There are 800,000+ pages of regulations requiring them to cover all sorts of things, along with govt. grants. It's not a free market. Ever hear of COBRA? Get it?
The wind blew down the fence behind my house. My homeowner's insurance policy covered it.
barfo said:I guess if flu shots and the like make up the majority of healthcare spending, your plan could work.
HMOs are big business and they have govt. in their pockets.
COBRA is one of those regulations you want to ignore. If there were no COBRA, the market would be a bit freer.
I can see why you want to change the subject.
However, for catastrophic health insurance, 100% of the peoples' money should be pooled to pay the benefits of 10% who actually need them. That's per insurance provider.
And you said the auto insurance analogy doesn't work. But the home owners' insurance one does (better).
Better outcome, certainly.
You are somehow hooked on "insurance" being the most important thing. I'm hooked on "care" being the most important thing.
I had another insurance claim recently. The fuse box was so old and needed repair, but I put it off and did other work on the place. It shorted out the dishwasher which overflowed and flooded the entire first floor. The insurance company told me "you definitely have a claim." They told me to let the water damage guys come and do whatever they felt they needed and that it'd be paid for. They also paid for most of a remodel of the first floor - the difference being that we chose to upgrade the floor tiles and cabinets and build new stairs.
So if the insurance companies are so willing to pay that sort of claim, why wouldn't they be willing to pay health care claims? The answer is there's a LOT less regulation, and paying claims is the insurer's business, and if they didn't then I'd switch to one of their competitors.
Not to jump in here, but for barfo (or anyone, for that matter):
What part of the Affordable Care Act made any of the care more affordable? It seems to me (and I'm not a scholar on the subject like you guys are) that care is just as expensive--only now there's a government mandate that Patient X (who heretofore had been previously uninsurable, since the costs for his medical treatment for Major Diseases Y and Z were prohibitively high for a private insurance corporation to break even on) will now be able to afford insurance from that private insurance corporation that covers those exorbitant costs, since you and Denny and I are funding the government subsidies of his premium and/or his bill.
And "we as a society" haven't decided anything. Obama decided it, and scraped together enough congressmen who hadn't read it to push it through. You might just as easily say that "we as a society have decided" that drinking a gosh-danged liter of cola was illegal, since an executive in government has deigned it.
national polls were so insanely in favor of going to war that it was almost unanimous. But you may not be recollecting what "we as a society" thought about it in the 1870's...or the 1910s...or the 1930s...or in the early 1970s....don't pretend to tell me that the military is off the reservation fighting wars when "we as a society" don't want to.
I'm a big fan of a representative republic. I don't know where you'd get that.
No. Not in the slightest. The care still costs just as much as before. It's just that someone else is now paying for it.
And "we as a society" haven't decided anything. Obama decided it, and scraped together enough congressmen who hadn't read it to push it through.
You only get to vote for two
, so by definition you didn't vote for 533 of them. I don't know why it's relevant that the "representatives aren't the ones you voted for". What's relevant is that they didn't represent society--they voted in a partisan manner to follow legislation put forth by an executive without reading it. What part of society was represented by that? "Society" as a whole has, to my limited knowledge, NEVER been for ObamaCare/PPACA, and especially not for the way it was voted in. To take a legislative action and attempt to expand it to a new societal impulse ("we wish now to subsidize with taxpayer money the exorbitant health care fees for all, and mandate an insurance middleman") is folly and intellectually dishonest.
In the 1920s, when "society" didn't want to fight any wars, and didn't want to have an Army other than to garrison home bases from foreign invasion, we didn't. Then "society" got smart and realized that sticking your head in the sand didn't stop bad people from doing bad things, so we became the first-rate military in the world.
I'm not going to answer hypotheticals and theoreticals. If you'd like to point out where "society" was against sending troops overseas and the military did so anyway without Congress knowing about it, I'm all ears.
