sunmaster14
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2014
- Messages
- 10,017
Well I do blame the Republicans, and I'll explain why. When the ACA passed, the GOP had just won Ted Kennedy's seat and the dems no longer had 60 votes. Had the GOP not been 100% obstructionist, 60 votes wouldn't have mattered, but they were. So the crafters of the bill couldn't do any of the usual conference committee work of fine tuning the law before it was signed by Obama. This resulted in some of the poorly worded phrasing that's allowing the Halbig stuff to even happen, and that's allowed far too many states to opt out of Medicaid expansion for the sole purpose of appearing to fight the tyranny of the ACA. But again, had the GOP been part of the process apart from attempting to "kill the bill", then the execution would have gone smoother, kinks in the law would have been smoothed out over the last 5 years, and there's be no reason to doubt that future kinks wouldn't be smoothed over as well. Medicaid expansion would be working as designed, and people in red states would have cheaper insurance right now. Believe me, I am a strong believer in a two party system, and I don't think liberals are always right. I just think that the modern GOP has chosen to appeal to some really ugly base instincts as a strategy to win, and the result is not only that the ACA execution is poor, but we now live in a country where nothing gets done. All issues are insurmountable because we can't pass a budget. We can't agree on any laws. We can't improve anyone's lives. And we can't even keep up our infrastructure. I fear that we're going to be a failed state, in large part because a huge portion of the country thinks that President Obama literally wants to kill Americans because his loyalties lie with foreign muslim terrorists. It's crazy.
You're really in need of a reality check. I'll just list a bunch of points in no particular order:
(1) it was Obama's job to convince voters that his prescription for health care reform made sense; if he had done that, the Republicans would not have opposed it; if the Republicans saw political advantage in obstruction, it's because that's what a significant fraction of the country wanted;
(2) there is little doubt that the restriction of subsidies to state exchanges was intentional; videos of Jonathan Gruber and Jonathan Cohn spelling this out almost three years ago make this clear; it was the old carrot and stick trick; turned out to be too clever by half, but that doesn't mean the Democrats should get a do-over;
(3) we do not live in a country where nothing gets done;
(4) people's lives can and do improve without bills being passed by the Federal government; in any case, lots of bills do get passed; despite the hyperbole about an obstructed government, >95% of the Federal government has been operating as usual;
(5) the infrastructure is good enough, and it gets fixed as needed; would things be done more efficiently and at lower cost if the government were more proactive about investing in infrastructure? perhaps, but the fundamental problem is the way government has always worked; any temporary political fights have little to do with it; Obama tried to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on shovel-ready projects in 2009 and 2010 only to find out (by his own admission) that, like fairies and unicorns, they really are mythical;
(6) I predict that Democrats are going to (re)learn the virtue of obstructionism very quickly; of course it's only a good thing when you're obstructing the enactment of laws you don't like.
