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Re: It Already Died in the Light
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Or at least if there is, it doesn't have a seat at the table. |
Re: Aca
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: Aca
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We should do something about this! Quote:
If you asked them, "Should the govt provide a form of health insurance to those who cannot acquire it from private sources because it's humane, and people cannot opt out of seeking health care?", you'd find a lot of agreement. Quote:
You're expanding "liberty" to include rights to have certain things. A libertarian would tell you freedom is the right not to be interfered with by the govt, and does not include the right to have choices provided to you. I think most libertarians would break with my support for medicare expansion, arguing the govt's functions do not include stepping in to fill product absences in the market. Quote:
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The person being forced to spend more, for that which he doesn't want, isn't made worse off? And even worse, you are taking a choice away from someone. The market would provide catastrophic policies to those under 30 if it were allowed to do so. The people you seek to benefit are those you argue would never have been given what they want. Hence, they've lost no choice, because they never would have had one. ...Well, except for Medicare expansion, which would fill in that market hole. Quote:
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If you're single guy, living in a bungalow, using ACME Discount Trash Removal at $X, a small outfit who can service those with minimal needs, and the County suddenly says, "ACME is not approved. You must use one of our approved trash servicers, who can also service the McMansion owners down the street, at $XX," you've been robbed of a choice in favor of giving a service to someone else. |
Re: Aca
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZECQCQjP38 |
Re: Aca
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Re: Aca
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Suckaaaa!!! |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: Aca
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If you cannot buy health insurance, you have less liberty and less freedom than if you can. I agree that many libertarians care whether the government takes away your freedom, but not whether private parties take away your freedom. You seem to be in this camp. I keep pushing you to give some principled reason to distinguish between the two, and you can’t. If you care about liberty, you should support things that the government does that further liberty. You say that justifying government action on the basis of promoting liberty “opens the barn door” too far, which strikes me as a very weird thing for a libertarian to say. Too much liberty! Scary! Maybe you think this because you don’t consider taxation to threaten anyone’s liberty, which is also truly weird. Once you accept that just about any government action affects different liberty interests in different ways, and involves trade-offs, you start to see that the barn doors are not so wide open, and that libertarianism is a foolish infatuation. Does this mean you have a right to health insurance? I never said that. You keep changing the subject to talk about rights, something I’m not talking about. You also have this odd notion that it’s OK for the government to do things that diminish liberty so long as people have a notional choice to opt out of the market entirely. As if deciding not to drive is really a choice that many people could make, and as if deciding not to drive does not itself greatly reduce one’s liberty. You have articulated a principle here, just not one that is consistent at all with an interest in liberty. Then you argue that “government cannot force people to subsidize the coverage of others by compelling them to buy certain products.” Why not? Isn’t that what government is? The government forces you to pay taxes, and it uses those taxes to pay for things that necessarily involve cross-subsidies. The government builds roads, schools and army bases, all of which benefit some people more than others. Now, you also argue that the ACA doesn’t increase choice, because those over thirty cannot buy catastrophic coverage. That’s the right question to be asking, but you’re ignoring what the individual market was doing before the ACA. Yes, it was possible to buy certain kinds of coverage that the ACA forbids. The reason the ACA forbids that coverage is that the provision of those policies undermines the market’s ability to provide other coverage that more people want. If you assume away that problem, as you are wont to do, then indeed you can assume away the ACA’s regulation as unnecessary. Once you accept that people actually want to be able to get coverage for pre-existing conditions and preventative care, and that the ACA makes this possible, then the libertarian game is up. Libertarianism healthcare policy involves pretending that necessary regulation is unnecessary, and/or that people don’t want to buy the insurance coverage that people actually want to buy. And the older person who wants to buy only catastrophic coverage is out of luck, just like the pacifist who doesn’t want his tax dollars to pay for nuclear weapons. You say that you don’t believe that healthcare markets can work better when they compete to provide services, as compared to a government monopoly. Does that mean you think all hospitals should be nationalized? All doctors should work for the government? I assume the answer is “um, not that,” in which you’re not actually making a libertarian argument about rights, but an empirical argument about what works better in specific markets. On your privity/Timmy point, we’ll have the government act as a quasi-broker, but intermediating the transaction. You pick which services you want to buy, as offered by different private parties, but you tell and pay the government, which pays the private party to serve you. Bingo — no privity. Finally, on the trash removal hypotheticals, you duck the question because you don’t have a good answer. My hypothetical illustrates that if the government requires you to buy a service, you can be better off purchasing it from a private party than from a government monopoly, a point you were resisting. Your hypothetical is not apt to that question at all. You’re just arguing that government regulation limits your choices by preventing you from buying the sort of product forbidden by the regulation. Well, duh. You can’t buy children’s toys adorned with shards of broken glass, either. To which you will say, people don’t want those toys, but they do want catastrophic coverage. To which I will say, go back to the justification for the ACA regulations, which is that allowing health insurers to provide certain kinds of cut-right coverage prevents insurers from offering other kinds of insurance that lots of people want. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
"The federal government is an insurance company with an army."
