SilverFJ wrote:Little kids haven't tasted the awesome, rockin' adventure ride that my life has been so far .
you realize that this is starting to sound awfully Charlie Sheen-like?
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
SilverFJ wrote:Little kids haven't tasted the awesome, rockin' adventure ride that my life has been so far .
SilverFJ wrote:If you're on a straightaway on a clear day with no other cars around and you're Dale Jr. it would be absolutely R&P for you to travel at 130mph if you wanted..
burn!!!callmeslick wrote:and, of course, being Dale Jr., at least 5 cars would pass you before you got to Missoula.
tunnelcat wrote:Egoists/Ayn Randees = Wannabees that don't have a snowball's chance in hell of getting super rich but still think it's possible = Screw all those who can't help themselves because of resentment = Tea Party.
You do realize Slick, that people who went to the tea party rallies didn't do so because they were looking form a new political party. They went to protest a fat bloated govt. that in the last 4 or 5 years the debt increased 8 trillion dollars under the control of a Dem. controlled house and senate. The porkulous bill and finally the health care bill were seen as the final straws and the tea party people peacfully made their displeasure known. If a third party forms so be it. You can try the tired old liberal mantra of demonizing them but it won't work here. The real saps are all those who think govt. welfare is a honorable profession and will lead us to prosperity.callmeslick wrote:tunnelcat wrote:Egoists/Ayn Randees = Wannabees that don't have a snowball's chance in hell of getting super rich but still think it's possible = Screw all those who can't help themselves because of resentment = Tea Party.
I think your equation overlooks that the whole movement is driven by a handful of greedy, well-off individuals behind the scenes, playing those wannabe rubes for all they can. My equation would be along the lines of:
money+salesmanship+huge numbers of gullible saps= Tea Party.
Then again, we've seen Know Nothings, Luddites and other wacky movements, so it all just falls into the great American political tradition. Some day, most of the Tea Party folks will wake up and realize they've been had, just like folks who follow the TV preachers. It will be a sad realization, but all too predicatable.
With luck, the rest of us won't have to pay too high a price for their foolishness.
Ok, I was wrong…Slick is not a liberal…he’s a straight up dyed in the wool Democratic operative.callmeslick wrote:I think your equation overlooks that the whole movement is driven by a handful of greedy, well-off individuals behind the scenes, playing those wannabe rubes for all they can. My equation would be along the lines of:
money+salesmanship+huge numbers of gullible saps= Tea Party.
really? you think anyone who disagrees with the tea party is a democrat?Spidey wrote:Ok, I was wrong…Slick is not a liberal…he’s a straight up dyed in the wool Democratic operative.
woodchip wrote:You do realize Slick, that people who went to the tea party rallies didn't do so because they were looking form a new political party. They went to protest a fat bloated govt. that in the last 4 or 5 years the debt increased 8 trillion dollars under the control of a Dem. controlled house and senate. The porkulous bill and finally the health care bill were seen as the final straws and the tea party people peacfully made their displeasure known. If a third party forms so be it. You can try the tired old liberal mantra of demonizing them but it won't work here. The real saps are all those who think govt. welfare is a honorable profession and will lead us to prosperity.
What has changed from the initial message they sent?!? Maybe I haven't noticed but the signs look the same, the interviews with them sound like the same talking points: "Spending, spending, taxes, spending..." the so called Tea Party conservatives that were sent into office in the last cycle are taking grief from the Tea Party for not pushing for enough spending cuts ...callmeslick wrote:woodchip wrote:You do realize Slick, that people who went to the tea party rallies didn't do so because they were looking form a new political party. They went to protest a fat bloated govt. that in the last 4 or 5 years the debt increased 8 trillion dollars under the control of a Dem. controlled house and senate. The porkulous bill and finally the health care bill were seen as the final straws and the tea party people peacfully made their displeasure known. If a third party forms so be it. You can try the tired old liberal mantra of demonizing them but it won't work here. The real saps are all those who think govt. welfare is a honorable profession and will lead us to prosperity.
I know why people got angry and went to the initial rallies. And, I've watched as they've been twisted into a completely different ideal by folks with a pre-set agenda. ...
