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Post 21 Nov 2014, 11:13 am

danivon wrote:The bizarre definition of corporations as people (which I see nowhere in the Constitution) does not help.


Are you becoming a Constitutional literalist Danivon? Wouldn't that be refreshing :wink:
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Post 21 Nov 2014, 12:41 pm

I had simply wondered exactly how the whole thing was being portrayed, especially in countries (such as yours) where you have free health care grace a H.M. Government.
Not sure about the majority of my fellow Brits, but certainly it was clear to those I've talked to that you were not getting healthcare like ours, and it wasn't a serious prospect.

By the way, we know that the NHS is not free - we pay for it from our taxes.
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Post 21 Nov 2014, 12:43 pm

bbauska wrote:
danivon wrote:The bizarre definition of corporations as people (which I see nowhere in the Constitution) does not help.


Are you becoming a Constitutional literalist Danivon? Wouldn't that be refreshing :wink:
As the Constitution does not cover me, I'm fairly sanguine about it. What I am, however, is noting that people who call themselves literalists or originalists but defend Citizens United are not basing it on any text in the document.

Do you support CU? If so, on what grounds?
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Post 21 Nov 2014, 3:47 pm

danivon wrote:
bbauska wrote:
danivon wrote:The bizarre definition of corporations as people (which I see nowhere in the Constitution) does not help.


Are you becoming a Constitutional literalist Danivon? Wouldn't that be refreshing :wink:
As the Constitution does not cover me, I'm fairly sanguine about it. What I am, however, is noting that people who call themselves literalists or originalists but defend Citizens United are not basing it on any text in the document.

Do you support CU? If so, on what grounds?


I don't believe there should be any limitation whatsoever on political contributions.
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Post 21 Nov 2014, 3:48 pm

hacker
do you ever try to look for sources that support an opinion opposite the stance you have already taken?

all the time. But when i make a claim and support it with a source, that source will tend to support my claim won't it? Or why would I post the source?

hacker
I'm not stupid because I had not heard of the McKinsey Center, for example,

No. But to make an offhand smear of them as "Obama cheerleaders without bothering to look into them as an organization ....
and then to ignore the link I posted to you to enable to let you do that without the effort of exploring for yourself..
and to quibble about my request for clarification about the use of the term cheerleader .... eventually you hit the ceiling.

And I didn't mean it as, "You're an idiot" I meant it as "You're being an idiot". I recognize in your case its not a permanent condition.

They have coverage wherever they are treated in the country, and there’s none of this stuff about limiting the doctors and hospitals that patients can use as a condition of getting full benefits. In Canada there are no financial barriers to care at the point of service as there are and will continue to be in the U.S.


hacker
Ricky, mull over that last paragraph, especially the last two sentences.

If the realization I'm supposed to come to is that the ACA is still pretty crappy, even compared to one of the poorer universal health care systems in the west, I think I've already said that numerous times.
republicans want the debate about the ACA to rest on the crappy procedure that the crappy law was borne from .... and refuse to take the responsibility for their part in the process.
Democrats are too stupid to divorce themselves from that debate and make it about what the end product of health care should be ..... and how the ACA is still better than what preceded the ACA in the US . (In terms of percentage of people covered, and the ability to generate savings and bend down the cost curve, and in terms of ensuring that health insurance policies have genuine value)

If you wonder about dysfunction Hacker, the US health care system is, when compared to any other system, dysfunctional. But only if you employ metrics in your comparison like cost, coverage, outcomes and ease of access and use. A properly functioning government might have produced a better solution from the legislative sausage factory after 20 years of trying than the ACA.
And yet, its still better than 2010.
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Post 21 Nov 2014, 5:34 pm

Not sure about the majority of my fellow Brits, but certainly it was clear to those I've talked to that you were not getting healthcare like ours, and it wasn't a serious prospect.


So wait, judging by the last clause of your second sentence quoted above, you do not think ACA was a "serious prospect"?

all the time. But when i make a claim and support it with a source, that source will tend to support my claim won't it? Or why would I post the source?


