Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6897|67.222.138.85

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Allowing a vital need to be distributed solely by the market would appear to be ignorant of greed in human nature.
Forcing a moral standard on the system in spite of human nature is being ignorant of it, serving the same need by exploiting basic human nature in a free market is using human nature to your advantage. No reason to paddle upstream if you can get to the same place going down.
....except for the fact that rising costs and considerably less accessibility to the average person render this "free market" rather....  plutocratic.  In effect, our current system mostly just benefits the rich and insurance agencies.  It really fucks over the average person.
Rising costs from technological advancement. I seriously doubt it is getting more expensive to maintain the same standard of care apart from any simple supply/demand reasons, which are anything but "plutocratic". And just forget the irony of using that word to apply to the U.S., when you're comparing socialized countries favorably to it.

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

This is my point . Bargaining is satisfaction of mutual need, the only possible way that all parties come away happy, satisfied that they have not been cheated out of their work. It seems that socialists fail to see this, not making the connection between producer and consumer happiness, focusing only on the consumer's well-being. Whether that is achieved through reasonable means or by unnecessarily screwing over someone else does not appear to present a dilemma.
Uh, I wouldn't exactly consider the 40 million uninsured to be "happy."
What about everyone else who doesn't have to pay to insure those 40 mil?

Trade results in the traders being happy...if you don't have anything to trade, how can happiness be gleaned from that circumstance? The only thing you can do is spread around the misery.

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Because the demand is high for medical technologies, there is an incentive to lower the cost of the technology is well. Medical care is expensive it is true, but not the run-of-the-mill stuff we take for granted. First-aid supplies, cold/allergy medicine, penicillin that makes short work of what very well may have been a life threatening disease a century ago. The problem is people feel entitled to the absolute best, technology that cannot be distributed without extreme cost to society. No matter how many people need it, it doesn't lower the cost of what it takes to produce it (in the short term).
Yes, but having a huge tax pool to work with would.
How?

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

But you're not managing anything, you're just compensating. You may be more efficient, but now even more money is spent on healthcare that people don't need enough to pay for themselves.
Except for the fact that under our private system, we pay more currently than we would through taxes for a universal system.  We pay more per capita than any other country.
links I provided to Berster7 if you aren't reading that exchange.

http://www.scribd.com/document_download … _password=

http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/publicatio … 49_ERP.pdf

The first one is fairly long, but it's good. If you still don't want to read it I pulled some quotes above.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6595|North Carolina

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Rising costs from technological advancement. I seriously doubt it is getting more expensive to maintain the same standard of care apart from any simple supply/demand reasons, which are anything but "plutocratic". And just forget the irony of using that word to apply to the U.S., when you're comparing socialized countries favorably to it.
If it was solely technological advances, other countries would see an increase in prices that would keep up with our increases.  Clearly, that is not the case.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

What about everyone else who doesn't have to pay to insure those 40 mil?

Trade results in the traders being happy...if you don't have anything to trade, how can happiness be gleaned from that circumstance? The only thing you can do is spread around the misery.
Spreading around the misery is what happens when a significant portion of your population is uninsured, ends up in the ER, gets served, and then the costs get passed to you and me.  In a socialized system, there would be less misery to spread.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

How?
As I mentioned earlier, the predictability of costs in a socialized system allows prices to change less dramatically when someone needs an expensive treatment that they can't fully pay themselves.  In a socialized system, you have a continual flow of money from taxation that is invested in healthcare.  Private healthcare is subject to the business cycle, which means that unexpected costs can result in dramatic price increases to cover those that don't pay their way, especially during a recession.

Socialized healthcare is kind of like having a massive insurance service.  Insurance works on the principle of paying a standard amount per month to cover the possible costs you could incur on your provider (and in the process helps pay for other people currently using services).  With socialized healthcare, the pool is much larger than any private business would have access to, and therefore can handle more unexpected costs than a private system.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

links I provided to Berster7 if you aren't reading that exchange.

http://www.scribd.com/document_download … _password=

http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/publicatio … 49_ERP.pdf

The first one is fairly long, but it's good. If you still don't want to read it I pulled some quotes above.
The first one apparently requires a password.