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C9dFl7MXYAA4EXy.jpg |
Re: Aca
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Although I wouldn't sign up for Ty's hypo either. St. Paul is currently fighting over how to reduce the number of haulers making use of the public alleys to collect trash and there's no way I would trade the municipal-provided (probably contracted, don't even know) service we get in Minneapolis for it. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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TM |
Re: Aca
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This is a far more reasonable thing than your suggestion that any time a private party precludes the liberty of another, govt intervention is warranted. Quote:
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And again, nobody is compelling privity between you and a corporation. If you're okay with the govt saying, "Ty, buy insurance from [insert corp]," you're okay with the govt saying, "Ty, buy toothpaste from [insert corp]." This is a dangerous crack in the dam. Quote:
I do not buy the argument that the group desiring the more comprehensive policies is larger than those who'd seek to pare costs by purchasing catastrophic policies. I think, empirically, the latter would be much larger, as people are strapped for cash and seeking low cost variants of almost everything since the financial crisis. I think what the ACA has made a choice. It has decided to give the people who need comprehensive plans priority over those who'd seek value, at cost to those who'd seek value. Quote:
The argument I raised, way, way back when, was that this "choice" may not need to be made. I suggested there was an albeit politically unrealistic, but economically feasible way to satisfy both groups's interests. Quote:
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What you have described throughout this post, over and over, is a choice. You say we can only satisfy one of two groups with mutually exclusive goals: Those seeking comprehensive coverage (pre-existing care, maternity, etc.), and those seeking catastrophic plans. If you leave the market alone, the former will not get what they want, but the latter will continue to enjoy their liberty to purchase what they want. If you intervene, preventing the latter from purchasing what the market would otherwise give them, and compelling them to pay more for broader coverage, the former will get what they want and the latter will not only lose what they had, but have to spend more for that which they did not want. This is not a general enhancement of liberty. This is weighing of the liberties of two parties, with a decision that the "liberty" (I've not conceded you're misusing the term) of one is more important than that of another. You can justify that as a societal need, or an allowed result of proper regulatory power. But I'm sorry... however many semantic and logical contortions you go through, this is not, and never will be, a policy grounded in the interests of liberty. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: Aca
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Fortunately, I'm not saying anything so utopian. I'm saying that different things that the government does have different implications for liberty, and that people who at least profess to care about liberty should care about private threats to liberty just as they do about public threats. Surely you're not saying that because we can't completely make such problems go away, we shouldn't try to do anything about them at all. Because that would be silly. |
Re: Low Standards
I'm really hoping that the worst thing Trump does today is screw up the Easter Egg Roll. That would make it the most successful day of his administration so far.
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Re: Aca
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What you really object to is the idea that relatively healthy people are forced to pay more for their coverage in order to subsidize people who aren't as healthy. No? Quote:
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[I say, so interpose the government between the buyer and seller to avoid privity.] I don't like it, but it's better than compelling a direct purchase.[/QUOTE] Why don't you like it? Sounds like it solves your privity problem absolutely. One starts to suspect that your objection isn't really about privity. Quote:
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Because we value some of these liberty interests more than others -- e.g., the right to free speech more than the right not to hear stuff you don't like -- the tradeoff seems pretty easy, but it's still a tradeoff. The government requires you to drive on the right side of the street, taking away your ability to drive wherever you want on the street. Because this solves a coordination problem and is so obviously beneficial for everybody, we don't worry about the lost freedom to drive on the left. The ACA is like this. The right to sell insurance to people that doesn't cover really basic things is not a right that matters to anyone. And the right to buy catastrophic coverage is like the right to drive on the left side of the road -- maybe it sounds great in the abstract, but not when you realize that it's screwing things up for most people who just want to be able to use the car to get places, and just want to have decent health insurance, and didn't ask to be a part of anyone's libertarian thought experiments. Solving these problems actually improves people's choices and liberty in real ways. |
Re: Aca
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First, I care about both public and private threats to liberty. An excellent example of this is my apprehension toward any policy that compels direct contracting with private entities. The line between govt and corporations is already blurred enough. The last thing we need to do is hand the people who are already writing our regulations (via lobbyists, to create barriers to entry against competition), exempting themselves from competition (drug price negotiation), and enjoying bailouts a device by which they can create new govt-compelled consumers for their products. Second, as I noted before, I welcome an argument of degree on the extent to which liberty may be curtailed. I think your better argument would have been the one you've now offered: The ACA's favoring of comprehensive plan purchasers over catastrophic plan purchasers is a choice, based on a worth societal goal. I'd argue in response that, yes, there's a lot of heft to that position, so we should try to balance the interests of both groups. I'd say this balancing could be achieved by creating a few more layers of policies in the ACA, beyond silver, bronze, etc. If we wanted to, we could provide customized products to consumers, while still observing some parameters that preserve the necessary subsidization and risk pooling necessary to make pre-existing condition plans possible. |
Re: Aca
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Sneaky tyranny is the worst tyranny. Quote:
Yes, that's a super elementary point, but so is yours. Quote:
Oh, and if a corporation can do all of those things to get customers, why deal with the herculean task for getting a federal mandate statute passed and signed into law? |
Re: Aca
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I say let them enjoy loose regulation. And when they collapse, let them die, and their pieces be sold to those who can use them. Including, perhaps most notably, the banks. TBTF is TBTExist. Quote:
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(There's a great argument Cowen missed in the Complacent Class, by the way. He fails to adequately highlight the tie between financial risk management, short termism, and lack of innovation. It's the need to deliver each quarter, dependably, that's fucking us hardest.) |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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TM |
Re: Aca
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Honestly, it's weird that you're still flogging an argument that wasn't even strong enough to get Roberts on board. Quote:
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So, yeah, driver's licenses and passports are not distinguishable from the government. Nor is a legal entity with the rights and responsibilities dictated by law neatly distinguishable from government. |
Re: Aca
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1m23uu5Yz-Y |
I'm sure you'll get right on that.
