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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?

#5481 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2017-March-27, 11:39

 Zelandakh, on 2017-March-27, 09:31, said:

You are joking right? Surely noone who has any idea about international healthcare can really believe something like this. :lol:

If one can afford insurance and is selective, one can get good care here. Our family uses the Mayo Clinic for anything serious. But the overall statistics for outcomes in the US fall far below those of more advanced nations.

It was common when traveling to get questions or comments about US healthcare along the lines of WTF? Now though, the WTF questions are about Trump.
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#5482 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-March-27, 11:52

 barmar, on 2017-March-27, 08:27, said:

I've never been able to fully understand my healthcare options. Whether I've had employer-supplied insurance or I've been self-insured, they've always given me a menu of different plans to choose from. Employers generally just have a few options (HMO versus PPO, high or low deductibles), while the market place has lots of options. The websites have options to compare them, but figuring out the priority between feature A, feature B, and price is difficult. In the end I just guess.


Even in the relatively simple situation I inhabit right now, the benefits are confusing. I definitely did not say the system is understandable, mostly it isn't. But I have been happy with the care that I get, and one way or another most thinigs seem to get covered

It certainly would be nice to understand what I have. I don't. But it seems to work out.
Ken
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#5483 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2017-March-27, 17:27

Quote

The usa has the best health care



 Zelandakh, on 2017-March-27, 09:31, said:

You are joking right? Surely noone who has any idea about international healthcare can really believe something like this. :lol:

For the 30% with cadillac plans that statement is probably true. At the top level for the top 1% the USA certainly has the best healthcare. For the 25% at the bottom the USA may have nearly the worst healthcare among the industrialized world.
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#5484 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2017-March-27, 20:09

Quote

In the 25 years that I served in the United States Congress, Republicans never, ever, one time agreed on what a health care proposal should look like. Not once. And all this happy talk that went on in November and December and January about repeal, repeal, repeal — yeah, we’ll do replace, replace — I started laughing.
-- John Boehner, who handed off the Speaker's gavel to Paul Ryan on October 29, 2015 before resigning from Congress on October 31, 2015. Boehner currently works for Squire, Patton, Boggs the 3rd largest lobbying firm in the U.S. He also sits on the board of Reynolds American, the 2nd largest tobacco firm in the U.S.
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#5485 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 09:11

 kenberg, on 2017-March-27, 11:52, said:

It certainly would be nice to understand what I have. I don't. But it seems to work out.

That's basically my point. Except for people with special needs, the details don't make all that much difference. If you're generally healthy, you go with low premiums, high deductibles, and moderate reimbursement for routine care; if you expect to have significant medical expenses, you choose higher premiums that pay medical expenses in full.

It's like picking a college to go to or deciding where to live. People agonize over these decisions when they have to make them, but in most cases you'll be happy with whatever you choose -- you can usually weed out the choices that would be a really bad fit.

#5486 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 10:22

 barmar, on 2017-March-28, 09:11, said:

That's basically my point. Except for people with special needs, the details don't make all that much difference. If you're generally healthy, you go with low premiums, high deductibles, and moderate reimbursement for routine care; if you expect to have significant medical expenses, you choose higher premiums that pay medical expenses in full.

It's like picking a college to go to or deciding where to live. People agonize over these decisions when they have to make them, but in most cases you'll be happy with whatever you choose -- you can usually weed out the choices that would be a really bad fit.


As I am now, it is all pretty simple. I am in generally good health but I can read the calendar. I have Medicare, and I have supplemental insurance that is partly subsidized as part of a retirement package. The coverage is such that I don't often have to pay much out of pocket, the combined cost of the two plans is such that I don't fret about it.

Life was not always that simple for me, and I try to stay aware of the fact that it is right now not simple for a lot of people. What to do requires thought. I absolutely agree that people have responsibility for themselves, but help can be very useful, and, for that matter, good for us all.

Back to Trump, this being the Trump thread. I see no evidence that Trump has given the health care issue five minutes of thought. Repeal and Replace apparently worked well for the campaign. Replace with what? It will cover everyone and be terrific; so he said. Whatever the merits of Ryan's plan, it was not going to cover everyone, far from it. But it was a Repeal and Replace bill, and for Trump that was enough. Who cares about details? This is totally irresponsible.

Worse, this stuff with health care reflects his general approach. I might well be more supportive of military spending than some on this thread. But surely building up the military, in itself, is not a viable approach for success in international matters. The man really seems to think that all he has to do is order how things are to be and then they will be that way. Solo flight, New York to Paris, worked out for Lindbergh, but that was quite a while ago. Generally I think we need our friends.

I fear that I am both repeating myself and stating the obvious.

