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Merry Christmas Seniors...
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Merry Christmas Seniors...
nom=de=plume wrote:
wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 18:46:08 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: Canada gets mentioned every time this comes up and if you say France, you are talking about "Free" medical care ... unless you pay taxes. The problem is that level of taxation is politically impossible here so it would just be rampaging debt. Canada gets mentioned as a unlikely and not viable example for the US. The French med system isn't free. Umm... most people pay taxes, except maybe the very, very rich, and the very, very poor. It is mostly young people in mediocre jobs who don't buy insurance. Those are the ones we need in the system if this is actually going to be insurance. Yes, but they could afford it if it's set up properly, which is where we need to be. You keep saying "this is where/what we need to blah blah blah, but you have no ****ing idea how your pipe dreams could be accomplished or who could fullfill them. You are just another silly left wing whacko. Otherwise it is just a medical brokerage. Nobody wants to buy insurance until they think their medical bills will be more than their premium. Nobody wants to buy car ins., but we're generally required by law to do that. He was a whacko who drove the fiscal policy of Gingrich/Clinton that got us close to even for a year or two. You could criticize Perot for being an egotistical jerk but his charts were right on. Gingrich?? His "Contract on America" was just a rehash of the same bs. Clinton mostly got things under control. Perot was unwilling to listen to anyone. Having a good chart means very little. I actually saw Perot once at EDS in Rockville Md, and he fired me for having hair on my face. Too bad I didn't work for him. The problem is, guys who used to be making $60,000 and up, building cars and houses are now back working... but for half that at some menial job. Ok, so what's your solution? If he had a solution he would be President. Anything beats the " throw it at the wall and see if it sticks action guy we presently have in charge. Sorry President Barry. I love the crabs you sent me, but my conscience dictates that I tell the truth. (gag) -- It's flattering to see so many of you turds spoofing me. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 07:24:57 -0500, Tom Francis wrote:
On the other hand, the lake is calling and I'm going fishing. :) Save the debate for another day. :) Never fished for striped bass in fresh water. Good luck, and enjoy. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
Rob wrote:
nom=de=plume wrote: wrote in message ... On Dec 25, 7:14 pm, John wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? He can't help it. He and Rob are truly losers. Rob is obnoxious, so I've decided to just ignore his posts.. call it a New Year resolution. Rob had nothing to do with this post. Kill file and run is so typical of those who can't debate. Peace I think Mr. Plume has a woodie for you. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 26/12/2009 6:30 PM, Harry wrote:
On 12/26/09 7:54 PM, thunder wrote: On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 19:42:17 -0500, Tom Francis wrote: You're right and as far as it goes, it would be a boon. Unfortunately, that requires a free market approach to keep costs competitive and we just got a crap sandwich of a "health care" bill. This is gonna be a diaster and the more the details are being exposed, it's becoming apparent that it's nothing more than a Chavez style take over of a major industry - confiscatory and restrictive. Hopefully, 2010 will bring a reversal of this boondoogle. For different reasons, like you, I'm not overly happy with the proposed health care bill, but we've been trying, without success, to get health care legislation for 60 years. Regardless, of this bill's quality, that sacred cow has been slaughtered. Now, fine tuning, in the future, will be considerably easier to accomplish. I view what will emerge in January as a start, as you do. I also believe the Obama admin learned a few lessons, the most important being that it doesn't matter whether you listen to the republicans. Best policy, just ignore the Republicans whenever possible, and end up with better legislation. You would be more correct to say Obama ignores the general popular opinion. I know lib-dims like to forget the majority were flat out against bailouts. What did Obama do, bailout with debt dollars on the taxpayer. 79% said not to GM/Chrysler bailouts and bailout he did. Obama will keep talking a lot, talk some more and in 2010 people will decide enough talk jive turkey. But like a prdictable lib-dim Obama will have excuses. Mind you, Obama is good at shooting his mouth off. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
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Merry Christmas Seniors...
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Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 9:43 AM, I am Tosk wrote:
In articlebb50ece8-a81f-43d7-ae80-94e95dcd1172 @d20g2000yqh.googlegroups.com, says... On Dec 26, 8:34 am, John wrote: On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 08:21:51 -0500, wrote: Harry wrote: On 12/26/09 12:20 AM, Steve B wrote: wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 20:23:51 -0800, "Steve B" wrote: "John wrote in message ... ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. "We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it's not."" Another - "Because Dartmouth's analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus's would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth's approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H If they were serious about saving money, wouldn't they just all get on a conference call instead of flying their jets to Denmark to schmooze around? Barry has some expensive tastes, and so does Michelle. Steve Jon Stewart pointed out that these climate savers managed to lease every limo in western europe, some couriered in from as far away as Germany so nobody had to share a ride. Well, you can't have people who are interested in saving the planet have to ride two to a limo or two to a jet, now can you. It's just not done. I wonder how many heating oil tanks could have been filled for what was spent on that extravaganza. BTW, what's a caviar wedge? I understand they ate a lot of caviar. That would have bought a lot of turkeys at the shelters. I bet they had expensive cognac and real Cuban cigars, too. Nothing too good for our tax dollars. Steve Does anyone recall "stevie" objecting when bush was spending like a drunken sailor, and cutting taxes for the wealthy at the same time? Hypocrisy, thy real name is republican/conservative. Nothing is piled higher than republican/conservative b.s. Nothing except the burgeoning public debt. Did someone justify Obama's spending using Bush as a rationale? How silly. -- John H "Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery." Churchill- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ever hear of the word "precedent"? It's used legally binding all of the time. Ever hear the word "change"...??? Ever think that your stiffing your local hospital out of $25,000 is the sort of activity that raises everyone's health care costs? |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 8:10 AM, Jim wrote:
