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Why Democrats Lost


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2014 Nov 7, 11:14am   67,921 views  60 comments

by curious2   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

Most Americans have not become Republicans, but gave up voting for Democrats who accomplished little other than imposing Obamacare, of which most Americans disapprove. I have given up trying to explain to Democrats the need for introspection, and the need to acknowledge the failure of a disastrous policy error. Democrats have now lost 15 seats in the Senate and 65 in the House, but still refuse to consider the possibility that they might have done something wrong, so I will simply let others do the talking:

"Seven in 10 people say Obamacare had bad or zero impact on US"

"Surprise Medical Bills: After Surgery, Surprise $117,000 Medical Bill From Doctor He Didn’t Know"

"Costs Can Go Up Fast When E.R. Is in Network but the Doctors Are Not"

"Patients’ Costs Skyrocket; Specialists’ Incomes Soar"

"Unable to Meet the Deductible or the Doctor"

"The Cost of Cancer Drugs"

"Americans Fear Being Swamped by Medical Debt"

The articles above are from 2014. The articles below describe the pre-existing condition that Democrats promised to solve but instead worsened:

"As Hospital Prices Soar, a Stitch Tops $500"

"How American Health Care Killed My Father"

"Long Term Care Insurance"

#politics

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10   marco   2014 Nov 8, 6:29am  

I'm sure the commander-in chief and his banker friends have all of our best interests at heart.

11   curious2   2014 Nov 8, 12:27pm  

From your linked article:

"Fifty-six percent of people are against the healthcare overhaul and 44 percent favor it... Sixty-one percent of Americans are against the mandate, the issue at the center of the Republicans' contention that the law is unconstitutional, while 39 percent favor it."

People oppose being forced to swallow the pile of manure, and they always have. The bill is ridiculous because of the outrageous markups that the legislation enables.

12   zzyzzx   2014 Nov 8, 12:39pm  

Hitler reacts to Democrat midterm losses

http://www.youtube.com/embed/YN6uMI6TCAw

16   curious2   2014 Nov 8, 2:51pm  

As the linked map shows, Republicans have become the dominant party. They have a 60-seat majority in the House, plus a majority in the Senate and on the Supreme Court, plus at least 31 Governors, plus majorities among state legislatures:

"Republicans now control state government outright in at least 24 states, one more than they did before the election. They control at least 66 of 99 state legislative chambers nationwide. And they cut the number of states with total Democratic control from 14 to seven — the lowest number since the Civil War."

Obamacare has given the Republicans a 10 point head start in every race, and the consequences have devastated the Democratic party. Independents oppose Obamacare by a margin of 3-1, but Democrats cannot even recognize that fact, let alone understand it. All Democrats can say is that everyone who doesn't drink the prescribed Obamacare Flavor-Aid is "right wing," thus handing the "right wing" a majority of voters and political power nationwide.

I don't know what to say about it anymore. I don't know how to talk with Democrats or Republicans. Both sects seem lost in their own counter-factual worldviews, and I don't know how to reach them. For example, most Republicans believe the earth was created less than 10,000 years ago as described in Genesis, while most Democrats insist that Obamacare should be (or even is actually) popular. I don't know what to say to people who reject evidence based decision making, and I would appreciate any honest suggestions.

17   tatupu70   2014 Nov 8, 7:38pm  

curious2 says

I don't know what to say about it anymore. I don't know how to talk with Democrats or Republicans. Both sects seem lost in their own counter-factual worldviews, and I don't know how to reach them. For example, most Republicans believe the earth was created less than 10,000 years ago as described in Genesis, while most Democrats insist that Obamacare should be (or even is actually) popular. I don't know what to say to people who reject evidence based decision making, and I would appreciate any honest suggestions.

When someone sees everyone else as the problem--it's usually best to look in a mirror. Then the real problem shows itself.

18   curious2   2014 Nov 8, 8:13pm  

tatupu70 says

When someone sees everyone else as the problem--it's usually best to look in a mirror. Then the real problem shows itself.

1) I don't see everyone else as the problem, only the two major parties.
2) I looked in the mirror, now what?
3) Are you happy with Tuesday's election results, or do you see a majority of voters as "the problem?"

19   tatupu70   2014 Nov 8, 8:46pm  

curious2 says

2) I looked in the mirror, now what?

Maybe some introspection?

curious2 says

Are you happy with Tuesday's election results, or do you see a majority of voters as "the problem?"