But I'll ask a specific question: Do you think that since Mayor Bloomberg pushed a bill against 16-oz. sodas (among other things), and if 26 of the 51 council members vote for the bill without reading it, that the 10M members of "society" in NYC have now deigned that large sodas should be illegal?
Thanks. Again, relevant how?Three. Two senators and one congressperson.
then you'd lose your ass. What part of "representative democracy" (to use Minstrel's words) means that a congressman doesn't have to represent his/her district or state, but to blindly (a.k.a., "without reading or understanding") vote for a bill? ANY bill? I'm limited in my legislative history, but can you point out another bill in the last 50 years that was passed (whether R or D) by partisan vote, where the legislators voting for it claimed they didn't read it, and didn't have to to vote on it?Sounds like sour grapes to me. If they'd passed a bill you liked in exactly the same fashion, I bet it wouldn't bother you at all.
You're not paying attention or deliberately not addressing what I'm saying. I bolded what I'm saying above. The second issue is your assertion that someone "society" has deemed that this is what it wants now. What I'm saying is that that's nowhere close to true.You think that this is the first time congress has ever acted in a way that disagreed with public opinion polls? Because that's what it sounds like you are saying.
Yes. They voted for those people to represent them and make laws for them. That's the way our government works. Do all 10M agree with it? Of course not. When do 10M people ever agree on anything?
barfo
Thanks. Again, relevant how?
then you'd lose your ass.
What part of "representative democracy" (to use Minstrel's words) means that a congressman doesn't have to represent his/her district or state, but to blindly (a.k.a., "without reading or understanding") vote for a bill? ANY bill? I'm limited in my legislative history, but can you point out another bill in the last 50 years that was passed (whether R or D) by partisan vote, where the legislators voting for it claimed they didn't read it, and didn't have to to vote on it?
You're not paying attention or deliberately not addressing what I'm saying. I bolded what I'm saying above. The second issue is your assertion that someone "society" has deemed that this is what it wants now. What I'm saying is that that's nowhere close to true.
What?!? "Society" has shifted because 26 people voted for a law without reading it? You can't possibly be serious.
And you're attempting to twist "the way our government works" in passing laws into equating that "society has now changed." Nowhere close to true.
I'll stop here and agree to disagree. There's no possible way that you can convince me (I highly doubt you believe it yourself) that society changes their fundamental beliefs based on legislation, especially legislation that wasn't read or vetted before being voted upon.
I don't think that all of a sudden a large amount of America (doesn't even need to be a majority) now thinks "we wish now to subsidize with taxpayer money the exorbitant health care fees for all, and mandate an insurance middleman", just because Pelosi got a bunch of people with a (D) after their name to vote without reading.
And it's not even a D-vs.-R thing. Bloomberg semi-claims to be a Republican depending on the election cycle, and if he got 26 R's on the NYC Council to vote for it without reading it, I don't think that you could claim that "society in NYC no longer things sodas should be legal". That's absurd.
Though I'd really like it if you could show me one example of another law being passed like this, especially one that shifted society's fundamental viewpoint.
What's relevant is that they didn't represent society--they voted in a partisan manner to follow legislation put forth by an executive without reading it. What part of society was represented by that?
I'm not going to answer hypotheticals and theoreticals.
My wife is a part of the national team for the HMO "model" for ObamaCare, and her CEO was a key adviser in structuring parts of the law. Everybody in their organization hates it, and they've had to raise rates already, because of the hidden gems in it that nobody knew about until it was passed. Even the CEO says it isn't what they were told it would be.
I didn't think you would, since I didn't expect you to want to watch your own logic hang troops out to dry. What this boils down to is "representative democracy is great until it does something I don't like...then the system clearly doesn't work."
It's not that at all. I asked you a specific question--not some hypothetical one
But you never answered mine. Answering a question with a question is classic evasion. Anyway, I'll answer the question for you, since we both know the answer: Troops prosecuting a war is an action by society, even if the polling is against it, because society elects representatives to act for it. And exactly the same is true of the ACA.