Rob wrote: nom=de=plume wrote: wrote in message ... On Dec 25, 7:14 pm, John wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? He can't help it. He and Rob are truly losers. Rob is obnoxious, so I've decided to just ignore his posts.. call it a New Year resolution. Rob had nothing to do with this post. Kill file and run is so typical of those who can't debate. Peace I think Mr. Plume has a woodie for you. I think Mrs. Flajim hasn't seen a woodie in decades, at least not from Mr. Flajim. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
In article d02777de-b898-427e-a0a1-
, says... On Dec 25, 7:14*pm, John H wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? Pfffftttt, are you gonna' stop the "everything is Rush and Hannity" bull****? |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Dec 27, 10:02*am, I am Tosk
wrote: In article d02777de-b898-427e-a0a1- , says... On Dec 25, 7:14*pm, John H wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? Pfffftttt, are you gonna' stop the "everything is Rush and Hannity" bull****?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You know what, Scotty? Go right to **** ahead. Do just like John, make yourself look like an unhinged, narrow minded fool. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 10:15 AM, Loogypicker wrote:
On Dec 27, 10:02 am, I am wrote: In articled02777de-b898-427e-a0a1- , says... On Dec 25, 7:14 pm, John wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? Pfffftttt, are you gonna' stop the "everything is Rush and Hannity" bull****?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You know what, Scotty? Go right to **** ahead. Do just like John, make yourself look like an unhinged, narrow minded fool. Actually, all three of you are unhinged, narrow-minded fools, along with BAR, the Krueger of the day, Canuck, the unemployed inventor of the florida panhandle, and a few others. You and JustHate, though, still share the trophy of dumbest posters in rec.boats. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 19:42:17 -0500, Tom Francis wrote:
On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 23:17:46 -0600, thunder wrote: You mention a "business decision". It seems to me tying health insurance to business, was a faulty paradigm from the beginning, competitively and socially. However, health care has the potential of reviving this entire economy. Health care jobs are well paying and *local*. IMO, they could provide a replacement for the manufacturing jobs we have lost. Our medical technology sector, already top of the world, could provide export dollars. In the public debate, we've been looking at health care as a drain on the economy. I'm thinking it could save the economy. It's basic economics, manufacture something of value, and the whole world values life, at least in theory. You're right and as far as it goes, it would be a boon. Unfortunately, that requires a free market approach to keep costs competitive and we just got a crap sandwich of a "health care" bill. This is gonna be a diaster and the more the details are being exposed, it's becoming apparent that it's nothing more than a Chavez style take over of a major industry - confiscatory and restrictive. Hopefully, 2010 will bring a reversal of this boondoogle. There has not been a free market for years. It has been a front to look like a free market with cooperation amoung insurance carriers to set prices and have had no control of who they can deny service to even if they pay their premiums. A public option would prevent this and keep them honest. Been there, had this happen. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 26/12/2009 4:49 PM, John H wrote:
On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 10:59:00 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Dec 26, 10:54 am, wrote: On Dec 26, 10:15 am, wrote: Loogypicker wrote: On Dec 26, 8:34 am, John wrote: On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 08:21:51 -0500, wrote: Harry wrote: On 12/26/09 12:20 AM, Steve B wrote: wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 20:23:51 -0800, "Steve B" wrote: "John wrote in message ... ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. "We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it's not."" Another - "Because Dartmouth's analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus's would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth's approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H If they were serious about saving money, wouldn't they just all get on a conference call instead of flying their jets to Denmark to schmooze around? Barry has some expensive tastes, and so does Michelle. Steve Jon Stewart pointed out that these climate savers managed to lease every limo in western europe, some couriered in from as far away as Germany so nobody had to share a ride. Well, you can't have people who are interested in saving the planet have to ride two to a limo or two to a jet, now can you. It's just not done. I wonder how many heating oil tanks could have been filled for what was spent on that extravaganza. BTW, what's a caviar wedge? I understand they ate a lot of caviar. That would have bought a lot of turkeys at the shelters. I bet they had expensive cognac and real Cuban cigars, too. Nothing too good for our tax dollars. Steve Does anyone recall "stevie" objecting when bush was spending like a drunken sailor, and cutting taxes for the wealthy at the same time? Hypocrisy, thy real name is republican/conservative. Nothing is piled higher than republican/conservative b.s. Nothing except the burgeoning public debt. Did someone justify Obama's spending using Bush as a rationale? How silly. -- John H "Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery." Churchill- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ever hear of the word "precedent"? It's used legally binding all of the time. Can you clarify?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes: prec?e?dent??/n. ?pr?s?d?nt; adj. pr??sidnt, ?pr?s?d?nt/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [n. pres-i-duhnt; adj. pri-seed-nt, pres-i-duhnt] Show IPA –noun 1. Law. a legal decision or form of proceeding serving as an authoritative rule or pattern in future similar or analogous cases.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - So if the person in front of you jumps off a cliff, then it's OK for you to do it too? Hey, they set a precedent. There's good ones and bad ones. According to Loogy, they should all be emulated just 'cause they're precedents. Liberal judges in New Hampshire and elsewhere set precedents when they let child rapists off with a one year sentence. Those precedents leads to things like this: http://tinyurl.com/yd8s8yf Sad and sick. Especailly if the authorities were listening they could ahve predicted it. http://tinyurl.com/yjp6jt7 This guy is a preditor and maybe this time the liberal judge will be told how to make the senatance if they like there job. I also found a reference to a conviction in 2000. Has a long history, why only one year on his last round about is beyond me. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Dec 27, 10:18*am, Harry wrote:
