ganja girl
New Member
I just decided to ignore your lame posts.I'm pretty sure if they read the thread they addressed none of what I've said and responded with tired talking points from the 1950's.
I just decided to ignore your lame posts.I'm pretty sure if they read the thread they addressed none of what I've said and responded with tired talking points from the 1950's.
If I get your post right, then I might actually agree with you. We have very few choices and the government dictates more and more each day.And what people buy is about ALL Americans choose anymore.
That would be fine if your "choice" not to get health insurance coverage wouldn't mean that the rest of us end up picking up the tab if you go to the emergency room and can't pay the bills. ERs are required by law to provide you with emergency services regardless of your insurance status, so this "choice" does drive up everyone else's insurance premium. If you want to advocate for ERs putting people out on the sidewalk, then you might have a coherent argument, but I doubt you will find much support for that...If I get your post right, then I might actually agree with you. We have very few choices and the government dictates more and more each day.
And healthcare is one more choice denied.
Good, you just keep right on doing that, unless I managed to crack the concrete and you're actually willing to listen and not see what you want to see. Why was this thread started again, if we all have our "opinions" and that's that? I guess I should have seen it coming, the OP was such a loaded ridiculous statement.I just decided to ignore your lame posts.
That would be fine if your "choice" not to get health insurance coverage wouldn't mean that the rest of us end up picking up the tab if you go to the emergency room and can't pay the bills. ERs are required by law to provide you with emergency services regardless of your insurance status, so this "choice" does drive up everyone else's insurance premium. If you want to advocate for ERs putting people out on the sidewalk, then you might have a coherent argument, but I doubt you will find much support for that...
And your rhetoric about the government dictating your choices is just that...rhetoric. Do you have any concrete examples of how government has restricted your choices recently? They have restricted the 'choice' of credit card companies to screw over their customers, this is true. Paying your female employees less than males for the same work is also not really a 'choice' anymore, true. How about the 'choice' of the financial industry to tie your retirement fund to some deadbeat's mortgage and cause the financial system to nearly melt down in the process, all while relying on taxpayers to get bailed out? Should that be a choice too?
Good, you just keep right on doing that, unless I managed to crack the concrete and you're actually willing to listen and not see what you want to see. Why was this thread started again, if we all have our "opinions" and that's that? I guess I should have seen it coming, the OP was such a loaded ridiculous statement.
I can guarantee a person who gets the shit kicked out of them by the police for no reason will see police brutality as a serious issue, though most American's don't.
I think I pretty well answered the question with my first post anyway. If it's something we have to provide to POWs and convicts we keep locked up, then obviously it is a right. But whaaa?!?!? THAT'S SOCIALISM har da har da dee da har.
No, it's not.
How would that have worked out for you if you had gotten seriously ill or injured during that time...? I'm glad to hear that it all worked out for you, but for a lot of americans it hasn't. They got sick, couldn't pay their bills and end up losing everything they had worked for. It's hard to build a secure future under those circumstances...I made my money the hard way working for it for many long hard hours. Self-employed so there were no safety nets to catch me and I made it. And now they want me to share it with those that didn't even come close to putting in the hours, the sweat and the heartache that I did so I could have a secure future. People who truly need is different than those that just want.
I have read this entire post several times. I fail to see what it is that I am not understanding. Let me zero in on a few key points:People need to read the whole thread before they chime in with the incredibly lame and tired "sucking from the nipple of socialism." talk.
And CaRNiFReeK, no you're not understanding. Did you read the rest of the thread?
I'm a bit puzzled by what you're saying, honestly...
You're example is a pretty good case study of why there needs to be universal coverage. I don't know how her doctor "worked the system", but if there was no insurance coverage from BC, the money must have come from somewhere else. Medicare maybe? So because this woman made a "choice" not to get covered by the companies policy, somebody else ended up footing the bill. This is the status quo you would like to see maintained? I don't get it. Even more puzzling is your statement about possibility of blue cross coverage AFTER her diagnosis. Generally, if you have a tumor, going without treatment for 12 months is a pretty serious problem. Here's another interesting bit of information. If she had opted for the BC plan when you offered, some employee there would have gone over all her paperwork to see if there was ANY pretext that could be used to drop her coverage in order not to pay her bills, like failing to mention a history of breast cancer in her family or some other administrative BS. That's illegal now thanks to this law.
Maybe I misunderstood what you're saying, but mandating health insurance is not really a matter of restricting choice.
And local ordinances about water supply have little to do with any of this. Also, yes I'm pissed off about the financial meltdown, but not because I lost money. It's more the idea that a bunch of degenerate gamblers were able to tank the economy that bothers me...
