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Obama's Deficit Lies

Leaving aside the question of whether or not the stimulus is a good idea, let's look at its effect on the deficit.

Obama says it will create or save 3.5 million jobs. Let's take that at face value and assume he's correct. If each one of those jobs generates $8,000 of tax revenue, that's 28 billion dollars per year of increased tax revenue. To my way of thinking, that doesn't cover the cost of the plan.

I think the debt goes up.

Most likely you are correct. I haven't heard anyone claim the plan is debt neutral. However, a trillion dollars at 3.5% interest, which is what T-bills are currently paying, is $35 billion a year. Indefinitely. So if I assume your numbers are correct I could argue that the real cost of saving 3.5 million jobs is 7 billion a year. $2000 a job. Pretty cheap.

Unfortunately, the uncertainties in these numbers make this calculation more or less meaningless. The ancillary costs of someone being unemployed, for example: how much are costs increased in unemployment benefits, welfare, medicaid, food banks, homeless shelters, criminal justice, etc? How much does government borrowing crowd out private borrowing? How much does one foreclosed house depress the rest of the neighborhood?
 
No.



No it doesn't.

So based on that answer you would consider the statement made by this individual upchurch pointed out as an example incorrect? If not incorrect, feel free to elaborate on your interpretation. I am curious...

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,496446,00.html

Quote:
LLEWELLYN: No, and most of the people who are writing about socialism don't know anything about it either. You know, the discussion that emerged in the campaign was — you know, very surreal. It didn't — it wasn't based on facts. It was more like name-calling.

I mean, if you want to be honest, and you want to take who of the four people running for national office was actually the most socialistic, it was Sarah Palin — because she administered a state that says that the oil revenues are collectively owned...

BECK: Right.

LLEWELLYN: ... and she used her position as governor to force the oil companies to pay the state more money, which they then redistributed to the people. Now, I have a feeling that that's what Chavez does in Venezuela, that people like you criticize him for. So, you know, that would, at least, be a more serious discussion .

I'm interested in what your interpretation of socialist policies is. Where do you draw the line between socialism policy, and some other application. Upchurch used this example to point out that Obama's policies are by no means the socialist type which conservatives have been worried about, yet based on what I'm reading of his considerations redistribution of wealth very well fits into a subset of socialist practices. The only real difference I see between forcing oil companies to pay more to the state and then redistributing the added fund to the people, and raising taxes on people who earn more annually is how the idea of class warfare is applied.

And assuming Obama's policies shouldn't be considered such, why is there no concern when his tax policies affect people under the same categories he classifies as being below the threshold of a particular income? If the idea of relieving the middle class is the goal, what are your intention concerning positions regarding some of the policies he's already signed into law which don't conform to this pledge?
 
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If you want to know how BeAChooser is using the word you need to ask him, indeed that is partly why I keep asking him the question that came from his opening post in this thread "And that assumes his socialist ..... policies ......"

Have to say I would have thought that since he made the claim in his opening post it would have been very simple for him to list at least some of these socialist policies. So far he hasn't.
 
Upchurch used this example to point out that Obama's policies are by no means the socialist type which conservatives have been worried about, yet based on what I'm reading of his considerations redistribution of wealth very well fits into a subset of socialist practices.
[quibble]

Technically, all I was doing was responding to this:
Why do I get the feeling that real socialists laugh at the accusations that Obama is a socialist?
by providing the opinions of one "real socialist". I infer no conclusions about the content of that opinion, for or against.

[/quibble]
 
So based on that answer you would consider the statement made by this individual upchurch pointed out as an example incorrect?

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,496446,00.html

The point Llewellyn was making is the same point I was making; that "redistribution of wealth" can mean a great many things, and is not, in itself, indicative of a socialist state.

Any government program that provides a service to the public, funded by tax dollars, is essentially "redistribution of wealth" to some degree. If someone gets a different amount of government services than the amount of taxes they pay, wealth is being "redistributed."

I don't think anyone would confuse Alaska with being socialist. Certainly not Alaskans.

