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 Post subject: Re: Legal Care Reform.
PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:18 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Other than the quote Vindicarre listed, I don't need any more evidence that he promised not to raise taxes.


But that isn't an entirely accurate way to look at it. Yes, he promised to not raise taxes on anyone making less than a certain threshold. That's different that promising to not raise *any* taxes, and I don't see any deliberate intention to mislead on that principle.

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Premiums paid into the system are taxes--


Um, no. They are premiums. Like any other insurance plan. FICA and SS withholding are taxes. This program is not Social Security, and it is not Medicare.

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They're called payroll taxes, which incidentally violates his campaign pledge.


No, this would not be a payroll tax. This is a premium, like any other premium you would pay for your private insurance.

Monte wrote:
Payroll taxes affect all income earners, even those who have no Federal Income Tax burden. So, no, he's not sticking to that principle.


How does that work exactly.

let's say the top marginal tax rate is 33%. If he raises just that tax rate, the people in lower brackets do not see a tax increase.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:20 pm 
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If it's mandatory to pay premiums into the system, or buy your own insurance, it's a tax. IT doesn't matter if you call it a premium or not.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:22 pm 
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It's a government tax if I spend my money on a private insurance plan?

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:24 pm 
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Monte wrote:
It's a government tax if I spend my money on a private insurance plan?


Yes. The government isn't actually taking the money, but it's still making you spend it. I don't give a **** where the money goes; if I'm forced to spend it I'm still out the money.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 12:33 pm 
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Personally, I very much oppose the mandate. I understand the reason for it, practically, but I still oppose it. I feel that if they are going to mandate insurance, that they should simply allow for anyone to buy into Medicare coverage. If there is a mandate and *no* public option, I will be one of many voices raised in powerful opposition to the administration and congress.

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 Post subject: Re: Legal Care Reform.
PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 1:23 pm 
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Ladas wrote:
What I think Vindicarre is missing is the modifier of "your". Consumption taxes aren't normally considered personal taxes, which is the implication behind the modifier.


What I think you're missing is the line "any form of tax increase".

Was this a form of tax increase?
Did it affect those making less than $250k?

Ladas wrote:
Its an example of slipperly language used by politicians. It wins him votes from people who interpret it the way Vind has during voting, and gives him an out when called on it.

Actually, it lost votes from people like me because I knew it was a promise he wouldn't keep.

Monte wrote:
Khross wrote:
Other than the quote Vindicarre listed, I don't need any more evidence that he promised not to raise taxes.


But that isn't an entirely accurate way to look at it. Yes, he promised to not raise taxes on anyone making less than a certain threshold. That's different that promising to not raise *any* taxes, and I don't see any deliberate intention to mislead on that principle.


"any form of tax increase"

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 Post subject: Re: Legal Care Reform.
PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 1:31 pm 
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Vindicarre wrote:
Actually, it lost votes from people like me because I knew it was a promise he wouldn't keep.

True, but the stupid outnumber the smart.


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 1:47 pm 
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Greed and class-envy can make even smart people stupid - another reason to high light the "your taxes", implying that it'll only happen to those rich SOBs.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 15, 2009 7:58 pm 
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Monte -- premiums don't scale with income. Premiums represent a good/service that has a market price.

Taxes are based on dependent values -- dependent on the value of your property, your income, or the goods or services involved in a transaction.

The plans before Congress do not have premiums.

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 Post subject: Re: Legal Care Reform.
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 7:55 am 
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Ladas wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
Actually, it lost votes from people like me because I knew it was a promise he wouldn't keep.

True, but the stupid outnumber the smart.


So, is it your opinion that every person that voted for the President is stupid?

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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 7:56 am 
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Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Monte -- premiums don't scale with income. Premiums represent a good/service that has a market price.


I was just listening to a report on the Baucus plan this morning in the car. It's capped at 13% of income.

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Taxes are based on dependent values -- dependent on the value of your property, your income, or the goods or services involved in a transaction.

The plans before Congress do not have premiums.


They will have premiums, and the bills outline how those premiums are regulated.

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 Post subject: Re: Legal Care Reform.
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 8:19 am 
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Monte wrote:
So, is it your opinion that every person that voted for the President is stupid?


to quote you...

Monte wrote:
That wasn't what I argued. I will thank you to not build straw men out of my argument. It's a logical fallacy.


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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 8:21 am 
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Monte wrote:
They will have premiums, and the bills outline how those premiums are regulated.

The point being made was that differences in costs of insurance (premiums) are based upon characteristics of the insurance, such as deductible amount, etc, and not your income. 25 people on the same insurance plan pay the same premium regardless of their income.

What is being proposed by our politicians is not a premium in any sense except the name, which is nothing more than a means to mask what it really is from people not paying enough attention.


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 Post subject: Re: Legal Care Reform.
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 8:54 am 
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Ladas wrote:
Monte wrote:
So, is it your opinion that every person that voted for the President is stupid?


to quote you...