Now Ricky: I disagree (about you looking for sources that may disprove you "all the time"). Without having bugged your computer, it seems that you only bring up sources that support what you already believe. That is not the same as finding out if you're right first, THEN bringing sources to bear which support the truth, not simply your own theory you had in the first place. While I admit I cannot read your mind, you seem to be almost...offended for lack of a better word....when someone disagrees with you. And if they came up with a source totally contradicting your own, that's when the ad hominem begin to fly about.

As for the "Obama Cheerleaders" Ricky I ASKED if that was the case, not accused it like I already knew. As I said when I made the comment, I hadn't heard of them. So how could I accuse them of being one-sided in the same breath? No, Ricky, I was simply trying to ascertain whether they were legit, or just another cheerleader for the government and the ACA. It's not that hard to tart up websites, even produce impressive links on them to other impressive-looking but equally tarted up websites, on the internet. If you can design a website, it's child's play. I've always thought that it pays to have a healthy dose of skepticism of anything one finds on the net, even if it bears the Imprimatur of the God of Truth himself.

And I didn't mean it as, "You're an idiot" I meant it as "You're being an idiot". I recognize in your case its not a permanent condition.


Well, the second sentence is actually quite a bit of praise, coming from you. However, do be careful you don't backpedal so quickly, you might fall off your bicycle!

If the realization I'm supposed to come to is that the ACA is still pretty crappy, even compared to one of the poorer universal health care systems in the west, I think I've already said that numerous times.


OK wait, forgive me, since I am an idiot (no wait, BEING an idiot, my bad) I thought your core argument began with the assertion that the Republicans were silly twits to oppose the ACA? If it is, in your own words, "still pretty crappy", would they not have been right to oppose it?
Last edited by JimHackerMP on 21 Nov 2014, 5:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post 21 Nov 2014, 5:46 pm

Not trying to squash the subject at hand, but I feel inclined to comment on bb's statement, here:

I don't believe there should be any limitation whatsoever on political contributions.


This is where I'd have to disagree with you and agree with Ricky, Sass, and others, who claim there ought to be a caps or even bans on such things as fundraising via PACs & corporations. The crux of the matter, however, is that someone else's (a group of someone elses) votes are "bigger" than my vote; that they have greater say in the government than I do. That is quite frustrating for corporations and PACs to rule the country.

On the other side of the coin, it's not just dictatorships that seem to have an "elite". America's elite seems to be more readily identifiable by the Watergate-era maxim "follow the money." Maybe that's the difference. Or maybe not. But it's interesting to think about: who are the elite in every democracy? And if there are democratic elite in other western democracies besides the United States, are they not committing the same offense against the average voter? (e.g., making their vote "bigger" than the average voter in those countries, just as corps & PACs make their votes "bigger" than the average American voter via money and other means.)

Not saying we do not have a problem, here (in fact, I just said in paragraph one that we do). But is it possible to identify the elite in every democratic society? And do these elites make it any less harmful to democracy in other countries, than corporate and wealthy donors make it in the United States?

Just a thought.
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Post 22 Nov 2014, 12:33 am

JimHackerMP wrote:
Not sure about the majority of my fellow Brits, but certainly it was clear to those I've talked to that you were not getting healthcare like ours, and it wasn't a serious prospect.


So wait, judging by the last clause of your second sentence quoted above, you do not think ACA was a "serious prospect"?


No. I think, and thought at the time, that there is no serious prospect that the ACA was going to be single payer or similar.

The ACA is more that a serious prospect - it is a reality. But it is just a large and complicated reform of the previous model.
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Post 22 Nov 2014, 10:54 am

hacker
OK wait, forgive me, since I am an idiot (no wait, BEING an idiot, my bad) I thought your core argument began with the assertion that the Republicans were silly twits to oppose the ACA? If it is, in your own words, "still pretty crappy", would they not have been right to oppose it


They offered nothing that was a serious alternative to the ACA. Their opposition was not responsible. It was dominated by nonsense and lies like "death panels", the evils of socialism and so on...
There was never a credible response to the objective that the ACA was attempting to achieve
- universal insurance coverage
- an attempt to control costs ...
-the creation of consumer protection from deceptive |non-insurance policies) Something that is acceptable in car insurance already...

