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Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Aside from this being an incredibly simplistic and dumb argument, ignoring thousands of factors that influence costs, I don't understand how life not being fair matters in any way.Night Strike wrote:Why do people think they have the right for lower health insurance prices when they have an unhealthy life style or genetic predisposition?? The people who will cost the system more must pay more for their coverage. Life isn't fair, so these liberals need to stop trying to make everyone exactly the same and get something realistic on the table.
We are? How strange, nobody has told me. Thanks for the information random-american-on-the-internet. I will alert the media and government to this.jbrettlip wrote: Every other health care system in the world is failing. Along with their economies. Look at Europe, the poster child for "free" health care. Even with exorbitant tax rates, they are failing to cover costs.

Maybe no one told you, because you aren't important. Read the Wall Street Journal sometime.Snorri1234 wrote:We are? How strange, nobody has told me. Thanks for the information random-american-on-the-internet. I will alert the media and government to this.jbrettlip wrote: Every other health care system in the world is failing. Along with their economies. Look at Europe, the poster child for "free" health care. Even with exorbitant tax rates, they are failing to cover costs.

Why do some people think they should skate along for free while they are young and healthy and leave it up to taxpayers to pick up the burdern when they get old and finally need care?Night Strike wrote:Why do people think they have the right for lower health insurance prices when they have an unhealthy life style or genetic predisposition?? The people who will cost the system more must pay more for their coverage. Life isn't fair, so these liberals need to stop trying to make everyone exactly the same and get something realistic on the table.
I have a friend with $70,000 in medical bills that he's never paid a penny on and just went to the ER again a couple months ago and guess what...they treated him. People don't get turned away from emergency rooms if they have an "easily curable" sickness so go easy on the drama.Snorri1234 wrote:"You have an easily curable sickness but no insurance SO f*ck YOU AND FUCKING DIE YOU f*ck!"?
I believe he is reading some rather more broad sources.jbrettlip wrote:Maybe no one told you, because you aren't important. Read the Wall Street Journal sometime.Snorri1234 wrote:We are? How strange, nobody has told me. Thanks for the information random-american-on-the-internet. I will alert the media and government to this.jbrettlip wrote: Every other health care system in the world is failing. Along with their economies. Look at Europe, the poster child for "free" health care. Even with exorbitant tax rates, they are failing to cover costs.
They do if they are NOT poor, but are not wealthy enough to have insurance. Those 70,000 in bills would mean he'd have to lose his house, etc.HapSmo19 wrote:I have a friend with $70,000 in medical bills that he's never paid a penny on and just went to the ER again a couple months ago and guess what...they treated him. People don't get turned away from emergency rooms if they have an "easily curable" sickness so go easy on the drama.Snorri1234 wrote:"You have an easily curable sickness but no insurance SO f*ck YOU AND FUCKING DIE YOU f*ck!"?
Well, if you are going to have a debate on costs and economics, Left wing Euros Illustrated might not have the same credentials as the WSJ.PLAYER57832 wrote:I believe he is reading some rather more broad sources.jbrettlip wrote:Maybe no one told you, because you aren't important. Read the Wall Street Journal sometime.Snorri1234 wrote:We are? How strange, nobody has told me. Thanks for the information random-american-on-the-internet. I will alert the media and government to this.jbrettlip wrote: Every other health care system in the world is failing. Along with their economies. Look at Europe, the poster child for "free" health care. Even with exorbitant tax rates, they are failing to cover costs.
And, if you haven't noticed, he has a clue about what happens in other countries, becuase he LIVES IN ONE! and yet, unlike you, he also happens to know a bit about our system.

BS. He is poor in every sense of the word.PLAYER57832 wrote:They do if they are NOT poor, but are not wealthy enough to have insurance.HapSmo19 wrote:I have a friend with $70,000 in medical bills that he's never paid a penny on and just went to the ER again a couple months ago and guess what...they treated him. People don't get turned away from emergency rooms if they have an "easily curable" sickness so go easy on the drama.Snorri1234 wrote:"You have an easily curable sickness but no insurance SO f*ck YOU AND FUCKING DIE YOU f*ck!"?
Here is a quick synapsis of the bills actually being debated, versus our current system.jbrettlip wrote:Player, here is a quick synopsis of how things work. The government has NO money of their own. They are funded by taxes paid by people and companies that produce things. For people who pay no taxes to be given services, that means more money has to be taken from some and given to others. Giving 30 million people health care comes from the producers of the country, not from the gov. The government isn't good at running anything.
I searched my posts for "research" and can't find it. I think you are arguing with someone else.
You don't know because you keep reciting idiocy instead of looking up real facts.jbrettlip wrote:. He knows what happens because he lives there, yet I can't possibly know anything about where I live since I disagree with you. Wonderful. Someday I hope to be unemployed and live off the labor of others too. I don't know why I try so hard to be successful.
jbrettlip wrote:Maybe no one told you, because you aren't important. Read the Wall Street Journal sometime.Snorri1234 wrote:We are? How strange, nobody has told me. Thanks for the information random-american-on-the-internet. I will alert the media and government to this.jbrettlip wrote: Every other health care system in the world is failing. Along with their economies. Look at Europe, the poster child for "free" health care. Even with exorbitant tax rates, they are failing to cover costs.

