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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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Or at least not relative to anything that matters. Quote:
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TM |
Re: Aca
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Most people would prefer to buy comprehensive coverage that protects them not only from paying the costs of catastrophic and chronic care, but also preventative and elective care. Contra Sebby, this is not because people can't be trusted to handle his own health care, but because they prefer to pay to let someone else incur those risks. Sebby sees a market failure that makes him want to forbid people from transacting with each other for such insurance, a bizarre thing to call libertarian. If there is a libertarian strain here, it is the knee jerk objection to the government provision of services, and the concomitant blindness to using the government to screw people while pretending it is their own fault. |
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I mean, you know where he gets it, but, come on, to quote 43, it's just some weird shit. |
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I understand insurance. I'd invite you to research the difference between a TPA and insurance, and get back to me as to which our HC insurance system resembles. Quote:
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_______________ * Under 30 only, or hardship exemption. |
Re: Aca
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I understand lawyers get married to precedent and are blindered by risk avoidance, so dicking around at the margins, which is the ACA, is a fix close to your heart. Try to have an open mind. I'm not suggesting my idea is a definite winner, but at a minimum, incorporation of some elements of it would make a positive difference. Honestly, I don't know how anyone can argue with at least attempting to lower the private pay price for direct consumers (which necessarily creates more price transparency)? How is this not an item on which we all agree? This would help the people on bronze plans! |
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Some here will share some of my views, but some won't. |
Re: Oops! I did it again!
What do you say we all send Pence, c/o the White House, a male chastity belt. There are some nasty looking ones on Amazon for under $50. I think it would be hepful.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
Today's Horribly Scary Statistic, Non-Trumpazoid Division:
Unfunded pension obligations have risen to $1.9 trillion from $292 billion since 2007. A financial crisis is steaming along as the Boomers retire, their pensions default, and they can't support themselves on social security alone. Hardest hit: Municipal employees like cops and teachers, whose pension plan return assumptions are so far beyond optimistic as to constitute criminally negligent magical thinking. Boomers' children will NOT be happy about this. Instead of visiting their parents in a warm weather vacation villa, they will have their parents living in the spare bedroom. https://www.bloomberg.com/view/artic...kets-to-ignore A disclaimer: Some of the websites cited in the Bloomberg piece are run by "Its The End Of The World As We Know It, Here's Where To Buy A Bomb Shelter And A Machine Pistol To Protect Your Family" people. That said, the numbers are or should be terrifying. Disclaimer 2: Sebby probably agrees with me on this. Please don't hold that against me. |
Re: Aca
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What you're suggesting is akin to saying that we would all be better off if auto insurance had per incident deductibles of $100K, because people would be covered for massive injury but would drive more carefully and exercise better care in paying for repairs if they couldn't just pass costs to insurers. Even if this were true as far as it goes, what you miss is that people are risk-averse are prefer to buy insurance rather than to be exposed to these risks. So too with healthcare. What you're underscoring is that libertarianism is a nonsensical concept here. Consumers' choices -- their freedom -- are constrained both by the government and by private parties. You can't get the peculiar flavor of insurance you want if the government requires more, but you also can't get it if other consumers don't want it or insurers don't want to provide it. In all three cases, your freedom is limited in a meaningful way. The conceit of libertarianism, that the only limitations on your freedom that count are those dictated by the government, is a distinction without a meaningful difference. |
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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