On 12/27/09 10:15 AM, Loogypicker wrote: On Dec 27, 10:02 am, I am wrote: In articled02777de-b898-427e-a0a1- , says.... On Dec 25, 7:14 pm, John *wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? Pfffftttt, are you gonna' stop the "everything is Rush and Hannity" bull****?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You know what, Scotty? Go right to **** ahead. Do just like John, make yourself look like an unhinged, narrow minded fool. Actually, all three of you are unhinged, narrow-minded fools, along with BAR, the Krueger of the day, Canuck, the unemployed inventor of the florida panhandle, and a few others. You and JustHate, though, still share the trophy of dumbest posters in rec.boats.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - See you this spring! |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
In article ,
says... In article d02777de-b898-427e-a0a1- , says... On Dec 25, 7:14*pm, John H wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? Pfffftttt, are you gonna' stop the "everything is Rush and Hannity" bull****? I just finished watching David Gregory on Meet the Press interview Janet Napalitano about the terrorist incident on the NWA flight from Amsterdam to Detroit. I think that David Gregory tapes up his seams before each show just to hold himself together and not call some of the people he interviews the idiots they are. Nepalitano sounded more like Gibbs, a press secretary than a cabinet secretary. I could tell he was just about to burst at the aforementioned seams and call her an idiot and ask here how she got her job. What does this have to do with Obama? Obama appointed Naplitano to be the head of DHS. Obviously Obama didn't want a competent person at the helm of the DHS or Obama is an idiot too in that he can't see incompetence when it is staring him in the face. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
In article ,
says... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 19:42:17 -0500, Tom Francis wrote: On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 23:17:46 -0600, thunder wrote: You mention a "business decision". It seems to me tying health insurance to business, was a faulty paradigm from the beginning, competitively and socially. However, health care has the potential of reviving this entire economy. Health care jobs are well paying and *local*. IMO, they could provide a replacement for the manufacturing jobs we have lost. Our medical technology sector, already top of the world, could provide export dollars. In the public debate, we've been looking at health care as a drain on the economy. I'm thinking it could save the economy. It's basic economics, manufacture something of value, and the whole world values life, at least in theory. You're right and as far as it goes, it would be a boon. Unfortunately, that requires a free market approach to keep costs competitive and we just got a crap sandwich of a "health care" bill. This is gonna be a diaster and the more the details are being exposed, it's becoming apparent that it's nothing more than a Chavez style take over of a major industry - confiscatory and restrictive. Hopefully, 2010 will bring a reversal of this boondoogle. There has not been a free market for years. It has been a front to look like a free market with cooperation amoung insurance carriers to set prices and have had no control of who they can deny service to even if they pay their premiums. A public option would prevent this and keep them honest. Been there, had this happen. Remove government regulation of the medical insurance industry. The free market will return. Why should health insurance be treated any differently than your life, home, auto and property insurance? Your previous history of claims and behavior determines your ability to obtain insurance and the rates you pay. Besides you do not have a right to health insurance or health care. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:28:45 -0500, BAR wrote:
What does this have to do with Obama? Obama appointed Naplitano to be the head of DHS. Obviously Obama didn't want a competent person at the helm of the DHS or Obama is an idiot too in that he can't see incompetence when it is staring him in the face. Let's see, valedictorian of her college class, J.D. from University of Virginia, US Attorney for the District of Arizona, Attorney General of Arizona, Governor of Arizona ... yup, must be an idiot. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 11:28 AM, BAR wrote:
In , says... In articled02777de-b898-427e-a0a1- , says... On Dec 25, 7:14 pm, John wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? Pfffftttt, are you gonna' stop the "everything is Rush and Hannity" bull****? I just finished watching David Gregory on Meet the Press interview Janet Napalitano about the terrorist incident on the NWA flight from Amsterdam to Detroit. I think that David Gregory tapes up his seams before each show just to hold himself together and not call some of the people he interviews the idiots they are. Nepalitano sounded more like Gibbs, a press secretary than a cabinet secretary. I could tell he was just about to burst at the aforementioned seams and call her an idiot and ask here how she got her job. What does this have to do with Obama? Obama appointed Naplitano to be the head of DHS. Obviously Obama didn't want a competent person at the helm of the DHS or Obama is an idiot too in that he can't see incompetence when it is staring him in the face. You mean, he should have nominated a guy who barely got out of high school, skipped college, joined the marines, and knows nothing about law enforcement...someone like you, for example? |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
In article ,
om says... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 10:48:18 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 06:49:48 -0500, Harry wrote: Jon Stewart pointed out that these climate savers managed to lease every limo in western europe, some couriered in from as far away as Germany so nobody had to share a ride. Well, you can't have people who are interested in saving the planet have to ride two to a limo or two to a jet, now can you. It's just not done. I wonder how many heating oil tanks could have been filled for what was spent on that extravaganza. BTW, what's a caviar wedge? I understand they ate a lot of caviar. That would have bought a lot of turkeys at the shelters. I bet they had expensive cognac and real Cuban cigars, too. Nothing too good for our tax dollars. Steve Does anyone recall "stevie" objecting when bush was spending like a drunken sailor, and cutting taxes for the wealthy at the same time? Hypocrisy, thy real name is republican/conservative. Nothing is piled higher than republican/conservative b.s. I was complaining about the Bush/Clinton/Bush war long before it became Obama's war. Is that the spending you are talking about? Just because it was bad then doesn't mean it's bad now. Obama is doing it now, therefore it's a good thing. He's just emulating a bad precedent, but since it *is* a precedent, it's a good thing to emulate. I think this is the correct loogic. "Loogic", I like it... |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 11:43 AM, thunder wrote:
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:28:45 -0500, BAR wrote: What does this have to do with Obama? Obama appointed Naplitano to be the head of DHS. Obviously Obama didn't want a competent person at the helm of the DHS or Obama is an idiot too in that he can't see incompetence when it is staring him in the face. Let's see, valedictorian of her college class, J.D. from University of Virginia, US Attorney for the District of Arizona, Attorney General of Arizona, Governor of Arizona ... yup, must be an idiot. You do know that BAR has the c.v. to make a judgment: Near high school dropout joined marines no college works computer help desk plays golf with herring |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 11:28 AM, BAR wrote:
I just finished watching David Gregory on Meet the Press interview Janet Napalitano about the terrorist incident on the NWA flight from Amsterdam to Detroit. I think that David Gregory tapes up his seams before each show just to hold himself together and not call some of the people he interviews the idiots they are. Nepalitano sounded more like Gibbs, a press secretary than a cabinet secretary. I could tell he was just about to burst at the aforementioned seams and call her an idiot and ask here how she got her job. What does this have to do with Obama? Obama appointed Naplitano to be the head of DHS. Obviously Obama didn't want a competent person at the helm of the DHS or Obama is an idiot too in that he can't see incompetence when it is staring him in the face. BTW, I saw the same interview, and was impressed by Napolitano's calmness and caution in jumping to conclusions. Were we still mired in the previous administration, we'd be seeing Cheney on TV, along with the other superchickenhawks of the Bush years, jumping up and down, screaming, and urging an immediate attack on some country we haven't yet invaded. It's nice to have a competent, intelligent president in the White House, eh? BTW, I believe you misspelled Napolitano's name three times in your post. Your purpose might have been better served had you enlisted in college instead of the marines, eh? |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
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Merry Christmas Seniors...
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Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Dec 27, 9:15*am, Loogypicker wrote:
On Dec 27, 10:02*am, I am Tosk wrote: In article d02777de-b898-427e-a0a1- , says.... On Dec 25, 7:14*pm, John H wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? Pfffftttt, are you gonna' stop the "everything is Rush and Hannity" bull****?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You know what, Scotty? Go right to **** ahead. Do just like John, make yourself look like an unhinged, narrow minded fool. Oh man! right when things are getting good, I'm running out of popcorn! Y'all mind holding off till I can make some mac n cheese? |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:31:46 -0500, BAR wrote:
In article , says... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 19:42:17 -0500, Tom Francis wrote: On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 23:17:46 -0600, thunder wrote: You mention a "business decision". It seems to me tying health insurance to business, was a faulty paradigm from the beginning, competitively and socially. However, health care has the potential of reviving this entire economy. Health care jobs are well paying and *local*. IMO, they could provide a replacement for the manufacturing jobs we have lost. Our medical technology sector, already top of the world, could provide export dollars. In the public debate, we've been looking at health care as a drain on the economy. I'm thinking it could save the economy. It's basic economics, manufacture something of value, and the whole world values life, at least in theory. You're right and as far as it goes, it would be a boon. Unfortunately, that requires a free market approach to keep costs competitive and we just got a crap sandwich of a "health care" bill. This is gonna be a diaster and the more the details are being exposed, it's becoming apparent that it's nothing more than a Chavez style take over of a major industry - confiscatory and restrictive. Hopefully, 2010 will bring a reversal of this boondoogle. There has not been a free market for years. It has been a front to look like a free market with cooperation amoung insurance carriers to set prices and have had no control of who they can deny service to even if they pay their premiums. A public option would prevent this and keep them honest. Been there, had this happen. Remove government regulation of the medical insurance industry. The free market will return. Why should health insurance be treated any differently than your life, home, auto and property insurance? Your previous history of claims and behavior determines your ability to obtain insurance and the rates you pay. Besides you do not have a right to health insurance or health care. I have medicare now. I had health insurance that I paid for through my employer in the past. A claim was denied that should have been covered. My employer tossed up their hands as to say tough **** but I was locked in to paying premiums until the first of the year. I quit the employment. They lost in the long run, trust me. The free market is a farce in the insurance market. They all work in concert. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
wrote in message
... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 22:59:34 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message . .. On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 21:32:12 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message m... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 18:46:08 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message news:k07dj55knu2m5m920vva9hsjjagfg59qij@4ax. com... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 13:39:25 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: Canada gets mentioned every time this comes up and if you say France, you are talking about "Free" medical care ... unless you pay taxes. The problem is that level of taxation is politically impossible here so it would just be rampaging debt. Canada gets mentioned as a unlikely and not viable example for the US. The French med system isn't free. Umm... most people pay taxes, except maybe the very, very rich, and the very, very poor. In the US 43% of the low end pay no income tax and the high end up paying around 15%. I don't see that changing anytime soon since the congress is well bribed by the rich. Nope... http://www.taxfoundation.org/news/show/250.html Nope what? If you are really rich you manage to keep most of your income off of line 37 of your 1040 so that chart is bogus. I am just citing Warren Buffett and he is probably more honest on his taxes than your dentist, who is also in that top 1% column. The numbers you quoted don't match, and if it's off the 1040, then it's speculation. Where did Buffett say this? The people who pay will be paying a lot more and a lot of people who choose not to buy insurance will have to buy it. That will be a sticker shock for them Which people? Those who don't have it, mostly want it. Sure, there are always a few who choose or can afford not to have it. It is mostly young people in mediocre jobs who don't buy insurance. Those are the ones we need in the system if this is actually going to be insurance. Yes, but they could afford it if it's set up properly, which is where we need to be. "Afford" is a relative term. They don't want to pay anything unless they are sick and