The second one made my computer freeze, so I'm going to try reading it in a moment.  I think there was some conflict with my Adobe Reader.

I'll probably respond to this second link in a few hours.  (I'm about to play some Left for Dead.    )
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6897|67.222.138.85

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Rising costs from technological advancement. I seriously doubt it is getting more expensive to maintain the same standard of care apart from any simple supply/demand reasons, which are anything but "plutocratic". And just forget the irony of using that word to apply to the U.S., when you're comparing socialized countries favorably to it.
If it was solely technological advances, other countries would see an increase in prices that would keep up with our increases.  Clearly, that is not the case.
Second article (that I realize you are currently unable to read) address this point particularly.

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

What about everyone else who doesn't have to pay to insure those 40 mil?

Trade results in the traders being happy...if you don't have anything to trade, how can happiness be gleaned from that circumstance? The only thing you can do is spread around the misery.
Spreading around the misery is what happens when a significant portion of your population is uninsured, ends up in the ER, gets served, and then the costs get passed to you and me.  In a socialized system, there would be less misery to spread.
I can see the case for equal misery (though at least the misery in a capitalist system is up front and blatant, not hidden in the depths of taxes), but how do you come up with less in a socialist system?

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

How?
As I mentioned earlier, the predictability of costs in a socialized system allows prices to change less dramatically when someone needs an expensive treatment that they can't fully pay themselves.  In a socialized system, you have a continual flow of money from taxation that is invested in healthcare.  Private healthcare is subject to the business cycle, which means that unexpected costs can result in dramatic price increases to cover those that don't pay their way, especially during a recession.

Socialized healthcare is kind of like having a massive insurance service.  Insurance works on the principle of paying a standard amount per month to cover the possible costs you could incur on your provider (and in the process helps pay for other people currently using services).  With socialized healthcare, the pool is much larger than any private business would have access to, and therefore can handle more unexpected costs than a private system.
The overall cost is still the same though, and increased with a socialist system.

You are right in that there will be more fluctuations in a socialist system, but you misrepresent how effectively government can flatten out the business cycle. In theory it could do so very effectively, but the fact of the matter is that government is asked to spend more during a recession and never make up the difference because we refuse to accept a tax increase in a time of expansion. The private system does not handle fluctuations well from the point of the consumer, but at least they can handle fluctuations responsibly (in most cases).

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

links I provided to Berster7 if you aren't reading that exchange.

http://www.scribd.com/document_download … _password=

http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/publicatio … 49_ERP.pdf

The first one is fairly long, but it's good. If you still don't want to read it I pulled some quotes above.
The first one apparently requires a password.

The second one made my computer freeze, so I'm going to try reading it in a moment.  I think there was some conflict with my Adobe Reader.

I'll probably respond to this second link in a few hours.  (I'm about to play some Left for Dead.    )
On the first one I did make an account in finding it, but I thought the actual page I found it at didn't need the account. My bad, I uploaded it here.

I find it absofuckinlutely hilarious that I have pointed TWO other people to that article, one of which was bitching at me for not providing specific evidence, and you are the first one to tell me it needs an account.

what is your steamid
Varegg
Support fanatic :-)
+2,206|7000|Nårvei

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Varegg wrote:

That you hate MM for some reason is not my fault, he's not objective I agree but he has some seriously good points in that movie that is well documented ...
I never said I hate Micheal Moore, I haven't even seen any of his movies. The fact is I'm not going to pay to sit there for 2 hours as someone bitches at me while I can't bitch back, liberal, conservative, or otherwise.

So if your view of the U.S. medical system is "Micheal Moore said people died..." without anything to back it up, I dunno what we can talk about.
Why is so many conservatives "afraid" of his movies?

My view of the US medical system is not based on MMs movies, I said he raises some serious issues about some of it and I happen to share his view that a insurance based system where a company must have a profit increases the cost of just that system ... that profit is not present in a government controlled system, it is rather used on healthcare ...