I was talking about inheritance, first off."Practically all of the wealth transfer in this country anymore happens that way." No, ALL wealth transfer happens this way! Transfer payments- payments that no good or service is exchanged (SSI, welfare, unemployment)
Once again, I knew what you meant. And I agreed. No need to argue over an agreement.
I was talking about inheritance, first off.
Once again, I knew what you meant. And I agreed. No need to argue over an agreement.
I like this conversation because you're both knowledgeable about the subject and civil, so thanks for that...No, I don't believe it is a case for universal healthcare. She had the option for paid healthcare already and opted out! I think it was you who mentioned abuse of the system, Medicare is already abused to the tune of $60 billion in 2009. Imagine the abuse with this.
I do believe that there should be healthcare coverage for those who can not take care of themselves, be it, through clinics, hospitals, or government. But, not for those that can have coverage and don't opt for coverage. She took what she believed was a educated guess and she lost. She opted for a new car instead of healthcare. Why should you or I pay for that? That being said I am glad she received care, no one should suffer. No, she did not qualify for medicare, I believe she received care through the compassion funds at the hospital.
In my state BC can not deny you coverage because they are a non-profit. But, they do have the right to deny coverage for any pre-existing condition for the first 12 months. And it was that way before the law.
Yes, it is restricting choice. The choice to say no. We are all free to make good or poor choices and we pay for those choices because we are free.
BTW, I'm pissed off too. I am so glad I'm not in business now, small business is going to get creamed over healthcare.
Oh yeah, the point about the water system is that government can and will control whatever they can. If you had followed the post I was responding to you would have understood.
But, if you want to keep it on medicine than let's talk Avastin. The FDA is close to denying it for breast cancer. Why, because it is expensive. Isn't the FDA supposed to determine drug safety and not deny a drug on cost? This will only get worse as this program increases in expense. Avastin for breast cancer expensive, but for Macular degeneration is is only $275.
I am not upset just giving you MHO.
I like this conversation because you're both knowledgeable about the subject and civil, so thanks for that...
Here's my point. Your colleague decided to go without medical coverage. She got sick and required treatment. As a result, she received treatment on compassionate grounds from funds that could have gone to someone who actually needed it. This isn't a nanny state thing about how her choices are bad for her individually. It's about how that sort of behavior bleeds money out of the system and ultimately ends up costing you or me when we visit the ER or pay our monthly premiums. As you yourself acknowledge, nobody should be left suffer unnecessarily, so just letting people croak because they don't have coverage is not an option. This is why some sort of mandate is necessary, whether it be on individuals or employers. I hate the idea as much as you, frankly, but I don't see an alternative that's both humane and isn't going to bankrupt us. What is the lesson you draw from the woman's story if you don't mind me asking? That some people are irresponsible and you shouldn't be asked to pay for it? Because in that case the status quo is a major fail...somebody DID pay for her irresponsibility. Again, to me, your story is an excellent example of why we do need universal coverage, through individual mandates if necessary. You don't have the choice to say no to auto insurance because when you do, you could potentially end up costing other people money. And unless we just tell people 'tough shit' when they get cancer and don't have insurance, then the same thing applies to healthcare.
As for avastin, the reason the FDA is considering dropping it's approval for it as a cancer treatment has little to do with cost and a lot to do with the fact that it doesn't really do much for patients. The FDA does have a mandate to look into the effectiveness of drugs, not just their safety. Otherwise you could market extremely safe sugar pills as a treatment for AIDS...
Your state obviously has tighter restrictions on healthcare insurers than most. Earlier you made a point about being able to purchase coverage across state lines. If that happened, you wouldn't have any of those protections because all the insurance companies would move to texas, north dakota or whoever has the laxest regulation. This is how the credit card industry operates...
And small businesses actually get a pretty good deal if they want to provide coverage to their employees and are exempt from a lot of the mandates placed on larger business. It does mostly suck for the wal-marts et al. of the world, i will give you that.
I understood what you meant with your water supply story, but local government isn't really what we are talking about here. But ok, point taken.
-I buy my own insurance individually, but through an exchange my state has set up, so I get a relatively good rate for an individual policy. It's an hmo network type plan where I can only go to certain providers. No complaints though really. Currently, I work as a freelance translator and have a part-time job as an innkeeper. Ok, your turn...This is the first time in American history that a person is MADE to purchase AGAINST their will. There is a big difference between catching people who fall between the cracks and insuring the entire country.
Avastin increases life expectancy by about 1 to 1.5 years. I would say that if it was your life that you would want that time. To me that is an effective drug.
I believe you are wrong about insurers moving to those states. Customers will migrate to good insures and that will change how all insurers operate. The same way that people migrated to Japanese cars when US made cars were inferior. Then US automakers increased quality and people came back-same here. End game consumers are not stupid.
Question-Do you have insurance? What kind? Who pays? Do you have a job? The answers to those will explain a lot.