Why is buying votes from the middle class a bad thing when the cause is worthy? I could understand if Bush was principled on the subject of buying votes but he's not. It seems to be a problem when it's the middle class.
Last edited by Matter-eater Man; 2007-09-254:28 PM.
...As for the president's speculation that families making $83,000 would be covered, the nonpartisan FactCheck.org stated that claim is false, noting new guidelines from the Center on Medicare and Medicaid Services making it "quite difficult" for any state to raise its eligibility for SCHIP recipients for those making more than 250 percent of the federal poverty level, $51,625 for a family of four.
I don't know if Health Care is a "right" in the constitutional sense but it seems to be the right/humane thing to do. What good is all this money the U.S has if we can't help people. Especially on something like Health. So many problems in the world why let people worry about paying for medical care when we can do something about it.
Ooops sorry G-man. Fixed the link. If only we could fix our President's severe exageration. Who knows how many little G-men are out there foolishly parrotting the President's "facts".
Originally Posted By: Matter-eater Man
Quote:
...As for the president's speculation that families making $83,000 would be covered, the nonpartisan FactCheck.org stated that claim is false, noting new guidelines from the Center on Medicare and Medicaid Services making it "quite difficult" for any state to raise its eligibility for SCHIP recipients for those making more than 250 percent of the federal poverty level, $51,625 for a family of four.
I don't know if Health Care is a "right" in the constitutional sense but it seems to be the right/humane thing to do. What good is all this money the U.S has if we can't help people. Especially on something like Health. So many problems in the world why let people worry about paying for medical care when we can do something about it.
I don't understand how people think health care is only good if it's for profit. HEALTH CARE should be primarily about the well being of patients not about business and the bottom line.
I want DOCTORS deciding who gets treated and if lives are worth saving, not number crunchers, insurers, and boards. It just seems like madness to me to put our lives and the lives of loved ones in the hands of people who's primary concern is turning a profit.
I could quote Jesus Christ again but I won't. We all know his message and it was about COMPASSION and giving, not about maximizing profits. Were we all to actually believe it and not just give lip service to it while sneering about socialism.
Nearly two dozen are at risk. Losing even a few would mean greater strain on the region's healthcare network.
By Daniel Costello and Susannah Ros
By Daniel Costello and Susannah Rosenblatt, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers September 23, 2007
Nearly two dozen private hospitals in Los Angeles and Orange counties, accounting for up to 15% of beds in the region, are in dire financial straits and in danger of bankruptcy or closure, according to hospital administrators, industry experts and state data.
The troublesome development follows the closure of community clinics and hospitals in recent years that has left the healthcare system seriously overburdened.
We're talking about a system that is already in crisis. — Carol Meyer, director of governmental affairs, L.A. County Department of Health Services
If even a few other hospitals close or reduce costly critical-care services, it could mean longer ambulance rides to hospitals, additional delays in emergency rooms and less access to care, especially for poor and uninsured people.
Among the hospitals in poor financial health, according to industry analysts, are Downey Regional Medical Center, Centinela Freeman Health System in Inglewood, Brotman Medical Center in Culver City, Century City Doctors Hospital and four Orange County hospitals owned by Santa Ana-based Integrated Healthcare Holdings Inc. including Chapman Medical Center in Orange and Western Medical Center in Santa Ana, one of three trauma centers in the county.
In interviews, senior executives at Centinela and Downey said they were considering closing their emergency rooms. Downey's chief operating officer, Rob Fuller, added that his hospital could close entirely as early as next year if its financial picture didn't improve soon.
"It's fasten your seat belt it's going to be a bumpy ride time," said James Lott, executive vice president of the Hospital Assn. of Southern California, a trade association.
The financial woes result from a multitude of developments:
* An increasing load of uninsured and low-income patients has resulted from overcrowding and the shutdown of public facilities. The number of uninsured patients visiting private hospitals, particularly in poor areas, has increased by one-third in Los Angeles County since 2002. California's Medi-Cal program for the poor reimburses hospitals at one of the lowest rates in the country.
* The closure of Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital in Willowbrook last month left half a dozen nearby hospitals to absorb most of the 47,000 patients who used the public hospital's emergency room last year.