I'm interested in what your interpretation of socialist policies is. Where do you draw the line between socialism policy, and some other application. Upchurch used this example to point out that Obama's policies are by no means the socialist type which conservatives have been worried about,

Well, it's like this. Contrary to what BAC seems to think, Obama is not promoting a single-payer health system, where all health insurance is managed by a government body. He's promoting open access--making sure everyone can buy health coverage from the private organization of their choice (or, more likely, their employers' choice).

To me, that's no more socialist than the fact that everyone can buy electric service. In fact, it's less so, because in most areas, while you buy your electric service from a private company, it's a monopoly.

Obama's idea of "universal health care," then, is more capitalist than many other services.


yet based on what I'm reading of his considerations redistribution of wealth very well fits into a subset of socialist practices.

Lots of weasel words there, to make this claim completely meaningless.

First, see above about "redistribution of wealth."

Second, "fits into a subset of socialist practices" can mean, well, just about anything. Money "fits into a subset of socialist practices," as all socialist countries (whether social democrat, communist, or whatever) use some form of currency. Yet money is hardly indicative of socialism, as capitalist countries use it as well.

The only real difference I see between forcing oil companies to pay more to the state and then redistributing the added fund to the people, and raising taxes on people who earn more annually is how the idea of class warfare is applied.

"Class warfare?" No. Just--no.

The Bolshevik revolution was "class warfare."
The French Revolution was "class warfare."

Raising taxes is not "class warfare."


All in all, I see a lot of conservative scare phrases and memes being thrown out by everyone from Limbaugh to Fox News on down. "Socialism," "redistribution of wealth," "class warfare," and so on.

None of these scarewords actually address the substance of Obama's proposals, but they do wonders for generating FUD. I can't help but think this is intentional.

At the end of the day, I notice that while the Right has been screaming about how Obama is virtually declaring the USA to be a People's Republic, none of them have answered Upchurch's very simple question: OK, what would you do?

This leads me to believe that the Right simply has no ideas.
 
The point Llewellyn was making is the same point I was making; that "redistribution of wealth" can mean a great many things, and is not, in itself, indicative of a socialist state.
I think socialism as a form of government is better measured as the magnitude to which policies reflect it. I'm hesitant to call a government "socialist" based on individual policies outright, but individual policies can reflect those principles making the politics practiced "closer" to it. To make my point clearer Venezuela is an extreme case where such policies have been way over applied. Obama's not there yet, and I'll have towait to see what Obama's policies do to the country but at this point my opinions fall more in line with BEA than they do with the views you hold.

Any government program that provides a service to the public, funded by tax dollars, is essentially "redistribution of wealth" to some degree. If someone gets a different amount of government services than the amount of taxes they pay, wealth is being "redistributed."
I'm aware that taxes are necessary to provide funding for infrastructure, but my problem is not necessarily with the taxes themselves being "redistribution of wealth" it's this idea that there's a classification that deems someone as "too wealthy" to such a degree that they are obliged to pay more in order to help the lower and middle class. And Obama's plan increases the burden on an income group that already pays the majority of taxes in this country (2005 figures). Tell me everything you want about how the rich have us by the balls by putting down the middle class, but I don't think society's overall views of "fairness" is entirely correct. Taxes for revenue I can agree with, using tax as a medium to move wealth from one group to another is not something I can agree with, particularly granted that this consideration ignores people who legitimately earn their keep.


Well, it's like this. Contrary to what BAC seems to think, Obama is not promoting a single-payer health system, where all health insurance is managed by a government body. He's promoting open access--making sure everyone can buy health coverage from the private organization of their choice (or, more likely, their employers' choice).
I'm semi aware of the overall concept of his health plan -- that is at least as far as what Obama stated . That's not really part of what I was asking about though. I'll comment more on this after I've seen the more details concerning the background of the plan. Until then, I'll only say that I hope this plan doesn't reflect the application of the children's health insurance plan. I won't post the links again, as I've posted them a couple of times already. I think how they implemented the plan for funding it was a mistake.

Lots of weasel words there, to make this claim completely meaningless.

First, see above about "redistribution of wealth."

Second, "fits into a subset of socialist practices" can mean, well, just about anything. Money "fits into a subset of socialist practices," as all socialist countries (whether social democrat, communist, or whatever) use some form of currency. Yet money is hardly indicative of socialism, as capitalist countries use it as well.
It's my fault for not stating where I am making this claim from. But I made that statement under the same context as I put under the second quote in this post.


