Night Strike wrote: You lose your freedoms when the government dictates who gets help and who doesn't.
What if the government dictates everyone should receive help?
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Night Strike wrote: You lose your freedoms when the government dictates who gets help and who doesn't.
rockfist wrote:Your side is arguing for change. I am not. You want change, write a clear and concise bill that can be easily explained or expect most people to be against it. Why would someone support their taxes going up for something they don't understand?
Mr_Adams wrote:If the government wants to support the health of its citizens, my first suggestion is to transfer subsidies from the massive corn crop (topping 10M bushels) and transfer them to more healthy food, like domestically grown green veggies. lord knows the US is in love with unhealthy crap, and the only regularly eaten green veritable is iceberg lettuce, which is supposed to be the least healthy of all leafy vegetables(deep colors=better for you, iceberg is almost white). So, subsidize the spinach crop, the bell peppers, and other such vegetables. Then people will eat less of this crap full of the corn derivatives you hear so much about (high fructose blabla bla), because they won't be the cheapest things available. Instead of looking for a solution to the peoples health care, we need to look more into curing causes of peoples health problems. Natty, IDK about the subsidized crops in Finland.
sources:
http://artsci.wustl.edu/~anthro/articles/09harvest.html
http://www.newsweek.com/id/71510
Night Strike wrote:notyou2 wrote:Its called empathy for your fellow man. It's an amazing emotion. I'm sorry you don't have any.
So the only way to have empathy is through the government? It's amazing that the same people who demand that anything government remove anything religious from their realm are now saying that we must turn to that amoral government to have empathy (which is a moral attitude contrary to the natural state of people). If you want to show empathy for a fellow person, go do it yourself. You lose your freedoms when the government dictates who gets help and who doesn't. You try to enact this legislation on the grounds of empathy, but once they have access to your healthcare, they can dictate every facet of your life. Progressives want nothing more than to control people through governmental power, and in the name of healthcare they will do whatever they want. The government is in place to protect our rights from violation by other people, instead they want to dictate how we live.
PLAYER57832 wrote:rockfist wrote:Your side is arguing for change. I am not. You want change, write a clear and concise bill that can be easily explained or expect most people to be against it. Why would someone support their taxes going up for something they don't understand?
I don't understand? Gee, that's pretty interesting, given A. I actually have read the bill (not that you bothered to ask) B. have listened to plenty of commentary on ALL sides of this issue.
C. I have gone to lengths to explain all this to you and others (look back a ways in this thread...).
Further,
D. I have lived in and still have friends/family in more than one country with national health systems as well as (of course) the US.
E. I have lived here as an adult, responsible for children and that DOES make a huge difference in attitude!
SOO ....
You have a right to your opinion, but if you want to be taken seriously, you had best back it up with facts and reality, not the garbage you have so far spewed out. So far, all you have done is emphasize how little you know about real socialized medicine. And the fact that you refuse to even acknowledge that you know nothing ... and THEN essentially brag about not being able to read through the bill you are criticizing... makes you look like a royal idiot, regardless of whether your views have any validity or not. (I disagree with greekdog and others, but they do have reasons for their ideas and beliefs. You do not!)
rockfist wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:rockfist wrote:Your side is arguing for change. I am not. You want change, write a clear and concise bill that can be easily explained or expect most people to be against it. Why would someone support their taxes going up for something they don't understand?
I don't understand? Gee, that's pretty interesting, given A. I actually have read the bill (not that you bothered to ask) B. have listened to plenty of commentary on ALL sides of this issue.
C. I have gone to lengths to explain all this to you and others (look back a ways in this thread...).
Further,
D. I have lived in and still have friends/family in more than one country with national health systems as well as (of course) the US.
E. I have lived here as an adult, responsible for children and that DOES make a huge difference in attitude!
SOO ....
