Colin Powell is now jumping on the single payer bandwagon. Hope this is where it all leads (and I think it will)
http://news.yahoo.com/colin-powell-pitc ... itics.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;


That is brilliant!kalm wrote:I was listening to some pundit named Glen Ford on a podcast the other day who described (paraphrasing) the Obamacare website as a government built platform for insurance companies to sell their products under the pretense that it's suppose to be providing assistance to the public.![]()

That is stupid (as is his reasoning)!kalm wrote: Colin Powell is now jumping on the single payer bandwagon. Hope this is where it all leads (and I think it will)![]()
http://news.yahoo.com/colin-powell-pitc ... itics.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

THIS.ASUG8 wrote:I've always liked Powell, but him saying "I've benefited from single payer for 55 yrs" is hardly a ringing endorsement. I'm pretty sure he's got a much different health plan than the one being required by the ACA. It's beating a dead horse, but if this plan is so great why doesn't Congress put themselves and their aides on it as well?
He also endorsed the invasion of Iraq.kalm wrote:I was listening to some pundit named Glen Ford on a podcast the other day who described (paraphrasing) the Obamacare website as a government built platform for insurance companies to sell their products under the pretense that it's suppose to be providing assistance to the public.![]()
Colin Powell is now jumping on the single payer bandwagon. Hope this is where it all leads (and I think it will)![]()
http://news.yahoo.com/colin-powell-pitc ... itics.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

He's endorsing single-payer, which the ACA is not.ASUG8 wrote:I've always liked Powell, but him saying "I've benefited from single payer for 55 yrs" is hardly a ringing endorsement. I'm pretty sure he's got a much different health plan than the one being required by the ACA. It's beating a dead horse, but if this plan is so great why doesn't Congress put themselves and their aides on it as well?

1). Is (referring to G8's post) the ACA itself a health plan or does everyone have to a compliant health plans that fit it's criteria...including congressional aides?Cluck U wrote:THIS.ASUG8 wrote:I've always liked Powell, but him saying "I've benefited from single payer for 55 yrs" is hardly a ringing endorsement. I'm pretty sure he's got a much different health plan than the one being required by the ACA. It's beating a dead horse, but if this plan is so great why doesn't Congress put themselves and their aides on it as well?
Colin Powell, like the rest of Washington, is out of touch and out of reality. Therein lies the failure in his reasoning.
I won't post it all here, but this link is the hypocrisy I'm referencing. The Dems ramming this down everyone's throat didn't take into account that even their staffers would have trouble paying for coverage through the exchanges if they weren't exempted.kalm wrote:1). Is (referring to G8's post) the ACA itself a health plan or does everyone have to a compliant health plans that fit it's criteria...including congressional aides?Cluck U wrote:
THIS.
Colin Powell, like the rest of Washington, is out of touch and out of reality. Therein lies the failure in his reasoning.
2). You're both missing Powell's point. Of course folks who benefitted from rock solid government plans like Powell or Congress and their staffs are out of touch, but so are people who've had rock solid employer base plans that provide great coverage and very little out of pocket expense. If you're not really on the hook for the outrageous fees why would you care about over-billing and price gouging?
Powell is recognizing that not everyone has enjoyed those benefits and he thinks the greatest country on earth can afford to make it so. Private insurance is expensive and too many people choose cheaper plans that don't provide enough coverage to avoid bankruptcy in the case of a major issue or they roll the dice and go without. This has been a tremendous drag on the system.
No system is perfect but single payer has proven to cut expenses without compromising outcomes. I'd rather take a chance that we're as smart as the Swedes and can make it work than continue to see bake sales to raise money for some poor previously insured schmuck who though he'd never get cancer or that his insurance would not run out...and now has the nerve to expect all life saving measures be at his disposal.

