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2013   PeopleUnited   2010 Mar 24, 4:47pm  

Troy says

This debate is liberalism vs. conservatism in a nutshell. Liberals ask “can’t the government do something?” while conservatives

Ask: can't WE THE PEOPLE do something rather than relying on Uncle Sam and Big Brother to take care of us? Lets start a charity. Lets get together some doctors, nurses etc... to set up free clinics for those in need. Lets allow people to write off the cost of their health care so they are not taxed on being healthy. Lets let non-profit charitable organizations run hospitals.

Then liberals come along with all those rules and regulations making it nearly impossible for anyone but the government and the mega corporations to run health care operations. Costs skyrocket, small clinics close and access is curtailed. Sorry, but big brother and uncle sam don't solve or fix any problem that you and I can't fix if we work together in our local communities to do so. Why not do that first?

by the way Troy, I guess you didn't really mean it when you said your last post was on March 13th. So why should we believe anything you say?

2014   Vicente   2010 Mar 24, 6:18pm  

Ummm, yes charity will be lining up to provide you treatment for MS. I suspect not.

2015   Â¥   2010 Mar 24, 6:23pm  

AdHominem says

I guess you didn’t really mean it when you said your last post was on March 13th. So why should we believe anything you say?

An actual ad hominem attack from AdHominem. This is my surprised face.

But you're right. I'm wasting too much valuable time here going around in pointless argumentation and do want to sign off. Maybe this one will be it . . .

2016   nope   2010 Mar 24, 6:58pm  

AdHominem says

Ask: can’t WE THE PEOPLE do something rather than relying on Uncle Sam and Big Brother to take care of us?

No, "we" can't because "we" are stupid, lazy, and apathetic (obviously not all of us, but enough to make things difficult)

2017   elliemae   2010 Mar 24, 10:39pm  

Kevin says

AdHominem says


Ask: can’t WE THE PEOPLE do something rather than relying on Uncle Sam and Big Brother to take care of us?

No, “we” can’t because “we” are stupid, lazy, and apathetic (obviously not all of us, but enough to make things difficult)

If you're gonna describe me, you forgot middle-aged, overweight and bitter. I'm getting a bumper sticker made that says that.

2018   elliemae   2010 Mar 24, 11:54pm  

Haven't they already done that - built the world a home and furnished it with love? You should have plenty of time, then.

2019   Paralithodes   2010 Mar 25, 12:31am  

elliemae says

The White House didn’t create the story, but it did make references to it. Unfortunately, the pesky media found the story first. I guess that the White House shouldn’t refer to it even though it’s topical?

The WH and others in the Administration like Kathleen Sebelius specifically pointed out Wellpoint without the full context, in an entirely misleading way. Yes, they shouldn't have referred to it, because there was nothing to specifically refer to without being misleading. If the truth is on your side in the issue, then why lie?

elliemae says

Sure, some of the profits are a result of the sale of a unit. But Wellpoint made huge profits

Some? How about the vast majority? Wellpoint made "huge profits" simply because they had "huge revenue." Their profit margin (not counting a one-time sale of a huge business unit) has been typically between 2-5%. Is that a "huge" profit margin? Have you taken an accounting and/or finance class?

2020   CBOEtrader   2010 Mar 25, 1:20am  

Para,

Unfortunately you have accurately diagnosed the basic mindset of the average liberal, as demonstrated on this site. They are the epitomy of the pot calling the kettle black. When fox news uses propoganda, they yell bloody murder, but when the propoganda supports their politics, they fail to even acknowledge the propoganda.

The democratic brainwashing machine is a powerful force.

Pot, meet kettle.

2021   tatupu70   2010 Mar 25, 1:23am  

Paralithodes says

The WH and others in the Administration like Kathleen Sebelius specifically pointed out Wellpoint without the full context, in an entirely misleading way. Yes, they shouldn’t have referred to it, because there was nothing to specifically refer to without being misleading. If the truth is on your side in the issue, then why lie?

My lord, you have really beaten this into the ground. WH just repeated exactly what Wellpoint had reported as their earnings. How is that a "lie"?? I would argue that it was Wellpoint that was deceiving in its earnings report. Blaming the WH is a stretch.