You really should see that movie ... he doesn't attack you or your lifestyle if that's what you are afraid of ...
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
PureFodder
Member
+225|6475

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

The first link in my response to Berster7 even talks about forced waiting periods of 122 days. So, looking at you Fodder, make sure other countries do it better before pointing the finger at us.
Good advice
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/co … 042072.htm
There is no systemized collection of data on wait times in the U.S. That makes it difficult to draw comparisons with countries that have national health systems, where wait times are not only tracked but made public. However, a 2005 survey by the Commonwealth Fund of sick adults in six nations found that only 47% of U.S. patients could get a same- or next-day appointment for a medical problem, worse than every other country except Canada.

The Commonwealth survey did find that U.S. patients had the second-shortest wait times if they wished to see a specialist or have nonemergency surgery, such as a hip replacement or cataract operation (Germany, which has national health care, came in first on both measures). But Gerard F. Anderson, a health policy expert at Johns Hopkins University, says doctors in countries where there are lengthy queues for elective surgeries put at-risk patients on the list long before their need is critical. "Their wait might be uncomfortable, but it makes very little clinical difference," he says.

The Commonwealth study did find one area where the U.S. was first by a wide margin: 51% of sick Americans surveyed did not visit a doctor, get a needed test, or fill a prescription within the past two years because of cost. No other country came close.
I'll give you a cookie if you can actually find the nonexistent/poorly cited sources that article makes its case on. It's worthless if you can't find that.
http://www.commonwealthfund.org/Content … dults.aspx
I demand cookie! Actually I don't deserve cookie as finding the source took about 3 seconds, hardly nonexistant/poorly cited.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6897|67.222.138.85
1 - I was actually talking about the other survey mentioned, that's the one I couldn't find.

2 - "Interview Method: Telephone" - self-reporting bitchy Americans for the win

Varegg wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Varegg wrote:

That you hate MM for some reason is not my fault, he's not objective I agree but he has some seriously good points in that movie that is well documented ...
I never said I hate Micheal Moore, I haven't even seen any of his movies. The fact is I'm not going to pay to sit there for 2 hours as someone bitches at me while I can't bitch back, liberal, conservative, or otherwise.

So if your view of the U.S. medical system is "Micheal Moore said people died..." without anything to back it up, I dunno what we can talk about.
Why is so many conservatives "afraid" of his movies?

My view of the US medical system is not based on MMs movies, I said he raises some serious issues about some of it and I happen to share his view that a insurance based system where a company must have a profit increases the cost of just that system ... that profit is not present in a government controlled system, it is rather used on healthcare ...

You really should see that movie ... he doesn't attack you or your lifestyle if that's what you are afraid of ...


I said I am not going to watch a politically slanted movie, because it's a waste of two hours. Whether the slant is left, right, or sideways is irrelevant, I don't want to watch it because it's boring and biased.
PureFodder
Member
+225|6475

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

1 - I was actually talking about the other survey mentioned, that's the one I couldn't find.

2 - "Interview Method: Telephone" - self-reporting bitchy Americans for the win
Seeing as you don't accept telephone polls or people's stories and the US doesn't track waiting times in any sensible way then the US has no point of camparison. We'll have to assume that the US waiting times are roughly the same as everywhere else, so waiting times are not a reason to avoid switching to socialised healthcare because for all we know they're just as bad as in the US.
Varegg
Support fanatic :-)
+2,206|7000|Nårvei

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

1 - I was actually talking about the other survey mentioned, that's the one I couldn't find.

2 - "Interview Method: Telephone" - self-reporting bitchy Americans for the win

Varegg wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I never said I hate Micheal Moore, I haven't even seen any of his movies. The fact is I'm not going to pay to sit there for 2 hours as someone bitches at me while I can't bitch back, liberal, conservative, or otherwise.

So if your view of the U.S. medical system is "Micheal Moore said people died..." without anything to back it up, I dunno what we can talk about.
Why is so many conservatives "afraid" of his movies?

My view of the US medical system is not based on MMs movies, I said he raises some serious issues about some of it and I happen to share his view that a insurance based system where a company must have a profit increases the cost of just that system ... that profit is not present in a government controlled system, it is rather used on healthcare ...

