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PostPosted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 5:48 pm 
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Elmarnieh wrote:
Page 118 or there abouts of HR 3200. It also mandates any grandfathered coverage expires in 5 years even if you keep your job. Or at least it did in the revision of three weeks ago.


This.


Furthermore, if you keep your job and your employer changes benefits package, you have to have one of the new QHRB (whatevers) plan instead of your old one.



Look, the analysts aren't saying 80 million people would be forced onto the government plan for no reason. CBO isn't estimating the cost at 1-2 trillion for nothing. These are facts and estimates based on real numbers and real provisions in the bill.

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 6:00 pm 
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Exactly. And this is why I believe proponents of the current bill are kidding themselves, flat out lying, or being deceptive when they say they want to encourage competition. There would be competition, but it would be short-lived as everybody is basically forced onto a government plan and we end up with a de facto single payer system.

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 6:12 pm 
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fun little game: go find the phrases some folks keep repeating and put them into a google search engine.

Searches related to: poisoning the well poisoning the well stargate apple polishing ad hominem straw man
hasty generalization logical fallacies false analogy ad populum

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 6:30 pm 
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What do physicians say about the public option?

63% support a public insurance option, 10% support single payer, and only 21 percent support private health insurance only. Prettly clear endorsement of a public insurance plan from health care providers.

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 6:43 pm 
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Monte wrote:
What do physicians say about the public option?

63% support a public insurance option, 10% support single payer, and only 21 percent support private health insurance only. Prettly clear endorsement of a public insurance plan from health care providers.


No it isn't.

The survey was based on the assumption that physicians want an expansion of healthcare coverage. The question was phrased as follows:

NEJM wrote:
Survey respondents were asked to indicate which of three options for expanding health insurance coverage they would most strongly support: public and private options, providing people younger than 65 years of age the choice of enrolling in a new public health insurance plan (like Medicare) or in private plans; private options only, providing people with tax credits or subsidies, if they have low income, to buy private insurance coverage, without creating a new public plan; or a public option only, eliminating private insurance and covering everyone through a single public plan like Medicare.



No choice was given for "no expansion" or any other opposition to further encroachment.

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 11:47 pm 
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You are incorrect, DFK. They could choose entirely private, entirely public, or a mix of the two. Please re-read the link and you'll understand.

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 11:54 pm 
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Monte wrote:
You are incorrect, DFK. They could choose entirely private, entirely public, or a mix of the two. Please re-read the link and you'll understand.


I understand just fine, you don't.


Let me rephrase: where is the option for "I don't want any expansion of coverage."

It doesn't exist. Therefore, this study is ONLY examining which of the options to expand coverage is more popular, NOT whether physicians believe it should occur.

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 11:57 pm 
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DFK, I an baffled as to how you missed it. " I don't want any expansion of coverage" is the "entirely private" option. That would constitute a complete private market, and only a small minority of the surveyed physicians supported that.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:03 am 
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Monte wrote:
DFK, I an baffled as to how you missed it. " I don't want any expansion of coverage" is the "entirely private" option. That would constitute a complete private market, and only a small minority of the surveyed physicians supported that.


No it isn't.

Read it again, I'll quote it for you, again:

NEJM wrote:
Survey respondents were asked to indicate which of three options for expanding health insurance coverage they would most strongly support...


Emphasis mine.



See, they weren't asked if they support "any of these three options, or fourth option for non-expansion." The only thing they were asked about was expanding coverage. Period. There is no question about that, and the NEJM is about as impeccable a source as somebody could ask for. Any other interpretation of what this study examined is flat-out wrong.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:09 am 
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Here, let me break them out for you.
Quote:
Survey respondents were asked to indicate which of three options for expanding health insurance coverage they would most strongly support:

A) public and private options, providing people younger than 65 years of age the choice of enrolling in a new public health insurance plan (like Medicare) or in private plans

B) private options only, providing people with tax credits or subsidies, if they have low income, to buy private insurance coverage, without creating a new public plan

C) a public option only, eliminating private insurance and covering everyone through a single public plan like Medicare.


None of those options are "Keep it the way it is, and work it out a different way."