* Smaller community hospitals are drawing fewer patients as a few larger facilities attract a growing share of doctors and insured patients.
* As insurers have consolidated in recent years, they've squeezed many smaller facilities. Private insurance companies generally pay higher rates to larger hospitals with greater bargaining power.
* New, stricter state mandates on nursing ratios have raised labor costs, and a 2013 deadline to retrofit all hospitals to better withstand a major earthquake is estimated to be costing medical facilities $110 billion statewide.......................
By Lisa Girion, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer November 9, 2007
One of the state's largest health insurers set goals and paid bonuses based in part on how many individual policyholders were dropped and how much money was saved.
[b]Woodland Hills-based Health Net Inc. avoided paying $35.5 million in medical expenses by rescinding about 1,600 policies between 2000 and 2006. During that period, it paid its senior analyst in charge of cancellations more than $20,000 in bonuses based in part on her meeting or exceeding annual targets for revoking policies, documents disclosed Thursday showed.
The revelation that the health plan had cancellation goals and bonuses comes amid a storm of controversy over the industry-wide but long-hidden practice of rescinding coverage after expensive medical treatments have been authorized.
These cancellations have been the recent focus of intense scrutiny by lawmakers, state regulators and consumer advocates. Although these "rescissions" are only a small portion of the companies' overall business, they typically leave sick patients with crushing medical bills and no way to obtain needed treatment.
Most of the state's major insurers have cancellation departments or individuals assigned to review coverage applications. They typically pull a policyholder's records after major medical claims are made to ensure that the client qualified for coverage at the outset.
The companies' internal procedures for reviewing and canceling coverage have not been publicly disclosed. Health Net's disclosures Thursday provided an unprecedented peek at a company's internal operations and marked the first time an insurer had revealed how it linked cancellations to employee performance goals and to its bottom line.
The bonuses were disclosed at an arbitration hearing in a lawsuit brought by Patsy Bates, a Gardena hairdresser whose coverage was rescinded by Health Net in the middle of chemotherapy treatments for breast cancer. She is seeking $6 million in compensation, plus damages.
Insurers maintain that cancellations are necessary to root out fraud and keep premiums affordable. Individual coverage is issued to only the healthiest applicants, who must disclose preexisting conditions.
Other suits have been settled out of court or through arbitration, out of public view. Until now, none had gone to a public trial.
Health Net had sought to keep the documents secret even after it was forced to produce them for the hearing, arguing that they contained proprietary information and could embarrass the company. But the arbitrator in the case, former Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Sam Cianchetti, granted a motion by lawyers for The Times, opening the hearing to reporters and making public all documents produced for it.
At a hearing on the motion, the judge said, "This clearly involves very significant public interest, and my view is the arbitration proceedings should not be confidential."
The documents show that in 2002, the company's goal for Barbara Fowler, Health Net's senior analyst in charge of rescission reviews, was 15 cancellations a month. She exceeded that, rescinding 275 policies that year -- a monthly average of 22.9.
More recently, her goals were expressed in financial terms. Her supervisor described 2003 as a "banner year" for Fowler because the company avoided about "$6 million in unnecessary health care expenses" through her rescission of 301 policies -- one more than her performance goal.
In 2005, her goal was to save Health Net at least $6.5 million. Through nearly 300 rescissions, Fowler ended up saving an estimated $7 million, prompting her supervisor to write: "Barbara's successful execution of her job responsibilities have been vital to the profitability" of individual and family policies.
State law forbids insurance companies from tying any compensation for claims reviewers to their claims decisions.
But Health Net's lawyer, William Helvestine, told the arbitrator in his opening argument Thursday that the law did not apply to the insurer in the case because Fowler was an underwriter -- not a claims reviewer.
Helvestine acknowledged that the company tied some of Fowler's compensation to policy cancellations, including Bates'. But he maintained that the bonuses were based on the overall performance of Fowler and the company. He also said that meeting the cancellation target was only a small factor.
The documents showed that Fowler's annual bonuses ranged from $1,654 to $6,310. But Helvestine said that no more than $276 in any year was connected to cancellations.
He said Fowler's supervisor, Mark Ludwig, set goals that were reasonable based on the prior year's experience.
"I think it is insulting to those individuals to make this the focal point of this case," Helvestine said.
