Xequecal wrote:
DFK! wrote:
Medicare disability
Medicaid
Some methods of Individual insurance
Faith-based co-op
Employer-based coverage
Spousal employer coverage
You're just factually wrong.
Ok. Since this whole argument was about "employer-based health coverage or Medicaid" that leaves the first two and the fifth one out.
This argument was about whether people can get healthcare coverage, pre-ACA if they have pre-existing conditions. Period. Don't change the goalposts.
Xeq wrote:
You don't get disability if you're working and that leaves you with exactly the same dilemma.
Yes, you can get it. I've had 2 employees thus far in my career with it, and I'm not that old.
Xeq wrote:
I went and looked up faith-based co-ops and it sure seems to me that they also screen for pre-existing conditions, the ones I've found say they will not accept people who already have serious diseases or have obvious risk factors. (obesity, smoking, promiscuity, etc.)
Everybody screens. That doesn't mean they deny.
Xeq wrote:
I guess spousal-based employer coverage does count as another option, but do you want to open the can of worms associated with suggesting that sick people marry someone for their insurance coverage?
No, but people with disabled kids (or themselves) DO get married. All the time. So it's an option.
Xeq wrote:
DFK! wrote:
This isn't to mention things (that aren't coverage, but still means to access care) like:
Free health clinics
Hospital-based NFP Charity services
Veterans Administration Care
Faith-based charitable assistance
I'll concede this point, you can get care if you get it from a source that's basically charity.
Your tone seems to indicate this is bad. Why?
Xeq wrote:
First, that statement doesn't imply that you want sick and poor people to die, it implies that you don't care if they do.
Correct. Nobody except my family and friends cares if I die, why should I care about "random poor person X." I also don't care if rich people die.
Xeq wrote:
Second, any kind of unearned handout, whether it comes from the government or not, constitutes a incentive to both not work and/or to not increase your wages. Seriously, any philosophy more lenient than "succeed or die" means that you're OK with some amount of "disincentives," and now we're just arguing about how many and where they should come from. Thus, when you suggest something is bad policy just because it's a "disincentive to work," you are indirectly suggesting that we should adopt a "succeed or die" system.
Not at all. That you interpret it that way speaks to your mindset in a very interesting way, though.
Quote:
Third, if you don't want to get labeled as an uncaring and arrogant, maybe you should try taking a position that doesn't suggest you have contempt for the vast majority of the country. You've actually gone past the already laughable position of "anyone who is unemployed for any reason is lazy" to confirming you actually believe that "anyone who is underemployed for any reason is lazy." Then there's your response to the illness situation. You see, as your own statistics have shown, having a full-time job with good health benefits at age 25 is an above-average result for college degree holders. The majority haven't achieved that. That's just amongst degree holders, so it's a significantly above average result compared to the general population. Despite this, you chose to **** on this achievement by suggesting it's easy to accomplish and that if she were a person of value, she'd have no problems accomplishing it. That doesn't say a whole lot for your opinion of the two-thirds of the country who also haven't reached that particular mark.
Except I didn't say "anyone who is unemployed for any reason is lazy" nor did I say "anyone who is underemployed for any reason is lazy." Again, you have interpreted it that way, probably due to your own bias.
Now, I did say, essentially, that those able to work who do not work at a job that offers benefits (in a pre-ACA context) did so by choice. Which is to say, laziness. Post-ACA, I anticipate a lot of us to lose our benefits. Khross has stated to me that he's lost his already, as an anecdotal example.
Further, you have failed to understand the statistical results.
You need to stop bringing your baggage from your life into this. 84-86% of this country (roughly) was insured before Obamacare. Less than 5% of the population received insurance from individual plans. Estimates from
professionals, not Xeq the bitter board poster, indicated that less than 5% and as few as 1% of the population were not acquiring insurance because they
couldn't, with the majority of the uninsured being so by choice.
This is further confirmed by some of the low enrollment rates for Obamacare, that is:
people didn't need it.Xeq wrote:
You know, I've always had trouble figuring out how people could really believe that anyone who is unemployed for any reason is just lazy, but you just helped me figure it out.
That's amazing, considering I didn't say that.
Xeq wrote:
Conservatives who spout this actually think almost everyone is lazy. Someone who "just" works a 9-to-5, 40 hour/week job is already inexcusably lazy in their eyes, so someone that's actually unemployed and makes their survival your problem is just a miserable excuse for a human being. A real American would get a second-full time job, or go to school on top of the job. These conservatives want the US to adopt the work hours of the slave laborers in China, but not only that, they think that such hours shouldn't be forced on us, but that we should choose to work that much voluntarily, and the fact that we don't just fills them with disgust. 40 hours/week is a vacation! Overtime? You think you should get paid extra to work more than forty hours? God, what kind of lazy worthless degenerates are we raising today?
It fills me with disgust when people who "just" work 9-5, and choose not to better themselves with any education, that want to earn what I earn, yes.
People who "just" work 9-5, and choose not to better themselves with any education, yet go home and don't ***** and complain about things in life in regards to the "fairness" of pay in the world? Good for them. They've achieved the level of monetary success they wanted, it would seem.
As for those who are unemployed but want to make others pay their way? Are they unemployed by circumstances in their control, or out of their control? If they latter, **** them. Yes. If out of their control? We should assist them at a level the democratic process in each state deems appropriate.