HossHarris Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 (edited) 47 minutes ago, drewpey said: Why can't we start here: Are we as a culture ok with people falling into unrecoverable lifelong poverty and never returning to be productive taxpaying citizens for what amounts to losing a medical lottery? I think the large majority of people would agree something should be done. If so, what? Where in the constitution does it say the federal government has a duty to protect the citizenry from financial ruin? Edited October 20, 2020 by HossHarris 3 1
Kiloalpha Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 4 hours ago, Sua Sponte said: So the DNI, who reports to Trump, was nominated by Trump for the job, and been in the job since this past May, says that an email that was “verified” authentic from an anonymous source who sent it to Fox News, a media organization that is Pro-Trump, says it’s not a smear campaign? Shocking 😂 https://apnews.com/article/024b553e9a4ffb2716286dd134876f8a “Yet Giuliani says foreign sources didn’t provide the Hunter Biden emails. He says a laptop containing the emails and intimate photos was simply abandoned in a Delaware repair shop and the shop owner reached out to Giuliani’s lawyer.” Seems “authentic.” So, the repair shop owner random reached out to the lawyer of the lawyer who’s job is to find dirt on Joe Biden, the father of the owner of the purported laptop, who’s running against Trump for President? And he did this possibly without trying to, I dunno, contact the owner of said laptop? Oh and the media outlets that are making a big deal of the emails? Fox News and The New York Post which are Pro-Trump. Well, every DNI and director of our intelligence agencies are President-appointed. So every one of them is useless? Who would you trust then to determine if there is Russian interference? Adam Schiff? It’s a wild story, but Hunter Biden wasn’t exactly on the straight and narrow during the time period this happened. It’s also worth noting that the shop owner didn’t immediately call Giuliani. He called the FBI, who seized the computer, never called him back, and *according to Giuliani* was told to “keep his mouth shut.” After a period of time he started reaching out to people who eventually put him in touch with Giuliani, where he gave him a copy. I’m not taking any of this story as fact until I know more. But there’s a hell of a lot more meat here than the Ukraine impeachment. We have actual emails that corroborate a quid-pro-quo when paired with Biden’s comments to the CFR. Sure, you guys are upset at Trump playing golf and taking trips. I’m not happy about it, but it’s legal. Biden using his position as VP to enrich himself via international sources is a crime. They’re different. They might feel equally as outrageous morally, but you can’t put Trump in prison for playing golf. You can put Biden in prison for getting a payday via the Chinese. Investigate it. Follow leads. Test sources. It’s literally your job as media. The fact they won’t even do that is outrageous. Our media was terrible before, but this might be the breaking point. They’ll investigate random sources if it’s against Trump but God forbid they do the same to the other side. 1 3
lloyd christmas Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 1 minute ago, HossHarris said: Where in the constitution does it say the federal government has a duty to protect the citizenry from financial ruin? It doesn't. Even if health care is believed to be a "right", the gov doesn't subsidize any of our other rights provided by the constitution. Why should health care be any different? Especially when so many of us do not take care of ourselves. 1 1
Sim Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 3 hours ago, 17D_guy said: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/18/business/media/new-york-post-hunter-biden.html ...."story" Meh.
jazzdude Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 It doesn't. Even if health care is believed to be a "right", the gov doesn't subsidize any of our other rights provided by the constitution. Why should health care be any different? Especially when so many of us do not take care of ourselves. Why should the government provide healthcare coverage for military families/dependants at extremely low cost to the member? Should service members pay insurance premiums comparable to the national average for premiums? At least for the service member, you could argue they should have healthcare coverage to protect the investment made in the service member if they have a critical skill. Should service members be covered for a pre-existing condition, or for medical accidents that happen not in the direct line of duty (say, breaking your arm while skiing on leave)? Or pay for coverage to cover non-line of duty accidents?The government subsidizes lots of things. Food stamps, social security, medical research, basic science research, education, arts, conservation of wilderness areas, roads, housing, etc. It also (heavily) subsidizes defense. Basically, it's all an investment in our society to hopefully make us all better, even if it's not a "right."What about combat zone tax exemption? Why not eliminate that? What purpose does it serve, besides essentially being a pay raise for doing the job we signed up to do? (Especially since HFP/IDP also exists) 1
Kiloalpha Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 Yes, I'm posting a link instead of writing a ton of information, but I really think Rep. Dan Crenshaw did a good job talking about medical reform with Dr. Avik Roy. https://holdthesetruthswithdancrenshaw.libsyn.com/a-more-sensible-approach-to-fixing-health-care-dr-avik-roy Dr. Roy has done some interesting studies that conclude while the US is a good system, we could do better... and Medicare for all is not the answer. He mentions a catastrophic care system (which I've been in favor of for a while) while using the market to give user choices, while not leaving those with pre-existing conditions out. Worth the 34min if you have time. 2
drewpey Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 1 hour ago, HossHarris said: Where in the constitution does it say the federal government has a duty to protect the citizenry from financial ruin? This sidesteps the original question. If we as a country are ok with it, then nothing to see and we keep walking on. If we aren't, then we should have an actual discussion about what should change in order to help that...does it involve state solutions, constitutional amendment, or expansion of existing programs, etc. Ignoring a problem that is affecting more and more people every year because it wasn't mentioned on a 200 year old document is a bit short sighted.
