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The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

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  • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

    Originally posted by unofan View Post
    So you're saying we leave people to die on the street. Got it.

    Edit: Apparently Flaggy's admitting that's what he's for now, too, even though he took umbrage with that exact statement a year or two ago.
    No. There will still be charity cases. But if Bill Gates does not have health insurance, I expect him to pay the entire bill, not the government.

    Further, if I am employed / retired and decline offered health insurance, then the consequences are on me.
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    • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

      Originally posted by unofan View Post
      So you're saying we leave people to die on the street. Got it.

      Edit: Apparently Flaggy's admitting that's what he's for now, too, even though he took umbrage with that exact statement a year or two ago.
      If we go your way, then what the hell is the point of buying insurance in the first place? If you're going to get bailed out anyway, then it truly IS a waste of money. And when the hell did I take your fancy lawyer term with a statement? I want you to show me the exact quote. Can't do it? That's right, just like a typical lawyer, making up bull**** in order to force the opposition to shell out more money.

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      • Originally posted by joecct View Post
        No. There will still be charity cases. But if Bill Gates does not have health insurance, I expect him to pay the entire who the bill, not the government.

        Further, if I am employed / retired and decline offered health insurance, then the consequences are on me.
        We're not talking about Bill Gates. We're talking about Joe Schmoe, who can either be a 40 year-old blue collar worker with a wife and two kids who thought paying the mortgage was more important than getting health insurance, or a twenty year old hotshot who still thinks he's invincible, or any of a number of other scenarios that play out in real life rather than a perfect world.

        No, we should not reward people for making poor choices. But good luck getting society to agree that the penalty for a poor choice should be death from an otherwise treatable ailment. Especially in a country as well endowed with resources and wealth as the U.S.

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        • Originally posted by unofan View Post
          It still doesn't answer the inevitable question that follows: what do you do with the guy who risked not getting insurance but then suffers a major medical issue. Leave him to die on the streets?
          I think the no denial for pre-existing conditions means something that you've already been diagnosed with and been treated for, not that you tried to fix the lawnmower yourself and 5 minutes later are trying to sign up on your way to the hospital.

          Regarding the people who still insist on not getting insurance and paying the penalty, they get to work out a payment plan with the hospital or govt entity that paid for the care. If Mr Invinsible is 20 years old, he's got plenty of time to pay off the bill. Joe Blue Collar is probably qualifying for a subsidy anyway, so he's got no excuse not to get insured.
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          • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

            Isn't the real question, do you believe that a right to health care is some sort of fundamental right to which everyone is guaranteed? If not, then shouldn't it be a business decision every person has to make on their own, and if your income status is such that you can't afford it (or insurance for it), then you go without, just like people go without a lot of things?

            Personally, I've never believed health care is something that belongs to us a fundamental, guaranteed right. First, for all that healthcare may do for us, it is of course a losing battle. We're all going to die.

            Second, if you really want to talk about something we, as human beings, need to survive or at least prolong life, you're talking about water, food and sex (for continuing the species). I don't see any big movement to have government guarantee everyone with the availability of these for no cost.
            That community is already in the process of dissolution where each man begins to eye his neighbor as a possible enemy, where non-conformity with the accepted creed, political as well as religious, is a mark of disaffection; where denunciation, without specification or backing, takes the place of evidence; where orthodoxy chokes freedom of dissent; where faith in the eventual supremacy of reason has become so timid that we dare not enter our convictions in the open lists, to win or lose.

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            • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

              Originally posted by Rover View Post
              Regarding the people who still insist on not getting insurance and paying the penalty, they get to work out a payment plan with the hospital or govt entity that paid for the care. If Mr Invinsible is 20 years old, he's got plenty of time to pay off the bill. Joe Blue Collar is probably qualifying for a subsidy anyway, so he's got no excuse not to get insured.
              That actually isn't too bad of an idea. I believe that it currently exists and is called a "loan". This brings up a good way to execute this, though, and you could also extend it to deductibles: Outsource one of the several P2P Lending companies that are really starting to grow, and give them a chance to take on these hospital bill loans. Granted, I don't know what sort of interest you would need to charge, as with medicine I don't know if the expected default percentage would be higher.

              One thing that I do like, though, and I know they recently did a mini-series on a car dealer that did this sort of thing but I can't remember what network aired it, are the family doctors that accept just about any sort of barter for the services (crate of tomatoes, pigs, massage parlor coupons).
              Last edited by FlagDUDE08; 07-11-2013, 09:29 AM.

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              • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

                Originally posted by SJHovey View Post
                Isn't the real question, do you believe that a right to health care is some sort of fundamental right to which everyone is guaranteed? If not, then shouldn't it be a business decision every person has to make on their own, and if your income status is such that you can't afford it (or insurance for it), then you go without, just like people go without a lot of things?

                Personally, I've never believed health care is something that belongs to us a fundamental, guaranteed right. First, for all that healthcare may do for us, it is of course a losing battle. We're all going to die.