That question is not a proper either/or. The answer to both is no.

20   curious2   2014 Nov 8, 9:19pm  

tatupu70 says

curious2 says

Are you happy with Tuesday's election results, or do you see a majority of voters as "the problem?"

That question is not a proper either/or. The answer to both is no.

How can you claim to be unhappy with the election results without being unhappy with the voters?

21   smaulgld   2014 Nov 8, 10:36pm  

Very hard to defend either party. Amazing that people try.

Republicans didn't win because people want Republican policies- what ever they are- but because the Democrats showed how poorly they implemented their form of government from the failed obamacare, IRS targeting, VA mess-ups, on again off again never ending war in Syria/Iraq etc.

Now it's the republicans turn to show us their poor version of government.

22   smaulgld   2014 Nov 8, 10:40pm  

curious2 says

This 2010 article remains true:

"Fifty-nine percent of voters say that the biggest problem with the health-care system is the cost: They want reform that will bring down the cost of care. For these voters, the notion that you need to spend an additional trillion dollars doesn't make sense. If the program is supposed to save money, why does it cost anything at all?


On top of that, most voters expect that passage of the congressional plan will increase the cost of care at the same time it drives up government spending. Only 17% now believe it will reduce the cost of care."

As most voters predicted, spending increased and costs have continued to increase faster than wages and CPI.

There are so many ways on the left and right to "fix" healthcare from free market to providing coverage for those unable to pay to single payer.

What exactly is Obama care other than a way of getting people to put information into a government data base via a 1 billion dollar unsecure website so they can get worse coverage at a higher price or get fined if they don't buy it.

Certainly its not "affordable" not "health care" but has "Obama" written all over it.

23   smaulgld   2014 Nov 8, 10:46pm  

Who ever invented it had no idea what they were doing-blame everyone for it.

Blame Obama & democrats for passing it, blame the Supreme court for inventing legal fiction that it is a tax, blame republicans for not repealing it

24   tatupu70   2014 Nov 8, 11:00pm  

SoftShell says

Slate is a patently biased source.

try again.

Facts have a liberal bias too.

25   Robert Sproul   2014 Nov 8, 11:25pm  

I think the developmentally delayed Fox viewers AND the smug pricks who think the smug prick Maddow is the Second Coming can both understand this simple chart.

Note: "The projections include impacts from the Affordable Care Act."

26   anonymous   2014 Nov 9, 12:39am  

We will always have health care inflation as long as we, as the public, continue to want the latest technology and innovation in medical devices, pharmaceuticals and advanced procedures. You can only squeeze so much from a rock as it pertains to the payer infrastructure, but I believe Obamacare (or least the components from the Republican Chafee bill in 1993) is a good step in the right direction. I agree that Fox News and the right wing media has dumbed down the public into thinking Obamacare is socialized medicine...it's sad.

27   Tenpoundbass   2014 Nov 9, 12:46am  

debyne says

I agree that Fox News and the right wing media has dumbed down the public into thinking Obamacare is socialized medicine...it's sad.

The only brainwashing dumbing down of dishonesty, is the Democrats trying to claim they lost because the 2/3rds of the disgusted voters didn't show up to vote, because they are all FOX viewers.

And again...

If that IS the case, how about showing them a little more respect, or do you plan getting them to vote in 2016 by calling them idiots and misinformed?

28   Tenpoundbass   2014 Nov 9, 12:49am  

At least the Republicans did soul searching in '08 and after '12.

Stay scrong Liberals, stay scrong!

29   Bellingham Bill   2014 Nov 9, 1:51am  

CBO is projecting a $21.5T economy in 2022

$5T of that is 23%.

This rise from the current 16%+ is to be expected; the 80M baby boomers are age 50 to 68 now and will be 58 to 76 in 2022.

Hello health care boom!

30   Tenpoundbass   2014 Nov 9, 2:23am  

Bellingham Bill says

CBO is projecting a $21.5T economy in 2022

And in every board room in America, the topic of meetings, is how much of that share can they get. By cutting hours, automating production, and synthesizing materials. You guys better get to investing in those companies, your jobs just aren't going to dissolve themselves.

31   curious2   2014 Nov 9, 5:55am  

debyne says

We will always have health care inflation as long as we, as the public, continue to want the latest technology and innovation in medical devices, pharmaceuticals and advanced procedures.