Bates' lawyer, William Shernoff, said Health Net's behavior was "reprehensible."
He said the cancellation goals and financial rewards showed that the company canceled policies in bad faith and just to save money. After all, he told the arbitrator, canceling policies was Fowler's primary job.
"For management to set goals in advance to achieve a certain number of rescissions and target savings in the millions of dollars at the expense of seriously ill patients is cruel and reprehensible by any standards of law or decency," Shernoff said.
The company declined requests to make Fowler available to discuss the reviews.
Cianchetti, the arbitrator, earlier ruled the rescission invalid because Health Net had mishandled the way it sent Bates the policy when it issued coverage. At the end of the hearing, it will be up to Cianchetti to determine whether Health Net acted in bad faith and owes Bates any damages.
The disclosures surprised regulators. A spokesman said state Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner was troubled by the allegations.
"Commissioner Poizner has made it clear he will not tolerate illegal rescissions," spokesman Byron Tucker said. "We are going to take a hard and close look at this case."
In recent months, the state's health and insurance regulators have teamed to develop rules aimed at curbing rescissions and to more closely monitor the industry's cancellation policies.
Other insurers that have rescission operations, including Blue Cross of California and Blue Shield of California, said they had no similar policies linking employee performance reviews to rescission levels. Blue Cross said it conducted audits to ensure that claims reviewers were not given any "carrots" for canceling coverage.
Bates, who filed the suit against Health Net, owns a hair salon in a Gardena mini-mall between a liquor store and a doughnut shop. She said she was left with nearly $200,000 in medical bills and stranded in the midst of chemotherapy when Health Net canceled her coverage in January 2004.
Bates, 51, said the first notice she had that something was awry with her coverage came while she was in the hospital preparing for lump-removal surgery.
She said an administrator came to her room and told her the surgery, scheduled for early the next day, had been canceled because the hospital learned she had insurance problems. Health Net allowed the surgery to go forward only after Bates' daughter authorized the insurance company to charge three months of premiums in advance to her debit card, Bates alleged. Her coverage was canceled after she began post-surgical chemotherapy threatments.
"I've got cancer, and I could die," she said in a recent interview. Health Net "walked away from the agreement. They don't care."
Health Net contended that Bates failed to disclose a heart problem and shaved about 35 pounds off her weight on her application. Had it known her true weight or that she had been screened for a heart condition related to her use of the diet drug combination known as fen-phen, it would not have covered her in the first place, the company said.
"The case was rescinded based on inaccurate information on the individual's application," Health Net spokesman Brad Kieffer said.
Bates said she already had insurance when a broker came by her shop in the summer of 2003, and said she now regretted letting him in the door. She agreed to apply to Health Net when the broker told her he could save her money, Bates said.
She added that she never intended to mislead the company. Bates said the broker filled out the application, asking questions about her medical history as she styled a client's hair in her busy shop and he talked to another client waiting for an appointment at the counter. She maintained that she answered his questions as best she could and did not know whether he asked every question on the application.
Bates' chemotherapy was delayed for four months until it was funded through a program for charity cases. Three years later, she can't afford the tests she needs to determine whether the cancer is gone.
So she is left to worry. She is also left with a catheter embedded in her chest where the chemotherapy drugs were injected into her bloodstream. Bates said she found a physician willing to remove it without charge, but he won't do it without a clear prognosis. That remains uncertain.
Shernoff, Bates' lawyer, claimed that the performance goals for Fowler showed that Health Net was bent on finding any excuse to cancel the coverage of people like Bates to save money.
"I haven't seen this kind of thing for years," Shernoff said. "It doesn't get much worse."
lisa.girion@latimes.com
And people simply scoff and deny and shout "socialized medicine"...
This is private medicine in it's purest form. Just another enterprise out to make money and profit for it's own sake. The human element becomes just an inconvenience. They want healthy people giving them money. Sick people are a drain on profits.
Having worked for a time in the medicaid fraud unit of a government agency I can tell you that the government already does reward employees who try to bump people off the government health care dole.
yeah, and the government would never dream of anything like that.
Originally Posted By: the G-man
Having worked for a time in the medicaid fraud unit of a government agency I can tell you that the government already does reward employees who try to bump people off the government health care dole.
um.....