Sua Sponte Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 1 hour ago, lloyd christmas said: It doesn't. Even if health care is believed to be a "right", the gov doesn't subsidize any of our other rights provided by the constitution. Why should health care be any different? Especially when so many of us do not take care of ourselves. Why should I, a civilian, pay for the premiums of military dependents under Tricare Prime? They didn't sign up for military service. They're not critical for national defense and security.
lloyd christmas Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 (edited) 34 minutes ago, Sua Sponte said: Why should I, a civilian, pay for the premiums of military dependents under Tricare Prime? They didn't sign up for military service. They're not critical for national defense and security. There is a difference in the government covering health care costs for service members/their families and people that are not employed by the US government. The US government is not responsible for the health care for ALL citizens. FWIW, I had to read your post over and over again to see if I was missing something. Are you really advocating on a military forum for the gov to not pay for health care of service member's dependents because they did not sign up for military service? And that they are not critical for national defense and security? Edited October 20, 2020 by lloyd christmas
Motofalcon Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 2 hours ago, HossHarris said: Where in the constitution does it say the federal government has a duty to protect the citizenry from financial ruin? “...promote the general welfare...” is probably the catchall. Is it good if Americans are healthy? Yes. Is it good if Americans are wealthy? Yes. I’m not saying that everyone just gets to be rich because America is rich (a la UAE), but to me, healthcare is like the road system. We all pay for it, some people happen to use it more than others, it helps us all. Isn’t that the point of government? To help the majority of the populace? 2
Guardian Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 We as a country have determined that we want certain segments of the population to have government supported health care and have for more than 50 years. Why is expanding this out to include others a bad thing if the voting populous determines that is what they want? Because it is stealing from some for the benefit of others. And it takes personal responsibility out of the equation.
Guardian Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 How do you separate the insurance aspect from healthcare? I’m not sure there’s a conversation to be had about the”best healthcare system in the world” without considering insurance in the equation. As far as “healthcare is not a right”, it’s abundantly clear that the majority of Americans would like it to be. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018/10/03/most-continue-to-say-ensuring-health-care-coverage-is-governments-responsibility/ Just because a majority wants to steal from others doesn’t mean it’s right.
Guardian Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 Need more information... What defines "best" regarding healthcare? This is probably the fundamental question regarding healthcare policy. So what is best? Cutting edge technologies and research in treatments? Access to basic care at adorable prices? Access to basic care covered by taxes? Access to emergency/preventative/diagnostic care? You also make a strong assumption that you can separate insurance from the healthcare system. So long as people may need to pay for medical treatments that they can't afford to pay out of pocket for, insurance will be a factor in the discussion. It's like saying car insurance should be made optional (especially if you believe healthcare is not a right, since most people don't consider driving a car a right).As military members, it's easy to have a skewed opinion, as Tricare has pretty good coverage and is significantly cheaper than anything comparable on the open market.I didn’t make an assumption. I stated something. That our health care (the act of giving or receiving medical treatment) is the best in the world. I made that statement. Then said I wasn’t talking about insurance. Re read my statement. Health care isn’t a right. It’s not included in the bill of rights. Health care is three things. But it can only be two of them at any given time. Cheap, accessible, and good. In America we make the medicine that drives the rest of the worlds medicine. Anyone can access the health care in America. But it ain’t cheap. When it becomes cheap it either has to lose the accessible or the good. They can’t all 3 stand at the same time. As for what makes it the best? Look at our mortality rates across the board and the accessibility of care. When you lose the expense then you lose quality and likely accessibility Also yes we in the military have good health care. The military is a volunteer force. Hence you volunteered and as a bi product receive good health care. I get that there are people that can’t serve. But there is a large majority of people in this county that are told live your truth, big is beautiful, take drugs if you want, and these people have higher likely hood of medical issues. And free health care for all then glorifies their negative choices and steals from others. Because the money has to come from somewhere. Same thing with the stupid free college for all push. It’s just immoral. It’s a lie. And it’s stealing. Bottom line it’s sick.
