beezer wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, this isn't even about "every man for himself", because the truth is that socialized health care COSTS LESS.
She can't tell where she heard that, just that she heard it. So it must be true.
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beezer wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, this isn't even about "every man for himself", because the truth is that socialized health care COSTS LESS.
HapSmo19 wrote:beezer wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, this isn't even about "every man for himself", because the truth is that socialized health care COSTS LESS.
She can't tell where she heard that, just that she heard it. So it must be true.
Phatscotty wrote:HapSmo19 wrote:beezer wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, this isn't even about "every man for himself", because the truth is that socialized health care COSTS LESS.
She can't tell where she heard that, just that she heard it. So it must be true.
what motivates her?
ViperOverLord wrote:She's an ideologue that ignores reality.
Phatscotty wrote:what motivates her?
Lootifer wrote:I earn well above average income for my area, i'm educated and I support left wing politics.
jbrettlip wrote:You live in New Zealand. We will call you when we need to make another Hobbit movie.
bradleybadly wrote:Phatscotty wrote:what motivates her?
Phatscotty wrote:bradleybadly wrote:Phatscotty wrote:what motivates her?
ooh, and hiding his hand too
saxitoxin wrote:Barramundi Dan wrote:Oh and guess what? It did not cost him a cent.
Who paid for it?
Barramundi Dan wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Barramundi Dan wrote:Oh and guess what? It did not cost him a cent.
Who paid for it?
Australian tax payers payed for it.
Barramundi Dan wrote:We look after each other in our country.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Phatscotty wrote:yes, but what's the bottom line? What is it with you player? whats your bottom line
Enforce fair drug prices if sponsored by govt research
Since the early 1980s, the government has routinely given away the fruits of the research it sponsors, granting private companies exclusive, royalty-free rights to commercialize government-financed inventions while failing to include reasonable pricing requirements in the licenses.
In the critical area of pharmaceuticals, this research giveaway policy leads to superprofiteering by drug manufacturers, who charge unconscionably high prices for important medicines-costing consumers, and often resulting in the denial of treatment to consumers who are unable to pay high prices.
Where the government hands an annual billion-dollar revenue earner [like exclusive licenses to distribute government-researched medicines] to a private company for a pittance, is it too much to ask the relevant federal agency to enforce reasonable pricing requirements? This has resulted in a failure to avert preventable cancer deaths. Shame clearly will not work as a disciplinary force to limit corporate welfare abuses.
HapSmo19 wrote:beezer wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, this isn't even about "every man for himself", because the truth is that socialized health care COSTS LESS.
She can't tell where she heard that, just that she heard it. So it must be true.
thegreekdog wrote:Player - ignoring what the conservatives say, do you believe ObamaCare is socialized healthcare in the vein of an Australia, Germany, UK, etc.? In other words, all of these savings that can be realized under a socialized healthcare system - are they going to be realized under Obamacare?
PLAYER57832 wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Player - ignoring what the conservatives say, do you believe ObamaCare is socialized healthcare in the vein of an Australia, Germany, UK, etc.? In other words, all of these savings that can be realized under a socialized healthcare system - are they going to be realized under Obamacare?
No, it is just a small step in the correct direction. Unfortunately, too few people bothered to even read the bill and so it will likely be revoked.
That means it won't just be me and my husband, but my kids who cannot get insurance (each has pre-existing conditions), except under the Medicaid system.... fully at taxpayer expense. We will be eligible for the "Fairpay" plan in 4 months, but by then the waiting list will no doubt be long, IF the program is even continued (doubtful, given who was elected). So, we face either no insurance or paying $1300 a month with no coverage for anything considered "pre-existing". Which, by insurance definitions will include just about everything down to and including a hang nail.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Because the alternative being presented is always to roll things back, do away with even those small reforms that have been implemented. I have never said anything but that I think a more comprehensive reform is needed.
thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Because the alternative being presented is always to roll things back, do away with even those small reforms that have been implemented. I have never said anything but that I think a more comprehensive reform is needed.
I think "rolling back" is one of the alternatives being presented, sure. I also think the Republicans have presented other plans that have been routinely ignored. Now, these other alternatives do not involve socialized healthcare, but there is evidence that they will save money and insure Americans that are currently uninsured.
http://www.gop.gov/solutions/healthcare
So, I don't think you're being fair saying that the only alternative is to roll things back.
PLAYER57832 wrote:I FIRMLY disagree, beginning with the fact that the original so-called "Obama" plan was very much mirrored after the previous Republican plan, but this time around they simply walked off saying "no.. its a stupid Democratic idea".
PLAYER57832 wrote:I will say that I find it strange that someone as intelligent as you would buy into this idea that returning to the party that has pretty much had full control, who has made the most critical changes in history in a negative way, should somehow be considered the "light at the end of the tunnel".
Not in the passed bill. Republicans went to this after the other things they griped about were added.Number one: let families and businesses buy health insurance across state lines.
I'm not exactly sure, there wasn't much of an issue made of this. Probably in the passed bill then, but for argument's sake we'll say no.Number two: allow individuals, small businesses, and trade associations to pool together and acquire health insurance at lower prices, the same way large corporations and labor unions do.
In the passed bill, although through federal government, not through states. This is the whole deal about death panels. We'll call it half.Number three: give states the tools to create their own innovative reforms that lower health care costs.
Tort reform - In the passed bill.Number four: end junk lawsuits that contribute to higher health care costs by increasing the number of tests and procedures that physicians sometimes order not because they think it's good medicine, but because they are afraid of being sued.
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.
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