"Class warfare?" No. Just--no.

The Bolshevik revolution was "class warfare."
The French Revolution was "class warfare."

Raising taxes is not "class warfare."
Of course it is... in the context which you're arguing at least. "Raising taxes" is a red herring at best, it's the principal behind the tax increases which make it class warfare is it not? Isn't the argument your pushing along the lines of the top percentile of income earners are suppressing the potential of the middle and lower classes? This is class warfare by wealth; the rich class versus the poor. The very principle by which Obama is planning to tax individuals and couples making over 250,000 dollars a year. This is what Hugo Chavez does in Venezuela (the application of which I will not be comparing with Obama's due to the obvious differences between them). This is arguably what Palin's policy does in Alaska. Essentially Obama and many who agree with his ideals are drawing an imaginary line in the income earning tiers and labeling it as a boundary between the rich and the middle class and poor. Essentially because those people are making more than the rest of us they have a mandatory duty to share their wealth with the rest of us -- not through charity -- but rather through taxation with the intent of shifting the tax burden. The examples you cite are based largely on ideological principals, not the wealth based principals I'm talking about.



All in all, I see a lot of conservative scare phrases and memes being thrown out by everyone from Limbaugh to Fox News on down. "Socialism," "redistribution of wealth," "class warfare," and so on.

None of these scarewords actually address the substance of Obama's proposals, but they do wonders for generating FUD. I can't help but think this is intentional.

The problem is however although I can agree with a lot of the material they have to say about this subject, I don't always agree with how many of the conservative outlets argue it. Taxation in itself is supposed to be a "non-partisan" (i can't think of the other word I want to use for this) means for the country to maintain an income that sustains it. What Obama is advocating is penalizing one tax bracket because by his definition of "rich" they make too much money. Raising the taxes on the income earners above his threshold is the means by which this income is redistributed. Again, in my honest opinion taxation is not what I take issue with, its how that taxation is implemented. I tend to agree with Obama in some context of this, that is where CEO's benefit from their failures, but his overall policy is a sweeping generalization that makes no discernment between greedy CEO's who capitalize on corporate failure or those who legitimately earn their keep. And of course some of the measures that are being taken to "assist" if you will the middle class are doing the reversed which tends to be one of my more favored arguments.
 
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The Palin sponsored process of having the oil companies distribute some of the profit from their oil ventures to the people of Alaska. Even those who, Gawd forbid, had nothing at all to do with creating that wealth

How is insisting that some of the revenue from oil owned collectively by Alaskans be shared socialism? The Alaskan people own the mineral rights to everything under the ground in Alaska. Leasing that land to oil companies and then paying some of the revenue to the owners of the leased property is not socialism. Socialism is when you take something from someone who owns it and give it to someone who does not. Like Obama wants to do with the earnings from things that are not based on the use of a collective resource. Of course, Obama wouldn't even think of doing what Palin did since he's against drilling for oil. :rolleyes: And it's also ironic that democrats would complain about Palin's action since they continually harp about oil company windfall profits. Oh ... maybe they just don't like the fact that Palin gave the money directly back to the people, rather than simply bloating government further as democrats intend to do with THEIR increased taxes on big oil. :D

Apparently, a stimulus bill provision means that "our doctors" no longer get to make healthcare decisions for us (http://article.nationalreview.com/?q...U1MTc2NTE4YTI= ) with Dashill's "rationing board" being the goal.

Somehow I just don't see it going down that way in the States.

"somehow"? :rolleyes: Can't you be a little more specific as to why that won't happen. You are wrong. The language is already in the bill that was passed to allow it to happen and the democrat that Obama wanted to make his Health czar stated that was his goal. Somehow I just don't have much confidence that you really understand Obama and the democrats in this country. Perhaps your media isn't telling you everything you need to know. :D

I get as good basic health care as anyone in the USA. I get as good, or better, health care for serious disease as the majority of US citizens.

Maybe you do but what about other Canadians?

Why is it that so many Canadians come to America to seek medical treatment and drugs if it's so wonderful? For example, take the case of Suzanne Aucoin:

http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_3_canadian_healthcare.html

summer 2007

The Ugly Truth About Canadian Health Care
David Gratzer

Socialized medicine has meant rationed care and lack of innovation. Small wonder Canadians are looking to the market.

