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Tuesday, July 14, 2015

With This Type Of Thinking, How Long Will It Be Before The US Is Like Greece?

The following article is a great example of what is wrong with America today. It has become the land of the "giveaway."  It is the land where illegal immigrants come here to improve their lives by getting on the government dole instead of working and striving. It is the land where LEGAL immigrants wait years for admittance because they might improve the country. It the the land where nearly half of the population receives something from the government (and we are not talking Social Security to which we have contributed).  It the land where in the past 7 years our national debt has doubled to  18 trillion dollars which is the same as our national GDP.  


The author says that "Jim" earns a good salary, then why did he not have insurance? Not my problem to solve his issues. He is an adult, be responsible. It is not my duty to protect him from anything that might hurt him. But I will bet that he has the newest cell phone (mine is from 2006), goes on fancy vacations, has the largest tv made, has a cable bill of over $200 per month, and has a fancy imported leased car.  Why did he not cut back on the "basics" and provide himself with insurance. We would also believe that he has not done a will or a trust, does not have life insurance and only has car insurance because the state (and his leasing company) makes him pay for that and even then he has only the minimum required coverage. 

Jim is an example of the "live for today" mantra of many in the US. Worrying about tomorrow is for chumps. He then expects all of us to pay for his illnesses when he gets sick or to provide him with the insurance he did not get in the first place.

Jim is a loser but unfortunately for those of us who do plan for the future, he is in the majority.  And the Democrats will always pander to those who want something for nothing. It guarantees them a vote. It is not what is best for the country, it is what is best for their re-election.

Can we change this trend. Unfortunately, probably not. There are just too many who get money, food, housing from the government who will riot if those benefits are taken away. Just look at Greece, they are in a mess, yet they would not reform their ways. We are the same just a few years behind.

Prepare your children and grandchildren for a third world country and not the great one that we grew up in.

Conservative Tom





Continued attacks on ObamaCare are wasteful and unethical


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This past month was eventful for our dear friend Jim. He was beyond relieved to learn from a biopsy that he did not have prostate cancer. He had also just spent five days in the hospital due to an adverse reaction to the extraordinarily expensive medication that keeps his Crohn's disease in check. But more than the relief of a return to health was the Supreme Court verdict in King v. Burwell that allowed him to keep his health insurance. According to Jim, who has a good salary, either the medication, which allows him to have a productive career and a happy home life; the hospitalization; or the biopsy, with its attendant facility and anesthesia fees, could have put him into debt for life. And there was no way he would have even thought to have the check-up that led to the biopsy without insurance.
But despite his short-term relief, Jim remains worried because the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is still under constant challenge. Every member of the GOP 2016 presidential field has said he or she will make it a priority to repeal it. Even thoughKing v. Burwell — the suit over federal subsidies that threatened to severely cripple the ACA — has been decided in favor of the status quo, the millions of people like Jim dependent on the ACA for their healthcare, not just their health insurance, can only breathe a momentary a sigh of relief.
The ACA is the single most important social program in decades. But it is still under fire from ideologues, intent on destroying it solely on principle. There are pending lawsuits, costing taxpayers millions, issued by the very people who should be finding ways to resolve the technical flaws still present in the ACA with legislation rather than wasteful litigation. Mind you, the ACA is made up of 906 pages of the law and thousands ofpages of regulations. It takes little imagination to predict, in a body of work so complex, that flaws, and therefore excuses for grandstanding through legal action, will be found for generations to come. But like Medicare and Social Security, ACA seems to be here to stay.
Even a non-economist such as I can understand the societal impact that destroying this law will have, even while its opponents are ignoring the catastrophic results that would ensue. The independent and nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that 20 million people would lose health insurance by 2016. That's more than 6 percent of the population, or one in 16 people. Not only that, it would add hundreds of billions of dollars to the national debt, mostly by increasing the cost of covering the uninsured and a loss of control on reimbursement rates. In fairness, it also predicts a scant increase in productivity of 0.7 percent as workers would have to take on additional jobs to pay for insurance. While our unemployment rate is indeed dropping, one has to wonder where these jobs are going to come from. There is no news about millions of jobs left unfilled, particularly well-paying jobs. And anyone who has had to work more than one job simultaneously will attest to the detriment to family life, marriage stability, productivity, the quality of diet and not surprisingly, health. These effects are not considered in the report. Nor are they considered by those who seek to quash the law on the one hand and claim to support family values on the other.
The ACA is not the government simply throwing money at the problem. As suggested by the CBO report, this is the wise expenditure of money that has a return on investment, not a bridge to nowhere. ACA also requires that doctors be paid based on outcomes. We doctors have had, up to now, few incentives to focus us on how we utilize our technology, other than how much money we could make.
The other effect not considered by the report is the devastation healthcare costs are having on American families. Not only would Jim have to pay for health insurance, which he would not be able to afford in the first place, but the insurance would not have covered any of his preexisting conditions without the ACA. Prior to the ACA, one in five Americans had trouble paying their medical bills, and healthcare-related expenses were the single most common cause of bankruptcyin this country. The downstream negative economic effects of a loss of credit are immeasurable and long-lasting.
But health insurance is a matter of moral imperative, not just a matter of the economics that the opponents of the ACA seem to continue to ignore despite plentiful objective evidence. Politics aside, we as a society have determined that healthcare is a right. For better or worse, government is the only currently viable mechanism for guaranteeing rights in our American society. Civil rights do not result from free-market pressures.
Opponents to the ACA would counter that healthcare and health insurance are part of the economy and should be left to the free market to provide. Moreover, look at the long histories of systemic problems with management and financial viability in other systems that are dependent on the government, such as Medicare and Social Security.
But the free market has nearly destroyed healthcare in the U.S., making our system one of themost expensive, with some of the worst outcomes, in the world. The free market has failed miserably at guaranteeing that good healthcare is available to all. Moreover, the government is left paying the costs of emergency care, which are far higher than proactive care. The devastation to individuals and families, the drain on our economy, and the poor results even for those able to enter into the medical system, all mandate a societal and governmental approach.
Legislators should show true leadership by rallying congress and swaying public opinion to help save American lives and money by creating legislative fixes to relieve any remaining concerns about ACA. Instead, they are wasting taxpayer money with endless and irresponsible lawsuits. These serve only to throw people like Jim into healthcare limbo, while placating the political base and playing political ping-pong with Americans' health and lives.
Seres is an associate professor of medicine and clinical ethicist at Columbia University Medical Center. He is a fellow of Columbia's OpEd Project and a member of the medical advisory board forConsumer Reports.

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