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 Message Boards » » You will have health insurance... OR ELSE! Page 1 2 [3], Prev  
Dentaldamn
All American
9974 Posts
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everyone is forced to have car insurance.

seems silly to force one and not the other.

7/6/2009 10:15:16 AM

EarthDogg
All American
3989 Posts
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Quote :
"California’s Nightmare Will Kill Obamanomics: Kevin Hassett

Commentary by Kevin Hassett, director of economic-policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute.

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- Last week, we discovered that the state of California will gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.

With California mired in a budget crisis, largely the result of a political impasse that makes spending cuts and tax increases impossible, Controller John Chiang said the state planned to issue $3.3 billion in IOU’s in July alone. Instead of cash, those who do business with California will get slips of paper.

The California morass has Democrats in Washington trembling. The reason is simple. If Obama’s health-care plan passes, then we may well end up paying for it with federal slips of paper worth less than California’s. Obama has bet everything on passing health care this year. The publicity surrounding the California debt fiasco almost assures his resounding defeat.

It takes years and years to make a mess as terrible as the California debacle, but the recipe is simple. All that you need is two political parties that are always willing to offer easy government solutions for every need of the voters, but never willing to make the tough decisions necessary to finance the government largess that results. Voters will occasionally change their allegiance from one party to the other, but the bacchanal will continue regardless of the names on the office doors.

California has engaged in an orgy of spending, but, compared with our federal government, its legislators should feel chaste. The California deficit this year is now north of $26 billion. The U.S. federal deficit will be, according to the latest numbers, almost 70 times larger.

Bleak Picture

The federal picture is so bleak because the Obama administration is the most fiscally irresponsible in the history of the U.S. I would imagine that he would be the intergalactic champion as well, if we could gather the data on deficits on other worlds. Obama has taken George W. Bush’s inattention to deficits and elevated it to an art form.

The Obama administration has no shame, and is willing to abandon reason altogether to achieve its short-term political goals. Ronald Reagan ran up big deficits in part because he believed that his tax cuts would produce economic growth, and ultimately pay for themselves. He may well have been excessively optimistic about the merits of tax cuts, but at least he had a story.

Obama has no story. Nobody believes that his unprecedented expansion of the welfare state will lead to enough economic growth. Nobody believes that it will pay for itself. Everyone understands that higher spending today begets higher spending tomorrow. That means that his economic strategy simply doesn’t add up.

Character Deficit

Back in the 1980s, Reagan’s own economist, Martin Feldstein, spoke up when he felt that the Reagan administration was pushing the deficit too far. Where are the economists with such character today? Apparently, the job description for economists has transformed from recommending policies that are defensible to defending whatever policies that the political hacks in the West Wing dream up.

As bad as the California legislature has been over the years, it has never entered a fiscal crisis like the one that we face today and then doubled down with a massive spending increase. In the end, when times got tough, patriotic and sensible Californians of both parties stood up and began acting like adults.

Maybe the same thing is starting to happen in our nation’s capital. The key players in Washington are Senator Evan Bayh and 15 Senate Democrats who joined him this year in forming a coalition of moderates. One thing that has distinguished moderate Democrats from the garden variety of the species is heightened concern about fiscal responsibility.

Off a Cliff

With the price tag of Obama-care likely to exceed $1 trillion, moderate Democrats face a simple choice. They can jump off the cliff with the president, or they can stay true to the principles that they have espoused throughout their careers.

There are reassuring signs that principle is winning. One of the most expensive components of the Obama plan is the so- called public-insurance option, which opponents fear would result in massive government subsidies. Senator Mary Landrieu said that she is “not open” to a public option that will compete with private insurance.

Many other Democratic Senators, including Ben Nelson, Blanche Lincoln, and Tom Carper, also oppose the public option. As the cost estimates increase and support wanes, the Senate Finance Committee is even going as far as to pursue its own health-care plan, meaning that the health-care end game is now in sight.

Tax Bite

Moderates might support Obama’s health-care objectives if the bill also included tax increases to cover the spending increases. But those tax increases would likely be unpopular, making it almost impossible to pass a bill.