The obvious contradiction in strong Republican support for Medicare but almost violent opposition to the ACA is a clear illustration that the opposition was not coherent or responsible. (Leading to that favorite tea party slogan keep your government hands off my medicare)
A responsible opposition offers an alternative. That continues to be a problem for the republicans on health care, and on immigration...
.
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Post 22 Nov 2014, 11:17 am

rickyp wrote:hacker
OK wait, forgive me, since I am an idiot (no wait, BEING an idiot, my bad) I thought your core argument began with the assertion that the Republicans were silly twits to oppose the ACA? If it is, in your own words, "still pretty crappy", would they not have been right to oppose it


They offered nothing that was a serious alternative to the ACA. Their opposition was not responsible. It was dominated by nonsense and lies like "death panels", the evils of socialism and so on...


Utter nonsense, rickyp.

We said it was fictional economics. Now, we know from Gruber that it was.

We said it would cost more than projected. It has.

We said the phase-in was so the numbers could be manipulated. That's obvious now.

We said the government could not manage this. We said it would drive doctors out of practice. We said it would lead to worse care and government deciding what level of care you had to have.

All of those things are true.

There was never a credible response to the objective that the ACA was attempting to achieve
- universal insurance coverage


We said it would not achieve universal coverage. It won't. Even the CBO agrees it falls 30 million short--and those numbers were provided by Gruber.

- an attempt to control costs ...
-the creation of consumer protection from deceptive |non-insurance policies) Something that is acceptable in car insurance already...


Let's cut to the chase: there was no clamor for the ACA. It was never popular. It's still not popular. You can't face that.

A responsible opposition offers an alternative. That continues to be a problem for the republicans on health care, and on immigration...


Conservatives have--and will again. You just keep ignoring it.

Also, the House passed a border security bill in July. What happened to it?

Reid killed it. He never allowed a vote. There is no agreement on immigration because Obama NEVER wants to reduce illegal immigration. He will not enforce those laws--never has.

"But, deportations are at an all-time high!"

Lies, damn lies, and statistics.

When you count turn-arounds as "deportations," you instantly increase the stats.

However, how many who have been deported and returned have been charged with a Federal felony for returning? It is a FEDERAL law, and supposed to be enforced by Eric Holder. Is he doing it? Have most AG's?

Enforce the law!

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Luis Enrique Monroy-Bracamonte had more to hide than many of the estimated 11 million people living in the United States illegally. He had been convicted in Arizona for selling drugs and twice deported to Mexico.

His background would have almost certainly flagged him to be expelled from the country again, but he managed to stay under the radar until his arrest Friday on suspicion of murder, attempted murder and carjacking in the deaths of two sheriff’s deputies during a shooting rampage in Northern California.

More than 2 million deportations have occurred under the watch of President Barack Obama, whose administration has laid out three priorities for people to be expelled from the country: Anyone who poses a public safety threat; anyone with a serious immigration history; and recent border crossers. Monroy-Bracamonte would appear to be a prime candidate on the first two counts. How he escaped detection was a mystery on Sunday.

The suspected shooter told investigators that he was 34-year-old Marcelo Marquez of Salt Lake City, but his fingerprints matched biometric records of Monroy-Bracamonte in a federal database, said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman Virginia Kice. He was first removed from the country in 1997 after a conviction for possession of drugs for sale in Arizona, then arrested and repatriated to Mexico again in 2001.

Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones told The Sacramento Bee on Sunday that he may have lived under multiple identities and that he may have had troubles with the law under another name.

“We’re not convinced we have a full picture of his identity,” Jones told the newspaper. “Immigration has come up with one identity. We are not entirely convinced that is his only identity.”

Mauro Marquez, his father-in-law, told the Los Angeles Times that he always knew him as Luis Monroy and said his son-in-law worked as a house painter. He said the couple moved to Utah a couple years after marrying about 14 years ago in Arizona.

Marquez told the newspaper that and he and his wife spent a couple days around Christmas with them each year at their home in West Valley, a suburb of Salt Lake City.

Janelle Marquez Monroy, 38, was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and carjacking after the attack on Friday that left two deputies dead and a sheriff’s deputy and the carjacking victim wounded.

.http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/10 ... nvictions/
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Post 22 Nov 2014, 11:52 am

A responsible opposition offers an alternative.