Monte wrote:
That wasn't what I argued. I will thank you to not build straw men out of my argument. It's a logical fallacy.


Great. So, what did you mean by that statement, in the context in which it was posted?

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 Post subject: Re: Legal Care Reform.
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 9:30 am 
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Monte wrote:
Great. So, what did you mean by that statement, in the context in which it was posted?

The same thing you frequently say. The majority of people, if not all people some of the time, tend to take things at surface value and/or hear what they want to hear, and in the case of elections, vote accordingly. I believe you have gone so far in the past to imply directly that everyone that voted for Bush was stupid (or delusional, misled, etc).

In particular to this case, I have no doubt people heard "no new taxes" (figuratively) and actually believed that Obama could deliver all these new "free" items at no cost to them, but not with the qualifiers which we are discussing where it is now "no personal taxes" or "only consumption taxes", and voted in support, without thinking about the reality of the statement.


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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 9:52 am 
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Monte wrote:
Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Monte -- premiums don't scale with income. Premiums represent a good/service that has a market price.


I was just listening to a report on the Baucus plan this morning in the car. It's capped at 13% of income.


They will have premiums, and the bills outline how those premiums are regulated.[/quote]

13%‽ Jesus jumped up christ on a pony! That's 6 TIMES what I pay now. (Assuming I get stuck paying the 13% figure.) On a monthly rate, that's more than the COBRA payments I would have had to make to keep my insurance when I got laid off. There's no way in hell I could afford ~$450 a month to have insurance...

No thank you government. I'll stick with what I have now thanks.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 9:58 am 
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And you would certainly have that right under Obama's plan, and under the proposals before congress.

I might have the number wrong, though, and it could be split between the employee and the employer.

Here's something interesting - the cost for individuals under France's program? 7% on their income taxes, and 120 bucks a month. That's it.

That's pretty damn good for universal coverage, and to never deal with the hassle of an insurance company, billing from a hospital, denied claims, etc.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:02 am 
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Monte wrote:
And you would certainly have that right under Obama's plan, and under the proposals before congress.

I might have the number wrong, though, and it could be split between the employee and the employer.

Here's something interesting - the cost for individuals under France's program? 7% on their income taxes, and 120 bucks a month. That's it.

That's pretty damn good for universal coverage, and to never deal with the hassle of an insurance company, billing from a hospital, denied claims, etc.


Sure, I would have the right, but how many companies are going to stop offering insurance now that there's a public option, and they don't *have* to offer it? In a perfect world, none. In the world we live in? Probably most.

Lets see, 7% +120 a month = (for me) $361 a month. Still, $300 more than what I currently pay. So no, that's **** compared to what I have. I don't have much hassle with my insurance company at all. I go to the doc, pay my 20 bucks, and get my pharmaceutical joy.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:15 am 
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Well, at present, we don't know if there will *be* a public option. However, assuming there is one, you can still get insurance. You can go to the proposed insurance exchange, you can buy a private plan or the government plan, and those private plans will have to compete with that government plan. Their prices will be lower.

Employers will also be paying less for insurance coverage for their employees. The insurance companies will have to compete with a much cheaper public plan, so your current costs are not likely to be an accurate means of comparison.

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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:18 am 
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Monte wrote:
Well, at present, we don't know if there will *be* a public option. However, assuming there is one, you can still get insurance. You can go to the proposed insurance exchange, you can buy a private plan or the government plan, and those private plans will have to compete with that government plan. Their prices will be lower.

Employers will also be paying less for insurance coverage for their employees. The insurance companies will have to compete with a much cheaper public plan, so your current costs are not likely to be an accurate means of comparison.



So what happens when the insurance companies go out of business because they can't compete with the government plan? Remember, the government doesn't have to worry about profit. Also, if we continue with that line of thought, what happens to all the people employed by those insurance companies that suddenly can't compete with the government plan?

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:20 am 
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Private schools exist right alongside public schools, and are not driven out of business because of the presence of a public option for education. In fact, they thrive. I fail to see how private insurance would be put out of business by a public option for insurance.

The fact that the government has no profit motive or concern is a huge plus in my book. It means lower costs, and a more proper focus on what is important in health care.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:23 am 
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Monte wrote:
Here's something interesting - the cost for individuals under France's program? 7% on their income taxes, and 120 bucks a month. That's it.

That's pretty damn good for universal coverage, and to never deal with the hassle of an insurance company, billing from a hospital, denied claims, etc.



From this site, updated in 2007 regarding general stats in France... France

Quote:
Social welfare

The French Social Security system was introduced in 1945. Benefits are financed on a "pay as you go" basis.

65.5% of total social security spending (29.6% of GDP) comes from employers and employees’ contributions and 17.4% from taxes, including earmarked taxes such as the CSG (Contribution sociale généralisée - social security contribution levied on virtually all sources of income) or the CRDS (Contribution pour le remboursement de la dette sociale - contribution to the repayment of the social debt) which apply to all income other than that deriving from work. This is virtually the sole source of funding for the Social Security system. Public financing accounts for 13.5% of total resources.