Given the increasing public concern about deficits that heightened significantly last week because of the California crisis, there are only two possibilities left. Either the Obama plan will come crashing down or Senate Democrats will concoct some bill that has health in the title but costs almost nothing and does even less. With Al Franken arriving in the Senate and providing Democrats with a crucial 60th vote, the latter seems most likely.
"

7/6/2009 10:57:48 AM

Shrike
All American
9594 Posts
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Pretty interesting to see Paul Krugman come out in full support of congress's plan, considering he's been lambasting most domestic policy thus far.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/06/opinion/06krugman.html?_r=2&ref=opinion

Quote :
"The budget office says that all this would cost $597 billion over the next decade. But that doesn’t include the cost of insuring the poor and near-poor, whom HELP suggests covering via an expansion of Medicaid (which is outside the committee’s jurisdiction). Add in the cost of this expansion, and we’re probably looking at between $1 trillion and $1.3 trillion.

There are a number of ways to look at this number, but maybe the best is to point out that it’s less than 4 percent of the $33 trillion the U.S. government predicts we’ll spend on health care over the next decade. And that in turn means that much of the expense can be offset with straightforward cost-saving measures, like ending Medicare overpayments to private health insurers and reining in spending on medical procedures with no demonstrated health benefits.

So fundamental health reform — reform that would eliminate the insecurity about health coverage that looms so large for many Americans — is now within reach. The “centrist” senators, most of them Democrats, who have been holding up reform can no longer claim either that universal coverage is unaffordable or that it won’t work."

7/6/2009 11:08:14 AM

A Tanzarian
drip drip boom
10992 Posts
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Quote :
"much of the expense can be offset with straightforward cost-saving measures, like ending Medicare overpayments to private health insurers and reining in spending on medical procedures with no demonstrated health benefits."


But will they do this?

7/6/2009 11:17:47 AM

Hunt
All American
735 Posts
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Not to mention the fact that cost estimates for government programs nearly always underestimate actual costs. History also suggests the current, prospective number of benefits and recipients is but a foundation on which congress will build upon each election year.

[Edited on July 6, 2009 at 7:03 PM. Reason : .]

7/6/2009 7:03:09 PM

aaronburro
Sup, B
52712 Posts
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Quote :
"everyone is forced to have car insurance.

seems silly to force one and not the other."

Not really. While I'm not too keen on the mandatory insurance requirement, you are only really required to have insurance to cover the OTHER PERSON'S damages for when YOU are at fault. As much as I hate to say it, this one kind of makes sense. However, to force a perfectly healthy guy to pay 200bux a month for a service he probably won't use? That's immoral.

Quote :
"The federal picture is so bleak because the Obama administration is the most fiscally irresponsible in the history of the U.S."

Oh, come on. Certainly Dubya didn't help matters any with all of his deficit spending on Iraq, did he? As well, medicare/SS/medicaid aren't helping much, and we can't really blame that on Obama. As well, ED, I can't really see how California's woes really relate to the federal level, except to say that both are running deficits. Even then, one is obligated not to do so, the other is not. One can print money, the other cannot.

7/6/2009 7:41:41 PM

1337 b4k4
All American
10033 Posts
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Quote :
"i've never heard public-option opponents claim there is rationing in the current system, at least not in those words. I've never really heard any of the opponents say anything other than something like "sure, our current system isn't perfect, but do you really want government to take over?", without ever giving any specifics."


Then you aren't listening, there have been a number of specifics discussed in this very thread, let alone the many others on this topic. And if you won't listen, there's no reason to continue the conversation is there?

Quote :
"As for the rest of your post...... i could have saved you a lot of typing - "yeah, but, but, but - government will just make it worse!!!""


Well, yes. Congratulations, you just pointed out that an argument that a government run health system will be worse than the current system boils down to "government will just make it worse". Captain obvious would be proud. On the flip side, we could save you a lot of typing too: "but, but, but.... nuh uh!" However, boiling the arguments down to their most basic level does nothing to further the discussion. As I said before, if you aren't listening, there's no point in talking.

Quote :
"everyone is forced to have car insurance.

seems silly to force one and not the other."


As pointed out, liability insurance is significantly different from health insurance, and no, you aren't forced to have car insurance. Again, you can walk everywhere, take a bus, fly and even drive a few forms of low power low speed motor vehicles without any form of insurance. Hell, you can even drive a car in limited scenarios without personally having your own insurance policy (see zipcar.com, and also driving your own car on your own property).

7/7/2009 2:04:47 PM

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