I'm not a fan of Obamacare either.ASUG8 wrote:I won't post it all here, but this link is the hypocrisy I'm referencing. The Dems ramming this down everyone's throat didn't take into account that even their staffers would have trouble paying for coverage through the exchanges if they weren't exempted.kalm wrote:
1). Is (referring to G8's post) the ACA itself a health plan or does everyone have to a compliant health plans that fit it's criteria...including congressional aides?
2). You're both missing Powell's point. Of course folks who benefitted from rock solid government plans like Powell or Congress and their staffs are out of touch, but so are people who've had rock solid employer base plans that provide great coverage and very little out of pocket expense. If you're not really on the hook for the outrageous fees why would you care about over-billing and price gouging?
Powell is recognizing that not everyone has enjoyed those benefits and he thinks the greatest country on earth can afford to make it so. Private insurance is expensive and too many people choose cheaper plans that don't provide enough coverage to avoid bankruptcy in the case of a major issue or they roll the dice and go without. This has been a tremendous drag on the system.
No system is perfect but single payer has proven to cut expenses without compromising outcomes. I'd rather take a chance that we're as smart as the Swedes and can make it work than continue to see bake sales to raise money for some poor previously insured schmuck who though he'd never get cancer or that his insurance would not run out...and now has the nerve to expect all life saving measures be at his disposal.
http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/31/politics/ ... obamacare/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
I won't argue with you that the system is broken and we have the opportunity to make it better because very few people would take the opposing side. This plan, however, was flawed from the outset based primarily on the haste with which it was written and rolled out. It has some nuggets of goodness, but as a whole it's just been a wreck.

Limited thinking...and another example of how liberals are so willing to compromise on things.dbackjon wrote:Single payer is the only way to go.

kalm wrote: 1). Is (referring to G8's post) the ACA itself a health plan or does everyone have to a compliant health plans that fit it's criteria...including congressional aides?
2). You're both missing Powell's point. Of course folks who benefitted from rock solid government plans like Powell or Congress and their staffs are out of touch, but so are people who've had rock solid employer base plans that provide great coverage and very little out of pocket expense. If you're not really on the hook for the outrageous fees why would you care about over-billing and price gouging?
Powell is recognizing that not everyone has enjoyed those benefits and he thinks the greatest country on earth can afford to make it so. Private insurance is expensive and too many people choose cheaper plans that don't provide enough coverage to avoid bankruptcy in the case of a major issue or they roll the dice and go without. This has been a tremendous drag on the system.
No system is perfect but single payer has proven to cut expenses without compromising outcomes. I'd rather take a chance that we're as smart as the Swedes and can make it work than continue to see bake sales to raise money for some poor previously insured schmuck who though he'd never get cancer or that his insurance would not run out...and now has the nerve to expect all life saving measures be at his disposal.

Yeah, yeah, but do we cover assholes?Pwns wrote:
Single payer lowers costs because bureaucracy and actuary models are going to regulate what tests and procedures you can have that the government will actually cover and what kind of medical technology or drugs you have access to. Doctors won't have free reign to truly make medical decisions for you because the government decides what care you should get given your diagnosis and prognosis. Simply transferring the costs of health care to the government doesn't cut costs.
And don't be so sure that SP wouldn't affect health outcomes, either. There are only so many doctors and health care facilities we have and only so much money for SP to cover costs. You can bet preventative care (think mammograms and colonoscopies) and care for folks with chronic diseases are going to take a real hit with a SP system. The US has the best preventative care, cancer survival rates, and best care for people with chronic diseases bar NONE.
I knew you weren't.kalm wrote: I'm not a fan of Obamacare either.