"fraud"
hello?
How the hell do you equate the shenanigans being done in the article with your job of weeding out the people who are abusing the system???
Geez.
Let me guess,... if we wouldn't have Medicaid in the 1st place then there wouldn't be people out there trying to abuse it. Right?
Originally Posted By: Captain Apathy@ The Insurgency Boards
Hey, man, that company deserves the medal of freedom. All of the policies they cancelled were probably those of poor people who just would have leeched off of welfare and social security if they had lived any way. Just think of all of those courageous shareholders who got richer becaus of these deals; they are fuelling our economy right now! Look at the stock market! As everyone knows, when the rich get richer, the numbers go up, which is good for everybody! And to think, we still tax these amazing people who hold up our entire society. If they pay less in taxes, they get to spend more money on yachts! Again, good for everybody! Besides, if it wasn't for the fact that everyone in the lower 2/3rds income levels is a fraudulent crook, I'm sure this poor company wouldn't have to cancel their policies anyway. As long as you remain healthy, you can continue to pay them money for their service that you'll never need unless you become unhealthy, which is entirely your fault anyway. Only in America are we afforded this freedom. Did you know that in Canada and England, you have to wait hours for your health care? Here, we tell you pretty quickly whether or not your credt card has been declined, so you don't have to wait to find out if you'll be treated or not. That's alot less stress. As long as we don't socialize medicine, the terrorists don't win!
Did I miss any talking points on this? I just skimmed the memo...
Having worked for a time in the medicaid fraud unit of a government agency I can tell you that the government already does reward employees who try to bump people off the government health care dole.
Originally Posted By: whomod
How the hell do you equate the shenanigans being done in the article with your job of weeding out the people who are abusing the system???
You misunderstood my point. I will clarify.
Having worked at that job, I was familiar with the policies and procedures promulgated by federal, state and local governments in regards to Medicaid. In addition, I had some knowledge of how cases were handled from intake on.
As a result, I am aware that the government takes various steps to weed people out of the system. There are eligibility requirements. There are limits on which providers will treat patients. There are limits on what the government will pay for each form of treatment. In addition, local districts are generally encouraged to look for was to cut costs.
In other words, the government tries to find ways to limit, at least at some level, the cost and types of treatment people get.
If the people are in real need and not just abusing the system, then the Government also needs to be held to account. That is the basic point to all this. People in need should be treated and helped. Be it by private Hospitals and or/Government programs. No one should ever be denied or go without essential (or for that matter, preventive) care because of circumstances, financial or otherwise.
Certainly this isn't too much to ask for in the richest country on Earth?
I saw this a few days ago, but I’m still trying to rest during the holiday…:
Quote:
California health insurers have a duty to check the accuracy of applications for coverage before issuing policies — and should not wait until patients run up big medical bills, a state appeals court ruled Monday.
The court also said insurers could not cancel a medical policy unless they showed that the policyholder willfully misrepresented his health or that the company had investigated the application before it issued coverage.
“These facts raise the specter that Blue Shield does not immediately rescind health care contracts upon learning of potential grounds for rescission, but waits until after the claims submitted under that contract exceed the monthly premiums being collected,” the court wrote.
The court also highlighted the testimony of Blue Shield's underwriting investigator that the company referred about 1,000 claims a year to her for investigations of possible application omissions and misstatements. Yet, the court wrote, the investigator said she rescinded less than 1% of them.
A health plan, the court went on, "may not adopt a 'wait and see' attitude after learning of facts justifying rescission." The court said companies could not continue to "collect premiums while keeping open its rescission option if the subscriber later experiences a serious accident or illness that generates large medical expenses."
The courts have caught on to their con game and it’s starting to unravel…
Basically they were using accusations of fraud to rescind policies, but only after people got sick.
Hopefully G-Man won't bemoan the fact that Blue Shield won't be able to make bigger profits if they can't turn down actual sick people.
Oh fantastic....
Quote:
The decision came in a closely watched case involving Steve Hailey, an Orange County small-business owner whose coverage was canceled by Blue Shield of California after he had a disabling car accident.