Paralithodes says

Some? How about the vast majority? Wellpoint made “huge profits” simply because they had “huge revenue.” Their profit margin (not counting a one-time sale of a huge business unit) has been typically between 2-5%. Is that a “huge” profit margin? Have you taken an accounting and/or finance class?

OK--if you really want to dig into the numbers on this, let's look at what % of Wellpoint's costs are for actually providing healthcare. How much is overhead? What is their cash flow? I'm sure insurance companies do everything they can to hide profits with all the attention on them.

2022   Eliza   2010 Mar 25, 2:21am  

Here's the thing about Wellpoint and their crazy increase in fees: they have to do it because they are working with a population increasingly composed of those who would not do without health insurance because they know that given their health status, they must have insurance because they will be needing some health care. Where are the healthy people? Well, some of them are opting out entirely, and others are going with cheaper, catastrophic health insurance plans which cost less and don't cover day-to-day issues, unless their day-to-day issues include being hit by a truck.

And that is the vector in this. Insurance costs go up, healthy people and their employers opt out of full insurance in order to control costs, lather, rinse, repeat. Unless they are immortal, the healthy people will become less healthy at some point, but if they are not able or not choosing to fund preventive care, they may not know it for awhile, and by then they will be sicker than they might have been otherwise, and whatever is wrong with them will cost more to address than it might have otherwise.

Thus there is real value in creating a situation that will allow more people--including healthy people--to buy and to afford more complete health insurance packages. When the insurance companies have a larger pool of subscribers, a pool of subscribers which includes healthy people as well as people with illness, the insurance companies have a more workable, stable business situation. When people out in the world have better access to health care--including those early doctor visits which allow them to ask that important question, or perhaps to notice and derail the kind of weight gain that leads to diabetes, heart disease, etc--those people get to lead healthier, fuller lives, and they are more likely to be productive in society, and, oh yeah, their health care costs will be lower and more predictable over time.

I don't think Wellpoint is the devil, but clearly their subscribers cannot continue to accept 39% yearly increases, and if the subscribers cannot accept those increases, then that company and others like it will need to come up with another solution. Something closer to universal coverage (in any of a number of possible business structures) would help to change the current vector in such a way that the companies may survive...and the people, too.

This seems logical to me. I don't see why people are getting so upset about it, or why it is a partisan issue.

2023   MCM   2010 Mar 25, 2:28am  

Sad. I have read the comments, and it is apparent that most of you on both sides have been sucked in by the puppet masters in DC. HCR is nothing but a hot button issue to keep folks divided and interested so the respective parties can still get their votes. There is no "health care crisis". It is all made up hype, just like the supposed impending collapse of the financial markets. Follow the money - how have the financial stocks done since the bailout? How have the insurance companies stocks done since HCR passed? Bottom line is HCR does absolutely nothing to change the status quo - large companies will get richer, poor folks will stay poor, and anyone that actually works and produces gets to pay more. But go ahead and argue about constitutional freedoms and social morality, because it will make your feel better about yourself.

2024   pkennedy   2010 Mar 25, 5:30am  

It is very complex indeed, and partially self fulfilling. If you make a calculation that stocks will jump 20% in the next month, they will.

There are people, such as Warren Buffet, who have had entire careers doing much better than market. This is not only due to his ability to find good companies, but his ability to understand how things will unfold in the future. The science is there, but once it escapes to everyone, it becomes self fulfilling, which is a problem.

2025   Â¥   2010 Mar 25, 8:46am  

MCM says

There is no “health care crisis”

BlueCross declined me for private PPO coverage in 2003 because I had seen a knee specialist in 2002. F--- You.

The present system works really well if you're a millionaire and can self-cover, have a good job with a PPO, or can tolerate HMO levels of service. That's about half the population. The other half of this nation has been f---ed over by the status quo.

Compared to other modernized nations like Canada, Japan, Switzerland, France, Italy, Germany, Norway, Denmark, Holland our system is horribly suboptimal in providing care for dollar input.

The current HCR is the best our political system could do. The 25% of the country with their heads on backwards and the general 40-40 liberal-conservative split in this country militated against deeper reforms.

2026   MCM   2010 Mar 25, 9:03am  

Troy says

MCM says

There is no “health care crisis”

BlueCross declined me for private PPO coverage in 2003 because I had seen a knee specialist in 2002. F— You.