You have a right to your opinion, but if you want to be taken seriously, you had best back it up with facts and reality, not the garbage you have so far spewed out. So far, all you have done is emphasize how little you know about real socialized medicine. And the fact that you refuse to even acknowledge that you know nothing ... and THEN essentially brag about not being able to read through the bill you are criticizing... makes you look like a royal idiot, regardless of whether your views have any validity or not. (I disagree with greekdog and others, but they do have reasons for their ideas and beliefs. You do not!)
I've read a version of the bill when it was around 2000 pages, no I have not read the latest version, but it seems pointless until they give us the reconclied version to read every ammendment which may or may not get passed. I'm not for it.
I do have children and I provide for their healthcare, which I don't mind doing, and my family business provides for the healthcare of over 100 people, which I don't mind doing for employees. I do mind doing it for other people who I have nothing to do with. Does that make me heartless? Perhaps, but I am not well off enough to save everyone and neither is our country.
I get angry when people try to overload the boat, which I believe will make it sink. This bill will not contain costs, it will not be budget neutral, and the idea of non profit insurance exhanges run by the federal government is a trojan horse to get to the public "option." There just isn't enough money to do this, when we haven't tamed the "entitlement" beast. You want to argue this based on the emotional aspect that everyone "should" have something, but the money just doesn't exist to pay for it and I am quite happy to go over numbers and I can shoot holes in the "estimate" the Dems are using.
rockfist wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:rockfist wrote:Your side is arguing for change. I am not. You want change, write a clear and concise bill that can be easily explained or expect most people to be against it. Why would someone support their taxes going up for something they don't understand?
I don't understand? Gee, that's pretty interesting, given A. I actually have read the bill (not that you bothered to ask) B. have listened to plenty of commentary on ALL sides of this issue.
C. I have gone to lengths to explain all this to you and others (look back a ways in this thread...).
Further,
D. I have lived in and still have friends/family in more than one country with national health systems as well as (of course) the US.
E. I have lived here as an adult, responsible for children and that DOES make a huge difference in attitude!
SOO ....
You have a right to your opinion, but if you want to be taken seriously, you had best back it up with facts and reality, not the garbage you have so far spewed out. So far, all you have done is emphasize how little you know about real socialized medicine. And the fact that you refuse to even acknowledge that you know nothing ... and THEN essentially brag about not being able to read through the bill you are criticizing... makes you look like a royal idiot, regardless of whether your views have any validity or not. (I disagree with greekdog and others, but they do have reasons for their ideas and beliefs. You do not!)
I've read a version of the bill when it was around 2000 pages, no I have not read the latest version, but it seems pointless until they give us the reconclied version to read every ammendment which may or may not get passed. I'm not for it.
I do have children and I provide for their healthcare, which I don't mind doing, and my family business provides for the healthcare of over 100 people, which I don't mind doing for employees. I do mind doing it for other people who I have nothing to do with. Does that make me heartless? Perhaps, but I am not well off enough to save everyone and neither is our country.
I get angry when people try to overload the boat, which I believe will make it sink. This bill will not contain costs, it will not be budget neutral, and the idea of non profit insurance exhanges run by the federal government is a trojan horse to get to the public "option." There just isn't enough money to do this, when we haven't tamed the "entitlement" beast. You want to argue this based on the emotional aspect that everyone "should" have something, but the money just doesn't exist to pay for it and I am quite happy to go over numbers and I can shoot holes in the "estimate" the Dems are using.
comic boy wrote:rockfist wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:rockfist wrote:Your side is arguing for change. I am not. You want change, write a clear and concise bill that can be easily explained or expect most people to be against it. Why would someone support their taxes going up for something they don't understand?
I don't understand? Gee, that's pretty interesting, given A. I actually have read the bill (not that you bothered to ask) B. have listened to plenty of commentary on ALL sides of this issue.
C. I have gone to lengths to explain all this to you and others (look back a ways in this thread...).
Further,
D. I have lived in and still have friends/family in more than one country with national health systems as well as (of course) the US.
E. I have lived here as an adult, responsible for children and that DOES make a huge difference in attitude!
SOO ....