Last month, the California Nurses Association and the National Nurses Organizing Committee ran ads in Iowa newspapers advocating for a single-payer health-care bill, highlighting the fact Vice President Dick Cheney has benefited from his government-provided coverage. “If he were anyone else, he’d probably be dead by now” due to his long history of health problems, claimed the ad.
In the group’s newest round of ads, which ran “in eight New Hampshire papers” on Friday and will go “national” today, they dub a new name for “guaranteed, publicly-funded health care for all Americans”: CheneyCare.
The ad “asks readers to go to CheneyCare.org and sign a petition in support of CheneyCare for all Americans”:
Cheney’s office “did not respond to a request for comment” by the Washington Examiner, but in December, when the original ads ran, Cheney spokesperson Megan Mitchell said that “something this outrageous does not warrant a response.”
As ThinkProgress noted at the time, what is actually outrageous is the fact that there are roughly 47 million people in America without health insurance, including 3.2 million children, but President Bush twice vetoed legislation that would have expanded coverage to 4 million more children.
While it is certainly good that Vice President Cheney was able get the medical attention he needed, the groups’ ad is right. Americans do deserve “CheneyCare for all.”
I myself wonder why the Democrats don't just pass legislation or a vote that would require any politician who uses the phrase "socialized medicine" to drop out of their dread socialized Congressional health care and have them join an HMO. A Nay vote for "socialized health care" would enroll them in Blue Shield. Put their money where their rhetoric is.
After all if they're so against it, they shouldn't have to suffer under socialized medicine.
Last month, the California Nurses Association and the National Nurses Organizing Committee ran ads in Iowa newspapers advocating for a single-payer health-care bill, highlighting the fact Vice President Dick Cheney has benefited from his government-provided coverage. “If he were anyone else, he’d probably be dead by now” due to his long history of health problems, claimed the ad.
In the group’s newest round of ads, which ran “in eight New Hampshire papers” on Friday and will go “national” today, they dub a new name for “guaranteed, publicly-funded health care for all Americans”: CheneyCare.
The ad “asks readers to go to CheneyCare.org and sign a petition in support of CheneyCare for all Americans”:
Cheney’s office “did not respond to a request for comment” by the Washington Examiner, but in December, when the original ads ran, Cheney spokesperson Megan Mitchell said that “something this outrageous does not warrant a response.”
As ThinkProgress noted at the time, what is actually outrageous is the fact that there are roughly 47 million people in America without health insurance, including 3.2 million children, but President Bush twice vetoed legislation that would have expanded coverage to 4 million more children.
While it is certainly good that Vice President Cheney was able get the medical attention he needed, the groups’ ad is right. Americans do deserve “CheneyCare for all.”
I myself wonder why the Democrats don't just pass legislation or a vote that would require any politician who uses the phrase "socialized medicine" to drop out of their dread socialized Congressional health care and have them join an HMO. A Nay vote for "socialized health care" would enroll them in Blue Shield. Put their money where their rhetoric is.
After all if they're so against it, they shouldn't have to suffer under socialized medicine.
Smart nurses.
"Batman is only meaningful as an answer to a world which in its basics is chaotic and in the hands of the wrong people, where no justice can be found. I think it's very suitable to our perception of the world's condition today... Batman embodies the will to resist evil" -Frank Miller
"Conan, what's the meaning of life?" "To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of their women!" -Conan the Barbarian
"Well, yeah." -Jason E. Perkins
"If I had a dime for every time Pariah was right about something I'd owe twenty cents." -Ultimate Jaburg53
"Fair enough. I defer to your expertise." -Prometheus
I would prefer the government promote employers providing health care for their workers through tax incentives for them and possibly even the insurance companies themselves for providing the plans. That should, hopefully, increase use of packaged plans that help bring down the costs, making them affordable to everyone.
whomod said: I generally don't like it when people decide to play by the rules against people who don't play by the rules. It tends to put you immediately at a disadvantage and IMO is a sign of true weakness. This is true both in politics and on the internet."
I still don't understand how anyone can rectify a govt. that imposes safety/health measures such as no drugs, seat belts, helmets, and certain age requirements but doesn't provide health care.