... snip ...

Mountain-bike enthusiast Suzanne Aucoin had to fight more than her Stage IV colon cancer. Her doctor suggested Erbitux—a proven cancer drug that targets cancer cells exclusively, unlike conventional chemotherapies that more crudely kill all fast-growing cells in the body—and Aucoin went to a clinic to begin treatment. But if Erbitux offered hope, Aucoin’s insurance didn’t: she received one inscrutable form letter after another, rejecting her claim for reimbursement. Yet another example of the callous hand of managed care, depriving someone of needed medical help, right? Guess again. Erbitux is standard treatment, covered by insurance companies—in the United States. Aucoin lives in Ontario, Canada.

When Aucoin appealed to an official ombudsman, the Ontario government claimed that her treatment was unproven and that she had gone to an unaccredited clinic. But the FDA in the U.S. had approved Erbitux, and her clinic was a cancer center affiliated with a prominent Catholic hospital in Buffalo. This January, the ombudsman ruled in Aucoin’s favor, awarding her the cost of treatment. She represents a dramatic new trend in Canadian health-care advocacy: finding the treatment you need in another country, and then fighting Canadian bureaucrats (and often suing) to get them to pick up the tab.

Explain these facts, if Canada's system is so great.

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/BillSteigerwald/2007/09/01/uh-oh,_canada?page=full&comments=true

September 1, 2007

... snip ...

Why is the hip replacement center of Canada in Ohio -- at the Cleveland Clinic, where 10 percent of its international patients are Canadians?

Why is the Brain and Spine Clinic in Buffalo serving about 10 border-crossing Canadians a week? Why did a Calgary woman recently have to drive several hundred miles to Great Falls, Mont., to give birth to her quadruplets?

No one really knows how many Canadians come to the US for treatment each year. But it is surely in the many tens of thousands. One expert in the above link gave a conservative figure for 2006 of nearly 40,000.

If Canada's system of socialized medicine is so good, why are more and more Canadians complaining about like things like ... wait times?

http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_3_canadian_healthcare.html

Canadian newspapers are now filled with stories of people frustrated by long delays for care:

VOW BROKEN ON CANCER WAIT TIMES: MOST HOSPITALS ACROSS CANADA FAIL TO MEET OTTAWA'S FOUR-WEEK GUIDELINE FOR RADIATION

PATIENTS WAIT AS P.E.T. SCANS USED IN ANIMAL EXPERIMENTS

BACK PATIENTS WAITING YEARS FOR TREATMENT: STUDY

THE DOCTOR IS ... OUT

As if a taboo had lifted, government statistics on the health-care system’s problems are suddenly available. In fact, government researchers have provided the best data on the doctor shortage, noting, for example, that more than 1.5 million Ontarians (or 12 percent of that province’s population) can’t find family physicians. Health officials in one Nova Scotia community actually resorted to a lottery to determine who’d get a doctor’s appointment.

A Commonwealth Fund study (Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: An International update on the comparative performance of American health care, May 15, 2007) found that 24% of Canadians waited 4 or more hours in the emergency room, versus just 12% in the US. And 57% waited 4 or more weeks to see a specialist, versus only 23% in the US. In a 2003 survey (http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2001977834_cihak13.html ), when hospital administrators were asked "for the average waiting time for biopsy of a possible breast cancer in a 50-year-old woman, 21 percent of administrators of Canadian hospitals said more than three weeks; only 1 percent of American hospital administrators gave the same answer." And "fifty percent of the Canadian hospital administrators said the average waiting time for a 65-year-old man who requires a routine hip replacement was more than six months; in contrast, not one American hospital administrator reported waiting periods that long. Eighty-six percent of American hospital administrators said the average waiting time was shorter than three weeks; only 3 percent of Canadian hospital administrators said their patients have this brief a wait."

So if the socialize medicine of the type Obama is envisioning is really working in Canada, why is Canads now looking to the market for solutions?