Benefits break down as follows: pensions (44%), health (35.2%), family allowances (9%) and employment aid (unemployment benefit, vocational training and social integration) (7.4%).

However, the growing number of pensioners compared to the labour force, combined with medical advances and longer life expectancy, has led to a deficit in the French Social Security system and in 2003 to reform of the pension contribution system.

http://www.travail.gouv.fr

Health

Health is a major concern of the French: in 2005, they spent €190,5 billion on medical care and goods.

77.15% of this was covered by the social security system, with an increasing proportion being met by households and insurance companies. A major programme of reform was instituted in 2004 to balance the accounts of the health insurance branch of the Social Security system.


Additionally, the average family income in the US for 2007 was $50,000 (give or take a couple hundred). Depending on how that 7% is calculated (similiar to SS?), that would be a monthly cost $291.66, plus the $120.00/mo from the French plan, for a total of $411.00/mo, or about 10% of the average family monthly income.


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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:32 am 
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Monte wrote:
Private schools exist right alongside public schools, and are not driven out of business because of the presence of a public option for education. In fact, they thrive. I fail to see how private insurance would be put out of business by a public option for insurance.

The fact that the government has no profit motive or concern is a huge plus in my book. It means lower costs, and a more proper focus on what is important in health care.

Without a school voucher system so that more people can actually afford the option of the private schools, there is no real competition in that sector. Public schools have a monopoly at the lowest common denominator, and because of the way in which public schools are funded, people which can't afford to double pay for school are locked into that system. There is no competition.. the two groups are almost completely stratified based upon the income of the parents and the ability to afford paying twice for a school.

As for no motive equating to lower costs... the Postal system says otherwise. Much like the schools, there is no real competition at the mandate forced stratification. Private carriers are barred by federal law from handling first class mail, so the USPS has a monopoly. Where the private companies are allowed to compete, the USPS is essentially a non-player because they can't cover the costs of their operation (lost $3 billion last year), despite not needing to make a profit. Who pays for that loss?

Of course, you statement also assumes that politicians don't play games with favors for government agencies... I mean, surely you don't think the Defense Department has reduced costs because it doesn't need to make a profit?


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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:39 am 
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Ladas wrote:

Without a school voucher system so that more people can actually afford the option of the private schools, there is no real competition in that sector.



You surely aren't arguing that the only reason private schools continue to exist is because of public voucher programs, programs that don't exist everywhere. Yet, private schools do.


Quote:
Public schools have a monopoly at the lowest common denominator, and because of the way in which public schools are funded, people which can't afford to double pay for school are locked into that system. There is no competition.. the two groups are almost completely stratified based upon the income of the parents and the ability to afford paying twice for a school.


But anyone of any income can go to a public school, correct? Public schools are income neutral - no matter how rich or how poor you are, you have equal access to a public option for education. Now, it's true that poor people are less likely to be able to afford private school. And I think it's a great testament to our society that they can still have access to an education, regardless of their financial position.

Quote:
As for no motive equating to lower costs... the Postal system says otherwise. Much like the schools, there is no real competition at the mandate forced stratification. Private carriers are barred by federal law from handling first class mail, so the USPS has a monopoly. Where the private companies are allowed to compete, the USPS is essentially a non-player because they can't cover the costs of their operation (lost $3 billion last year), despite not needing to make a profit. Who pays for that loss?


We do, of course. But that doesn't invalidate the program itself. That being said, losses from the public option will be paid for by spending cuts. In other words, it is intended to have no net impact on our deficit.

Quote:
Of course, you statement also assumes that politicians don't play games with favors for government agencies... I mean, surely you don't think the Defense Department has reduced costs because it doesn't need to make a profit?


That's true. But that's not quite the same thing. There are no privatized DoD's operating in an exchange competing directly with the government DoD.



Edit - Unrelated side note. This is interesting, though. In 2003 Joe Wilson voted for a bill called the Medicare Perscription Drug, Improvement and Modernizaton act. Section 1100 gave 250,000 annually to hospitals over the course of about 5 years for treatment of illegal immigrants. So, he supported covering illegals under a white conservative president, but he shouted a lie about the black liberal president's proposal in the middle of a speech to the joint session when he was afraid it would ...cover illegals.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 11:12 am 
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Re: the aside:

Considering the ridiculous complexity of our laws, and the fact that none of our lawmakers actually *read* the damn things (which I'm certainly not excusing in any way), there are many reasons why he might have supported one bill and not the other. Unless they were verbatim identical bills, that doesn't prove anything.

Or, more simply, correlation =/= causation. On Monday, I decided to grab a hamburger for lunch. It was a sunny day. On Wednesday, I decided not to get a hamburger for lunch. It was raining on Wednesday. Clearly, I decided not to eat a hamburger because I don't like rain.

But regardless, the fact that he ever supported an act which would provide treatment to illegal immigrants could be used as an argument against him being racist.

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