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"My name's Pitt...
And your ass ain't talking its way out of this shit."
https://seekingalpha.com/article/406...pension-crisis |
Re: "My name's Pitt...
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Theory: the more ideologically hide-bound the think tank, the less reliable their projections. |
Re: "My name's Pitt...
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Basically, well-managed municipalities (generally blue) will figure out how to pay for it while those expecting poorly-managed (generally red) to cover them will be screwed unless we get a Dem controlled future Congress to kick in. And, of course, immigration would help but we're going the wrong way there. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: "My name's Pitt...
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I agree, however, that this will be a location-based crisis. It's going to be pretty wild because we'll see municipalities bordering each other facing highly disparate futures. The family a few blocks away could be subject to staggering property tax increases, while you see none. Be interesting how this impacts property values at the municipal and state levels. Also, in most of the Mid Atlantic at least, there is no more room to increase property taxes. This is proven by the fact that these states have for many years now relaxed laws on gaming and casinos in an effort to raise revenue. That's typically something states only engage in when they have no other sources of revenue. There's also a considerable political debate in Mid Atlantic states about enhance sales and personal income taxes to relax property taxes. That's not indicative of a climate, or capacity, to absorb property tax increases needed to fund pension shortfalls. |
Re: I'm sure you'll get right on that.
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I'm not concerned for the guy who complains that he must buy auto insurance in order to drive. If he doesn't like that, he can download Uber, or take the bus. The guy being told he must buy a certain form of expansive health care plan, simply because he's alive and has the means to do so, has no choice. He's being told he must contract with private entities. |
Re: "My name's Pitt...
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Re: "My name's Pitt...
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But since I did, let's take a look at some of this: Quote:
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Also, a very big chunk of that spending increase is inflation, why not control for it? Right, because we're not even attempting rational analysis, this is hype mode. Quote:
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I don't think the local fallout will be as interesting as you think. There will be some jostling among adjacent suburbs, maybe, but high-tax cities will still be high-tax cities with lots of other reasons people will want to be there. |
Re: I'm sure you'll get right on that.
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Re: "My name's Pitt...
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Conservatives should hate this. This, combined with the anti-intellectual fervor of places like Fox, is part of why there is so little quality conservative scholarship these days - I mean, where is the Milton Friedman or Bill Buckley of the current generation? Instead there is "public intellectual" (god I hate that phrase) Bill O'Reilly and Harvard Professor (he always leads with the Harvard) Charles Murray, spewing illogical bile. |
Re: I'm sure you'll get right on that.
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Re: "My name's Pitt...
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I think the reason we see no more Buckleys is because we've moved from a society of discourse to one of advocacy. Everyone has an opinion he's clamoring to spout, and the attention span of the audience is akin to that of gnats. Buckley and Vidal would get .0000043% in ratings today. "TL;DW!" Buckley harrumphed a lot, but he allowed a guy with contrary point to get in his licks, and he'd acknowledge where someone found a flaw in his argument. That shit ain't happening anymore because nobody gives a fuck about discourse. Nobody wants a back and forth where they have to adjust their points. People want to advocate. The dumb fucks don't realize - the only way you make an argument bulletproof is to allow the other side to batter it, and to drop the parts of it which opponents prove to be flawed. And the only way to shut up a guy like Murray is to put him to his proofs. Sure, that risks merely assisting him in honing his sophistry. But throwing a shit fit at his speech? That's just giving him $100k in new speaking fees. Self-defeating advocacy. I also think a better way to assess ideas, or public statements, or art, is to distance them from the source. Bill Cosby's funny comedy bits aren't suddenly awful because he's a rapist. Eric Clapton's lunatic racist speech about Enoch Powell in the '70s doesn't soil the beauty of Layla and Assorted Love Songs. In this same regard, I can remain a fan of Murray's concept for paring the regulatory state in We the People while concluding he's a deplorable sensationalist elsewhere. |
Re: "My name's Pitt...
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There is lots of perfectly civil discourse in all kinds of avenues these days, but it ends when a right winger walks in the room talking politics. |
Re: "My name's Pitt...
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Cymande has a message. but don't shoot them. Their message is one of funk and harmony. The Daily Dose is "The Message": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VO91BtMIciU |
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