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If nothing else, it taught me to buy subprimes when the U.S. economy is looking weak. WHen it invariably comes back, these companies do make money hand over fist. But when they start taking hits (e.g., late 2001-2003), the stock market convinces itself that they are all insolvent and not worth a dime. Funny that. |
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But, to the extent that logic can fill in blanks in actual knowledge: "The hospital charges me $X for a visit. The insurance company decides that only $X-Y is "reasonable" for the hospital stay. I don't get to do that; why should they?" Because it's in the contract into which you (or your employer, more likely) entered. Same with auto insurers only paying a certain amount for a wrecked fender; they take known risks based on predictable costs, and aren't willing (understandably) to pay unreasonable amounts as part of their contractual duty. Why should an insurer send off a check for $3000 for a fender when they know that the same fender can be purchased for $300? Why should they pay $4000 for a hospital room when they know that the prevailing reasonable charge is $1200? Heck, this issue alone has probably done more to keep health care costs down from the provider than any other provision. Do you think hospitals and clinics and docs would keep their rates where they are if they knew they could simply pick any desirable charge and get it paid? A contract for insurance isn't a promise of a blank check. It calls for a premium in exchange for a set of known benefits. Why would you not question your clinic as to the charge being too high, instead of questioning what you've explicitly contracted for from the insurer? |
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Let's say that the insurer tells me that I can attend a given clinic (or hospital, or doctor, or whatever) and that for a given procedure I'm covered 100% (or my deductible is flat and already paid, etc.) I go to the hospital, my bill comes, and I see that the hospital charged a zillion dollars, my insurer decided to pay only half a zillion dollars, and my amount to pay at the bottom is zero. WTF? I'm sure part of this are contracts for services that the insurer negotiates with the applicable health provider about what the insurer will actually pay for procedure XYZ. Still, why are the numbers so out of whack, and why does the provided still choose to send those bills out if they're not at all related to what they actually get paid? Why, RT, why? |
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Mr. Wonk - I don't loose sleep over the credit companyes either, but the people I do feel that do get screwed over are the small businessman who have a ninety day invoice period with wealthy purchasers and they get screwed by a bankruptcy. I see it with these palaces in the Silicon Valley. The people go out and hire all sorts of contracters to build stuff, buy items for their house, etc and then declare bankruptcy.
I don't know if you read the last few lines of the Economist article but it said: "Other quirks of the legislation make one wonder why credit-industry groups are so keen on it. One loophole allows rich debtors to go on shielding assets in special trust accounts that are legal in a few states. And debtors' fancy homes in Texas and Florida will still be off-limits to creditors. The bill's backers say that fear of trampling on states' rights stopped them closing such loopholes. But it smells rather pervasively like special treatment for the rich." I believe it is these areas where the reform is needed most and the bill doesn't cover these areas. I believe small businesses are the key to the success of the US economy and they are very fragile. Quote:
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Spankme, you fucking moron, none of us here (or, none of the people saying bankruptcy bill sucks, which is pretty much everyone who has commented on it) is in favor of letting people who don't need bankruptcy and have money and shit use the bankruptcy loophole for homestead exemptions to shield themselves from the consequences of their obnoxious actions, so I don't know what purpose your little speech had. I mean, it's like having a little speech on how it's bad to sodomize toddlers, because children are our future. Duh. |
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It's fun to work hard to get your client's divorce and custody battle done right, at a discounted price because you feel sympathy for her financial straits, and for which you didn't demand the full fee up front because you knew she didn't have it, and then get the bk filing served on you a few months later. (It's even more fun when you find out through mutual friends that, while you were being a softie, her plan was to BK out of your bill from the start.) It's fun to extend credit to a small retailer, in the form of shipping them an order of your small import company's goods without demanding COD or payment up front, and then getting the filing notice. It's fun to keep on taking those Smith kids in to your home day care, even though Ms. Smith is now three months behind on her bill - heck, it's hard to tell them to stop coming, 'cuz you're a softie at heart - and then get the bk filing. I still don't like this bill at all - but BK does have a very personal cost for many individuals. It's not just the big companies that get bitten by BK. |
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The urge to blame "special interests," from both sides of the aisle, is a pet peeve for me. There are people and groups on both sides of most issues. Whichever side wins, we denegrate as a "special interest." The truth is, at the state legislature level anyway, that these lobbyists are often the only people that know anything about the issue at hand - the part-time legislators surely don't. Most are there because they believe in the issue for which they advocate, or at least their employers do. Believe it or not, they can actually believe that what they want is in the overrall "best interest" of the country as a whole. Let me give you an example. When I was in college, a group of fellow student, whom I joined toward the end, spent a lot of their personal time lobbying the state legislature for a change that would benefit student (it cost nothing). The whole thing was handled without any budget, and with only the effort of less than a dozen students. Were we one of your dreaded "special interest groups?" Were the faculty members who ultimately thwarted our efforts? For the most part, there is an interest group on every side. With only very few exceptions, it is simplistic of us to dismiss any legislative decision as only the result of the pressure from "special interests" (mostly because we only have this complaint when we disagree). Quote:
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That last sentence was tongue-in-cheek. |
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You would not believe how many wealthy people use bankruptcy to avoid debts. Estate planning attorneys and financial advisors recommend it as an option like its a tax shelter. As far as mechnics liens, I have come across many of them but I have never seen a forclosure date set by a mechanics lien. I just wasn't sure if you could actually forclose on a six hundred thousand dollar house with a two thousand dollars mechanics lien.
In any case, I had a man approach me to help him refinance. One of my researchers found him because he had received a notice of default. He has a ten million dollar home. He showed me his file and he must have had three hundred to four hundred bills he had not paid. From carpet cleaners, to gardners etc. I am just sure he told all these people to bill him and they saw the size of the house and were sure they would get paid. He is now in bankruptcy and everything is cleared. I talked to his bankruptcy attorney and he told me he does these type of bankruptcies all the time. I have personal experience with this so lighten up francis. Quote:
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As far as Unions are concerned, if they are in support of a bill then I know the consumers are taking it in the derrier. The worst is the public service unions. Particularly the California Teachers Association. Anytime anyone has proposed legislation that would allow incompetant teachers to be dismissed they freak out like you are asking them to take a seventy five percent pay cut. It seems so ubsurd to me that you can't get rid of incompetance but they think job secuirty is some sort of divine right. In LA they have what is called the "dance of the lemons". At a high school, when enough parents complain about a principle, they just move him or her to another high school. They just keep moving them around. They do the same thing with teachers. If you question this policy you are accused of attacking eduction. The prisons union in California is also completely out of hand. Prisoners are getting killed and beat up all the time by correctional officers, but if any legislator even hints at having an investigation why so many prisoners in california end up in hospitals (or why so many female inmate end up pregnant or with veneral disease) the prison unions claim they are soft on law enforcement and siding with the criminals. In San Franicsco the transit union has insured that the average transit worker earns six figures and they get four months off a year.
There are always people on every side of an issue, but there are people that have a vested financial interest and that is all they care about. Quote:
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