I'm against a federal government with too much power. If a state government wanted to offer universal health care for its citizens, you wouldn't hear me say anything against it.
whomod said: I generally don't like it when people decide to play by the rules against people who don't play by the rules. It tends to put you immediately at a disadvantage and IMO is a sign of true weakness. This is true both in politics and on the internet."
I'm against a federal government with too much power. If a state government wanted to offer universal health care for its citizens, you wouldn't hear me say anything against it.
I think you and I are very like minded on this Doc. I don't necessarily want it either but...it seems hypocritical that they don't offer it.
I'm against a federal government with too much power. If a state government wanted to offer universal health care for its citizens, you wouldn't hear me say anything against it.
I think you and I are very like minded on this Doc.
whomod said: I generally don't like it when people decide to play by the rules against people who don't play by the rules. It tends to put you immediately at a disadvantage and IMO is a sign of true weakness. This is true both in politics and on the internet."
I don't necessarily want it either but...it seems hypocritical that they don't offer it.
Not at all. We have always made (and through our elected representatives have made) choices as to the amount of control the government has over us. We've always drawn lines and distinctions. That's what politics and voting (or civics, if you prefer) are about, determining the size and limits of government.
If you are going to argue that government intervention in one area mandates even more intervention later on, you are basically arguing that any government regulation at all requires totalitarianism.
That's an interesting version of the usual "slippery slope" argument.
I don't necessarily want it either but...it seems hypocritical that they don't offer it.
Not at all. We have always made (and through our elected representatives have made) choices as to the amount of control the government has over us. We've always drawn lines and distinctions. That's what politics and voting (or civics, if you prefer) are about, determining the size and limits of government.
If you are going to argue that government intervention in one area mandates even more intervention later on, you are basically arguing that any government regulation at all requires totalitarianism.
That's an interesting version of the usual "slippery slope" argument.
I see it as this, the govt. should be able to control over our actions that affect others (you can make that argument for everything but in this case I'm talking about shit like drunk driving) but things like whether we wear seatbelts should be completely up to us. That's the line I would draw. Now, if the govt, wants to cross that particular line then it should pay for health care. It's like a parent who expects there child to eat healthy food but doesn't buy any.
Actually, however, the government uses the fact that it already pays for at least some health care (medicare, medicaid, subsidized insurance) as their rationalization for why it can control our actions even if they don't affect others.
In fact, that's how they justify making us wear seatbels. Being one of the old farts here, I remember when the government mandated seat belt use in the early 80s. They said that they had the right to do so because people who were injured often ended up, if injured severly enough, on public assistance. Therefore, they had the power to tell us what to do with our own bodies (if you will).
I also remember that some of the more libertarian elements of the country argued "if we let them get away with THAT argument, next they rationalize banning smoking, then drinking, then fatty foods, then..." And the do-gooders said "no, no...they'd never do that.."
So if you have a federal government that pays for everyone's health care you can guarantee that you'll have a federal government that tries to assert more and more control over our lives over time, on the theory that they have a right and duty to cut costs by mandating we only engage in "healthy" activities.
Actually, however, the government uses the fact that it already pays for at least some health care (medicare, medicaid, subsidized insurance) as their rationalization for why it can control our actions even if they don't affect others.
In fact, that's how they justify making us wear seatbels. Being one of the old farts here, I remember when the government mandated seat belt use in the early 80s. They said that they had the right to do so because people who were injured often ended up, if injured severly enough, on public assistance. Therefore, they had the power to tell us what to do with our own bodies (if you will).
I also remember that some of the more libertarian elements of the country argued "if we let them get away with THAT argument, next they rationalize banning smoking, then drinking, then fatty foods, then..." And the do-gooders said "no, no...they'd never do that.."
So if you have a federal government that pays for everyone's health care you can guarantee that you'll have a federal government that tries to assert more and more control over our lives over time, on the theory that they have a right and duty to cut costs by mandating we only engage in "healthy" activities.
See that's totally bull shit though. The govt. exists to serve the people as much or more then anything else so it shouldn't be such an investment for them to help the people they serve. That's not directed at you, just a general observation.
You're right though, being the greedy, corrupted bastards they are they would demand more power.
I still maintain that the amount of control they have is disproportionate to the health care they give. If they can have any say over our private lives they should pay for health care IMO.
