Khross wrote:
Private insurance rations care? Funny. I never seem to have problems getting treated with private insurance.
You bet they do. I have watched the process cross my desk.
Monte wrote:
2Really? That's news to me and everyone else. The Senate Bill is projected to reduce the Definition by a grand total of $217 billion dollars over 10 years.
And if you
keep reading, they estimate another 650 billion in savings in the ten years following that. That's damn close to a trillion dollars in *savings*.
.
Monte wrote:
No, it's not. The bureaucracy you're arguing should manage everyone's healthcare is failing to deliver vaccines to the States. The CDC and White House are using the situation as a political tool. It's not a red-herring at all.
Tell me, when the VA system is properly funded, is it a giant colossal failure?
Monte wrote:
Really?
Really.
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The surrounding science supports delaying mammograms until 51?
Yes it does, and no, I am not wrong. The board that made this reccomendation did so because of the amount of false positives, the problems those false positives cause, and because of the low amount of actual positives you find between the age of 40 and 50.
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Funny, because, you know, you're wrong. And I didn't say they were law, I said they were provisions in the House Bill (which passed) and the Democrat's Senate Bill.
Show me. Pretty sure you're wrong here.
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Never mind the hard fact that the highest risk years for developing Breast Cancer are between 41 and 50.
Actually, no.
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Of course, I didn't make an appeal to emotion. I asked exactly how does this work out to the benefit you keep touting. At what point does changing care standards against empirical fact improve the quality of health care?
You have your facts wrong.
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You really have no idea what you're talking about now.
Save your personal attacks, Khross. I know exactly what I am talking about.
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1. Bush's Tax Cuts didn't cost me or you any money. They had a negligible impact on Federal Government revenues, too; after all, investments and capital gains taxation increased; actual business taxes paid increases; and more money was capitalized for gain under Bush's presidency than would have otherwise been.
They cost the government 2 *trillion* dollars. That's a hard fact, if you will. Two trillion dollars in revenue *lost*. And did it produce a massive spike in jobs, or growth? No. In fact, our economy got worse and worse under Bush, despite his tax cuts.
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2. We won't save any money through this plan:
Except for the trillion dollars the CBO sees. IF we spend X amount on health care now, and after this time frame we spend X minus 2 trillion, we have saved money.
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That's all fine and good; except, under your idea of a right, there will be no one to provide care. The best part about the House and Senate reforms will be the number of doctors who quit their practices and the number of doctors and nurses that never get trained. When you remove the incentive for someone to do a job, they quit doing they job unless forced.
*eyeroll*. Yet another dire horrifying warning of how doctors will stop working when 30 million more people have health insurance.
Wait, that's 30 million more people getting treated. That's thirty million more people to bill.
Doctors aren't going anywhere.
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So, who's going to treat you when the best and brightest and most inclined seek other vocations because medicine doesn't pay the bills?]
Dr. John Galt, then? You might have a point if there weren't lots and lots of brilliant doctors that work in countries that have universal health care coverage.
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Amusingly, everyone already has access to health insurance. 80% of the uninsured choose to be uninsured by the measures used by the Obama Administration. I know, I'm in that 80%. I have a Catastrophic Illness and Injury policy, an HSA, and the ability to pay out of pocket for office visits and preventative care. And, ironically, even with my health issues, I pay less a year than the average Single Person covered by employer provided group plans. Funny how that works out ... individual responsibility and intelligent behavior trumps your reform that will tax my policy and consider me uninsured.
That's just a lot of hogwash. Everyone does *not* have access to health insurance. Many who *do* qualify for medicaid don't use it, and should, but your paragraph here is unsupported and simply not accurate.
Blacklisting is *not* a myth. Recission is not a myth. I have watched people with serious illnesses get dropped from their insurance on technicalities. I have watched what happens when employers find out someone has a serious condition and that their rates will be going up. I've watched as a health insurance company retroactively denied claims on a cancer patient because of an unrelated illness she never reported (because she never knew she had to).
The profit motive fails when it comes to health care. Health insurance companies kill.