In all other sectors, advancing technology produces better results at lower cost. The issue comes down to who defines "better results:" the medical industrial complex is designed to maximize revenue, so better results from that POV means more revenue. Better results for people, including better value for money, would be possible if even one of the two major parties prioritized that. Neither does.

32   smaulgld   2014 Nov 9, 6:42am  

Peter P says

Obamacare eliminates pre-existing conditions. This alone is worthwhile.

Absoutely not! That issue along with getting insurance for the uninsured could have been dealt with without creating a billion dollar web site and massive bureacracy

33   Peter P   2014 Nov 9, 6:48am  

smaulgld says

Peter P says

Obamacare eliminates pre-existing conditions. This alone is worthwhile.

Absoutely not! That issue along with getting insurance for the uninsured could have been dealt with without creating a billion dollar web site and massive bureacracy

You cannot eliminate the concept of pre-existing conditions without covering everybody. Otherwise, only those with pre-existing conditions will buy insurances.

Alas, the whole concept of healthcare insurance is ridiculous. Everybody needs some medical care.

Can I buy sunshine insurance in California?

34   smaulgld   2014 Nov 9, 6:59am  

Peter P says

Alas, the whole concept of healthcare insurance is ridiculous. Everybody needs some medical care.

That is the argument for single payer not for obama care

35   smaulgld   2014 Nov 9, 7:01am  

Peter P says

You cannot eliminate the concept of pre-existing conditions without covering everybody. Otherwise, only those with pre-existing conditions will buy insurances.

Basically that is the loop hole in Obama care. Many people will forego the insurance and pay the fine if its cheaper and then if they get sick or need expensive treatment, sign up and not be denied for a pre existing condition- the law was not well thought out.
Indeed the supreme court had to save the "law" by calling it a "tax"

36   Peter P   2014 Nov 9, 7:02am  

smaulgld says

Peter P says

Alas, the whole concept of healthcare insurance is ridiculous. Everybody needs some medical care.

That is the argument for single payer not for obama care

Obamacare is not ideal but it is one step closer to a better system.

37   Peter P   2014 Nov 9, 7:02am  

smaulgld says

Peter P says

You cannot eliminate the concept of pre-existing conditions without covering everybody. Otherwise, only those with pre-existing conditions will buy insurances.

Basically that is the loop hole in Obama care. Many people will forego the insurance and pay the fine if its cheaper and then if they get sick or need expensive treatment, sign up and not be denied for a pre existing condition- the law was not well thought out.

Indeed the supreme court had to save the "law" by calling it a "tax"

Hopefully more people will see the light and strive for a single-payer system.

38   smaulgld   2014 Nov 9, 7:09am  

Peter P says

Hopefully more people will see the light and strive for a single-payer system.

Because the government so painfully botched this version of an attempt of health insurance, the appetite for another comprehensive try will be limited

39   Peter P   2014 Nov 9, 7:30am  

smaulgld says

Because the government so painfully botched this version of an attempt of health insurance, the appetite for another comprehensive try will be limited

I don't know, I thought any enterprising conservative would balk at the notion of tying healthcare to employment.

Universal healthcare is simply another form of national defense.

40   curious2   2014 Nov 9, 7:43am  

Peter P says

You cannot eliminate the concept of pre-existing conditions without covering everybody.

Democrats parrot insurers' "adverse selection" argument in isolation, illustrating the difference between "the truth" and "the whole truth;" in reality, propitious selection and subsidies can outweigh adverse selection. The insurance industry evolved over centuries without mandates. No other country on earth levies a tax/penalty on ordinary individuals for not buying insurance; the nearest parallel might be Australia, where persons with exceptionally high incomes incur a 1% surcharge (less than half the Obamacare penalty) for not buying. The individual mandate was unnecessary from a public perspective but it gave unprecedented power to the politicians and lobbyists who wrote it on behalf of their corporate sponsors.

Peter P says

Universal healthcare is simply another form of national defense.

Neither major party sees it that way. As part of Obamacare and "stimulus," the federal government bought flu vaccines but refused to give them to actual people. Instead, the administration gave the vaccines to corporate sponsors to sell at a profit, and the providers charged more than the market would bear, so more than 70 million vaccines expired unused while more than 10,000 Americans died of H1N1 and hundreds of thousands were hospitalized enriching the Chicago-based AHA. "Thanks, Obamacare!" By far the biggest beneficiaries of that legislation have been the revenue recipients and the Republican party.