they think a couple hundred a month is too much for something they don't plan on using. I don't believe that most people who are uninsured prefer to stay that way. Can you cite the source for this? Do you know a 20 something person who thinks health insurance is more important than a nice car? If you explain it to someone that age in a careful and complete way, then yes she'll get it. Otherwise it is just a medical brokerage. Nobody wants to buy insurance until they think their medical bills will be more than their premium. Nobody wants to buy car ins., but we're generally required by law to do that. ... But they have convinced us driving a car is not a right, it is just from the kindness of the government that we are allowed to drive. Why do you think it's a right? Is it written into the Constitution? It's a privilege that needs to be earned. What are you talking about, driving or health care. The Constitution is silent on both of them. Providing for the welfare of the general public is a basic goal of government. The deficit isn't a bread and butter issue with most people. You're talking about the budget deficit and not the trade deficit right? Just checking. It will become a bread and butter issue when bread and butter become more expensive (the carbon tax). Actually in the late 80s and early 90s, the deficit was an election issue (Ross Perot). It brought us about 3 years of sound fiscal policy with the help of the 104th congress. I don't think you can credit Perot with "sound fiscal policy." He was another wacko, smart business man that he was. He was a whacko who drove the fiscal policy of Gingrich/Clinton that got us close to even for a year or two. You could criticize Perot for being an egotistical jerk but his charts were right on. Gingrich?? His "Contract on America" was just a rehash of the same bs. Clinton mostly got things under control. You can't underestimate the contribution Gingrich made for Clinton's surplus. Ways and Means is a House function and that is where the money comes from. They also control spending. Gingrich did very little that he wasn't forced to do. Clinton called his bluff as I recall. Gingrich ran on a policy of fiscal responsibility and that was a big part of the "contract" They may have bickered on TV but Clinton and Gingrich were actually a very effective team. Neither would have succeeded without the other. BS. Read up... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract_with_America Perot was unwilling to listen to anyone. Having a good chart means very little. Perot got the public ready to accept the fiscal responsibility represented by the largest tax increase in history. That is how Clinton managed a surplus. He also pointed out the problem we have now, the amount of short term debt the government is carrying. If your debt is mostly in short term paper you have no idea what the interest rate will be when you have to roll it over ... or even if anyone will buy it. If China suddenly decided to just go somewhere else with their money and not renew their US paper we couldn't pay them what was due. That is a lot more of a problem for us than global warming, terrorism and the health care crisis combined. China calling in their cash would be about as bad as that planet killing comet we are overdue for. Oh come on... Perot never got much public support, and he quit and then changed his mind. It wasn't that Perot was a serious candidate, it was the questions he made everyone else answer. No one answered anything. He was mostly ignored. You notice that after that, the rules were changed to ensure another outsider could never get a seat at the table. If you are not anointed by the Remocrat/Depublican oligarchy, you can't enter the debates Ah, so it's back to conspiracy theories? Or, the more likely answer is that there hasn't been any viable third-party candidates. Ok, so what's your solution? Send about 5 million people to Navy Corpsman school and set them up in storefront clinics doing triage for doctors, actually taking care of about 20% of the patients. You don't need 8 years of college to patch up wounds, give shots and hand out a bottle of pills. That's going to solve our economic woes? Hardly. And, yes our economy and the heathcare crisis are interlinked. It would be training for a job that can't be exported and it would bend the health care cost curve. What else do you want? The high school dropout who was making $60,000 on the line putting the left front wheel on a Chevy is going to be in trouble, no matter what we do. Getting him a GED still won't get him UAW money. That is the 60 year old "union bubble" that globalism popped. Stop blaming the union for management's ill deeds. One immediate problem with it is that it'll never happen. You're going to force people into the school? Sure. -- Nom=de=Plume |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 12:59 PM, RLM wrote:
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:31:46 -0500, BAR wrote: In , says... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 19:42:17 -0500, Tom Francis wrote: On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 23:17:46 -0600, wrote: You mention a "business decision". It seems to me tying health insurance to business, was a faulty paradigm from the beginning, competitively and socially. However, health care has the potential of reviving this entire economy. Health care jobs are well paying and *local*. IMO, they could provide a replacement for the manufacturing jobs we have lost. Our medical technology sector, already top of the world, could provide export dollars. In the public debate, we've been looking at health care as a drain on the economy. I'm thinking it could save the economy. It's basic economics, manufacture something of value, and the whole world values life, at least in theory. You're right and as far as it goes, it would be a boon. Unfortunately, that requires a free market approach to keep costs competitive and we just got a crap sandwich of a "health care" bill. This is gonna be a diaster and the more the details are being exposed, it's becoming apparent that it's nothing more than a Chavez style take over of a major industry - confiscatory and restrictive. Hopefully, 2010 will bring a reversal of this boondoogle. There has not been a free market for years. It has been a front to look like a free market with cooperation amoung insurance carriers to set prices and have had no control of who they can deny service to even if they pay their premiums. A public option would prevent this and keep them honest. Been there, had this happen. Remove government regulation of the medical insurance industry. The free market will return. Why should health insurance be treated any differently than your life, home, auto and property insurance? Your previous history of claims and behavior determines your ability to obtain insurance and the rates you pay. Besides you do not have a right to health insurance or health care. I have medicare now. I had health insurance that I paid for through my employer in the past. A claim was denied that should have been covered. My employer tossed up their hands as to say tough **** but I was locked in to paying premiums until the first of the year. I quit the employment. They lost in the long run, trust me. The free market is a farce in the insurance market. They all work in concert. I love the simple-minded elegance of "get the government out and everything will be ok." Yeah, right. Bend over. Farther. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 12:55 PM, Tim wrote:
On Dec 27, 9:15 am, wrote: On Dec 27, 10:02 am, I am wrote: In articled02777de-b898-427e-a0a1- , says... On Dec 25, 7:14 pm, John wrote: ...Change is coming! The NYTimes is giving seniors a Christmas present to ponder. http://tinyurl.com/yl9vumo "Peter R. Orszag, the White House budget director and a disciple of the Dartmouth data, has noted. We can no longer afford an overall health care system in which the thought is more is always better, because it s not. " Another - "Because Dartmouth s analysis focuses solely on patients who have died, a case like Mr. Putrus s would not show up in its data. That is why critics say Dartmouth s approach takes an overly pessimistic view of medicine: if you consider only the patients who die, there is really no way to know whether it makes sense to spend more on one case than another." A preview of things to come? -- Have a Super Christmas and a Spectacular New Year! John H John, couldn't you, at least during the holidays stop your stupid and inane everything Obama is bad bull****? Pfffftttt, are you gonna' stop the "everything is Rush and Hannity" bull****?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You know what, Scotty? Go right to **** ahead. Do just like John, make yourself look like an unhinged, narrow minded fool. Oh man! right when things are getting good, I'm running out of popcorn! Y'all mind holding off till I can make some mac n cheese? It's the best comic act in rec.boats...loogy and justhate attacking each other and eventually everyone else. Add in a Krueger and you have dumb, dumber, and dumbest. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 1:14 PM, nom=de=plume wrote:
wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 22:59:34 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 21:32:12 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 18:46:08 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 13:39:25 -0800, "nom=de=plume" wrote: Canada gets mentioned every time this comes up and if you say France, you are talking about "Free" medical care ... unless you pay taxes. The problem is that level of taxation is politically impossible here so it would just be rampaging debt. Canada gets mentioned as a unlikely and not viable example for the US. The French med system isn't free. Umm... most people pay taxes, except maybe the very, very rich, and the very, very poor. In the US 43% of the low end pay no income tax and the high end up paying around 15%. I don't see that changing anytime soon since the congress is well bribed by the rich. Nope... http://www.taxfoundation.org/news/show/250.html Nope what? If you are really rich you manage to keep most of your income off of line 37 of your 1040 so that chart is bogus. I am just citing Warren Buffett and he is probably more honest on his taxes than your dentist, who is also in that top 1% column. The numbers you quoted don't match, and if it's off the 1040, then it's speculation. Where did Buffett say this? The people who pay will be paying a lot more and a lot of people who choose not to buy insurance will have to buy it. That will be a sticker shock for them Which people? Those who don't have it, mostly want it. Sure, there are always a few who choose or can afford not to have it. It is mostly young people in mediocre jobs who don't buy insurance. Those are the ones we need in the system if this is actually going to be insurance. Yes, but they could afford it if it's set up properly, which is where we need to be. "Afford" is a relative term. They don't want to pay anything unless they are sick and they think a couple hundred a month is too much for something they don't plan on using. I don't believe that most people who are uninsured prefer to stay that way. Can you cite the source for this? Do you know a 20 something person who thinks health insurance is more important than a nice car? If you explain it to someone that age in a careful and complete way, then yes she'll get it. Otherwise it is just a medical brokerage. Nobody wants to buy insurance until they think their medical bills will be more than their premium. Nobody wants to buy car ins., but we're generally required by law to do that. ... But they have convinced us driving a car is not a right, it is just from the kindness of the government that we are allowed to drive. Why do you think it's a right? Is it written into the Constitution? It's a privilege that needs to be earned. What are you talking about, driving or health care. The Constitution is silent on both of them. Providing for the welfare of the general public is a basic goal of government. The deficit isn't a bread and butter issue with most people. You're talking about the budget deficit and not the trade deficit right? Just checking. It will become a bread and butter issue when bread and butter become more expensive (the carbon tax). Actually in the late 80s and early 90s, the deficit was an election issue (Ross Perot). It brought us about 3 years of sound fiscal policy with the help of the 104th congress. I don't think you can credit Perot with "sound fiscal policy." He was another wacko, smart business man that he was. He was a whacko who drove the fiscal policy of Gingrich/Clinton that got us close to even for a year or two. You could criticize Perot for being an egotistical jerk but his charts were right on. Gingrich?? His "Contract on America" was just a rehash of the same bs. Clinton mostly got things under control. You can't underestimate the contribution Gingrich made for Clinton's surplus. Ways and Means is a House function and that is where the money comes from. They also control spending. Gingrich did very little that he wasn't forced to do. Clinton called his bluff as I recall. Gingrich ran on a policy of fiscal responsibility and that was a big part of the "contract" They may have bickered on TV but Clinton and Gingrich were actually a very effective team. Neither would have succeeded without the other. BS. Read up... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract_with_America Perot was unwilling to listen to anyone. Having a good chart means very little. Perot got the public ready to accept the fiscal responsibility represented by the largest tax increase in history. That is how Clinton managed a surplus. He also pointed out the problem we have now, the amount of short term debt the government is carrying. If your debt is mostly in short term paper you have no idea what the interest rate will be when you have to roll it over ... or even if anyone will buy it. If China suddenly decided to just go somewhere else with their money and not renew their US paper we couldn't pay them what was due. That is a lot more of a problem for us than global warming, terrorism and the health care crisis combined. China calling in their cash would be about as bad as that planet killing comet we are overdue for. Oh come on... Perot never got much public support, and he quit and then changed his mind. It wasn't that Perot was a serious candidate, it was the questions he made everyone else answer. No one answered anything. He was mostly ignored. You notice that after that, the rules were changed to ensure another outsider could never get a seat at the table. If you are not anointed by the Remocrat/Depublican