I quote you "he is poor".HapSmo19 wrote:BS. He is poor in every sense of the word.PLAYER57832 wrote:They do if they are NOT poor, but are not wealthy enough to have insurance.HapSmo19 wrote:I have a friend with $70,000 in medical bills that he's never paid a penny on and just went to the ER again a couple months ago and guess what...they treated him. People don't get turned away from emergency rooms if they have an "easily curable" sickness so go easy on the drama.Snorri1234 wrote:"You have an easily curable sickness but no insurance SO f*ck YOU AND FUCKING DIE YOU f*ck!"?
Are we talking about saving lives or credit ratings?
Funny, but what I remember from those interviews, the analysis is that while none of the systems was perfect, every one, without exception was far, better than the US system. People liked them better, they cost lest per person and served people better.tzor wrote:One of the greatest fallacies ever invented was that the government can actually do something! This is the greatest fallacy that the progressive elites have invented.
I remember a good series NPR did a year ago about national health systems worldwide. The long story short was that all of these systems had major long term problems. They each had their own different problems, but none of them had any solution that was long term solvent or long term sustainable. The European systems also had their problems. (One of the problems that they share with other nations is the burden of medical tourism.)
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I am not saying that that is the current system, I am saying that that is the logical extent of such a viewpoint. In fact, what you're referring to here is part of why your system is so incredibly dumb and failing so hard.HapSmo19 wrote:I have a friend with $70,000 in medical bills that he's never paid a penny on and just went to the ER again a couple months ago and guess what...they treated him. People don't get turned away from emergency rooms if they have an "easily curable" sickness so go easy on the drama.Snorri1234 wrote:"You have an easily curable sickness but no insurance SO f*ck YOU AND FUCKING DIE YOU f*ck!"?
Holy shit. You think this bill is the best way to achieve that goal?PLAYER57832 wrote:ITS IF YOU HAVE SOME MONEY, ARE WORKING, BUT ARE NOT WEALTHY that you get screwed. THAT is the point of healthcare insurance reform. To allow all of us working people to get real insurance at set costs with gauranteed care.
It would be awesome to see a world where government had never existed.tzor wrote:One of the greatest fallacies ever invented was that the government can actually do something! This is the greatest fallacy that the progressive elites have invented.
Wait...why is medical tourism such a burden?I remember a good series NPR did a year ago about national health systems worldwide. The long story short was that all of these systems had major long term problems. They each had their own different problems, but none of them had any solution that was long term solvent or long term sustainable. The European systems also had their problems. (One of the problems that they share with other nations is the burden of medical tourism.)
This is merely a problem unique to Spain because old people move there. It has nothing at all to do with Health Tourism for the same reason that old people moving to Florida has nothing to do with it. Yes Spain suffers from it a bit but they can likely strike a bargain with the EU for extra funds.
What you need to do is mandate coverage. Life insurance is completely different because you don't need it.The problem with health insurance; anyone’s health insurance, corporate, private, public, it doesn’t matter; is that it tries to hide the costs of health from the people who have to pay those costs. This makes the true costs (and ironically the true benefits) of health care totally unknown to the people who get and who have to pay for health care. It becomes harder to see how simple economic principles like supply and demand still impact the quality and cost of healthcare.
Thus it is less about everyone being covered than it is about everyone taking an active involvement in their own health care. (There is an argument that would suggest that covering everyone will lower costs because those not insured often go through the most expensive portion of health care for every problem; hospital emergency rooms.) The question of health insurance (especially for the young) is just like the question of life insurance. In the question of life insurance, you can pay now or you can pay later, but in either case the total you pay is going to be the same. (Buy life insurance later and your premiums will be higher.) This is the type of incentive we need in health insurance.
Nobody thinks this bill is the BEST way to achieve this. At least, in the realistic political sense. Hopefully this bill will lead to further improvements.HapSmo19 wrote:Holy shit. You think this bill is the best way to achieve that goal?PLAYER57832 wrote:ITS IF YOU HAVE SOME MONEY, ARE WORKING, BUT ARE NOT WEALTHY that you get screwed. THAT is the point of healthcare insurance reform. To allow all of us working people to get real insurance at set costs with gauranteed care.![]()
There's nothing wrong with the piecemeal(or all at once with individual bills that specifically address individual issues) approach to this problem.
you win. Your stupidity makes my head hurt. I know it isn't one system, but the models are similar. Greece is failing, the UK is failing, and the US is failing ALL due to entitlement programs. I am not a socialist and never will be. You can depend on government or you can depend on yourself. I will continue ot depend on myself and be a producer in this society. You can continue to hope for a percentage of my income.PLAYER57832 wrote:You don't know because you keep reciting idiocy instead of looking up real facts.jbrettlip wrote:. He knows what happens because he lives there, yet I can't possibly know anything about where I live since I disagree with you. Wonderful. Someday I hope to be unemployed and live off the labor of others too. I don't know why I try so hard to be successful.
As far as Europe. Yes, their economy is suffering. Mostly because the world is inter-connected and when we go down, so do other countries. This is precisely why Europeans do take an interest in our health care debate.
As for their healthcare system.... #1 it is not ONE healthcare system, it is many. EACH of them operates more cheaply and offers better care, overall than ours. And the Wallstreet Journal does not state otherwise, sorry.

jbrettlip wrote:I know it isn't one system, but the models are similar.
And I'm the one who should read the Wall Street Journal?Greece is failing, the UK is failing, and the US is failing ALL due to entitlement programs.
Don't worry, they're already getting it.You can continue to hope for a percentage of my income.
No, they are not... but you would know that had you bothered to actually read something other than right-wing blogs... INCLUDING by-the-way the Wall Street Journal which you attempted to cite earlier.jbrettlip wrote:you win. Your stupidity makes my head hurt. I know it isn't one system, but the models are similar.
I see, so Greece, the UK and the US all have the same type of economic and health care systems, according to you?jbrettlip wrote: Greece is failing, the UK is failing, and the US is failing ALL due to entitlement programs. I am not a socialist and never will be. You can depend on government or you can depend on yourself. I will continue ot depend on myself and be a producer in this society.
Now who's misquoting.jbrettlip wrote: You can continue to hope for a percentage of my income.