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:10 am 
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Elmarnieh wrote:
Page 118 or there abouts of HR 3200. It also mandates any grandfathered coverage expires in 5 years even if you keep your job. Or at least it did in the revision of three weeks ago.


I looked there abouts and did not find this. Could you be more specific about it's location?

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:11 am 
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Müs wrote:
Here, let me break them out for you.
Quote:
Survey respondents were asked to indicate which of three options for expanding health insurance coverage they would most strongly support:

A) public and private options, providing people younger than 65 years of age the choice of enrolling in a new public health insurance plan (like Medicare) or in private plans

B) private options only, providing people with tax credits or subsidies, if they have low income, to buy private insurance coverage, without creating a new public plan

C) a public option only, eliminating private insurance and covering everyone through a single public plan like Medicare.


None of those options are "Keep it the way it is, and work it out a different way."


Private Options Only seems to fit exactly that mold. They talk about tax credits, subsidies, etc.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:16 am 
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Monte wrote:
Müs wrote:
Here, let me break them out for you.
Quote:
Survey respondents were asked to indicate which of three options for expanding health insurance coverage they would most strongly support:

A) public and private options, providing people younger than 65 years of age the choice of enrolling in a new public health insurance plan (like Medicare) or in private plans

B) private options only, providing people with tax credits or subsidies, if they have low income, to buy private insurance coverage, without creating a new public plan

C) a public option only, eliminating private insurance and covering everyone through a single public plan like Medicare.



None of those options are "Keep it the way it is, and work it out a different way."


Private Options Only seems to fit exactly that mold. They talk about tax credits, subsidies, etc.



Incorrect.


Adding tax credits and subsidies is not "keeping things the way they are." It is "Adding tax credits and subsidies."


The status quo is 1. The survey is asking: "What do you want to add to 1?" There is no choice for "I choose not to do addition."

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:19 am 
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DFK! wrote:
Monte wrote:
Where is the push coming from? I want to know, because I *want* single payer health care. All I see is a bunch of democrats not even on board with a simple public insurance plan.

DFK, there is just no evidence to support your claim. When was your tape taken? What was the context?

On the tape, where does the President outline his secret plan to sneak Single Payer into the law through the house bill you quoted? Is it written in invisible ink or something?




I'm pretty sure I'm done repeating myself to you. Just because you feel that argumentum ad nauseum is a viable tactic doesn't mean I need to enable you to use it.


But you didn't actually show the Trojan Horse, DFK. You simply claimed that it existed without showing it's existence.

Perhaps you don't understand what "single payer" means. That might explain your confusion. The House bill does not establish a single payer plan, and the President did not advocate for a single payer plan in his speech to the joint session of congress. If all you have is a tape with him supporting it, the preponderance of evidence indicates that he's changed his mind. Unfortunate, in my opinion, but I think you're argument that this is some how a way to sneak single payer health care is simply not based on any real evidence.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 10:40 am 
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Monte wrote:
DFK! wrote:
Monte wrote:
Where is the push coming from? I want to know, because I *want* single payer health care. All I see is a bunch of democrats not even on board with a simple public insurance plan.

DFK, there is just no evidence to support your claim. When was your tape taken? What was the context?

On the tape, where does the President outline his secret plan to sneak Single Payer into the law through the house bill you quoted? Is it written in invisible ink or something?




I'm pretty sure I'm done repeating myself to you. Just because you feel that argumentum ad nauseum is a viable tactic doesn't mean I need to enable you to use it.


But you didn't actually show the Trojan Horse, DFK. You simply claimed that it existed without showing it's existence.


I cited 4 sections that work to undermine private insurance in the United States. Perhaps you don't understand how those sections work, and how that undermining will work to phase out private care entirely.

Perhaps you don't believe cited videos, and want to take what a politician says now vs. what they said a year ago as somehow more valid, I do not. Especially when we have lots of Democrats who are currently stating a belief that the best way to single payer is via a 'public option.'

You're off 180 degrees here. The preponderance of evidence is that the Democratic party members in Congress and the PotUS want single payer healthcare and have constructed a bill to work towards that end.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 10:55 am 
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Monte wrote:
If all you have is a tape with him supporting it, the preponderance of evidence indicates that he's changed his mind. Unfortunate, in my opinion, but I think you're argument that this is some how a way to sneak single payer health care is simply not based on any real evidence.

