Quote:
Originally Posted by jeremy1375
As I was reading your reply and researching the details of the subject matter in it, I had a realization. While we don't see eye to eye on the subject matter, I definitely sensed your concern and worry about the direction this country is heading in. If you strip away the content, that is certainly an experience we share. We find ourselves on different teams with different visions for our country, however.
I am open to shift my views based on evidence I find. When we were arguing the 2nd amendment and I was researching the laws and history, I had no idea where the rabbit hole I fell into was going to take me. That shit is hard and uncomfortable to do because for all I know, the end result I might find is exactly the opposite of what I believed. Then I would have no choice, but to admit defeat and accept reality. I am trying to do the same here. If you have supporting facts, historical precedent, and logical reasoning to support your claims in a honest open discission, I would love to hear them. I don't want to hear rehashed rhetoric from a talking head that knows fear and anger are the easiest way to get people fired up.
I've begun familiarizing myself with the concept of opening health markets across state lines. To put things in proper perspective, we could begin by discussing how the system currently works as a starting point. Then we'll have a framework to build on and understand how opening markets across state lines would change things. Thoughts?
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We're all friends here and open discussion is key.
The whole premise behind Obamacare was two things, plus one that goes undiscussed.
1) reduce cost for the working middle class as cost were going up
2) insure the uninsured
3) the "other" agenda
For 1)
Cost are going up, not down. In the very beginning cost did seem lower, but if you follow election cycles vs implementation of key aspects of Obamacare it has risen as elections have passed. Same ol' dog and pony show as usual.
The simplest way to bring cost down is by opening up the insurance markets to allow competition across state lines and implement TORT Reform to do away with frivolous law suits that drive the cost up. This was the conservative plan that was put forward in senate, but good ol' boy Harry Reid blocked it from debate, basically keeping it out of the public eye.
See article and proposed bills at the bottom.
"Comprehensive Republican health reform plans introduced in Congress
Let’s start with 5 comprehensive health reform proposals that have actually been introduced in Congress—some well before President Obama even was nominated for president, and all months before the House (11/7/09) or Senate (12/24/09) voted on what eventually became Obamacare.- Ten Steps to Transform Health Care in America Act (S. 1783) introduced by Senator Mike Enzi (R-WY) July 12, 2007.
- Every American Insured Health Act introduced by Senators Richard Burr (R-NC) and Bob Corker (R-TN) with co-sponsors Tom Coburn (R-OK), Mel Martinez (formerly R-FL) and Elizabeth Dole (formerly R-NC) on July 26, 2007.
- Senators Bob Bennett (R-UT) and Ron Wyden (D-OR) introduced the Healthy Americans Act on January 18, 2007 and re-introduced the same bill on February 5, 2009.
- Patients’ Choice Act of 2009 introduced by Senators Tom Coburn (R-OK) and Richard Burr (R-NC) and Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) and Devin Nunes (R-CA) on May 20, 2009. [See Update #1 for why this bill was of particular significance]
- H.R. 2300, Empowering Patients First Act introduced July 30, 2009 by Rep. Tom Price (R-GA)."
http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapoth...o-health-plan/
The old system was basically a monoploy because the insurance companies positioned themselves to have no real competition. They controlled their own markets with no worries from competitors. Think back to the days of "Ma Bell" if you're old enough to remember, unfortunately I am. "Ma Bell" was the nation wide phone company that was divided into basically compass based positions in America, BellSouth, Northern Bell, Western Bell, etc. But they were under the same umbrella of Bell Telephones. At that time the cost of having a phone was very high, until they were deemed a monopoly somewhere in the late 70's if I remember correctly. At that point they were forced to sell off the branches and allow other companies to access the networks. Once that happened there was a dramatic increase in quality or services while the cost dropped. Same thing would happen with healthcare if the Republican plans were allowed to move forward. If you never heard about the Republican ideas I'm not surprised, Harry Reid and the Dems never spoke of it and kept it locked down.
So now you'll have a government controlled monopoly, how do think that will go?
For 2)
There was never technically anybody in this country that couldn't get healthcare, including illegals (don't get me started). For the most part, the poor had easier access to healthcare than the middle class. Those who couldn't afford it got it for free. Those who couldn't pay didn't.
For 3)
It's two folded. First off those in charge think people are living too long and they are looking for ways to reduce the population numbers. By complicating the healthcare system they are "backdoor" causing a reduction in healthcare for the aging class. If it's too complex or too burdomsone you may tough it out instead of running to the doctor everytime you feel ill. In the long run, going unchecked, many people could get sick enough to say it's too late for you, you should have come in sooner. Welcome to the DMV of healthcare.
Secondly,the longer you do live, the longer they have to pay for your healthcare and your social security payments after you retire. This is huge because the "baby boomers" are now hitting retirement age. So, the largest group of tax payers who've been paying into the system are now becoming the biggest burden of it. By causing you to die off sooner they save on both healthcare cost and social security payments. There will be "formulas" to determine if you qualify for a treatment or if you should just go home to die. Can you say death panels?
Ever really thought about why Congress, the Senate, all of their aids and anybody at a higher status in the government got an excemption? Because they saw the writing on the wall and would have never voted themselves out of quality healthcare. Exempting them was the only way to get it passed.
Know this for sure, the whole thing is designed to fail in the long term so we'll all be forced into "single payer".