You really should see that movie ... he doesn't attack you or your lifestyle if that's what you are afraid of ...


I said I am not going to watch a politically slanted movie, because it's a waste of two hours. Whether the slant is left, right, or sideways is irrelevant, I don't want to watch it because it's boring and biased.
So you don't read books, newspapers or watch television because you can't argue or debate with them either ... or?



Most sources of information is biased in one way or another you know ...
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6897|67.222.138.85

Varegg wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

1 - I was actually talking about the other survey mentioned, that's the one I couldn't find.

2 - "Interview Method: Telephone" - self-reporting bitchy Americans for the win

Varegg wrote:


Why is so many conservatives "afraid" of his movies?

My view of the US medical system is not based on MMs movies, I said he raises some serious issues about some of it and I happen to share his view that a insurance based system where a company must have a profit increases the cost of just that system ... that profit is not present in a government controlled system, it is rather used on healthcare ...

You really should see that movie ... he doesn't attack you or your lifestyle if that's what you are afraid of ...


I said I am not going to watch a politically slanted movie, because it's a waste of two hours. Whether the slant is left, right, or sideways is irrelevant, I don't want to watch it because it's boring and biased.
So you don't read books, newspapers or watch television because you can't argue or debate with them either ... or?



Most sources of information is biased in one way or another you know ...
ah you edited

Simple bias is easy to read through, and is usually at least based on a personal ideology and not that of a group. Micheal Moore is known as and identifies with a political party...reading Il Principe is only "biased" because it's one person's independent opinion.
Varegg
Support fanatic :-)
+2,206|7000|Nårvei

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Varegg wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

1 - I was actually talking about the other survey mentioned, that's the one I couldn't find.

2 - "Interview Method: Telephone" - self-reporting bitchy Americans for the win




I said I am not going to watch a politically slanted movie, because it's a waste of two hours. Whether the slant is left, right, or sideways is irrelevant, I don't want to watch it because it's boring and biased.
So you don't read books, newspapers or watch television because you can't argue or debate with them either ... or?



Most sources of information is biased in one way or another you know ...
ah you edited

Simple bias is easy to read through, and is usually at least based on a personal ideology and not that of a group. Micheal Moore is known as and identifies with a political party...reading Il Principe is only "biased" because it's one person's independent opinion.
True

But it's always good to shed light on a matter from different sources and different views ...
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
Harmor
Error_Name_Not_Found
+605|6738|San Diego, CA, USA

Varegg wrote:

Why is so many conservatives "afraid" of his movies?

My view of the US medical system is not based on MMs movies, I said he raises some serious issues about some of it and I happen to share his view that a insurance based system where a company must have a profit increases the cost of just that system ... that profit is not present in a government controlled system, it is rather used on healthcare ...
I wonder if the modicum of profit a private healthcare practice makes makes up for the inefficiency any government system may have?


Sorry if I sound cynical, but I can't fathom a government in charge of my healtcare when they can't even get the DMV right.
Varegg
Support fanatic :-)
+2,206|7000|Nårvei

Harmor wrote:

Varegg wrote:

Why is so many conservatives "afraid" of his movies?

My view of the US medical system is not based on MMs movies, I said he raises some serious issues about some of it and I happen to share his view that a insurance based system where a company must have a profit increases the cost of just that system ... that profit is not present in a government controlled system, it is rather used on healthcare ...
I wonder if the modicum of profit a private healthcare practice makes makes up for the inefficiency any government system may have?


Sorry if I sound cynical, but I can't fathom a government in charge of my healtcare when they can't even get the DMV right.
So you think that a profit based private enterprice that have employees whos main goal is to deny you healthcare is better? (maybe stretching it a little but it's not completely untrue)
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
kylef
Gone
+1,352|6683|N. Ireland

Bertster7 wrote:

kylef wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:

The government is more flexible in virtually every way. How can you say it isn't? They can change the rules, they can set the budgets, they can change every aspect of the framework the system works in - private companies just work with that framework, the government makes it. That is real flexibility.
The problem is, our Government is restricted heavily by Parliament. Where private companies can use tax avoidance schemes and workarounds to pay lower costs, the Government framework is often loopholed.
How is that benefiting the country?

