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I think the answer lies with the fucking lawyers, the ambulance chasers, who make it impossible for us to have an efficient health care system.
You've been brainwashed by the Koch Bros. Lawsuits and malpractice insurance are a rounding error in the cost of healthcare.
No Joey, you don't get it. The frivolous lawsuits is what results in "defensive medicine" Doctors will order every unnecessary test and procedure, just to protect themselves.
Our system is fucked up.
I would study the healthcare systems that work for other countries, learn from them, and copy the best.
I don't think grass is greener on the other side.
I was hoping you would spew that false narrative. Now for FACTS...
...."After the ACA was passed in 2010, the federal government established a temporary high-risk pool for people not being served by the state polls, and it enrolled another 135,000.
In all, estimating generously about 500,000 people would likely need high-risk pool coverage after ObamaCare is repealed.
That’s a far cry from the Obama administration’s claim that 129 million Americans with a pre-existing condition could be denied coverage.†That inflated number exaggerates what medical conditions trigger a coverage denial."
http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/healthcare/309081-the-pre-existing-conditions-mythSee, the "pre-existing conditions myth" was just that, scare tactics by Obama, and you bought the lie:, hook, line and sinker.
Forgive me if I'm a bit skeptical of an article written by a former Republican Lt. Governor. Her opinion is that fewer than 129MM would be denied, but she has no basis for that opinion. And she is 100% incorrect that pre-existing conditions don't matter in the private sector. They don't matter until you are laid off and are not continuously covered. She paints a rosy picture, but even her rosy picture estimates that $16B is needed for the high risk pool. Trumpcare sets aside $8B. And guess what, you're paying for it.
https://apnews.com/56832ece99244ce585d20e8196f0afec
Annual and lifetime caps are back!!!
I don't think grass is greener on the other side.
If cost is one of your concerns, then it definitely is. The US spends more per capital on healthcare than any other civilized country. By FAR.
The US spends more per capital on healthcare than any other civilized country.
You can thank Obama and the Dems for NOT addressing that with their major healthcare reform bill of Obamacare?
Why didn't they address the costs??
How we reduce the cost of healthcare is the million dollar question. Here are are a few suggestions.
1. Revise/ change the liability laws.
2. Offshore our healthcare do other countries.
3. ....I don't know...please comment.
How we reduce the cost of healthcare is the million dollar question
just copy the healthcare system of any of the other developed countries, it will already be a huge imporvement
I don't think grass is greener on the other side.
If cost is one of your concerns, then it definitely is. The US spends more per capital on healthcare than any other civilized country. By FAR.
That's because we are a very unhealthy nation. People stuff their faces all day with all kinds of junk food, there are consequences for that. Not to mention people get paid here more than other countries, prices do go up to absorb income.
The Schear family of Huntington Beach says they were flying from Hawaii to Los Angeles last week when airline staff asked them to give up a seat occupied by their 2-year-old son and carry him on their laps for the duration of the flight.
The entire airline staff should be arrested for wreckless endangerment of a child. Do you have any idea how dangerous it is to have a two-year-old unbuckled on someone else's lap on an airplane if anything happened to the plane? Would you hold a two-year-old in your lap, unbuckled in a car? Of course not. The toddler would become a projectile in a crash. Imagine how much worse it would be in a crash landing of a plane or even in severe turbulence.
Also, how is the child supposed to breath during a drop in cabin pressure? There is only one oxygen mask per seat. Oh, does Delta not give oxygen to children even if the parents paid for the child's seat?
These assholes at Delta should be arrested for endangering the toddler's life and for threatening to arrest the family for protecting their child's life.
More reason to make overbooking illegal. It's blatant fraud. And the airlines should be forced to pay fines equal to all the revenue collected by overbooking over the past decade.
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Massive lawsuits are the only way to get people to treat each other decently any more.
That baby was sneaking on the plane using someone else's ticket. The parents were probably breaking federal law. They are lucky that tsa didn't shriek eminent domain while giving two finger cavity searches. DVDA for the lawless.
Also, how is the child supposed to breath during a drop in cabin pressure? There is only one oxygen mask per seat. Oh, does Delta not give oxygen to children even if the parents paid for the child's seat
Good point, never considered this before.
In terms of the seat belts, you can't keep a toddler in that seat anyway, believe me. Those lap belts are effective for turbulence but not effective for crashes (unlike cars)
"Tatty, knowledge is your friend, here's what this bill does to reduce costs to the public"
It's exactly like I said. It does NOTHING to reduce the cost of service. It shifts cost from the wealthy to the poor, but doesn't do anything to make health care cheaper.
"That's because we are a very unhealthy nation. People stuff their faces all day with all kinds of junk food, there are consequences for that. Not to mention people get paid here more than other countries, prices do go up to absorb income."
I'd be interested to see what % of the US healthcare costs can be attributed to obesity.
But, your 2nd argument is a HUGE reason why healthcare should be controlled by the government. The free market does a horrible job in markets with very inelastic demand like healthcare. Profit maximizing companies will always raise prices to ridiculous levels--because they can.