                Second, if you really want to talk about something we, as human beings, need to survive or at least prolong life, you're talking about water, food and sex (for continuing the species). I don't see any big movement to have government guarantee everyone with the availability of these for no cost.
                Governments never did any big movement to provide food stamps (I know that doesn't cover one of these, but two out of three ain't bad). To deal with the third, legalize prostitution.

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                • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

                  Originally posted by Rover View Post
                  I can live with a tweak like this. However a "life event" would need to include losing coverage, as in you got laid off or injured and couldn't work.
                  No, we sever the link between employment and insurance coverage.

                  We don't need insurance exchanges for that either; in the 1980s and 1990s there was a robust market for association-sponsored insurance (similar to the Freelancers' Union group plan I posted about earlier in this thread). Whether you belonged to the APA, the AMA, the ABA, MANA, or even B'Nai B'Rith, you could buy group health insurance as an individual and receive group rates. The market was so robust that a group of us, half in jest and half seriously, had a series of discussions on whether it would be feasible to form the Airbreathers' Association so that we could offer group insurance to individuals through that vehicle.

                  It would not be difficult to have a transition period (say, 5 years for example) in which everyone moves from employer-sponsored group insurance to association-sponsored group insurance with open enrollment windows. It would be similar in operation to what the exchanges are supposed to provide but without the attendant problems that inevitably will plague the proposed exchanges (government might sponsor basic research but it is terrible at implementing technology and keeping it current, military excepted).

                  I'm not sure what happened to the association market since the early 1990s as my career took me into a different direction and I haven't followed detailed developments in group insurance for the last 20 years. Most likely it was eviscerated by government regulations.

                  There are still vestiges of it today: AARP is one of the largest sellers of Medicare Supplement insurance, for example. Many members of private-sector unions get their health insurance through their union, not through their employer. Freelancers' Union members, as previously noted (although they needed a special exemption to continue to offer their group plan).
                  Last edited by FreshFish; 07-11-2013, 09:36 AM.
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                  • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

                    Originally posted by FlagDUDE08 View Post
                    If we go your way, then what the hell is the point of buying insurance in the first place? If you're going to get bailed out anyway, then it truly IS a waste of money. And when the hell did I take your fancy lawyer term with a statement? I want you to show me the exact quote. Can't do it? That's right, just like a typical lawyer, making up bull**** in order to force the opposition to shell out more money.
                    The point is if you have any money at all they will collect it from you. So, if you're in the middle class like I supposedly am (I question the numbers to be honest) you have to have insurance. And the percentage of money I have to have going out for insurance is too much in comparison to my overall income.

                    Car Insurance (required to drive)
                    Home Insurance (required to have a loan)
                    Life Insurance (required if you have kids)
                    Medical Insurance (required if you don't want to play russian roulette with your money)
                    Dental Insurance (overall has saved me some money due to my oral surgery, kids braces, kids wisdom teeth yanking, etc.)
                    Umbrella Policy (will save my *** if I'm ever sued for anything)

                    Lot of money going out the door every week for all that. And all of it entirely necessary. Lot of money I cannot contribute to the real economy.
                    **NOTE: The misleading post above was brought to you by Reynold's Wrap and American Steeples, makers of Crosses.

                    Originally Posted by dropthatpuck-Scooby's a lost cause.
                    Originally Posted by First Time, Long Time-Always knew you were nothing but a troll.

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                    • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

                      Originally posted by ScoobyDoo View Post
                      Lot of money going out the door every week for all that. And all of it entirely necessary. Lot of money I cannot contribute to the real economy.
                      Insurance companies aren't part of the "real economy"?
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                      • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

                        Everytime I think about taking Flaggy off the ignore list, someone quotes him and reminds me why I put him on there in the first place. Only in his warped little head is "dying on the streets" a "fancy lawyer term."

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                        • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

                          Originally posted by unofan View Post
                          Everytime I think about taking Flaggy off the ignore list, someone quotes him and reminds me why I put him on there in the first place. Only in his warped little head is "dying on the streets" a "fancy lawyer term."
                          Actually, I think he was confused by the term "umbrage".

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                          • Originally posted by FadeToBlack&Gold View Post
                            Actually, I think he was confused by the term "umbrage".
                            That's actually funnier, then.

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                            • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

                              Originally posted by FadeToBlack&Gold View Post
                              Actually, I think he was confused by the term "umbrage".
                              Bingo. I've never even heard the word.

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                              • Re: The PPACA - Implementation Phase I

                                Originally posted by FreshFish View Post
                                government...is terrible at implementing technology and keeping it current, military excepted.
                                I'd remove that exception if I were you. SNAFU is a military term, remember? Military tech only works as well as it does because of the enormous $$$ that gets pumped into it - easily less than 5% efficient in terms of the "bang for the buck" that comes out the other side. Throw enough money at the filter that is bureaucracy, and some useful ideas will eventually leak out despite their best efforts!
                                If you don't change the world today, how can it be any better tomorrow?

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