What is interesting is how the opposition (left) responds to a tea party assembly. Funny how I haven't seen such vulgarity from the tea party members. Even more interesting how Media Matters commented on the O'reilly segment without showing the video of the protestors:callmeslick wrote:woodchip wrote:You do realize Slick, that people who went to the tea party rallies didn't do so because they were looking form a new political party. They went to protest a fat bloated govt. that in the last 4 or 5 years the debt increased 8 trillion dollars under the control of a Dem. controlled house and senate. The porkulous bill and finally the health care bill were seen as the final straws and the tea party people peacfully made their displeasure known. If a third party forms so be it. You can try the tired old liberal mantra of demonizing them but it won't work here. The real saps are all those who think govt. welfare is a honorable profession and will lead us to prosperity.
I know why people got angry and went to the initial rallies. And, I've watched as they've been twisted into a completely different ideal by folks with a pre-set agenda. I had great hopes, at first, with the idea of the Tea Party movement, simply because it might get folks thinking about and involved with their government. Sadly, it turned into yet another populist smokescreen that will help prolong the process of building a national consensus on what kind of nation we wish to be, what sort of social safety net we wish to maintain, and how to pay for it all fairly.
You're equation does make more sense. They're gullible people that have genuine concerns about the state of our country who are being manipulated by powerful and wealthy individuals like Dick Armey and his Freedom Works organization and The Koch Brothers and their Americans for Prosperity propaganda front group. They got started by Rick Santelli, a CNBC commentator, in his infamous rant on TV that blamed the mortgage mess on homeowners (but, as it turns out, was in essence the big banks own, greedy, damn fault). Tea Partiers may want an Ayn Randish American utopia of liberty and personal freedom, but they're just being manipulated into thinking government is the big, bad wolf, when in reality these wealthy Laissez Faire Capitalists are the real problem when they steal from all of society to line their own pockets. They're making us all poorer, and it's not due to those lazy, parasitic poor people that Ayn Rand so vilified. It's a shell game they've fallen for. I'd have more respect for Tea Partiers if they had started their protests on Bush's watch, but nary a peep until a Black Democrat gets elected president, then it's all about "Kill that big government"! Well, that big government really got going on Bush's watch, they should have spoke up then! They are unprincipled, gullible people!callmeslick wrote:tunnelcat wrote:Egoists/Ayn Randees = Wannabees that don't have a snowball's chance in hell of getting super rich but still think it's possible = Screw all those who can't help themselves because of resentment = Tea Party.
I think your equation overlooks that the whole movement is driven by a handful of greedy, well-off individuals behind the scenes, playing those wannabe rubes for all they can. My equation would be along the lines of:
money+salesmanship+huge numbers of gullible saps= Tea Party.
Then again, we've seen Know Nothings, Luddites and other wacky movements, so it all just falls into the great American political tradition. Some day, most of the Tea Party folks will wake up and realize they've been had, just like folks who follow the TV preachers. It will be a sad realization, but all too predicatable.
With luck, the rest of us won't have to pay too high a price for their foolishness.
your saying you want us to throw out the Democrats for defiling the government???tunnelcat wrote:Jesus cleaned out the money changers from the Temple, so if you're a Christian Republican, follow what Jesus would have done.
to be completely fair, the beginnings of the Tea Party/Patriot movement DID start during the latter part of the Bush term, and it wasn't a monolithically conservative group. It's been coopted, as I stated in a thread I started elsewhere.tunnelcat wrote:[ I'd have more respect for Tea Partiers if they had started their protests on Bush's watch, but nary a peep until a Black Democrat gets elected president, then it's all about "Kill that big government"! Well, that big government really got going on Bush's watch, they should have spoke up then! They are unprincipled, gullible people!
Bingo! We have a winner! Although, everyone knows that the true reason is that Obama has killed domestic production through his communist policies. Of course, the fact that our puny domestic production has increased for the past two years is just an annoying fact.Want to hear gullible? Ask any American why gas prices are going up. Who do you think they blame? I'm willing to bet OPEC and Libya would top the list of answers, but it's not the right answer. Now if they said it was due to speculators, you'd have the right answer. All the rise in commodity prices lately is due solely to speculators and hedge funds trying to make profits off yours and mine bottom line!