Good point, never considered this before.
This is one of the reasons why airlines, including Delta, tell parents to purchase a seat for toddlers rather than putting them in their laps.
This is one of the reasons why airlines, including Delta, tell parents to purchase a seat for toddlers rather than putting them in their laps.
The ticket wasn't in his name.
The ticket wasn't in his name.
So what. The facts are
1. The tickets were purchased by the family.
2. The seat was intended for the child.
3. Delta tells parents to purchase separate seats for their young children.
4. The child's safety was threatened by demanding it be placed on the parent's lap. See oxygen mask point.
5. This incident had absolutely nothing to do with whose name is on the ticket.
6. The sole reason the airline employees illegally ordered the parents to place the child on their laps is to save the airline from having to pay out the federally required compensation for denying the family their seats.
7. The airline has the right to deny the seats to the family, but they do not have the right to
- force the child to sit on the parents lap, endangering the child
- threaten the parents with arrest for not endangering their child
- split the family up by denying the child a seat but still charging the parents for theirs or not giving compensation for the loss of all three seats. You can't leave your child at the airport while you fly away.
The airline's action were criminal. The fact that the employees acted on behalf of a corporation should not protect them from the long arm of the long. If a person acting on behalf of a major corporation caused a toddler to die from directly endangering it's life, that's still criminal.
2. The seat was intended for the child.
At the time of purchase, it was intended for a different child. That is why it was in the other child's name. I believe that was the technicality that the airline used to take the seat back. The ticket is non-transferable, even between kids in the same family, and the airlines enforced that. So, it was probably legal, although tremendously dickish.
Another dickish thing that airlines do is enforce a 45 minute early rule for people traveling with children. I don't know what the age cutoff is, but my wife and I were pretty surprised when we got to the airport 40 minutes before our flight. Because we were travelling with a toddler, they had already sold our tickets to somebody else.
To add insult to injury, our tickets were American tickets flying on an Alaska Airlines flight or some such thing. So, on another technicality, they refused to put us on the other Alaska Airlines direct flight later that day. We had to go through American Airlines to get rebooked, and this required a multi-city flight from a different airport. A $50 Uber ride was the beginning of the rest of our fucked up day which of course was filled with more delays and cancellations. We had to stay over in another city that night and arrived at our final destination the following day.
The biggest dick-move that married people have to deal with is the fact that the airlines absolutely do not honor the seat reservations made through various online booking systems. That seems to mean fuck all by the time you check in.
Here's an hypothesis: Those to be ejected are picked by algorithms, because "People make mistakes, not the Holy Math". The algos don't select for nuance like same last name people on the same flight. The crews cannot reject the decision and must enforce it.
The ticket wasn't in his name.
So what.
So fact. It wasn't technically/legally his seat. It was just a seat which remained free because someone (his 18 y.o. brother in this case) didn't show up.
If they bought that seat in his name they wouldn't have the shitty day they ended up having.
Airlines need their own Right to Refuse Service signs:
"If you think paying for a ticket reserves your right to service, think again."
Pass the Air Traveller's Bill of Rights.
Clearly overbooking is also a safety issue.
At the time of purchase, it was intended for a different child. That is why it was in the other child's name. I believe that was the technicality that the airline used to take the seat back. The ticket is non-transferable, even between kids in the same family, and the airlines enforced that. So, it was probably legal, although tremendously dickish.
Somebody else has bought the ticket they technically forfeited when the son whose name was on the ticket didn't show up.Why that person had to suffer? Because some family bought a cheap non-transferrable, fixed-date, non-refundable ticket but wanted it to be treated as something else?
The free market does a horrible job in markets with very inelastic demand like healthcare. Profit maximizing companies will always raise prices to ridiculous levels--because they can.
You have a good point, but frivolous lawsuits is still the main cause of ridiculous health care costs.
The entire airline staff should be arrested for wreckless endangerment of a child. Do you have any idea how dangerous it is to have a two-year-old unbuckled on someone else's lap on an airplane if anything happened to the plane?
It's also against Delta's own policy - that 2 year olds be in car seats.
I've struggled with airlines on this before, and had to google the company's own policy to show the Crew. Not only did they want my kid out of the car seat, but wanted to store AND charge us as checked baggage. This only happens on US Airlines, not the Argentinian or Panamanian Carriers.
Now that boomers don't have young kids, they want everything re-arranged to their convenience. Just like they killed affordable tuition and affordable housing starts after they graduated and brought a house.
That's because we are a very unhealthy nation. People stuff their faces all day with all kinds of junk food, there are consequences for that.
Yet, there are some here that think that behavior should be rewarded with FREE healthcare (paid by others). Go figure.
When Marie Antoinette said "Let them eat cake" she did not literally mean it. Now they eat too much cake.
Pass the Air Traveller's Bill of Rights.
Clearly overbooking is also a safety issue.