Sorry, still don't see the crisis. So you couldn't get INSURANCE! The horror! Are you dead? Are streets lined with dead people because they didn't have INSURANCE?

I just can't believe that folks think that by forcing everyone to buy INSURANCE it is going to reduce the cost of health care and magically make us all healthy.

2027   tatupu70   2010 Mar 25, 9:21am  

MCM says

Sorry, still don’t see the crisis. So you couldn’t get INSURANCE! The horror! Are you dead? Are streets lined with dead people because they didn’t have INSURANCE?

Oh, I see. It's OK if some people die because they didn't have insurance--as long as it's not a whole lot. And if they are buried quickly so you don't really have to see them.

So, how many deaths before it becomes a "crisis" in your book? 1000? 10,000?

2028   Â¥   2010 Mar 25, 10:24am  

MCM says

I just can’t believe that folks think that by forcing everyone to buy INSURANCE it is going to reduce the cost of health care and magically make us all healthy.

the point is to move the status quo to the Canada, Japan, Swiss, Dutch, Danish, German, Italian, etc. systems.

This is going to be a very long process because 20% of this country are outright nutjobs, another 20% are deluded fools, and another 20% can't find their ass with a map. That leaves 40-50% of the country, depending on the phase of the moon, to caucus for progressive policy.

I'm 42 now and self-covered through a major PPO provider. The relationship is completely asymmetric, they have all the pricing power since going uncovered in this world is not an option for the financially prudent. Regulation is coming none too soon for me.

What we need are actual cost controls, to take the immense profits out of medicine, but HillaryCare got shot down 15+ years ago now. ObamaCare is hopefully just the first step. As a first step it is what it is -- not too different from RomneyCare. It is indeed a victory for the existing for-profit medical establishment and further improvements will require more fighting against the forces of got-mine-screw-you conservatism.

Insurance alone isn't going to create more capacity in the health services. But an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure as they say. It's a solid first step.

2029   PeopleUnited   2010 Mar 25, 10:39am  

Nomograph says

MCM says

Sorry, still don’t see the crisis. So you couldn’t get INSURANCE! The horror! Are you dead?

And these folks wonder why they don’t get a seat at the table where the decisions are made.

Yeah because the AMA, Big pharma etc.. are not at all special interest groups looking out for their own bottom line. J6P doesn't deserve a voice because???????

2030   tatupu70   2010 Mar 25, 12:07pm  

AdHominem says

Yeah because the AMA, Big pharma etc.. are not at all special interest groups looking out for their own bottom line. J6P doesn’t deserve a voice because???????

J6P is welcome, MCM is not. Anyone who doesn't care if their fellow man dies or not doesn't get to help make decisions about the future of America

2031   wcalleallegre   2010 Mar 25, 12:32pm  

Here is what will likely happen:

1. Cost overruns
2. Fraud
3. Additional coverage extended to groups
4. Rising deficits in the program
5. Lower payments to physicians
6. Lower payments to hospitals
7. Delays in payments
8. Rising taxes on the rich
9. Rationing by doctors, hospitals, government
10. Delays in treatment
11. More HMO care: assembly line medicine
12. A search for scapegoats

Obamacare will lead to an expansion of these forms of
medicine:

1. Concierge
2. Wal-Mart
3. ER
4. HMO
5. Mexican

CONCIERGE. The rich and very rich hire their own
physicians. They pay top dollar. The physicians do not take
third-party payments, either from the government or insurance
companies. They are independent practitioners. They make
house calls. The houses they call on are very large.

For the upper middle class, there are fee-for-service
physicians. They take no third-party payments. They do not
make house calls.

WAL-MART. These are the walk-in clinics. They are
price competitive. They treat minor ailments. They sell
services on a one-time basis. They take credit cards. They
may or may not cater to the Medicare crowd. They are
assembly-line clinics. There are no major surgeries or other
high-cost, high-risk services.

ER. Large hospital emergency rooms are mandated by law.
The poor get treated there. In a life-and-death emergency,
they work. People who would otherwise die in a couple of
hours are saved. For walk-in patients, the ERs ration by
time. Patients demonstrate their patience.