This idea will ultimately obliterate the GOP, I suspect, once actual thought is given to it by voters in the 35-55 year old age group. Not to worry, they'll be replaced, as were the Whigs and the Democrat-Republicans. However, unless things change, not just the Tea Party, but the bulk of the American populace will continue to be suckers. They don't see the real picture: America is run by the same families that have run it for generations. They make huge money from every Crash and burst Bubble. They send their kids to the schools that feed the Law Firms, the Courts, the Finance and Investment world. They own the bulk of the land. And, in terms of the current generatons of those families, greater numbers of them have lost the sense of noblesse oblige that kept them from fecking the whole lot of you over with greater regularity. As long as America's broad electorate fights over far left, far right issues, as long as the gridlock continues, the noose tightens. Class warfare? Don't make me laugh. The war ended around the late 1700's sometimes and the winners are still running the show.Now we have Paul Ryan trying to make Medicare a voucher system, in other words, privatized. How in the hell is that going to benefit everyone? Well except for the rich CEO's of those already rolling in dough health insurance companies that will clean up even bigger with huge profits if this abomination of an idea ever gets traction.
Yeah, so you'll vote for the other party that worships Laissez Faire Capitalism above all else? THE MONEY CHANGERS of Wall Street? Lets put the coyote right back in the hen house again. Sure the Dems are corrupt as well, I don't deny that, but they don't espouse social conservatism and unfettered Capitalism as core tenets. I wish they would stick to their core ideals. You're a Christian Republican, I'm guessing, so got a better response to that oxymoron?CUDA wrote:your saying you want us to throw out the Democrats for defiling the government???tunnelcat wrote:Jesus cleaned out the money changers from the Temple, so if you're a Christian Republican, follow what Jesus would have done.
Well, I can't argue with you there. So what does one do? The Tea Party has been co-opted, so that's out as a viable option now.Spidey wrote:“They're gullible people that have genuine concerns about the state of our country who are being manipulated by powerful and wealthy individuals…”
Wow, like you can’t say that about everyone that belongs to a political party.
Maybe, but not one person I would call a member of the Tea Party made one little bit of stink publicly when Bush was taking away many of our civil liberties, growing government exponentially and creating the debt from hell. The liberals were screaming and protesting publicly all over the place back then, but nary a word from anyone with Tea Party ideals even spoke up. The time to have spoken in protest was when the crap was starting to hit the fan, not after.callmeslick wrote:to be completely fair, the beginnings of the Tea Party/Patriot movement DID start during the latter part of the Bush term, and it wasn't a monolithically conservative group. It's been coopted, as I stated in a thread I started elsewhere.
Please provide any documentation you can that the rise in gas prices is "due solely to speculators". There are dozens of factors that affect the price of gasoline from day to day. The chief reason for the general trend in rising gasoline/oil prices has been the closer and closer alignment of demand with available supply in the markets. This is primarily because of the increasing demand from Asia (mainly China and India) that has been occurring as their economies have responded favorably from being unleashed from the strong state centered control that was more the story in the last half of the 20th century. In the absence of what used to be a larger buffer between demand and available supply, all kinds of even minor supply issues can now have largely outsized effects on the price of oil, and hence gasoline; i.e. it doesn't take much of a hiccup any more to send prices out of whack. Sure, speculating on futures contracts is a part of what's happening, as it is in any other commodities market, but it's far from being the sole controlling factor.tunnelcat wrote: ... Want to hear gullible? Ask any American why gas prices are going up. Who do you think they blame? I'm willing to bet OPEC and Libya would top the list of answers, but it's not the right answer. Now if they said it was due to speculators, you'd have the right answer. All the rise in commodity prices lately is due solely to speculators and hedge funds trying to make profits off yours and mine bottom line!