I'm glad you've forgiven Ron Paul of any allegations of racism.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:22 pm 
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Kaffis, what does that have to do with the conversation at hand? Please stay on topic. Thank you.

DFK - What evidence do you have to support your conspiracy theory about single payer health care being the real motivation behind legislation that includes no such thing?

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:44 pm 
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Monte wrote:
DFK - What evidence do you have to support your conspiracy theory about single payer health care being the real motivation behind legislation that includes no such thing?

Obviously I'm not DFK, but a quick search returned a speech/comment from Barney Frank on July 27th in which he stated:

Quote:
"I think if we get a good public option, it could lead to single-payer, and that’s the best way to reach single payer.”


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:50 pm 
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DFK! wrote:

I cited 4 sections that work to undermine private insurance in the United States.


Let me be even more clear - even if your opinion about those sections is correct, that still does not constitute evidence that the President and Congress are trying to sneak single payer health insurance through the legislative process and to the President's desk for a signature.

There is no part of that bill that indicates that, and nothing in the president's proposal indicates that. Believe me, if it was there, I would be very excited. I *want* a single payer system, or an NHS style system.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 1:21 pm 
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Monte wrote:
DFK! wrote:

I cited 4 sections that work to undermine private insurance in the United States.


Let me be even more clear - even if your opinion about those sections is correct, that still does not constitute evidence that the President and Congress are trying to sneak single payer health insurance through the legislative process and to the President's desk for a signature.

There is no part of that bill that indicates that, and nothing in the president's proposal indicates that. Believe me, if it was there, I would be very excited. I *want* a single payer system, or an NHS style system.


Population of Great Britain: 60,943,912 (2008) Tax rates (Vary from 22-40% with a VAT of 15%)
Population of Sweden: 9,045,389 (July 2008 est.) Tax Rates 55% highest marginal with a VAT of 25%
Population of Canada: 33,212,696 (July 2008 est.)Tax rates 20-30ish percent with national sales tax of approx 15%

Population of the US: 304,059,724 - Jul 2008 Tax Rates 11-30ish percent. No Nat'l Sales Tax, No VAT...

So. Who is this single payer, and how are they going to afford the bills without tax increases?

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 1:37 pm 
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Müs wrote:
Population of Canada: 33,212,696 (July 2008 est.)Tax rates 20-30ish percent with national sales tax of approx 15%



Canada's national sales tax (Goods & Services Tax, or GST) is 5%, not 15%. This is down from 7% at inception, when "Conservative" PM Brian Mulroney implemented the GST in 1991.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 1:42 pm 
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Didn't know where to put this but just had to.

This was taken at the massive 9/12 march(the one most networks are doing their best to ignore or downplay).

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 1:46 pm 
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I saw one sign saying "I'm not racist, I hate Biden and Pelosi too"

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 1:49 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Müs wrote:
Population of Canada: 33,212,696 (July 2008 est.)Tax rates 20-30ish percent with national sales tax of approx 15%



Canada's national sales tax (Goods & Services Tax, or GST) is 5%, not 15%. This is down from 7% at inception, when "Conservative" PM Brian Mulroney implemented the GST in 1991.


I'd imagine he was talking about the HST, although even then it's off.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 2:13 pm 
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Vindicarre wrote:
Talya wrote:
Müs wrote:
Population of Canada: 33,212,696 (July 2008 est.)Tax rates 20-30ish percent with national sales tax of approx 15%



Canada's national sales tax (Goods & Services Tax, or GST) is 5%, not 15%. This is down from 7% at inception, when "Conservative" PM Brian Mulroney implemented the GST in 1991.


I'd imagine he was talking about the HST, although even then it's off.


(1) Most provinces don't have an HST. It's proposed, but not in use.
(2) The HST (Harmonized Sales Tax) is just a proposal to amalgamate of the GST and any provincial sales taxes into one homogenized mass so we can't as easily pinpoint where the money is going. You're not speaking of provincial consumption taxes, as Arafys did not include state consumption taxes in his post either. (Which is fine, because each state and province have different taxes.)

Also, i didn't notice, the tax brackets were marginally wrong. US federal Tax Brackets range from 10% to 35%. Canada's range from 15% to 29%.

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