oligarchy, you can't enter the debates Ah, so it's back to conspiracy theories? Or, the more likely answer is that there hasn't been any viable third-party candidates. Ok, so what's your solution? Send about 5 million people to Navy Corpsman school and set them up in storefront clinics doing triage for doctors, actually taking care of about 20% of the patients. You don't need 8 years of college to patch up wounds, give shots and hand out a bottle of pills. That's going to solve our economic woes? Hardly. And, yes our economy and the heathcare crisis are interlinked. It would be training for a job that can't be exported and it would bend the health care cost curve. What else do you want? The high school dropout who was making $60,000 on the line putting the left front wheel on a Chevy is going to be in trouble, no matter what we do. Getting him a GED still won't get him UAW money. That is the 60 year old "union bubble" that globalism popped. Stop blaming the union for management's ill deeds. One immediate problem with it is that it'll never happen. You're going to force people into the school? Sure. It's always so nice when those with some means want to crap on those with no means. It's so...Republican. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 13:16:48 -0500, Harry wrote:
On 12/27/09 12:59 PM, RLM wrote: On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:31:46 -0500, BAR wrote: In , says... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 19:42:17 -0500, Tom Francis wrote: On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 23:17:46 -0600, wrote: You mention a "business decision". It seems to me tying health insurance to business, was a faulty paradigm from the beginning, competitively and socially. However, health care has the potential of reviving this entire economy. Health care jobs are well paying and *local*. IMO, they could provide a replacement for the manufacturing jobs we have lost. Our medical technology sector, already top of the world, could provide export dollars. In the public debate, we've been looking at health care as a drain on the economy. I'm thinking it could save the economy. It's basic economics, manufacture something of value, and the whole world values life, at least in theory. You're right and as far as it goes, it would be a boon. Unfortunately, that requires a free market approach to keep costs competitive and we just got a crap sandwich of a "health care" bill. This is gonna be a diaster and the more the details are being exposed, it's becoming apparent that it's nothing more than a Chavez style take over of a major industry - confiscatory and restrictive. Hopefully, 2010 will bring a reversal of this boondoogle. There has not been a free market for years. It has been a front to look like a free market with cooperation amoung insurance carriers to set prices and have had no control of who they can deny service to even if they pay their premiums. A public option would prevent this and keep them honest. Been there, had this happen. Remove government regulation of the medical insurance industry. The free market will return. Why should health insurance be treated any differently than your life, home, auto and property insurance? Your previous history of claims and behavior determines your ability to obtain insurance and the rates you pay. Besides you do not have a right to health insurance or health care. I have medicare now. I also carry additional insurance too, beside medicare. I had health insurance that I paid for through my employer in the past. A claim was denied that should have been covered. My employer tossed up their hands as to say tough **** but I was locked in to paying premiums until the first of the year. I quit the employment. They lost in the long run, trust me. The free market is a farce in the insurance market. They all work in concert. I love the simple-minded elegance of "get the government out and everything will be ok." Yeah, right. Bend over. Farther. "Free market" is as phony as "Work will set you free". Feel good BS. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:43:03 -0500, Gene wrote:
On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 08:20:56 -0500, John H wrote: On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 22:44:40 -0500, Gene wrote: On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 21:56:19 -0500, John H wrote: However, I believe you should have the choice. What choice? Dying with dignity or being kept alive, with extraordinary means, in a persistent vegetative state? Indefinitely? And, there's always the chance that the extra little amount of medical care would add another ten fruitful years to your life. I have absolutely no idea what you mean by this. Let's recap, per your link: ".... has earned a reputation as a place where doctors will go to virtually any length and expense to try to save a patient’s life. " This sounds great until you have to admit that an insurance policy isn't an unlimited blank check. Sooner or later, whoever is "the deep pockets" is going to start "rationing health care." But let's get real and evaluate the next sentence..... “If you come into this hospital, we’re not going to let you die....” Holy Crap, what incredible impertinence! That is just NOT their decision. But wait, if you are in a persistent vegetative state, and they keep your heart beating by extraordinary means..... uh..... you haven't "died" yet..... right? At least not until the money runs out and they have to start rationing...... trust me.... there is NO FREE LUNCH.... and this has NOTHING to do with humanitarian feelings toward you.... this is a cold, hard, business decision..... You missed this: "Take the case of Salah Putrus, who at age 71 had a long history of heart failure. After repeated visits to his local hospital near Burbank, Calif., Mr. Putrus was referred to U.C.L.A. this year to be evaluated for a heart transplant. Some other medical centers might have considered Mr. Putrus too old for the surgery. But U.C.L.A.’s attitude was “let’s see what we can do for him,” said his physician there, Dr. Tamara Horwich. Indeed, Mr. Putrus recalled, Dr. Horwich and her colleagues “did every test.” They changed his medicines to reduce the amount of water he was retaining. They even removed some teeth that could be a potential source of infection. His condition improved so much that more than six months later, Mr. Putrus has remained out of the hospital and is no longer considered in active need of a transplant. " What YOU missed is that he WAS too old for a transplant, so they tried alternative treatment, which the high priced folks in Burbank incompetently missed.... he got no medical care, he got maintenance. Had the first hospital been competent, there would be nothing to say.... I agree with you and have a living will for DNR and a organ donor sheet that is always part of my record at the local hospitals and my primary doctor understands my wishes. Hell, we already have prepaid creamation services payed for. What's a few ounces shy in a cardboard box. We have picked out the GPS spot to be put in the ocean. A case of keep it simple. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 1:35 PM, RLM wrote:
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 13:16:48 -0500, Harry wrote: On 12/27/09 12:59 PM, RLM wrote: On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:31:46 -0500, BAR wrote: In , says... On Sat, 26 Dec 2009 19:42:17 -0500, Tom Francis wrote: On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 23:17:46 -0600, wrote: You mention a "business decision". It seems to me tying health insurance to business, was a faulty paradigm from the beginning, competitively and socially. However, health care has the potential of reviving this entire economy. Health care jobs are well paying and *local*. IMO, they could provide a replacement for the manufacturing jobs we have lost. Our medical technology sector, already top of the world, could provide export dollars. In the public debate, we've been looking at health care as a drain on the economy. I'm thinking it could save the economy. It's basic economics, manufacture something of value, and the whole world values life, at least in theory. You're right and as far as it goes, it would be a boon. Unfortunately, that requires a free market approach to keep costs competitive and we just got a crap sandwich of a "health care" bill. This is gonna be a diaster and the more the details are being exposed, it's becoming apparent that it's nothing more than a Chavez style take over of a major industry - confiscatory and restrictive. Hopefully, 2010 will bring a reversal of this boondoogle. There has not been a free market for years. It has been a front to look like a free market with cooperation amoung insurance carriers to set prices and have had no control of who they can deny service to even if they pay their premiums. A public option would prevent this and keep them honest. Been there, had this happen. Remove government regulation of the medical insurance industry. The free market will return. Why should health insurance be treated any differently than your life, home, auto and property insurance? Your previous history of claims and behavior determines your ability to obtain insurance and the rates you pay. Besides you do not have a right to health insurance or health care. I have medicare now. I also carry additional insurance too, beside medicare. I had health insurance that I paid for through my employer in the past. A claim was denied that should have been covered. My employer tossed up their hands as to say tough **** but I was locked in to paying premiums until the first of the year. I quit the employment. They lost in the long run, trust me. The free market is a farce in the insurance market. They all work in concert. I love the simple-minded elegance of "get the government out and everything will be ok." Yeah, right. Bend over. Farther. "Free market" is as phony as "Work will set you free". Feel good BS. Further, we haven't had a "free market economy" for many, many decades. Where there are segments of "free markets," or "almost free markets," what happens is that most of us get screwed by the marketeers. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
thunder wrote:
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:28:45 -0500, BAR wrote: What does this have to do with Obama? Obama appointed Naplitano to be the head of DHS. Obviously Obama didn't want a competent person at the helm of the DHS or Obama is an idiot too in that he can't see incompetence when it is staring him in the face. Let's see, valedictorian of her college class, J.D. from University of Virginia, US Attorney for the District of Arizona, Attorney General of Arizona, Governor of Arizona ... yup, must be an idiot. There's a thing called all G2 and no gee-whiz. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
In article ,
says... I had health insurance that I paid for through my employer in the past. A claim was denied that should have been covered. My employer tossed up their hands as to say tough **** but I was locked in to paying premiums until the first of the year. I quit the employment. They lost in the long run, trust me. The free market is a farce in the insurance market. They all work in concert. I love the simple-minded elegance of "get the government out and everything will be ok." Yeah, right. Bend over. Farther. "Free market" is as phony as "Work will set you free". Feel good BS. Work has been very good to me so far. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 1:46 PM, D.Duck wrote:
thunder wrote: On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 11:28:45 -0500, BAR wrote: What does this have to do with Obama? Obama appointed Naplitano to be the head of DHS. Obviously Obama didn't want a competent person at the helm of the DHS or Obama is an idiot too in that he can't see incompetence when it is staring him in the face. Let's see, valedictorian of her college class, J.D. from University of Virginia, US Attorney for the District of Arizona, Attorney General of Arizona, Governor of Arizona ... yup, must be an idiot. There's a thing called all G2 and no gee-whiz. BAR doesn't have the intel or gee-whiz to make the call he's tried to make. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 13:47:06 -0500, BAR wrote:
In article , says... I had health insurance that I paid for through my employer in the past. A claim was denied that should have been covered. My employer tossed up their hands as to say tough **** but I was locked in to paying premiums until the first of the year. I quit the employment. They lost in the long run, trust me. The free market is a farce in the insurance market. They all work in concert. I love the simple-minded elegance of "get the government out and everything will be ok." Yeah, right. Bend over. Farther. "Free market" is as phony as "Work will set you free". Feel good BS. Work has been very good to me so far. Zooooooooooooooooooooom! |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
On 12/27/09 2:14 PM, RLM wrote:
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 13:47:06 -0500, BAR wrote: In , says... I had health insurance that I paid for through my employer in the past. A claim was denied that should have been covered. My employer tossed up their hands as to say tough **** but I was locked in to paying premiums until the first of the year. I quit the employment. They lost in the long run, trust me. The free market is a farce in the insurance market. They all work in concert. I love the simple-minded elegance of "get the government out and everything will be ok." Yeah, right. Bend over. Farther. "Free market" is as phony as "Work will set you free". Feel good BS. Work has been very good to me so far. Zooooooooooooooooooooom! Bert (BAR) is a regular rocket scientist. |
Merry Christmas Seniors...
In article ,
says... On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 13:47:06 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... I had health insurance that I paid for through my employer in the past. A claim was denied that should have been covered. My employer tossed up their hands as to say tough **** but I was locked in to paying premiums until the first of the year. I quit the employment. They lost in the long run, trust me. The free market is a farce in the insurance market. They all work in concert. I love the simple-minded elegance of "get the government out and everything will be ok." Yeah, right. Bend over. Farther. "Free market" is as phony as "Work will set you free". Feel good BS. Work has been very good to me so far. Zooooooooooooooooooooom! It really must suck to be you. Seeing the worst in everyone and everything. |
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