This is currently in place, it is called "medicare" and even my staunchly conk headed brother who has nothing constructive to say about the ACA, loves himself his medicare. Maybe it's because the ACA is not single payer...hmm.kalm wrote:I was listening to some pundit named Glen Ford on a podcast the other day who described (paraphrasing) the Obamacare website as a government built platform for insurance companies to sell their products under the pretense that it's suppose to be providing assistance to the public.![]()
Colin Powell is now jumping on the single payer bandwagon. Hope this is where it all leads (and I think it will)![]()
http://news.yahoo.com/colin-powell-pitc ... itics.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Wedgebuster wrote:This is currently in place, it is called "medicare" and even my staunchly conk headed brother who has nothing constructive to say about the ACA, loves himself his medicare. Maybe it's because the ACA is not single payer...hmm.kalm wrote:I was listening to some pundit named Glen Ford on a podcast the other day who described (paraphrasing) the Obamacare website as a government built platform for insurance companies to sell their products under the pretense that it's suppose to be providing assistance to the public.![]()
Colin Powell is now jumping on the single payer bandwagon. Hope this is where it all leads (and I think it will)![]()
http://news.yahoo.com/colin-powell-pitc ... itics.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Pwns wrote:kalm wrote: 1). Is (referring to G8's post) the ACA itself a health plan or does everyone have to a compliant health plans that fit it's criteria...including congressional aides?
2). You're both missing Powell's point. Of course folks who benefitted from rock solid government plans like Powell or Congress and their staffs are out of touch, but so are people who've had rock solid employer base plans that provide great coverage and very little out of pocket expense. If you're not really on the hook for the outrageous fees why would you care about over-billing and price gouging?
Powell is recognizing that not everyone has enjoyed those benefits and he thinks the greatest country on earth can afford to make it so. Private insurance is expensive and too many people choose cheaper plans that don't provide enough coverage to avoid bankruptcy in the case of a major issue or they roll the dice and go without. This has been a tremendous drag on the system.
No system is perfect but single payer has proven to cut expenses without compromising outcomes. I'd rather take a chance that we're as smart as the Swedes and can make it work than continue to see bake sales to raise money for some poor previously insured schmuck who though he'd never get cancer or that his insurance would not run out...and now has the nerve to expect all life saving measures be at his disposal.
Single payer lowers costs because bureaucracy and actuary models are going to regulate what tests and procedures you can have that the government will actually cover and what kind of medical technology or drugs you have access to. Doctors won't have free reign to truly make medical decisions for you because the government decides what care you should get given your diagnosis and prognosis. Simply transferring the costs of health care to the government doesn't cut costs.
And don't be so sure that SP wouldn't affect health outcomes, either. There are only so many doctors and health care facilities we have and only so much money for SP to cover costs. You can bet preventative care (think mammograms and colonoscopies) and care for folks with chronic diseases are going to take a real hit with a SP system. The US has the best preventative care, cancer survival rates, and best care for people with chronic diseases bar NONE.
I don't know the answer to this, but I'll ask anyway.dbackjon wrote: Medicare already does this, for good reason.
There are many, many unnecessary tests, treatments that do nothing other than make doctors and the owners of the equipment rich.
No needed treatment is denied. No needed drug is denied.
But a whole lot of unneeded treatments are not paid for by Medicare.
Many Doctors make a lot of decisions based on personal financial gain - not what is best for the patient


But you're talking about a Medicare system that works in the same arena where non-Medicare healthcare is readily available. Sure, Medicare does decide what is necessary and what isn't necessary treatment, but for many people that's why they also have supplemental health insurance to cover what Medicare doesn't cover. So for many that have Medicare, they are happy to have it because they still have the safety net of some other system in place to get them the medication or surgery they think they need and they know thety want that they aren't too concerned when Medicare doesn't cover it.dbackjon wrote:Pwns wrote:
Single payer lowers costs because bureaucracy and actuary models are going to regulate what tests and procedures you can have that the government will actually cover and what kind of medical technology or drugs you have access to. Doctors won't have free reign to truly make medical decisions for you because the government decides what care you should get given your diagnosis and prognosis. Simply transferring the costs of health care to the government doesn't cut costs.
And don't be so sure that SP wouldn't affect health outcomes, either. There are only so many doctors and health care facilities we have and only so much money for SP to cover costs. You can bet preventative care (think mammograms and colonoscopies) and care for folks with chronic diseases are going to take a real hit with a SP system. The US has the best preventative care, cancer survival rates, and best care for people with chronic diseases bar NONE.
Medicare already does this, for good reason.
There are many, many unnecessary tests, treatments that do nothing other than make doctors and the owners of the equipment rich.
No needed treatment is denied. No needed drug is denied.
But a whole lot of unneeded treatments are not paid for by Medicare.
Many Doctors make a lot of decisions based on personal financial gain - not what is best for the patient

Not sure there is a good answer to that.ASUG8 wrote:I don't know the answer to this, but I'll ask anyway.dbackjon wrote: Medicare already does this, for good reason.
There are many, many unnecessary tests, treatments that do nothing other than make doctors and the owners of the equipment rich.
No needed treatment is denied. No needed drug is denied.
But a whole lot of unneeded treatments are not paid for by Medicare.
Many Doctors make a lot of decisions based on personal financial gain - not what is best for the patient
Who should we trust to make those decisions on what is necessary - the docs who are trying to keep a $5MM MRI machine at near capacity, or a bureaucracy that will determine that your suspected brain tumor can be checked out in 30 days after it has been approved by some government methodology?