Well, I have to agree with you there, Ricky (yes, you all may well pick your jaws up from where they fell in your laps). A responsible opposition offers an alternative, and the GOP offered no alternative to the ACA. The proper and logical thing for an opposition to do, when the government offers something idiotic, is to come up with a counterproposal that is "better".

Unfortunately, Ricky, many governments, the President and "his" 111th Congress included, suffer from what one might call "politicians' logic", namely: "Something must be done, Here is Something, Therefore we must do it!" In that sort of atmosphere, the only thing an opposition can do---whether responsible or not in anyone's opinion---is to oppose it, whether they lack a counterproposal or not. Otherwise, I would agree that the sensible thing to do is offer a counterproposal.

What it comes down to is the attempt at Party Hegemony. Both sides seek it: the Dems want to pass a sweeping health care reform and Obama wants to be FDR. Then, people will be voting Democrat for a very long time. The Republicans want to oppose it, thinking that they can exploit it for political capital in exactly the same way, due its failures.
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Post 22 Nov 2014, 12:12 pm

JimHackerMP wrote:
A responsible opposition offers an alternative.


Well, I have to agree with you there, Ricky (yes, you all may well pick your jaws up from where they fell in your laps). A responsible opposition offers an alternative, and the GOP offered no alternative to the ACA. The proper and logical thing for an opposition to do, when the government offers something idiotic, is to come up with a counterproposal that is "better".


Sorry, this is not correct. The GOP did offer ideas. They did not offer a bill--at least not one that got a vote. Why is that? Oh yeah, because the Democrats had control in both Houses of Congress!

As the minority party, the Republicans job was to offer opposition, not a competing bill which they could not get a vote on, let alone pass.

The GOP hammered at the dishonesty of the law. Democrats laughed and said, in different words, more people would get better coverage at less cost. The laws of economics? Pssh, child please! They had Jonathan Gruber of MIT!
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Post 22 Nov 2014, 12:36 pm

hacker
Unfortunately, Ricky, many governments, the President and "his" 111th Congress included, suffer from what one might call "politicians' logic", namely: "Something must be done, Here is Something, Therefore we must do it!" In that sort of atmosphere, the only thing an opposition can do---whether responsible or not in anyone's opinion---is to oppose it, whether they lack a counterproposal or not. Otherwise, I would agree that the sensible thing to do is offer a counterproposal.
What it comes down to is the attempt at Party Hegemony. Both sides seek it: the Dems want to pass a sweeping health care reform and Obama wants to be FDR. Then, people will be voting Democrat for a very long time. The Republicans want to oppose it, thinking that they can exploit it for political capital in exactly the same way, due its failures


So you agree that the system is dysfuntional?

hacker
In that sort of atmosphere, the only thing an opposition can do---whether responsible or not in anyone's opinion---is to oppose it, whether they lack a counter proposal or not.


You forget that one, perhaps the major reason for the atmosphere, is because the opposition largely created the atmosphere.
After Obama was elected there was a well enunciated strategy to oppose and obstruct (Bill Kristol) . Period.
PArt of the opposition was ideological stating that government couldn't run health care. Even though Medicare is a cornerstone on soceity now. And even though ACA isn't "government run".
Part of the opposition to the ACA included denial that there was even a health insurance "problem". In itself more ridiculous than climate denial.

In November 2007, research from the Economic Policy Institute showed that employer-provided health care in the United States has dropped sharply, with workplace insurance covering only 59.7% of Americans now, compared to 64.2% in 2000. And in June, a devastating new assessment from the Commonwealth Fund showed fully 25 million Americans are now "underinsured," a staggering 60 percent jump since 2003. All in all, 42% of the people in the United States under age 65 have insufficient insurance - or simply none at all.
As the New York Times reported, premiums for family health insurance have surged 78% since 2001 to over $12,000 a year. That cost explosion comes even as Americans' salaries and wages have barely moved: "inflation-adjusted median family income has dipped 2.6 percent -- or nearly $1,000 annually since 2000." It should come as no surprise that the wealthiest Americans now live 4.5 years longer than the least-well off, a startling jump from just a 2.8 year gap reported in 1982.