Anyway, we have a mess on our hands.
Ken
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#5487 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 10:51

 kenberg, on 2017-March-28, 10:22, said:



Back to Trump, this being the Trump thread. I see no evidence that Trump has given the health care issue five minutes of thought. Repeal and Replace apparently worked well for the campaign. Replace with what? It will cover everyone and be terrific; so he said. Whatever the merits of Ryan's plan, it was not going to cover everyone, far from it. But it was a Repeal and Replace bill, and for Trump that was enough. Who cares about details? This is totally irresponsible.



There is little evidence that any plan from any politician from either side of the aisle is any good.

Gavin Newsom's health plan is the best I've seen. Unfortunately egotistic Jerry Brown refused to step aside and allow Newsom to run for governor of California.
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#5488 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 13:10

 jogs, on 2017-March-28, 10:51, said:

There is little evidence that any plan from any politician from either side of the aisle is any good.

Gavin Newsom's health plan is the best I've seen. Unfortunately egotistic Jerry Brown refused to step aside and allow Newsom to run for governor of California.


This is true. But wait. Jamie Raskin, my Representative in Congress, did not run on repealing the ACA and replacing it by something really terrific. Trump did. I don't know if Raskin thinks NATO is obsolete, but if he does I hope he has the good sense to shut up about it. And so on.

To put this in still another way, it is true that I also do not have a great idea, even a concept let alone the details, of just how we should structure. health care. But then I had the good sense to not run for president, and if I had run then I assume people would have had the good sense not to vote for me.

For Trump to now say something like "my goodness, it's complicated", I don't recall exactly his words, does not really work for me. His business model seemed to be to just give anything a shot and if it doesn't work out well there are always the bankruptcy courts and good lawyers, Maybe that's NY real estate, but it is one hell of a way of conducting the presidency.
Ken
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#5489 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 14:34

Newsom's Healthy San Francisco only had to cover 8% of San Francisco. His plan is really only for those who didn't have access to good employer based health insurance.
Healthy California may include as many as 30% of Californians. Would Newsom be able to design a creative way to fund such a large system?

I have heard no plan from Trump or any republican which seems sound or workable.
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#5490 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 15:19

Say what you want about Trump, at least he made an ausholen his press secretary. Or he made his press secretary be an asshole.

https://www.washingt...m=.227c43836da7

Make assholes great again.
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#5491 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 15:54

http://www.foxnews.c...on-funding.html

Quote

Attorney General Jeff Sessions fired a broadside at so-called "sanctuary cities" Monday, telling reporters local policies of noncooperation with immigration authorities are "dangerous" and will cost communities federal funding.


Sanctuary cities fight back.

http://www.npr.org/s...threatens-funds

How does the progressive left justify giving illegal aliens more rights than ordinary Americans? There is no right to immigrate into the USA.
The dishonest left loves to cite flawed studies which claim immigrants commit crimes at a lower rate than average Americans. 300 sanctuary cities will not allow law enforcement to ask a criminal of their immigration status. Their crime total is clearly undercounted. Legal immigrants, especially those from Asia and Europe who come to America for university studies, commit crimes at a extremely low rate. The Trump administration is only deporting illegal immigrants who are also violent criminals. Any honest study would not group legal and illegal immigrants into a single large group. It is the uneducated illegal immigrants who are committing crimes at an extremely high rate.

http://www.cnn.com/2...d-student-rape/

18-year-old Henry Sanchez-Malian arrested and accused of rape. Sanchez is an illegal immigrant who can't speak English. He isn't even fluent in his native tongue. These are the people who should be deported.
Every advocate of placing illegal immigrants into public schools should be required to send their children, grand children, and great grand children of K-12 age into the public school system.
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#5492 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 16:10

 kenberg, on 2017-March-28, 13:10, said:

For Trump to now say something like "my goodness, it's complicated", I don't recall exactly his words, does not really work for me.


I think everyone, but especially Trump, deserves to be quoted accurately.

Quote

"We have come up with a solution that's really, really I think very good," Trump said at a meeting of the nation's governors at the White House.

"Now, I have to tell you, it's an unbelievably complex subject," he added. "Nobody knew health care could be so complicated."

http://edition.cnn.c...re-complicated/
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#5493 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-March-28, 19:56

 cherdano, on 2017-March-28, 16:10, said:

I think everyone, but especially Trump, deserves to be quoted accurately.


http://edition.cnn.c...re-complicated/


Continuing on from your cited source:

Quote

"We have a plan that I think is going to be fantastic. It's going to be released fairly soon," Trump said Monday. "I think it's going to be something special ... I think you're going to like what you hear."