Terrific, so I take it then that you have an alternative to the Ryan plan and the Bowles-Simpson Commission's recommendations. Awesome. Where is it so I can read about it. As it stands right now, keeping with the status quo will not work, because spending is continuing to increase, handwaving by the government notwithstanding. Also. let's keep in mind that the real money is not to be found in the "rich", but in the middle class.tunnelcat wrote: ... Now we have Paul Ryan trying to make Medicare a voucher system, in other words, privatized. How in the hell is that going to benefit everyone? Well except for the rich CEO's of those already rolling in dough health insurance companies that will clean up even bigger with huge profits if this abomination of an idea ever gets traction.
So I'm noticing you don't have a sense of Humor TCtunnelcat wrote:Yeah, so you'll vote for the other party that worships Laissez Faire Capitalism above all else? THE MONEY CHANGERS of Wall Street? Lets put the coyote right back in the hen house again. Sure the Dems are corrupt as well, I don't deny that, but they don't espouse social conservatism and unfettered Capitalism as core tenets. I wish they would stick to their core ideals. You're a Christian Republican, I'm guessing, so got a better response to that oxymoron?CUDA wrote:your saying you want us to throw out the Democrats for defiling the government???tunnelcat wrote:Jesus cleaned out the money changers from the Temple, so if you're a Christian Republican, follow what Jesus would have done.
OK I will the next time I catch anyone buying and sell and defiling God's House, I'll be sure to kick them outfollow what Jesus would have done.
You are amazing! You begrudgingly accept the fact that the Tea Party origins were built on people as mad at Bush as they were at the likes of Ted Kennedy etc. and it happened before Obama was President. Then turn right around and claim no one with Tea Party ideals spoke up against any of it until the black guy got in power!tunnelcat wrote:...
Maybe, but not one person I would call a member of the Tea Party made one little bit of stink publicly when Bush was taking away many of our civil liberties, growing government exponentially and creating the debt from hell. The liberals were screaming and protesting publicly all over the place back then, but nary a word from anyone with Tea Party ideals even spoke up. The time to have spoken in protest was when the crap was starting to hit the fan, not after.callmeslick wrote:to be completely fair, the beginnings of the Tea Party/Patriot movement DID start during the latter part of the Bush term, and it wasn't a monolithically conservative group. It's been coopted, as I stated in a thread I started elsewhere.
Give me a break! Ever since the turmoil in the Middle East, the price of oil has been going up, far faster than just demand would dictate. It's way too volatile. The pigs are at it again, just like in previous oil price spikes. The oil companies and commodity traders are profiting, not the local station owners or the customers. We're being taken for saps. Before it was mortgages, now it's commodities. Spread the profit taking and risks around broad areas of the markets to make more and more profits and hide their shenanigans, especially since they don't like the way the Fed is handling things.dissent wrote:Please provide any documentation you can that the rise in gas prices is "due solely to speculators". There are dozens of factors that affect the price of gasoline from day to day. The chief reason for the general trend in rising gasoline/oil prices has been the closer and closer alignment of demand with available supply in the markets. This is primarily because of the increasing demand from Asia (mainly China and India) that has been occurring as their economies have responded favorably from being unleashed from the strong state centered control that was more the story in the last half of the 20th century. In the absence of what used to be a larger buffer between demand and available supply, all kinds of even minor supply issues can now have largely outsized effects on the price of oil, and hence gasoline; i.e. it doesn't take much of a hiccup any more to send prices out of whack. Sure, speculating on futures contracts is a part of what's happening, as it is in any other commodities market, but it's far from being the sole controlling factor.
Yes, I agree the status quo is a recipe for failure and no, I don't have an easy fix. But Ryan's fix for privatizing Medicare with a voucher system would put a large burden of the costs on those who can least afford it, namely our senior citizens. Our mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers. Putting health care insurance companies into the mix will drive up prices exponentially just to pay for those profits the insurance companies demand. Medicare Part D, the Bush solution, is just a huge welfare program for big pharma and has made medications far more expensive for patients because the government cannot negotiate prices. Talk about collectivism. Privatization is the new form of "Death Panels", coldly calculating who gets medical care and who doesn't based solely on wealth. I don't see that as humane, but as something Ayn Rand would embrace as a way to weed out the sick, poor and infirm. We as a society better decide soon which way we are going to treat the poorer and sicker members of our nation if we are to be a noble and humane nation. Either we have a system that helps all, or one that helps only those that can afford it. When things melt down, we'll have a resolution, one way or another I guess.dissent wrote:Terrific, so I take it then that you have an alternative to the Ryan plan and the Bowles-Simpson Commission's recommendations. Awesome. Where is it so I can read about it. As it stands right now, keeping with the status quo will not work, because spending is continuing to increase, handwaving by the government notwithstanding. Also. let's keep in mind that the real money is not to be found in the "rich", but in the middle class.
