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Enough wrote:Oh my goodness, look at all the upset puppies threatening to move to Canada over the decision.
Jag wrote:GreenGoo wrote:Enough wrote:Oh my goodness, look at all the upset puppies threatening to move to Canada over the decision.
#SCOTUS holds up free healthcare for everyone?! Screw this commie country, I'm moving to #Canada #whoswithme
That is right up there with all the old people on medicare protesting this morning against taking from medicare to support socialized medicine.
I particularly like that he thinks this has something to do with free healthcare.
GG you have some room on your couch? I'd move in with Icebear, but I think he snores.
silverjon wrote:Enough wrote:Oh my goodness, look at all the upset puppies threatening to move to Canada over the decision.
At least half of those read as purposely ironic, not stupid. Twitter is full of both.
Just because a couple people on the Supreme Court declare something to be ‘constitutional’ does not make it so.
Exodor wrote:Noted Consitutional scholar Rand Paul weighs in:Just because a couple people on the Supreme Court declare something to be ‘constitutional’ does not make it so.
“While the court may have erroneously come to the conclusion that the law is allowable, it certainly does nothing to make this mandate or government takeover of our health care right.”
“Obamacare is wrong for Americans. It will destroy our health care system,” added Paul, who frequently rails about government overreach on the Senate floor. “This now means we fight every hour, every day until November to elect a new President and a new Senate to repeal Obamacare.”
DocDarm wrote:Some of us will kibble about the details,
noxiousdog wrote:[
Obama's limit will likely cause no changes. 20% overhead is fairly common across medical insurance.
silverjon wrote:Enough wrote:Oh my goodness, look at all the upset puppies threatening to move to Canada over the decision.
At least half of those read as purposely ironic, not stupid. Twitter is full of both.
El Guapo wrote:Kraken, if it's any consolation, at least as long as the filibuster is around (and probably for awhile afterwards), I really don't think that single payer was in the cards for at least a few decades even if the Supreme Court had struck the ACA down.
By persuading the court to reject a Commerce Clause rationale for a president’s signature act, the conservative legal insurgency against Obamacare has won a huge victory for the long haul. This victory will help revive a venerable tradition of America’s political culture, that of viewing congressional actions with a skeptical constitutional squint, searching for congruence with the Constitution’s architecture of enumerated powers. By rejecting the Commerce Clause rationale, Thursday’s decision reaffirmed the Constitution’s foundational premise: Enumerated powers are necessarily limited because, as Chief Justice John Marshall said, “the enumeration presupposes something not enumerated.”
Kraken wrote:It is generous. MA started out at 20% and gradually stepped that down -- it was 12% this year and it falls to 10% next year. I think we revert to the federal 20% figure after that -- a major windfall for insurers here.
noxiousdog wrote: Insurance has always been very competitive, so it will be interesting how they contain costs. My guess is it will increase fraud and cost containment since it's all pass through. They'll have to cut labor somewhere, and it's unlikely to be on the sales and marketing side.
msduncan wrote:I figured I would come here to find you guys spiking the football, and I was right. Spike it while you can, because November is right around the corner.
stessier wrote:Not sure what November is going to change. The president can't veto a law already in place.msduncan wrote:I figured I would come here to find you guys spiking the football, and I was right. Spike it while you can, because November is right around the corner.
Grundbegriff wrote:stessier wrote:Not sure what November is going to change. The president can't veto a law already in place.msduncan wrote:I figured I would come here to find you guys spiking the football, and I was right. Spike it while you can, because November is right around the corner.
I believe Romney's preferred technique is to grant Obamacare waivers to all states and entities.
DocDarm wrote:Wow...I can't believe people are upset about this. It's like, politics trumps real-life. How can anyone NOT want everyone to be insured?
msduncan wrote:I figured I would come here to find you guys spiking the football, and I was right. Spike it while you can, because November is right around the corner.
DocDarm wrote:Wow...I can't believe people are upset about this. It's like, politics trumps real-life. How can anyone NOT want everyone to be insured?
stessier wrote:Grundbegriff wrote:stessier wrote:Not sure what November is going to change. The president can't veto a law already in place.msduncan wrote:I figured I would come here to find you guys spiking the football, and I was right. Spike it while you can, because November is right around the corner.
I believe Romney's preferred technique is to grant Obamacare waivers to all states and entities.
I haven't seen that. Can you explain or point to a source? I promise to read the links this time.
El Guapo wrote:Since the commerce clause language was not part of the actual decision, it's dicta....
DocDarm wrote:Wow...I can't believe people are upset about this. It's like, politics trumps real-life. How can anyone NOT want everyone to be insured?
msduncan wrote:I figured I would come here to find you guys spiking the football, and I was right. Spike it while you can, because November is right around the corner.

Arcanis wrote:I can't speak for others, but my thoughts are this bill was a turd that had some good items in it.
Your comment is similar to saying "How can anyone be opposed to dropping the nuke on Japan? I how can anyone NOT want WWII to end?
Exodor wrote:Arcanis wrote:I can't speak for others, but my thoughts are this bill was a turd that had some good items in it.
Which parts are brown and smelly?Your comment is similar to saying "How can anyone be opposed to dropping the nuke on Japan? I how can anyone NOT want WWII to end?
Did you really just compare expanding access to medical care to atomic holocaust?
Congrats, you just trumped Mike Pence who merely compared it to 9/11.
SpaceLord wrote:I swear, I'm not sure what the color the sky is in the little world msduncan lives in.
SpaceLord wrote:Where is this fucking football msduncan is dreaming that everyone that's not him or YK on the forum is spiking? I swear, I'm not sure what the color the sky is in the little world msduncan lives in.
noxiousdog wrote:Kraken wrote:It is generous. MA started out at 20% and gradually stepped that down -- it was 12% this year and it falls to 10% next year. I think we revert to the federal 20% figure after that -- a major windfall for insurers here.
It will be interesting. Insurance has always been very competitive, so it will be interesting how they contain costs. My guess is it will increase fraud and cost containment since it's all pass through. They'll have to cut labor somewhere, and it's unlikely to be on the sales and marketing side.
In the grand scheme of things, it's irrelevant because it's the growth of expenses, not the percentage of expenses that matters.
Arcanis wrote:I think people getting medical care is important, the insurance is just a means to that end. I also think that until people are responsible for the costs of their care they will always demand the latest & greatest care even if the tried and true is good enough for their needs and significantly cheaper. There will need to be lots of changes in the mentality of the American people before medical costs will be controllable without some sort of arbitrary rationing of care. Just my thoughts and best answer to your question.

Isgrimnur wrote:Arcanis wrote:I think people getting medical care is important, the insurance is just a means to that end. I also think that until people are responsible for the costs of their care they will always demand the latest & greatest care even if the tried and true is good enough for their needs and significantly cheaper. There will need to be lots of changes in the mentality of the American people before medical costs will be controllable without some sort of arbitrary rationing of care. Just my thoughts and best answer to your question.
I'm pretty sure most of those who are currently insured have co-pays and deductibles. My insurance is pretty decent, but I can still take a hit of several thousand dollars if my health goes pear-shaped, like needing one's tonsils ripped out.
The ones that aren't insured and are using ERs for medical care are the ones that don't care what it costs, but they've long ago given up on having a decent credit rating or a job that would provide insurance. But they're not in there demanding the latest and greatest in hip replacements, either.

Isgrimnur wrote:Spoiler:
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