Guardian Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 I’m curious as to what qualifies the US healthcare system as the best in the world. Is it the fact that the best possible care that exists happens to be in the US? What good does something that is unattainable to a slew of Americans do? It might as well not exist to them. Should getting decent healthcare really be something that drives people into the red? Why? Don’t we have a duty to our fellow man to help them out? The system in place now, doesn’t work for a lot of people. Without insurance and pretty solid job security I’d be in major debt through zero fault of my own. Health issues are someone else’s problem until you or someone close to you is fighting them...This one is more philosophical than an actual question: So, happiness is a right, but being healthy to enjoy it isn’t? I’m just curious. Sent from my iPad using TapatalkSee my above response for why the US is the best. Your question about it being unattainable isn’t a good question. Do we have a duty to our fellow man? Yes. I should help those in my community of my own volition. I shouldn’t have to pay money or face a threat at the end of a gun if I don’t want to pay for someone else’s health care. The government shouldn’t force me to pay for other peoples things. That’s not what the government is for. That’s what churches or community outreach groups are for. I agree with you. Obama care doesn’t work. Please educate me. Where does it say happiness is a right? Where does it say being healthy or receiving health care is a right?You are using half truths and mis quotes strung together in a non logical way to try and make a point. It ends up hurting your point.
Guardian Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 Why can't we start here: Are we as a culture ok with people falling into unrecoverable lifelong poverty and never returning to be productive taxpaying citizens for what amounts to losing a medical lottery? I think the large majority of people would agree something should be done. If so, what?What are you talking about?
Guardian Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 This sidesteps the original question. If we as a country are ok with it, then nothing to see and we keep walking on. If we aren't, then we should have an actual discussion about what should change in order to help that...does it involve state solutions, constitutional amendment, or expansion of existing programs, etc. Ignoring a problem that is affecting more and more people every year because it wasn't mentioned on a 200 year old document is a bit short sighted.We as a country are not okay with theft. The problem isn’t the symptoms. Fix the health issue by being healthy. Not by glorifying big is beautiful. And on and on.
Guardian Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 “...promote the general welfare...” is probably the catchall. Is it good if Americans are healthy? Yes. Is it good if Americans are wealthy? Yes. I’m not saying that everyone just gets to be rich because America is rich (a la UAE), but to me, healthcare is like the road system. We all pay for it, some people happen to use it more than others, it helps us all. Isn’t that the point of government? To help the majority of the populace?Have you ever looked up what the average American makes compared to the rest of the world? It’s eye opening how comparatively rich even a waitress in the US is to the median of the world. I might recommend for you to look up why the National road system and the military are not examples of socialistic policies like health care for all is no matter how hard liberal ideology wants you to believe it.