At some point, yes, they (the government) will also come for you.
to some extent true.....Spidey wrote:“They're gullible people that have genuine concerns about the state of our country who are being manipulated by powerful and wealthy individuals…”
Wow, like you can’t say that about everyone that belongs to a political party.
nice agreeing for a change! By the way, whereabouts the Philly area are you from? As I think I stated along the way, I'm out in Berks County, but work in Horsham. Philly politics are a special breed, by the way.....I've never seen a setup so badly corrupted and incompetent on so many levels(we lived in Philly for 3 years, and fled before daughter reached school age).I do agree that the Paul Ryan plan is just plain stupid regarding medicare.
And the alternative that you support by your blind allegiance to the other half of the problem is letting the government consume the wealth, and I do mean consume not re purpose on our behalf. They simply consume something like 75% of every penny they take in the name of spending it on our behalf! So to follow your example of affordable healthcare the only result is less people will be able to afford the care and the government won't come close to being able to fund the Obama plan so the government will ration care based on what ever criteria they want to use. Voila! Death panels. D's= death panels. R's=death if you can't break the wealth barrier. So do you want to toss a coin to see if they let you have care or do you want to try your luck at making enough to survive?tunnelcat wrote:...
Privatization is the new form of "Death Panels", coldly calculating who gets medical care and who doesn't based solely on wealth.
...
no real fan of the Healthcare compromise here, but I'll offer the fair way to do things: Medicare, as currently designed, from cradle to grave. No more special childrens program, no need for special Medicaid program. Given the proveable fact that, despite lingering issues with fraud, etc, Medicare is about 5 times as efficient as any private insurer out there, coupled with the full range mix of the healthy with those not-so-healthy, the cost to the average person would end up FAR less than they and their employers pay now for health coverage. Employers would be free to compete without guessing healthcare expenses, should be able to pay slightly higher wages, and no one in this nation would have to worry about going into bankruptcy because they lost health insurance. No one would go without minimal coverage. It could be done, it should have been done, and the fact it wasn't is a testament to both the stupid gullibility of folks who cannot study the issue for themselves and spineless politicians unwilling to try and sell it.Will Robinson wrote:And the alternative that you support by your blind allegiance to the other half of the problem is letting the government consume the wealth, and I do mean consume not re purpose on our behalf. They simply consume something like 75% of every penny they take in the name of spending it on our behalf! So to follow your example of affordable healthcare the only result is less people will be able to afford the care and the government won't come close to being able to fund the Obama plan so the government will ration care based on what ever criteria they want to use. Voila! Death panels.
some nice neighborhoods there. I have a few co-workers in that part of Philly. I don't really go into town much except for dinner, museums or the theater/concert thing, but, as cities go, it has a lot to offer.Spidey wrote:Born and raised in North Philly, now living in the lower NE area.
Sounds at least reasonable. All you have to do is flush the current crop of thieves before they get to draw up the budget for it, otherwise....callmeslick wrote:no real fan of the Healthcare compromise here, but I'll offer the fair way to do things: Medicare, as currently designed, from cradle to grave. No more special childrens program, no need for special Medicaid program. Given the proveable fact that, despite lingering issues with fraud, etc, Medicare is about 5 times as efficient as any private insurer out there, coupled with the full range mix of the healthy with those not-so-healthy, the cost to the average person would end up FAR less than they and their employers pay now for health coverage. Employers would be free to compete without guessing healthcare expenses, should be able to pay slightly higher wages, and no one in this nation would have to worry about going into bankruptcy because they lost health insurance. No one would go without minimal coverage. It could be done, it should have been done, and the fact it wasn't is a testament to both the stupid gullibility of folks who cannot study the issue for themselves and spineless politicians unwilling to try and sell it.Will Robinson wrote:And the alternative that you support by your blind allegiance to the other half of the problem is letting the government consume the wealth, and I do mean consume not re purpose on our behalf. They simply consume something like 75% of every penny they take in the name of spending it on our behalf! So to follow your example of affordable healthcare the only result is less people will be able to afford the care and the government won't come close to being able to fund the Obama plan so the government will ration care based on what ever criteria they want to use. Voila! Death panels.
