Re: POTUS 45.0: It was the best of times. It was the worst of times.
Sad, but true with some folks.
He's black.
Sad, but true with some folks.
He's black.
How have his policies been a huge divider for cops?
How have his policies been a huge divider for cops?
He actually acknowledges they screw up from time to time. Same reason the NYPD acted like petulant children to deblasio when they felt he wasn't supportive enough.
How have his policies been a huge divider for cops?
Three words: "Black Lives Matter".
I saw something floating around Twitter which I would find hilarious: on the 18th or 19th of January, Obama resigns and they swear in Biden as the 45th president. Then that sticks Trump with pallets of 45th President merchandise that he can't sell. Or he sells merch that is incorrect.
Would that mean that Joe would get a Presidential library, lifetime SS protection, and a $400K pension?
Do it.
How have his policies been a huge divider for cops?
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald J. Trump said this weekend that he was nearly ready to unveil a plan to replace President Obama’s Affordable Care Act with “insurance for everybody.”
Mr. Trump, in an interview Saturday evening with The Washington Post, said that health care offered under his plan would come “in a much simplified form — much less expensive and much better.”
“We’re going to have insurance for everybody,” Mr. Trump said. “There was a philosophy in some circles that if you can’t pay for it, you don’t get it. That’s not going to happen with us.”
Sounds like Single Payer to me.
Early in his first term he came out, almost in a knee-jerked fashion, as stating the police were wrong during various interactions. He even had to walk back his comments more than a few times. Anybody remember the Beer Summit he had with the Boston officer after finding out the black professor wasn't quite so innocent when arrested?
The police haven't been angels, but he Pres. Obama wasn't very presidential when he started placing himself into the middle of issues that weren't federal issues. And he had to eat crow a couple times early that first term. First impressions are always the strongest. He didn't fare well with the nation's police officers then.
Anybody remember the Beer Summit he had with the Boston officer after finding out the black professor wasn't quite so innocent when arrested?
So, they don't have any new ideas then. Cause that's what we had before and it was so awesome we threw it out for Obamacare.Trump's plan won't be single payer; it was will be Paul Ryan's High Risk Pools, which gives way, way less help, for slightly less cost.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/15/...placement.html?smid=fb-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=0
Sounds like Single Payer to me. Which I know Trump won't go for and the Republicans won't pass. Health Care is a mess. Is anyone going to spend any time on actually fixing the problems?
Health care is only a mess because insurance doesn't want to cover poor people and therefore torpedoed the health care open markets. Energy is regulated or it might not serve the poor. And we know darn well that private schooling doesn't want to serve the poor as it doesn't today.
Costs are high because we can't price shop insurance - price is about 80% of what people care about in insurance - and therefore, there is no price pressure anywhere (thanks again to health care insurance).
If we want coverage for more than 70% of Americans and we want it cheap, regulation will be a major part of the solution.
Our health care system is a mess because the primary method we use to pay for health care did not evolve along with how we use healthcare.Health care is only a mess because insurance doesn't want to cover poor people and therefore torpedoed the health care open markets. Energy is regulated or it might not serve the poor. And we know darn well that private schooling doesn't want to serve the poor as it doesn't today.
Costs are high because we can't price shop insurance - price is about 80% of what people care about in insurance - and therefore, there is no price pressure anywhere (thanks again to health care insurance).
If we want coverage for more than 70% of Americans and we want it cheap, regulation will be a major part of the solution.
Insurance companies only care about their shareholders. Having them as a middle man is killing the health industry and doctors and nurses wanting to be part of their great profession. Maybe real ideas are impossible? I used to think this country could do anything it set it's mind to but now when it can't even keep lead out of drinking water I have my doubts.
If it's unsolvable it's another heavy tax burden on the middle class. Like all insurance. Insurance costs are one of the big things that destroy disposable income and hamstring the middle and lower classes.
Our health care system is a mess because the primary method we use to pay for health care did not evolve along with how we use healthcare.
When health insurance first came about, the idea made sense. It was like car insurance. You might need to use it. You might not. It covered those things that most Americans used doctors for, which was only extreme emergency situations.
The delivery of health care evolved. Preventative care, new drugs, and candidly, some overuse of healthcare by the populace and turned it into something closer to everyday expenses like housing and food.
We would never design a system to purchase insurance to cover the cost of our food needs. Why create a complex "middleman" situation? But that's what we have with healthcare.
I think a single payer system is a bad outcome for this country. But until they invent the time machine and we can go back and change our initial approach to paying for health care, I think it's the only system that will work. Unfortunately we have a huge health insurance system in this country, along with all of the third party payer companies and other associated parties in the system that will keep Congress from ever just scrapping the health insurance system and going to what will be medicare for all.
The next big step in the evolution of health care was also an accident. In 1943, the Internal Revenue Service ruled that employer-based health care should be tax free. A second law, in 1954, made the tax advantages even more attractive.