How on earth do you connect businesses avoiding taxes to being in the best interests of the country?

In any case, the point is nonsense since the NHS doesn't pay any tax. It's not a profit making organisation.
You're misinterpreting what I am saying - that private companies who have this framework set by the Government can use avoidance schemes and loopholes to bypass the framework that was imposed on them. I am not associating tax avoidance benefiting or being in the best interests of the country.
Harmor
Error_Name_Not_Found
+605|6738|San Diego, CA, USA

Varegg wrote:

So you think that a profit based private enterprice that have employees whos main goal is to deny you healthcare is better? (maybe stretching it a little but it's not completely untrue)
Yes, because one important different between a government0-run healthcare and a private one is that I can sue the private one.  In the United States you can't 'sue the government'.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6595|North Carolina

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

what is your steamid
I usually appear as "napsterbator". 
Varegg
Support fanatic :-)
+2,206|7000|Nårvei

Harmor wrote:

Varegg wrote:

So you think that a profit based private enterprice that have employees whos main goal is to deny you healthcare is better? (maybe stretching it a little but it's not completely untrue)
Yes, because one important different between a government0-run healthcare and a private one is that I can sue the private one.  In the United States you can't 'sue the government'.
Marvelous conclusion ...

/facedesk
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|6864|Canberra, AUS

Harmor wrote:

Varegg wrote:

So you think that a profit based private enterprice that have employees whos main goal is to deny you healthcare is better? (maybe stretching it a little but it's not completely untrue)
Yes, because one important different between a government0-run healthcare and a private one is that I can sue the private one.  In the United States you can't 'sue the government'.
Yes you can, people do it all the time. Occasionally with success.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
nickb64
formerly from OC (it's EXACTLY like on tv)[truth]
+77|5801|Greatest Nation on Earth(USA)
The Often cited statistic of "47 Million Uninsured" is pure deceit.

The Number shown by the Census is 46.6 Million:
*9.5 Million are not citizens
*17 million make over $50,000 a year
*18 million were between 18-34 years old and in good health, choosing not to purchase health insurance
*Only 30% remained uninsured for more than 12 months
*50% regained health coverage within 4 months

The first three groups make up 44.5 million of the 46.6 million.
Man With No Name
جندي
+148|5765|The Wild West
cite your source or get out
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6897|67.222.138.85
no shit
Flecco
iPod is broken.
+1,048|6855|NT, like Mick Dundee

Do illegal immigrants participate in the US Census? Just curious.
Whoa... Can't believe these forums are still kicking.
Man With No Name
جندي
+148|5765|The Wild West

Flecco wrote:

Do illegal immigrants participate in the US Census? Just curious.
no



the truth is no one who posts here knows shit about illegal immigrants and if they try and tell you they do, youll know better.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6595|North Carolina

Man With No Name wrote:

Flecco wrote:

Do illegal immigrants participate in the US Census? Just curious.
no



the truth is no one who posts here knows shit about illegal immigrants and if they try and tell you they do, youll know better.
What if the poster is illegal?
Man With No Name
جندي
+148|5765|The Wild West
flecco is aboriginal
PureFodder
Member
+225|6475

nickb64 wrote:

The Often cited statistic of "47 Million Uninsured" is pure deceit.

The Number shown by the Census is 46.6 Million:
*9.5 Million are not citizens
*17 million make over $50,000 a year
*18 million were between 18-34 years old and in good health, choosing not to purchase health insurance
*Only 30% remained uninsured for more than 12 months
*50% regained health coverage within 4 months

The first three groups make up 44.5 million of the 46.6 million.
The uninsured isn't the troubling thing about the US sytem, it's the underinsured. These are the people who have cheaper insurance that means any medical attention will come with an excess, co-pays, limited coverage etc. so that even those with insurance can't actually seek medical attention due to the costs. various polls (see Gallup for example) repeatedly show that this is a significant factor for people in the US when deciding whether or not to get treatment and it is also reflected in the significantly lower percentage of Americans that seek medical assistance each year in comparison to most rich countries.

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