In fact, that's how they justify making us wear seatbels. Being one of the old farts here, I remember when the government mandated seat belt use in the early 80s. They said that they had the right to do so because people who were injured often ended up, if injured severly enough, on public assistance. Therefore, they had the power to tell us what to do with our own bodies (if you will).
hey, G-Man, if you don't want to wear a seat belt, I'm cool with it.
I also remember that some of the more libertarian elements of the country argued "if we let them get away with THAT argument, next they rationalize banning smoking, then drinking, then fatty foods, then..." And the do-gooders said "no, no...they'd never do that.."
except the fact that cigarette, alcohol, and especially fast food companies have lots of lobbiests in washington. hell they have so much influence that, since reagan let them become a monopoly, meatpacking is practically unregulated and fast food is left all but untouched.
Originally Posted By: Friendly Neighborhood Ray-man
Originally Posted By: the G-man
I also remember that some of the more libertarian elements of the country argued "if we let them get away with THAT argument, next they rationalize banning smoking, then drinking, then fatty foods, then..." And the do-gooders said "no, no...they'd never do that.."
except the fact that cigarette, alcohol, and especially fast food companies have lots of lobbiests in washington. hell they have so much influence that, since reagan let them become a monopoly, meatpacking is practically unregulated and fast food is left all but untouched.
G-MAN JUST GOT OWNED AND THE DUMB ASS DOESN'T EVEN KNOW IT!!!!
Originally Posted By: Friendly Neighborhood Ray-man
... except the fact that cigarette, alcohol, and especially fast food companies have lots of lobbiests in washington... so much influence....
Yeah, Ray. They have so much influence that smoking is banned nearly everywhere in many states, taxed to the hilt nationally, trans fats have been banned in NYC and elsewhere and the drinking age was raised to twenty-one.
But let me ask you: are you saying that you WANT to be told by the government whether or not you can smoke, drink or eat fatty goods?
Originally Posted By: Friendly Neighborhood Ray-man
... except the fact that cigarette, alcohol, and especially fast food companies have lots of lobbiests in washington... so much influence....
Yeah, Ray. They have so much influence that smoking is banned nearly everywhere in many states, taxed to the hilt nationally, trans fats have been banned in NYC and elsewhere and the drinking age was raised to twenty-one.
But let me ask you: are you saying that you WANT to be told by the government whether or not you can smoke, drink or eat fatty goods?
There banned but more expensive then ever, which works out pretty well for the govt.
In fact, that's how they justify making us wear seatbels. Being one of the old farts here, I remember when the government mandated seat belt use in the early 80s. They said that they had the right to do so because people who were injured often ended up, if injured severly enough, on public assistance. Therefore, they had the power to tell us what to do with our own bodies (if you will).
hey, G-Man, if you don't want to wear a seat belt, I'm cool with it.
Hey G-Man, if you ever ride a motorbike, I'm cool with you not wearing a helmet either.
Last month, the California Nurses Association and the National Nurses Organizing Committee ran ads in Iowa newspapers advocating for a single-payer health-care bill, highlighting the fact Vice President Dick Cheney has benefited from his government-provided coverage. “If he were anyone else, he’d probably be dead by now” due to his long history of health problems, claimed the ad.
This is a pretty specious argument.
The gist of this argument is that, because the Vice President of the United States gets government-funded health care, every one should.
Using that logic, because the Vice President is paid a salary of over $200,000, every one else should be paid the same.
Using that logic, because the Vice President is gets to reside in government owned housing, we all should.
Using that logic, because the Vice President gets free bodyguards, we all should.
Etc.
As for your jokes about me and seatbelts, bike helmets, etc., I realize that it sounds pretty innoculous to make people do those things. But each time you let the government control what you do with your body on the theory that it's dangerous and they pay for health care, you create a precedent for the next act that the federal government decrees to be "dangerous."
What's not dangerous today, can be considered dangerous someday. Look at the studies about drinking, smoking, fatty foods.
Eventually, what happens when enough "Christian Conservatives" find enough studies that abortions create a health risk? Or homosexual activity? Or promiscuity? If the government pays for our health care why won't they be able to regulate those activities too?
The more aspects of your personal life that you allow government to subdize the more aspects of your personal life that you give it control over.