That's not responsible.
Any member of government has a duty to offer alternatives, not just oppose. Many of the critics of the ACA were right about elements of the law. But the law was written to appease the health care industry as much as it was written to attempt to solve the problems of access, and cost that citizens were encountering.
And for that you have the base problem. The health insurance business and Big Pharma contribute hundreds of millions to political campaigns... (All tax deductible). The ordinary citizens can't because they have to pay exorbitant insurance premiums.
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Post 22 Nov 2014, 2:44 pm

rickyp wrote:You forget that one, perhaps the major reason for the atmosphere, is because the opposition largely created the atmosphere.


Bunk. It takes two to tango.

Did you listen to the President's address the other night? Did you notice that in this "important address" he could not help taking a swipe at Republicans?

This is the man who was going to unite the country?

He is the most partisan President of my lifetime. Yes, they are all partisan, but none have gone out of their way to consistently malign, insult, and campaign against the other party like Obama has. Even on immigration, what is his posture? If the GOP will pass a bill per his instructions, he will sign it. Is that how our democracy works--the legislature capitulates to the executive branch? Funny, but I thought it was supposed to be collaborative? You don't get collaboration by insulting them.

PArt of the opposition was ideological stating that government couldn't run health care. Even though Medicare is a cornerstone on soceity now.


Let's see. How about we talk about the VA medical system? It is a purely governmental system. How's that working? Vets dying, systems being rigged so government employees get bonuses while veterans are denied care, etc.

Yeah, the American people want more of that!

How about the website?

How about all the unilateral (and political) delays?

How about the broken promises, including the lie of the year?

And even though ACA isn't "government run".


It's government designed.

Part of the opposition to the ACA included denial that there was even a health insurance "problem". In itself more ridiculous than climate denial.


Who said that?

In November 2007, research from the Economic Policy Institute showed that employer-provided health care in the United States has dropped sharply, with workplace insurance covering only 59.7% of Americans now, compared to 64.2% in 2000. And in June, a devastating new assessment from the Commonwealth Fund showed fully 25 million Americans are now "underinsured," a staggering 60 percent jump since 2003. All in all, 42% of the people in the United States under age 65 have insufficient insurance - or simply none at all.
As the New York Times reported, premiums for family health insurance have surged 78% since 2001 to over $12,000 a year. That cost explosion comes even as Americans' salaries and wages have barely moved: "inflation-adjusted median family income has dipped 2.6 percent -- or nearly $1,000 annually since 2000." It should come as no surprise that the wealthiest Americans now live 4.5 years longer than the least-well off, a startling jump from just a 2.8 year gap reported in 1982.


That's not responsible.


In a socialist system, you'd be right. But, read carefully, not every problem is best-solved by the Federal government. That's not the system we have, comrade.

Any member of government has a duty to offer alternatives, not just oppose.


If they see a bad idea, their first responsibility is to oppose it.

Republicans did have alternatives. They did not have a platform to present them, nor a reason to cobble together a coherent program--they had no way of passing it as the minority party in both Houses and lacking the Presidency. They were, for the most part, shut out of the ACA design.

Now, we heard how it was "just like" the "Republican-design" in Massachusetts. That wasn't true, as (Mac)Gruber has revealed. He boasted about how they "stole" $400M from the Feds to make it work.

Many of the critics of the ACA were right about elements of the law. But the law was written to appease the health care industry as much as it was written to attempt to solve the problems of access, and cost that citizens were encountering.


True. It was corrupt from the beginning with corporations being promised new markets, politicians being offered goodies (and being lied to--see pro-life Democrats), etc.

And for that you have the base problem. The health insurance business and Big Pharma contribute hundreds of millions to political campaigns... (All tax deductible). The ordinary citizens can't because they have to pay exorbitant insurance premiums.


And those are going to get worse as all the mandates kick in.

Thanks for nothing, Democrats.
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Post 23 Nov 2014, 9:53 am

fate
In a socialist system, you'd be right. But, read carefully, not every problem is best-solved by the Federal government. That's not the system we have, comrade


You have socialized medicine. Its called Medicare.
And its very popular.
Because its better than what came before.

Fate
Bunk. It takes two to tango.

In the US system of governance, with arcane rules in the Senate and House, it just takes one side to obstruct.
A minority can top the will of the majority easily. (And that's minority of Senators.... if you want to analyze how democratic that is ... Senators representing as little as 24% of the population of the US can stop legislation.) And individual Senators have the power to stop some legislation or funding...