HMO. This style of medicine is efficient. It cuts
costs by cutting services and cutting time. You see the
physician on duty. You may not have seen him before. His
job is to get you in and out as fast as possible. Time is
monitored by the company. Computers make this easy.

MEXICAN. This is off-shore medicine. In Canada, when
you can't get treated for months or years, you come to the
United States and pay. This will not be possible for
Canadians much longer, except for rich ones. Mexico will
serve upper middle-class Americans as the USA has served
Canadians.

It is possible to get very good surgical care in Asia
and Latin America. You have to know who the good
practitioners are. Asian hospitals sell for 25% the same
level of services. There is less regulation there. Place
fares are cheap. A stay in a hotel is cheap.

There will be entrepreneurs who set up Websites off-
shore that direct Americans to practitioners abroad. The Web
allows this sort of advertising.

Physicians who practice alone or in small limited
liability corporations will find that they cannot compete
under the new payment system. Assembly-line medicine will
replace the traditional doctor-patient relationship.

2032   Â¥   2010 Mar 25, 1:32pm  

The stupid thing is that the only criticisms that carry any weight are those from the left, not the right.

ObamaCare's mandate-with-subsidies (what is causing the most sand-in-the-vag reaction here) is basically what the f---ing Heritage Foundation was proposing not too long ago:

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/david-frum-aei-heritage-and-health-care/

And of course it's a lot like RomneyCare.

Most of this song and dance has been by the establishment to avoid any actual radical reform (single payer or the public option that would lead to single payer). The public has in fact been mau mau'd to accept something less than what we could have gotten with all three policy elements in Democratic hands.

2033   Zephyr   2010 Mar 25, 2:38pm  

Economics - some people understand some of it, and most people do not.

Unfortunately, when making economic forecasts one is always working with only partial and imperfect information.

2034   MCM   2010 Mar 25, 3:13pm  

Troy says
What we need are actual cost controls, to take the immense profits out of medicine, but HillaryCare got shot down 15+ years ago now. ObamaCare is hopefully just the first step. As a first step it is what it is — not too different from RomneyCare. It is indeed a victory for the existing for-profit medical establishment and further improvements will require more fighting against the forces of got-mine-screw-you conservatism.

Hi Troy, I totally agree. We desperately need to reign in the costs of health care - that is where the reform needs to happen. The current HCR may be a first step, however, there is too much unpleasant baggage associated with this first step. Just my opinion. Doesn't mean I'm right and your wrong, and vice versa.

2035   CBOEtrader   2010 Mar 25, 3:21pm  

MCM says

Troy says
What we need are actual cost controls, to take the immense profits out of medicine, but HillaryCare got shot down 15+ years ago now. ObamaCare is hopefully just the first step. As a first step it is what it is — not too different from RomneyCare. It is indeed a victory for the existing for-profit medical establishment and further improvements will require more fighting against the forces of got-mine-screw-you conservatism.


Hi Troy, I totally agree. We desperately need to reign in the costs of health care - that is where the reform needs to happen. The current HCR may be a first step, however, there is too much unpleasant baggage associated with this first step. Just my opinion. Doesn’t mean I’m right and your wrong, and vice versa.

Everyone agrees that costs are too high. The disagreement in policy is in regards to the scapegoating half of that thought.

The democrats blame the evil corporations, libertarians blame the corrupt government, and republicans blame gay people.

2036   MCM   2010 Mar 25, 3:26pm  

Nomograph says

MCM says

Sorry, still don’t see the crisis. So you couldn’t get INSURANCE! The horror! Are you dead?

And these folks wonder why they don’t get a seat at the table where the decisions are made.

Hey Nomo, please clarify. Exactly who is it you are referring to not getting a seat at the decision table? I voiced my opinion, and since it doesn't agree with yours, I (and anybody that agrees with my opinion) automatically lose our seat at the decision table?

A rather feeble analysis at best...

2037   MCM   2010 Mar 25, 3:38pm  

tatupu70 says

AdHominem says

Yeah because the AMA, Big pharma etc.. are not at all special interest groups looking out for their own bottom line. J6P doesn’t deserve a voice because???????

J6P is welcome, MCM is not. Anyone who doesn’t care if their fellow man dies or not doesn’t get to help make decisions about the future of America

And the second board bully weighs in! I just need Vincente to jump in, and I score a trifecta!