Well, a guy can hope. I wonder just who the "you" was in "I think you're going to like what you hear".
Ken
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#5494 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 05:17

 cherdano, on 2017-March-28, 15:19, said:

ausholen

German autocorrection will make the English language great again
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#5495 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 05:31

 helene_t, on 2017-March-29, 05:17, said:

German autocorrection will make the English language great again

LOL my phone uses bilingual autocorrelation. But apparently my phone is less profane than I am.
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#5496 User is offline   WellSpyder 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 07:44

 cherdano, on 2017-March-28, 16:10, said:

I think everyone, but especially Trump, deserves to be quoted accurately.

Quote

"Now, I have to tell you, it's an unbelievably complex subject," he added. "Nobody knew health care could be so complicated."


Ha, ha, ha! You almost got me there. For a moment I was worried that the fate of the western world really was in the hands of a complete ****** idiot. Then, fortunately, I realised this had to be an example of the "false news" we hear so much about these days. I mean, nobody could really be so stupid as to spend a whole election campaign believing it was just a simple problem that they would be able to sort out to everybody's satisfaction as soon as they thought about it properly, could they? And if somebody did really believe this, nobody would want to vote for them, would they?
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#5497 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 08:45

 kenberg, on 2017-March-28, 19:56, said:

Well, a guy can hope. I wonder just who the "you" was in "I think you're going to like what you hear".

Most of his supporters could be expected to "like" anything that isn't called "Obamacare".

A significant number of people don't realize that Obamacare and the Affordable Care Act are the same law, particularly among groups that are most likely to take advantage of it.

https://www.nytimes....-same.html?_r=0

#5498 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 08:55

 kenberg, on 2017-March-28, 10:22, said:

Back to Trump, this being the Trump thread. I see no evidence that Trump has given the health care issue five minutes of thought. Repeal and Replace apparently worked well for the campaign. Replace with what? It will cover everyone and be terrific; so he said. Whatever the merits of Ryan's plan, it was not going to cover everyone, far from it. But it was a Repeal and Replace bill, and for Trump that was enough. Who cares about details? This is totally irresponsible.

I like the way many comedians put it: The GOP is like the dog who chases a car -- they don't know what to do if they actually catch it. They've been talking about killing Obamacare ever since it was enacted. But because they knew they couldn't actually achieve it, they never gave serious thought to what they'd put in its place. Then when it actually became politically achievable, they had to throw something together incredibly quickly (because Trump said this would be done on Day 1), and of course it was a total mess.

As for Trump's "plan", that was just the usual campaign rhetoric. He's just a better BS artist than typical politicians. His entire campaign was just saying what people wanted to hear in broad strokes -- he never fleshed it out with any details. But the public was so hungry for a change from business as usual that they ate it up and elected him.

Trump also seems to have no notion of "unintended consequences". His executive orders have been making sweeping changes without any regard for the impact other than the primary goal.

#5499 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 10:34

All this about "tried to understand but couldn't" from people who are generally (at the risk of flattering y'all) very smart and well educated, all this shows how stupid someone like Rand Paul's idea is of "people should be allowed to choose what healthcare they want!". I mean, yes, within some limits they should be allowed to do it. But in practice many/most folks will just go for the cheapest possible and never read the fine print or even the large print (it is not actually an insurance but a scam. for small stuff you pay yourself and for large stuff they only pay a fraction - or something). Someone should set those limits and if that means that some of the cheapest options (that actually shouldn't be called health insurance as they don't insure you) are eliminated, so be it. I guess this is all pretty obvious but I just got reminded of this by this discussion.
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#5500 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 15:10

 gwnn, on 2017-March-29, 10:34, said:

All this about "tried to understand but couldn't" from people who are generally (at the risk of flattering y'all) very smart and well educated, all this shows how stupid someone like Rand Paul's idea is of "people should be allowed to choose what healthcare they want!". I mean, yes, within some limits they should be allowed to do it. But in practice many/most folks will just go for the cheapest possible and never read the fine print or even the large print (it is not actually an insurance but a scam. for small stuff you pay yourself and for large stuff they only pay a fraction - or something). Someone should set those limits and if that means that some of the cheapest options (that actually shouldn't be called health insurance as they don't insure you) are eliminated, so be it. I guess this is all pretty obvious but I just got reminded of this by this discussion.


Well, I am also often too dumb to figure out how to use my smart phone. So we want to be cautious about drawing conclusions from an education. Back when I used to drive long distances to tournaments we stopped for a snack and chatted with the server. She commented that my training as a mathematician must be very useful for bridge. The lady at my side observed that a certain amount of good sense is also useful.

But generally yes, I take your point.
Ken
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