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KrK
Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy
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join:2000-01-17
Tulsa, OK
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Healthcare Reform--- the REAL agenda

»www.youtube.com/watch?v=S35PZJDFsOw


NY Tel
Premium
join:2004-04-09
Smithtown, NY
kudos:3

said by KrK:

(youtube clip)
That was priceless!


Hpower
Roflmao

join:2000-06-08
Glendale, CA

reply to KrK
Blah I have to look at this at home due to content blocker at work
--
The Internet is about to go down....it is actually.



KrK
Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy
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join:2000-01-17
Tulsa, OK
Reviews:
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reply to NY Tel

said by NY Tel:

said by KrK:

(youtube clip)
That was priceless!
:D www.markfiore.com

He really does some nice satire stuff.
--
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power." -- Benito Mussolini

Romney2012
Defeat Obama 2012-Chg we can believe in
Premium
join:2002-03-03
USA
kudos:4

1 edit

reply to KrK

»www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gvy26x5ixV0

»www.youtube.com/watch?v=VQBccTF7Ygo&NR=1


KrK
Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy
Premium
join:2000-01-17
Tulsa, OK
Reviews:
·AT&T DSL Service

Aww TK, what? No sense of humor?

Well anyway, I gave it a listen. Unfortunately, As soon as you recognize the voice you might as well stop. You know that at best, severe distortion follows, or at worst, complete falsehood.
--
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power." -- Benito Mussolini


amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
·magicjack.com

1 edit

reply to Romney2012

said by Romney2012:

(youtube clip)
Your video focuses on how universal healthcare will replace privately-purchased healthcare, ultimately making it illegal to purchase goods and services on the "open market."

However, our current (and heavily socialized) healthcare system (depicted as a "market") made it illegal for millions of Americans to purchase the healthcare goods and services they would have chosen absent laws setting quality standards higher than a "free market" of willing buyers and sellers would produce.

It seems like no difference. We're just saying that if compulsion is good enough for some Americans, it's good enough for all!

Mark


KrK
Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy
Premium
join:2000-01-17
Tulsa, OK

The only sure thing is doing nothing will take everyone down and out.



rawgerz
The hell was that?
Premium
join:2004-10-03
Grove City, PA

reply to KrK
It will hurt his portfolio! God forbid!


Romney2012
Defeat Obama 2012-Chg we can believe in
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join:2002-03-03
USA
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said by rawgerz:

It will hurt his portfolio! God forbid!
If you think that is true, you REALLY don't understand investing. My portfolio will be adjusted by me no matter what Healthcare plan becomes law. Some areas of business will suffer and others will make out better no matter which version is passed. My portfolio is affected more by the health of the overall global economy than it is by 1 industry or another.

And if the abortion of HR 3200 comes out unchanged from Congress, I can always pay cash for premium care if it messes up the health care system too badly. Unfortunately there are a LOT of seniors that won't be able to say the same.
--
My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page

amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
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said by Romney2012:

if the abortion of HR 3200 comes out unchanged from Congress, I can always pay cash for premium care if it messes up the health care system too badly. Unfortunately there are a LOT of seniors that won't be able to say the same.
There are millions of average Americans who pay a premium for healthcare today (due to our artificial quality standards compared to the rest of the world). And, millions who can't even do that (and are prohibited by law from purchasing the level of healthcare available to others around the world).

If the scenario you described is undesirable, why should we live with today's?

Mark


pnh102
Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty
Premium
join:2002-05-02
Mount Airy, MD

reply to amigo_boy

said by amigo_boy:

However, our current (and heavily socialized) healthcare system (depicted as a "market") made it illegal for millions of Americans to purchase the healthcare goods and services they would have chosen absent laws setting quality standards higher than a "free market" of willing buyers and sellers would produce.
You keep claiming this but you, nor anyone else who argues for nationalization of the health care system, has shown how people who cannot afford insurance are systematically being denied health care. I would think the 47 trillion (or whatever the BS number is today) people who lack insurance would have died off by now since they lack insurance.

If you think that our system, which currently enables people of lesser means to get high quality care which they cannot afford to buy, is so bad, would you argue for replacing it with a system that allows for medical professionals to receive less training, and offer such subpar services to people simply because they cannot afford to pay?
--
Blagojevich / Madoff 2012!

amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
·magicjack.com

3 edits

said by pnh102:

You keep claiming this but you, nor anyone else who argues for nationalization of the health care system, has shown how people who cannot afford insurance are systematically being denied health care.
We all know you don't get something for nothing. There was a reason for criminalizing lessor (yet world class) standards in the interest of producing "the best healthcare in the world." Why? Because a significant number of people were willing to buy and sell those lessor goods and services.

You can't criminalize those goods and services without "denying" something to someone. Those who can afford the resulting socialized market (with standards set higher by public law than willing buyers and sellers would negotiate consensually) pay more. That's money they could have used for something else.

The further down the wealth scale you go, it's logical that individuals will make choices to buy food, clothing and housing before the above-described inflated healthcare.