Please go back a read my posts. I never stated I don't care about people dying. I was trying to make a point about insurance. Silly sheep, not having insurance does not guarantee that you are going to die.

Also, you and Nomo have a rather myopic view of who is making the decisions about the future of America - I am very certain that a large number of very uncaring individuals are sitting at the table.

2038   MCM   2010 Mar 25, 3:47pm  

tatupu70 says

MCM says

Sorry, still don’t see the crisis. So you couldn’t get INSURANCE! The horror! Are you dead? Are streets lined with dead people because they didn’t have INSURANCE?

Oh, I see. It’s OK if some people die because they didn’t have insurance–as long as it’s not a whole lot. And if they are buried quickly so you don’t really have to see them.
So, how many deaths before it becomes a “crisis” in your book? 1000? 10,000?

How many people have actually died because they didn't have health insurance? Serious question - I don't know the answer, so I wish someone would jump in with some verifiable statistics. I suspect it is a very, very small number.

If hundreds of people a day were dying, it might be considered a crisis. Or a pandemic.

The real crisis is the underlying cost of health care. And since big business controls congress, and the politicians are masters at keeping shallow thinkers spun up on hot button issues (ie crisis!), I really don't see things changing.

2039   MarkInSF   2010 Mar 25, 3:55pm  

CBOEtrader says

Everyone agrees that costs are too high. The disagreement in policy is in regards to the scapegoating half of that thought.

The democrats blame the evil corporations, libertarians blame the corrupt government, and republicans blame gay people.

Nah, I don't think that's quite accurate. I'm ostensibly a "Democrat" since I usually vote that way, but I think it's just the incentives that are structured all wrong, not that anybody is evil.

I actually agree with former Republican Senate Majority Leader Bill Frisk, who had this to say a few days ago:

Medicare 45 years ago and the current health care legislation are historic in that they are both huge coverage bills, focused primarily on distributive justice: a country as prosperous as ours should ensure affordable access to health care for every American. But Medicare was a reform bill, and today’s Congressional bill is not. Without substantive reform that includes purposeful alignment of incentives throughout the care delivery value chain, spending will skyrocket, deficits will definitely increase, and the country’s recovery from recession will be slowed. With passage, we should immediately unite and commit to a true reform initiative that is patient-centered, provider friendly and consumer driven, fueled by 21st-century information and choice.

Though I would add that "consumer driven" is not sufficient. "science driven" is also needed. There is too much testing/treatment that is not scientifically proven to be of substantial clinical benefit, or has very high cost/benefit, but medical care "consumers" are all for it.

Funny how politicians can be perfectly reasonable once they're not in politics any more. Compare that to the McCains hissy fit "There will be no cooperation for the rest of the year"

2040   MarkInSF   2010 Mar 25, 4:01pm  

BTW, CBOTrader, you mostly convinced me that the high level of infant mortality in the US is largely due to teen pregnancy. I did a bit of poking around, and your conclusion appears sound.

I think it is hard to argue that access to prenatal care and counseling would not be a great benefit these mothers and their children though, and probably at good cost/benefit to society as a whole too.

2041   CBOEtrader   2010 Mar 25, 4:19pm  

MCM says

The real crisis is the underlying cost of health care.

The US healthcare system is arguably the most highly regulated healthcare system in the world. We have been throwing increasing amounts of government resources at our healthcare system for the last 40 years. Currently, the US government alone spends more per capita on healthcare than any other government in the world. Yet our healthcare inefficiencies persist.

How befuddling.

Conclusion: the tea partiers (did you hear they are RACISTS??!!), Fox news pundits, and our retarded republican step-brother must be to blame. All we have to do now is increase government spending on healthcare, compliment each other for being brave/charitable, then join hands whilst singing kumbaya.

Oh, and anyone who disagrees with us hates poor people, likes to spit on minorities, steals from the elderly, and has sex with their cousins.

2042   CBOEtrader   2010 Mar 25, 4:32pm  

MarkInSF says

BTW, CBOTrader, you mostly convinced me that the high level of infant mortality in the US is largely due to teen pregnancy. I did a bit of poking around, and your conclusion appears sound.
I think it is hard to argue that access to prenatal care and counseling would not be a great benefit these mothers and their children though, and probably at good cost/benefit to society as a whole too.