No, I'm not going to give you a break. Nice article. Did you even read it? The title was "Global Energy Leaders Identify Speculation as a Cause of Spiking Oil Prices"; "a" cause, NOT "the" cause, but "a" cause. Your statement was that speculators were "the sole cause". Even your article agrees that this is not correct -tunnelcat wrote:Give me a break! Ever since the turmoil in the Middle East, the price of oil has been going up, far faster than just demand would dictate. It's way too volatile. The pigs are at it again, just like in previous oil price spikes. The oil companies and commodity traders are profiting, not the local station owners or the customers. We're being taken for saps. Before it was mortgages, now it's commodities. Spread the profit taking and risks around broad areas of the markets to make more and more profits and hide their shenanigans, especially since they don't like the way the Fed is handling things.dissent wrote:Please provide any documentation you can that the rise in gas prices is "due solely to speculators". There are dozens of factors that affect the price of gasoline from day to day. The chief reason for the general trend in rising gasoline/oil prices has been the closer and closer alignment of demand with available supply in the markets. This is primarily because of the increasing demand from Asia (mainly China and India) that has been occurring as their economies have responded favorably from being unleashed from the strong state centered control that was more the story in the last half of the 20th century. In the absence of what used to be a larger buffer between demand and available supply, all kinds of even minor supply issues can now have largely outsized effects on the price of oil, and hence gasoline; i.e. it doesn't take much of a hiccup any more to send prices out of whack. Sure, speculating on futures contracts is a part of what's happening, as it is in any other commodities market, but it's far from being the sole controlling factor.
http://www.heatingoil.com/blog/global-e ... rices0408/
Does any of this mean that speculation is not involved in the current runup? Of course not. My point is that it is the presence of all these other fundamental factors that makes it possible for speculators to bid up the market as they are currently doing. Oil is fundamental. They want security of supply, so if they have the money, they bid up the contract price. If there was reduced demand for petroleum, if peace and fuzzy bunnies suddenly broke out all over the world and everyone decided to hold hands and sing "Kumbaya", then there is no way that speculators would be able to continue to bid up the price of oil. The price came down after the last spike in 2008. Why. Was it because speculators suddenly became stupid and incompetent and couldn'r bid the price up further? Or was it because the advancing recession and people reducing their demand due to the higher price signal led to lower overall demand for petroleum?Josh Garrett wrote: At a conference of international leaders in the oil industry, the clear consensus was that oil prices will almost certainly continue to move higher in the near future, but beliefs about the causes of ongoing price increases were varied. Within the discussion of climbing oil prices, however, several conference attendees agreed that speculation and other financial influences are leading causes. ... offered four different potential causes for the jump in oil prices over the last two months: political turmoil in the Mideast, demand growth, domestic tax rates, and out of control speculation on oil markets. ...
Were you referencing a specific article?tunnelcat wrote:In fact, the prices of commodities in general are spiking. Why? This theory makes more sense than anything else:
http://traders-talk.blogspot.com/
How does this exponential stuff work. Whether you buy your insurance with a government voucher or buy it on the Obamacare exchange, what difference is that make for the exponential rise in insurance costs. It's all still a bunch of insurance companies bidding for your business.tc wrote:Yes, I agree the status quo is a recipe for failure and no, I don't have an easy fix. But Ryan's fix for privatizing Medicare with a voucher system would put a large burden of the costs on those who can least afford it, namely our senior citizens. Our mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers. Putting health care insurance companies into the mix will drive up prices exponentially just to pay for those profits the insurance companies demand.dissent wrote:Terrific, so I take it then that you have an alternative to the Ryan plan and the Bowles-Simpson Commission's recommendations. Awesome. Where is it so I can read about it. As it stands right now, keeping with the status quo will not work, because spending is continuing to increase, handwaving by the government notwithstanding. Also. let's keep in mind that the real money is not to be found in the "rich", but in the middle class.