Overbooking has nothing to do with this particular case. Whether the seat they forfeited was filled via overbooking or via last-minute sale or by some passenger on stand-by doesn't matter. They didn't fucking have the fucking ticket for the fucking 2 y.o. child, but insisted on getting the seat, that's all.
Not only did they want my kid out of the car seat, but wanted to store AND charge us as checked baggage.
Fake news: car seats and strollers are checked for free by all US carries. And every foreign carrier which flies to US for that matter.
Moreover, if they insist that you carry-on bag must be checked after you brought it on the plane and there is no space of it in overhead bins, they will also check it for free.
Because some family bought a cheap non-transferrable, fixed-date, non-refundable ticket but wanted it to be treated as something else?
I don't know the full details, b/c it wasn't in the article, but I'm betting that they did check the kid in either at the counter or a kiosk. Otherwise, they wouldn't have been able to bring the carrier on.
So, the airline found out about the switcheroo somehow, either by the fact that the kid never showed an ID to TSA, because the passengers told the airline, or because the computer told them to kick the 18 yr old off the plane, and they went and found a 2 yr old in the seat. I agree with you that the airline had a technicality on their side, but I doubt it was really a problem caused by these people bringing one son instead of another to the airport.
It's still a dick-move. People are learning that the airlines will fuck you over at the drop of a hat if it is technically possible and in their short term best interest. This behavior and frequent delays devalue an airline ticket, by the way.
Seats need to be treated as a security, you buy it you own that seat until the airline gets you to your destination.
Don't sell it if you don't want it gone, and same for buying them. A big part of airline prices is the bulk manipulation of seats.
It's no different than Ticketmaster, then the thousands of investors who have an inside relationship to buy up 80% of a venue seats for an event then sell them a marked up prices.
On top of that manipulation, you can be kicked off the plane because one of their best butt buddies, needs that seat to put together a sweet 2000 seat deal he's working on, so the airlines oblige.
At least once you buy a scalped ticket you wont be thrown out of your seat, after you've sat down. Even if the ticket was bogus.
I saw Phish in 2012 NYE in Miami, my friend and I just showed up and bought a ticket outside.
We were seated inside, when an usher came over with a couple, who had tickets(theirs looked more official actually) that matched ours.
The guy scanned them both and they both passed, so he told my friend and I to go down into the general admission area on the floor. Which was cooler anyway.
You know what let the ticket scalpers sell airline tickets yeah!
They didn't fucking have the fucking ticket for the fucking 2 y.o. child, but insisted on getting the seat, that's all.
They brought a ticket. One family member used it instead of another, and by using it they complied with Delta's recommendations for child seating. A child ticket may have been cheaper, so Delta got to keep the extra fare paid for an adult family member.
Kicking the whole family off the plane was horrible customer service.
Since the airlines won't do the minimum, the government has to. It's a small price to pay for the massive taxpayer subsidies, from the special-just-for-airlines lower gas tax rate to the construction and maintenance of airports from top to bottom.
Overbooking is a safety and efficiency issue, and it's getting more frequent now that the airlines have increased the average seating per plane.
How many flights are delayed ($$$), how many cops need to be called ($$$), how many other problems are related to overbooking situations on planes ($$$)?
Another great reform is month-by-month terminal gate rental, with premiums paid for premium timeslots, which will spread out the schedule and increase safety for ATC guys. Do away with hub airports.
This still has to get through the Senate, right?
The first time they tried this bill, the media and public got wind of it, and there was too much backlash to get it passed. This time, they gave the tea party some concessions, and then the bill was rammed through quickly, before the public figured out what was in it. There's no chance it will pass through the senate without major changes, and it is still unlikely that the Senate and House will actually agree on something. Even if it doesn't pass, the house Republicans can at least claim that they passed a repeal bill and the Senate dropped the ball when campaigning in 2 yrs. They even get to claim that they covered people with preexisting conditions, because they found $8 billion. This is enough to give each person with a preexisting condition around $100, but no matter. They'll say it was funded. This is 1 dimensional chess.
2. The seat was intended for the child.
The seat was purchased for a different child, not the one that was sitting in it.
Still running with that false narrative, are you? Try reading the other parts of the thread above.
blah blah blah false narrative blah blah
Your post added nothing of interest. You read some article on 'the hill' where people play a shell game with the definition of a preexisting condition. The gist of the article is that Obamacare places the cost of the high risk pool, which fails because it places the burden on too few people. Yet, Obamacare costs too much for the government and for the participants. The GOP solution is to just have the government pay for the high risk pool. So this $8Billion ($25 per citizen) will allow the government to cut a couple of hundred billion in taxes. In addition to the government saving $25 for each $1 spent, individuals on the market will have their premiums reduced by 40% by removing the high risk people. Win win win win win!!!! Everybody is winning!!!!! I love math!!!!!
Here's what Kaiser has to say about the number with preexisting conditions.
If this GOP bill does happen to pass, I hope that someone in the press makes a database of all of the people who end up getting no treatment and dying early due to the passage of the bill. It might be cathartic for the people who have to watch their loved ones die without treatment, and the journalist would probably get a Pullitzer.
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