I agree.

The point I was trying to emphasize though is that there is no real evidence to suggest that these mothers don't have access to prenatal care...especially the super poor, pregnant teens. Their healthcare at the very least is covered. At a minimum the poorest of US mothers have EXCELLENT post natal care.

The treatment for preventing premature birth is to live a healthy lifestyle. After the first 2 prenatal visits, the statistical benefit of preventing premature births via prenatal care is nonexistent.

2043   Paralithodes   2010 Mar 25, 9:45pm  

tatupu70 says

My lord, you have really beaten this into the ground. WH just repeated exactly what Wellpoint had reported as their earnings. How is that a “lie”?? I would argue that it was Wellpoint that was deceiving in its earnings report. Blaming the WH is a stretch.

And oddly enough, I'm not the one to first bring up Wellpoint in these forums. It was brought up by someone arguing your side, with exactly the same false argument that the WH claims. Your over-simplication of what the White House did, as well as your assumptions of Wellpoint, are dishonest. It is obvious that you didn't even read the short press release that Wellpoint put out with its quarterly report (the type of release that nearly ALL companies do). You should at least do the very basic research.

If you believe that insurance companies are "hiding profits," then put your evidence on the table. It's clear that you didn't even read Wellpoint's releases, so now go through their statements and point out the specific areas that you believe they are "hiding" profits by burrying it in overhead, etc. While you are at it, ask the SEC to investigate them on these charges, as well as obvious violations of Sarbaines-Oxley. Otherwise your argument comes down to a mere witchhunt, which is of course exactly what the WH wants you and other followers to do: These companies have "huge" and "massive profits." It's not reflected in their financial statements? Oh, that is because they are hiding them elsewhere. Government is completely transparent and objective, private industry is dishonest.

2044   Paralithodes   2010 Mar 25, 9:48pm  

Eliza says

This seems logical to me. I don’t see why people are getting so upset about it, or why it is a partisan issue.

It's a partisan issue because the Administration specifically targetted Wellpoint with a partisan point, specifically misrepresented their profits to make it seem as if their "one quarter" profit was not an anomaly based on things other than premiums, and to also make it seem that this "one quarter" profit was related to their premium increase. For people who like to parrot how conservatives don't understand "nuance," many liberals here seem to either not recognize or just simply feign ignorance of the same.

2045   Paralithodes   2010 Mar 25, 9:51pm  

Nomograph says

And these folks wonder why they don’t get a seat at the table where the decisions are made.

All this time the conventional wisdom is that the Republicans simply didn't cooperate/participate or present any ideas, and their claims that they were shut out of the process was bunk. It's good to see someone on the other side finally admitting that they were in fact shut out. Thanks!

2046   Paralithodes   2010 Mar 25, 9:56pm  

Troy says

the point is to move the status quo to the Canada, Japan, Swiss, Dutch, Danish, German, Italian, etc. systems.

So, the point IS in fact to go to a "single payer" system? So all of the arguments that many of the liberals here made, that this bill is not a step towards a government run system, all of the vitriolic push-back against those who claimed that this was socialist in nature - was all just posturing and feigned indignation, because in fact, its intent is in fact to go towards that goal? Thanks for finally admitting it.

2047   Paralithodes   2010 Mar 25, 10:05pm  

MarkInSF says

BTW, CBOTrader, you mostly convinced me that the high level of infant mortality in the US is largely due to teen pregnancy. I did a bit of poking around, and your conclusion appears sound.
I think it is hard to argue that access to prenatal care and counseling would not be a great benefit these mothers and their children though, and probably at good cost/benefit to society as a whole too.

Mark, I sincerely suggest that you keep CBOEtrader's example, and your own research, in mind when you hear of such things as that the US "ranks 37th," or otherwise on some poll or another. The devil is in the details as to whether their components are really comparing apples to apples, or accounting for numerous confounding variables. The WHO includes within their rankings a metric that is essentially about the degree of nationalization of the health care system, and therefore the most "socialized" systems will rank higher in that component - affecting their overall rank - regardless of the actual hands-on care system in the country. This is no surprise: The WHO is specifically anti-free market with health care and has "social justice," "gender" issues, and "global warming" as some of its major issues - not very different than many other left-leaning advocacy groups.