At some point, yes, they (the government) will also come for you.
There, there. Continue to be numbed by the soothing Orwellian doublespeak of the Obamacarians and their benign Independent Physician Advisory Board - who is responsible for keeping the costs of Medicare down. How do you suppose they are going to accomplish that. Let me know how it works out for you.tc wrote: Privatization is the new form of "Death Panels", coldly calculating who gets medical care and who doesn't based solely on wealth. I don't see that as humane, but as something Ayn Rand would embrace as a way to weed out the sick, poor and infirm. We as a society better decide soon which way we are going to treat the poorer and sicker members of our nation if we are to be a noble and humane nation. Either we have a system that helps all, or one that helps only those that can afford it. When things melt down, we'll have a resolution, one way or another I guess.
Well, you obviously still have access to a computer and electricity. I'm sure the government can pawn your PC for a few bucks just before they farm you out to the collective.tc wrote:And how is the government going to come for me?
Please define "fair".callmeslick wrote:no real fan of the Healthcare compromise here, but I'll offer the fair way to do things: Medicare, as currently designed, from cradle to grave.
You're obviously a heartless Republican bottom-dweller, robbing from children and the poor.cms wrote:No more special childrens program, no need for special Medicaid program.
Please provide links to sources that verify these several claims.cms wrote:Given the proveable fact that, despite lingering issues with fraud, etc, Medicare is about 5 times as efficient as any private insurer out there, coupled with the full range mix of the healthy with those not-so-healthy, the cost to the average person would end up FAR less than they and their employers pay now for health coverage.
So what happens to the pool of individuals who want to become doctors, now that they see that medicine is being relegated to a lower and lower wage profession? (cue the assembly line doctor) Will there be fewer or more people who choose to do it? Will the quality and skill of the applicants go up or down? Where is this system currently functioning now, and where everyone is happy with their outcomes?Employers would be free to compete without guessing healthcare expenses, should be able to pay slightly higher wages, and no one in this nation would have to worry about going into bankruptcy because they lost health insurance. No one would go without minimal coverage. It could be done, it should have been done, and the fact it wasn't is a testament to both the stupid gullibility of folks who cannot study the issue for themselves and spineless politicians unwilling to try and sell it.
I think NotsoSlicks' comment was sarcasm but I could be wrong.dissent wrote:You're obviously a heartless Republican bottom-dweller, robbing from children and the poor.cms wrote:No more special childrens program, no need for special Medicaid program.
That's great - so was mine.Heretic wrote:I think NotsoSlicks' comment was sarcasm but I could be wrong.
Heretic wrote:I think NotsoSlicks' comment was sarcasm but I could be wrong.dissent wrote:You're obviously a heartless Republican bottom-dweller, robbing from children and the poor.cms wrote:No more special childrens program, no need for special Medicaid program.
no, but I am not going to accept that perfectly(seemingly) intelligent people are unable to double check my facts, nor am I going to link every piece of what should be common knowledge.Heretic wrote:Mawhahahahaha you're just another one of those where you just have to believe what I say people.
um, you could pay nothing into it, at present, and get benefits at age 65. What changes?Spidey wrote:So then Medicare becomes straight up socialism*, and no longer a pseudo insurance program, where the people who pay into it get the benefits?
it is, by way of definiton more efficient. No stockholders to pay, no profit margin to aim for, no executives to pay 7 or more figure salaries to.Yea, that will help it become more “efficient”.
We have checked your "facts" before and found you omitted critical sections of the paragraph that contradict the spin you were putting on it so maybe not being so arrogant when someone asks for a simple link would help you as much as the person requesting it.callmeslick wrote:no, but I am not going to accept that perfectly(seemingly) intelligent people are unable to double check my facts, nor am I going to link every piece of what should be common knowledge.Heretic wrote:Mawhahahahaha you're just another one of those where you just have to believe what I say people.