If you want to say that the above doesn't "deny" anyone anything, then we can also say that Republican scare-tactics that individuals will be delayed care (under universal healthcare) won't deny them anything either.

Mark

amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
·magicjack.com

1 edit

reply to pnh102

said by pnh102:

If you think that our system, which currently enables people of lesser means to get high quality care which they cannot afford to buy, is so bad, would you argue for replacing it with a system that allows for medical professionals to receive less training, and offer such subpar services to people simply because they cannot afford to pay?
Sorry I didn't reply to that paragraph. I'll do so here instead of editing my previous reply.

I'd be open to that. However, I would word it slightly differently: "because that's all they can afford to pay."

The problem we have today, as I see it, is that we've used Public Law to set healthcare standards higher than willing buyers and sellers would negotiate consensually. (And, higher than the rest of the world, as evidenced by Republicans constantly telling us we have "the best healthcare system in the world.").

This creates a social responsibility to take care of those who can't afford our socialized "market." But, as soon as that discussion arises Republicans (primarily) object that this would be "socialism." What they really mean is: "coercion." Taking from one and giving to another. An "entitlement."

But, that's what we essentially did when we criminalized healthcare goods and services in the interest of creating a higher standard of living (a collective goal). I.e., a more predictable "market," (reducing the personal responsibility of some Americans to properly investigate their choice of goods and services) at the expense of others, who go without.

If Republicans don't like coercion, they shouldn't like the coercion we have now (and leading to growing demands for universalization of our already socialized "market"). But, as we've regularly seen in the Friday-Night threads, they're selective in their opposition to coercion. Using principle-based rhetoric against others which they aren't willing to apply to themselves.

Personally, I could support greater disparity of choices in the market. Not a truly Darwinian market (as many squeamish Republicans argue against in their parade of horribles).

But, absent that, I think there's no other choice than to make the existing socialized market more equally beneficial to all society.

Mark


backfeed
is giving feedback

join:2002-12-16
Peru, IN
Reviews:
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reply to KrK
I got my summer cold....I get one each year...this one nasty...BUT...I am not going to the doctor, I am afraid of running into the death panel and they might decide that I am too old to fix!!
--
There are 10 types of people. Those who can read Binary and those who cannot.



rawgerz
The hell was that?
Premium
join:2004-10-03
Grove City, PA

reply to Romney2012
I don't remember hearing that medicare is being disbanded. And being as Republican as you are, you must be completely against medicare as it is purely socialism.
--

You can't make all the people happy all of the time. But it should be common sense to shoot for the majority.



kapil
The Kapil

join:2000-04-26
Chicago, IL

reply to Romney2012
"we've seen the long lines in Britan and Canada".

Umm, really congressman douchebag? 'Cause you sound like the typical American who claims this is the best fucking country on Earth, blessed by God and all, but doesn't own a passport that would allow travel beyond our borders.

Also, he said "private sector has to pay taxes" twice. Because, you know, taxes are twice as scary! Boo!

What is this bullshit about "public option doesn't have to pay taxes or pay employees". Really? Don't government workers pay taxes on their salaries? ...and of course the workers pay taxes because they get paid a salary to begin with.

The real difference? the private insurers have to make a PROFIT...where as a public plan would be, in essence, non profit.

I will debate the merits of an argument all day and all night. But when you resort to spreading FUD, that's when you're not worthy of my time.
--
»www.VoIPTrunk.com


amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
·magicjack.com

1 edit

said by kapil:

"we've seen the long lines in Britan and Canada".

Umm, really ...?
I'm somewhere between you and G&S (whom you quoted). I think it's undeniable that spreading around a monopolistic (artificially limited supply) will result in one of the following (or a mixture of all):

1. Reduction/delay of services compared to what those who can afford today's socialized "highest bidder" environment receive.

2. Higher overall costs (as society pays the monopoly to treat more people).

3. Reduction of quality (as the monopoly is diluted to meet demand but keep societal costs down).

That's just basic economics. It's why Canadians (and others) come here for healthcare. It's why the Frontline piece I posted last Friday discussed delays in care in Britain.

I think it's worth acknowledging this reality to get past the partisan rhetoric (using "long lines" to sway public opinion). And, which similarly denies the problem we have today: Millions of Americans who don't even have a line to get into. Paying more for goods and services than they can afford (and would be willing to buy in other countries with more reasonable standards).

Mark

Romney2012
Defeat Obama 2012-Chg we can believe in
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join:2002-03-03
USA
kudos:4

said by amigo_boy:

said by kapil:

"we've seen the long lines in Britan and Canada".

Umm, really ...?
I'm somewhere between you and G&S (whom you quoted).
That wasn't me he quoted, but Congressman Ryan from the video.
--
My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page


KrK
Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy
Premium
join:2000-01-17
Tulsa, OK

reply to kapil
That's really what Fiore's piece is all about. It's poking fun at all the FUD going on to stop Healthcare reform.

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