41   smaulgld   2014 Nov 9, 9:55am  

Peter P says

Universal healthcare is simply another form of national defense.

Well then the conservative solution will be to bring healthcare to Iraq and Syria first before they bring it here!

43   curious2   2014 Nov 13, 5:22am  

CBS has the Wisconsin story too, in case the "Dislike"r above didn't believe the NY Daily News:

"There's no definitive data on how often patients are taken to hospitals not covered by insurance, but officials at St. Mary's said they believe Rothbauer's case is hardly isolated.

"I think what people don't often realize is that healthcare is primarily a business," Gaines said. "The reality is that until you get sick and you have to use an insurance policy you can't and don't understand what it is about."

But above all, one thing is clear.

"I'm most frustrated that I didn't have a choice," Rothbauer said. "I didn't have a choice then and don't have a choice now.""

Democrats cling to their belief in this legislation as fervently and desperately as religious fanatics cling to their belief in eternal life through Crusade/Jihad/whatever. I've racked up more than a dozen Dislikes in this thread alone, mainly for quoting accurately reported facts. Simply quoting a report of this woman's story got Disliked. Democrats don't want to understand why a majority of Americans are now turning to Republicans. It's like not wanting to understand a train wreck, oh it's nobody's fault, trains just wreck, or the train didn't wreck and anybody who claims to have been injured by it is lying. The issue is, a majority of Americans disapprove of the legislation, often with legitimate reasons why, and many of them vote. Since enacting this legislation, Democrats have fallen numerically to their lowest (in share of elected officials) in more than a century, and yet they refuse even to consider that they might possibly have a problem.

44   anonymous   2014 Nov 13, 5:43am  

The democrats problem is that the voters are too stupid. Ask yourself one question. Is your mother a dumb ass tea bagger? If so, You have every right to blame all the world's problems on republicans.

No, the problem isn't that democrats were stupid enough to think x that Americans are stupid enough to support heritage foundation care, So long as its called ohblahblah

45   AverageBear   2014 Nov 13, 11:33am  

I think the Dems lost because Obama lied to us. In order to get a smaller group of uninsured covered, he had to fuck over a really big group with insurance. And how did he do it? He had to lie: Save $2500, keep your plan, keep your doctor. The arm-twisting at the 11th hour to get it passed... It's that simple.

Defend Obamacare all you want. Every Dem trying to keep their job wanted to hide their record of supporting Obama, and wanted him far fuckin AWAY from their campaign.... And Nov 4th proved them right....

46   Blurtman   2014 Nov 13, 12:14pm  

The Loretta Lynch nomination demonstrates how out of touch the Dems are.

47   curious2   2014 Nov 13, 2:32pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCKisShostikovitch says

Mark Foley

Don't forget Senator Emeritus Larry Craig, who will be the nation's new Restroom Security Inspector, traveling tirelessly from one airport toilet to the next, searching for terrorists with whom he can practice his wide stance.

The question is not whether the Republicans are bad or horrible or both; the question is, how did the Democrats lose to those guys, and what can Democrats do differently next time. Hint: maybe reconsider the policy that polls between -10 and -20...

48   dublin hillz   2014 Nov 14, 3:32am  

I think that the biggest backlash to ACA must be due to costs. For example, if someone does not have health insurance from their job and their income is too high to qualify for subsidies, DINKS could easily fork over $500 per month, a couple with 1 child would spend in the $600s and a couple with 2 kids will pay almost $800 per month for a bronze plan according to Covered California. That is a rather hefty sum that could and would be lifestyle affecting to many people especially to those who just make enough not to qualify for a subsidy.

49   curious2   2014 Nov 14, 3:44am  

dublin hillz says

the biggest backlash to ACA must be due to costs.

I quoted a 2010 article with data supporting that view, and got 3 Dislikes for my effort.

A deeper issue though is that the legislation changes, in a fundamental way, the relationship between the federal government and individual citizens. It is like the closing of the western frontier in the 19th century. Since 2010, for the first time, executives and lobbyists for one industry sector have converted your government into their tool to compel you to buy their products and "services" at prices no one else in the world would pay. From their POV, you are cattle in a feedlot, and the purpose of your life is to maximize their revenue, and your government agrees with them. Most of the money goes to waste, fraud, and abuse, as multiple measures confirm, but that's the point. The additional markup is shared out via lobbyists to political patronage networks, so the game continues.

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