slackline Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 Yes, I'm posting a link instead of writing a ton of information, but I really think Rep. Dan Crenshaw did a good job talking about medical reform with Dr. Avik Roy. https://holdthesetruthswithdancrenshaw.libsyn.com/a-more-sensible-approach-to-fixing-health-care-dr-avik-roy Dr. Roy has done some interesting studies that conclude while the US is a good system, we could do better... and Medicare for all is not the answer. He mentions a catastrophic care system (which I've been in favor of for a while) while using the market to give user choices, while not leaving those with pre-existing conditions out. Worth the 34min if you have time.Thanks for posting this. I’ll try to give it a watch this afternoon. Hey Guardian, this is an example of moving things forward, not just saying, “you’re wrong and your argument is stupid” because you somehow think you’re right. You’re one of the main guys I was referring to who thinks his poop doesn’t stink. You, I guess, have a copyright on being correct...Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
slackline Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 See my above response for why the US is the best. Your question about it being unattainable isn’t a good question. Do we have a duty to our fellow man? Yes. I should help those in my community of my own volition. I shouldn’t have to pay money or face a threat at the end of a gun if I don’t want to pay for someone else’s health care. The government shouldn’t force me to pay for other peoples things. That’s not what the government is for. That’s what churches or community outreach groups are for. I agree with you. Obama care doesn’t work. Please educate me. Where does it say happiness is a right? Where does it say being healthy or receiving health care is a right?You are using half truths and mis quotes strung together in a non logical way to try and make a point. It ends up hurting your point. Your response above does not answer the question. At all. Also, your comments about the Good, Accessible, and Cheap isn’t a catch-all. Also, there’s a chasm between accessible and not accessible and cheap and expensive. Why is affordable so offensive to you? You are in a job where we have to stay healthy, yet there’s tons of fatties in the military. Every excuse you can think of exists. I happen to agree with you that people should do a much better job of taking care of themselves, but I don’t think they should be financially ruined if they didn’t. Please, tell me why my question about it being unattainable isn’t good. This is more of “Guardian deciding what is legit and what isn’t” that I mentioned earlier. Somehow you think you’re the only one making valid statements/questions. I think you’re taking a wildly slippery slope here talking about forcing you to pay for other people’s healthcare. I’m going to take a page out of your book and simply say, “your point isn’t good, you’re using half truths in a non logical way and it hurts your point.” Why? Because I said so. That’s apparently all the validation you need, so I’m going to do the same.You’re right, it’s not in the constitution, but our founders certainly believed in the pursuit of happiness as it was in the Declaration of Independence. “Unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” Kind of a big deal, give it a read. There’s a good catch all that should allow our government to do better to find a way to take care of our people. That’s all most of us are getting after in here, not advocating for a specific way to do it, but we maintain that the richest country in the world ought to be able to do a better job at taking care of its people than we do. Stop blaming it on unhealthy fatties as well! There’s hundreds of thousands in this country that lost the lottery, and just have crappy health. No amount of eating right or exercise will change their health issues. Shouldn’t we help them without bankrupting them?I totally recognize my arguments are not infallible, but man, you gotta stop acting as if yours are...Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
gearhog Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 22 minutes ago, slackline said: That’s all most of us are getting after in here, not advocating for a specific way to do it, but we maintain that the richest country in the world ought to be able to do a better job at taking care of its people than we do. Stop blaming it on unhealthy fatties as well! There’s hundreds of thousands in this country that lost the lottery, and just have crappy health. No amount of eating right or exercise will change their health issues. Shouldn’t we help them without bankrupting them? I read this as you want universal healthcare, but are unable/unwilling to advocate the specific way in which to do it. Who doesn't want healthcare for everyone? Anyone? The difference is, some people at least attempt the logical thought experiment as to how we get from where we are, to where we'd like to be, and realize the math doesn't work when you simply demand our "rich" government pay for it. You can't make 2+2=7. Others just demand things. You might demand you want your car to fly, tomorrow. Are you sure? I can definitely make your car fly tomorrow, but how do you think it will end? The specific way in which we provide universal health care is important. Why did our forefathers not write the words "...Unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and Happiness?". Think about it.