You have a right to your opinion, but if you want to be taken seriously, you had best back it up with facts and reality, not the garbage you have so far spewed out. So far, all you have done is emphasize how little you know about real socialized medicine. And the fact that you refuse to even acknowledge that you know nothing ... and THEN essentially brag about not being able to read through the bill you are criticizing... makes you look like a royal idiot, regardless of whether your views have any validity or not. (I disagree with greekdog and others, but they do have reasons for their ideas and beliefs. You do not!)
I've read a version of the bill when it was around 2000 pages, no I have not read the latest version, but it seems pointless until they give us the reconclied version to read every ammendment which may or may not get passed. I'm not for it.
I do have children and I provide for their healthcare, which I don't mind doing, and my family business provides for the healthcare of over 100 people, which I don't mind doing for employees. I do mind doing it for other people who I have nothing to do with. Does that make me heartless? Perhaps, but I am not well off enough to save everyone and neither is our country.
I get angry when people try to overload the boat, which I believe will make it sink. This bill will not contain costs, it will not be budget neutral, and the idea of non profit insurance exhanges run by the federal government is a trojan horse to get to the public "option." There just isn't enough money to do this, when we haven't tamed the "entitlement" beast. You want to argue this based on the emotional aspect that everyone "should" have something, but the money just doesn't exist to pay for it and I am quite happy to go over numbers and I can shoot holes in the "estimate" the Dems are using.
So how do you explain the fact that many other countries, that are far less wealthy than the USA, manage to run National healthcare schemes without bankrupting themselves ?
rockfist wrote:Seriously if you can't explain it quickly with bullet points what it will do, without resorting to emotional pleas, and then stand there and field questions about specifics, its not worth passing. No bill should take six pages to basically name a state.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
rockfist wrote:I haven't studied the budgets of every country on the globe. I can pick maybe three countries to review their budgets and projected budgets but I don't have the time to go over every one. So maybe I can look at the UK, Spain, and Canada or if you have other suggestions lets hear them.
they wait their turn for access to the health care they need???
Snorri1234 wrote:rockfist wrote:I haven't studied the budgets of every country on the globe. I can pick maybe three countries to review their budgets and projected budgets but I don't have the time to go over every one. So maybe I can look at the UK, Spain, and Canada or if you have other suggestions lets hear them.
Why on earth would you need to study their budgets?
Snorri1234 wrote:(Not slightly less, you spend 2 and a half times more than the number 2 on the list.)
rockfist wrote: You want to argue this based on the emotional aspect that everyone "should" have something, but the money just doesn't exist to pay for it and I am quite happy to go over numbers and I can shoot holes in the "estimate" the Dems are using.
rockfist wrote:I haven't studied the budgets of every country on the globe. I can pick maybe three countries to review their budgets and projected budgets but I don't have the time to go over every one. So maybe I can look at the UK, Spain, and Canada or if you have other suggestions lets hear them.
PLAYER57832 wrote:rockfist wrote:I haven't studied the budgets of every country on the globe. I can pick maybe three countries to review their budgets and projected budgets but I don't have the time to go over every one. So maybe I can look at the UK, Spain, and Canada or if you have other suggestions lets hear them.
Nice, pick the countries who's systems have nothing at all to do with the bill. France or Germany are much better parallels.
But, even if you do center on those countries, they have a higher level of overall health, lower costs per person AND a higher satisfaction rate than here in the US. So, even when you try to "cream off" the worst-case countries, our system still pales.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
stahrgazer wrote:Bullet Point: ...
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Bullet Point:
Question: Why would those who'd get paid be for a system that provides insurance or care for all, and those "nice ol' insurance companies" be against? Could it be that insurance is afraid they'll get a smaller piece of the pie? Isn't health care about HEALTH, not INSURANCE profits?
Answer: No, currently in America, "health care" is about Insurance Profits; but hopefully that will soon change so that health care becomes, as it should be, about Health.
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