2048   elliemae   2010 Mar 25, 11:04pm  

MCM says

Nomograph says


MCM says

Sorry, still don’t see the crisis. So you couldn’t get INSURANCE! The horror! Are you dead?

And these folks wonder why they don’t get a seat at the table where the decisions are made.

Hey Nomo, please clarify. Exactly who is it you are referring to not getting a seat at the decision table? I voiced my opinion, and since it doesn’t agree with yours, I (and anybody that agrees with my opinion) automatically lose our seat at the decision table?
A rather feeble analysis at best…

You & I will never actually sit at the decision table. We can see it on teevee, but that's as close as we'll ever get. You can't lose what you never had - even feeble ol' Nomo knows that.

2049   tatupu70   2010 Mar 26, 12:42am  

Paralithodes says

If you believe that insurance companies are “hiding profits,” then put your evidence on the table. It’s clear that you didn’t even read Wellpoint’s releases, so now go through their statements and point out the specific areas that you believe they are “hiding” profits by burrying it in overhead, etc. While you are at it, ask the SEC to investigate them on these charges, as well as obvious violations of Sarbaines-Oxley. Otherwise your argument comes down to a mere witchhunt, which is of course exactly what the WH wants you and other followers to do: These companies have “huge” and “massive profits.” It’s not reflected in their financial statements? Oh, that is because they are hiding them elsewhere. Government is completely transparent and objective, private industry is dishonest.

Well, it's very difficult for a layman to determine if Wellpoint is hiding profits as I can only see their public statements--if it was in there, it wouldn't really be hidden now would it? And give me a break with the SEC and Sarbanes Oxley BS--you don't think there are ways to move around numbers to make you appear less profitable?

But... here's what is freely available in their year end results:

Wellpoint free cash flow "exceeded $3 billion for 2009" Hmmm--that sounds like some serious money to me.

Wellpoint's SG&A was 16% for 2009. That equals another $9 billion. So, we're up to $12 Billion now just from one company covers 1/9th of the insured public. So, multiply that by 9 and we're at $108 Billion/year potential savings. Seems like real money to me.

Granted, there will be some administrative costs under any program, but I'd like to think that we could trim a LOT there... So, there you go. $100 billion/year.

2050   tatupu70   2010 Mar 26, 12:48am  

MCM says

How many people have actually died because they didn’t have health insurance? Serious question - I don’t know the answer, so I wish someone would jump in with some verifiable statistics. I suspect it is a very, very small number.
If hundreds of people a day were dying, it might be considered a crisis. Or a pandemic.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/09/18/deaths.health.insurance/index.html

It took about 3 seconds to google this article. 45K/365 = 123/day. I guess that qualifies as a crisis then.

2051   MCM   2010 Mar 26, 1:23am  

tatupu70 says

MCM says

How many people have actually died because they didn’t have health insurance? Serious question - I don’t know the answer, so I wish someone would jump in with some verifiable statistics. I suspect it is a very, very small number.
If hundreds of people a day were dying, it might be considered a crisis. Or a pandemic.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/09/18/deaths.health.insurance/index.html
It took about 3 seconds to google this article. 45K/365 = 123/day. I guess that qualifies as a crisis then.

From the article:
"The researchers examined government health surveys from more than 9,000 people aged 17 to 64, taken from 1986-1994, and then followed up through 2000. They determined that the uninsured have a 40 percent higher risk of death than those with private health insurance as a result of being unable to obtain necessary medical care. The researchers then extrapolated the results to census data from 2005 and calculated there were 44,789 deaths associated with lack of health insurance."

Seems like just another spin on numbers with a pie in the sky conclusion. And nevermind the underlying agenda of the American Public Health Association (APHA).
Also, key word in the conclusion was "associated". No one dies because they don't have health insurance. Health insurance may be a contributing factor, but was not main cause. Insurance does not fix a ruptured appendix. Folks die because of lack of healthcare.

I really, really want to help people understand the difference between INSURANCE and healthcare.

2052   tatupu70   2010 Mar 26, 2:13am  

MCM says

Folks die because of lack of healthcare.

Yes, and they don't get healthcare without insurance. Are you having a problem making that connnection?

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