Prozac Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 2 hours ago, Guardian said: Just because a majority wants to steal from others doesn’t mean it’s right. Um, so I suppose you think that mandatory car insurance is unconstitutional as well? Insurance 101: Everybody pays in, just in case & only a few will end up actually using the service. The idea behind mandating certain types of insurance (like car insurance), is that it doesn’t really work unless it’s universal. This holds true for healthcare. I might decide to save a few bucks and roll the dice with my health, but this makes it more expensive for everyone else and they’re still on the hook when/if I require emergency services that may have been unnecessary with preventative care. The argument is that a healthy population is good for the nation as a whole and it’s cheaper in the long run to do preventative maintenance than to try to fix a catastrophic breakdown. 1
gearhog Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 (edited) 42 minutes ago, Prozac said: Um, so I suppose you think that mandatory car insurance is unconstitutional as well? Insurance 101: Everybody pays in, just in case & only a few will end up actually using the service. The idea behind mandating certain types of insurance (like car insurance), is that it doesn’t really work unless it’s universal. This holds true for healthcare. I might decide to save a few bucks and roll the dice with my health, but this makes it more expensive for everyone else and they’re still on the hook when/if I require emergency services that may have been unnecessary with preventative care. The argument is that a healthy population is good for the nation as a whole and it’s cheaper in the long run to do preventative maintenance than to try to fix a catastrophic breakdown. I'm looking at my mandatory payroll deductions. Where does one find "car insurance"? Is it under FICA or Federal Income Tax Withholding? Also, does your private sector auto insurance company that you have selected to do business with have high risk and low risk designations? How does it affect your rates? Edited October 20, 2020 by torqued
slackline Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 I read this as you want universal healthcare, but are unable/unwilling to advocate the specific way in which to do it. Who doesn't want healthcare for everyone? Anyone? The difference is, some people at least attempt the logical thought experiment as to how we get from where we are, to where we'd like to be, and realize the math doesn't work when you simply demand our "rich" government pay for it. You can't make 2+2=7. Others just demand things. You might demand you want your car to fly, tomorrow. Are you sure? I can definitely make your car fly tomorrow, but how do you think it will end? The specific way in which we provide universal health care is important. Why did our forefathers not write the words "...Unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and Happiness?". Think about it. That's quite a stretch to say I'm looking for universal healthcare based off me saying it should be accessible. Nott looking for free, but we shouldn't be bankrupting anyone because they got cancer. Why is that so ridiculous a request? I also said I don't have the answer. But certain people are unwilling to start the conversation because you can't get passed, "no, it's expensive". I've always told my guys, tell your boss "yes, but" and I've always told my bosses "yes, but". That should be the starting point. "No!" seems to be the only starting point some of you are willing to consider...Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
slackline Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 I'm looking at my mandatory payroll deductions. Where does one find "car insurance"? Is it under FICA or Federal Income Tax Withholding? Also, does your private sector auto insurance company that you have selected to do business with have high risk and low risk designations? How does it affect your rates?You're ignoring the point. Car insurance is mandatory, and you can face repercussions/fines/penalties for not having it. Just because it doesn't come out of your paycheck upon receipt, doesn't change the law. Is that somehow unconstitutional?Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
jazzdude Posted October 20, 2020 Posted October 20, 2020 I didn’t make an assumption. I stated something. That our health care (the act of giving or receiving medical treatment) is the best in the world. I made that statement. Then said I wasn’t talking about insurance. Re read my statement. Health care isn’t a right. It’s not included in the bill of rights. Health care is three things. But it can only be two of them at any given time. Cheap, accessible, and good. In America we make the medicine that drives the rest of the worlds medicine. Anyone can access the health care in America. But it ain’t cheap. When it becomes cheap it either has to lose the accessible or the good. They can’t all 3 stand at the same time. As for what makes it the best? Look at our mortality rates across the board and the accessibility of care. When you lose the expense then you lose quality and likely accessibility Also yes we in the military have good health care. The military is a volunteer force. Hence you volunteered and as a bi product receive good health care. I get that there are people that can’t serve. But there is a large majority of people in this county that are told live your truth, big is beautiful, take drugs if you want, and these people have higher likely hood of medical issues. And free health care for all then glorifies their negative choices and steals from others. Because the money has to come from somewhere. Same thing with the stupid free college for all push. It’s just immoral. It’s a lie. And it’s stealing. Bottom line it’s sick. Best can mean a lot of things to different people, and that's something that needs to be understood going into this discussion. If you can't see that there may be other definitions of what best means regarding healthcare, then any debate is meaningless.And you can't separate insurance from this discussion, so long as healthcare costs more than people can pay out of pocket for. That ignores 2 of the points you made: accessiblility and cost (cheap). Have you been following the discussions on changes in military healthcare? Dependents are starting to get pushed off base as MTFs downsize. However, even though they have decent insurance, people have found it challenging to find off base PCMs willing to take on new patients. Premiums for retiree Tricare are creeping up (though still way below open market prices), and the new-ish Tricare for Life adds additional cost on top of that (due to having to sign up/pay for Medicare). Defense isn't cheap. Was what we spent in Afghanistan worth it? Did that campaign make us stronger as a nation, or further essential national goals worth the price we paid? There are many on the left that say the defense budget is theft as well. Like you said, that money has to come from somewhere.Healthcare would be an investment in our society. Access to routine and preventative care should help more people be productive members of society. The question is how much to invest and what level of care to provide.
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