Again from http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_3_canadian_healthcare.html

Rick Baker helps people, and sometimes even saves lives. He describes a man who had a seizure and received a diagnosis of epilepsy. Dissatisfied with the opinion—he had no family history of epilepsy, but he did have constant headaches and nausea, which aren’t usually seen in the disorder—the man requested an MRI. The government told him that the wait would be four and a half months. So he went to Baker, who arranged to have the MRI done within 24 hours—and who, after the test discovered a brain tumor, arranged surgery within a few weeks.

Baker isn’t a neurosurgeon or even a doctor. He’s a medical broker, one member of a private sector that is rushing in to address the inadequacies of Canada’s government care. Canadians pay him to set up surgical procedures, diagnostic tests, and specialist consultations, privately and quickly.

... snip ...

Some of the services that Baker brokers almost certainly contravene Canadian law, but governments are loath to stop him. “What I am doing could be construed as civil disobedience,” he says. “There comes a time when people need to lead the government.”

Baker isn’t alone: other private-sector health options are blossoming across Canada, and the government is increasingly turning a blind eye to them, too, despite their often uncertain legal status. Private clinics are opening at a rate of about one a week. ... snip ... Testifying to the changing nature of Canadian health care, Baker observes that securing prompt care used to mean a trip south. These days, he says, he’s able to get 80 percent of his clients care in Canada, via the private sector.

And lest you think I'm just picking on Canada, note this:

http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_3_canadian_healthcare.html

Nor were the problems I identified unique to Canada—they characterized all government-run health-care systems. Consider the recent British controversy over a cancer patient who tried to get an appointment with a specialist, only to have it canceled—48 times. More than 1 million Britons must wait for some type of care, with 200,000 in line for longer than six months. A while back, I toured a public hospital in Washington, D.C., with Tim Evans, a senior fellow at the Centre for the New Europe. The hospital was dark and dingy, but Evans observed that it was cleaner than anything in his native England. In France, the supply of doctors is so limited that during an August 2003 heat wave—when many doctors were on vacation and hospitals were stretched beyond capacity—15,000 elderly citizens died. Across Europe, state-of-the-art drugs aren’t available.

... snip ...

And if we measure a health-care system by how well it serves its sick citizens, American medicine excels. Five-year cancer survival rates bear this out. For leukemia, the American survival rate is almost 50 percent; the European rate is just 35 percent. Esophageal carcinoma: 12 percent in the United States, 6 percent in Europe. The survival rate for prostate cancer is 81.2 percent here, yet 61.7 percent in France and down to 44.3 percent in England—a striking variation.

... snip ...

This privatizing trend is reaching Europe, too. Britain’s government-run health care dates back to the 1940s. Yet the Labour Party—which originally created the National Health Service and used to bristle at the suggestion of private medicine, dismissing it as “Americanization”—now openly favors privatization. Sir William Wells, a senior British health official, recently said: “The big trouble with a state monopoly is that it builds in massive inefficiencies and inward-looking culture.” Last year, the private sector provided about 5 percent of Britain’s nonemergency procedures; Labour aims to triple that percentage by 2008. The Labour government also works to voucherize certain surgeries, offering patients a choice of four providers, at least one private. And in a recent move, the government will contract out some primary care services, perhaps to American firms such as UnitedHealth Group and Kaiser Permanente.

Sweden’s government, after the completion of the latest round of privatizations, will be contracting out some 80 percent of Stockholm’s primary care and 40 percent of its total health services, including one of the city’s largest hospitals. Since the fall of Communism, Slovakia has looked to liberalize its state-run system, introducing co-payments and privatizations. And modest market reforms have begun in Germany: increasing co-pays, enhancing insurance competition, and turning state enterprises over to the private sector (within a decade, only a minority of German hospitals will remain under state control).

So I ask you, must we go down the same road and make the same mistake and then have to do what Canada and Europe are now trying to do ... get out of the hole they dug for themselves and their people? How about instead of doing what Obama proposes (building a system much like you had years ago), we meet you half-way (as we were in the process of doing anyway)? :D

In June of 2008, the Toronto Star reported (http://www.thestar.com/article/445835 ) that over 4 MILLION Canadians (12 and older) have no family doctor. That's about 15% of your population (12 and older). It said Canada's poor and underprivileged were affected the most. Now I ask you, how is that any different than the claim here in the US (by democrats) that 45 million out of 300 million (that's 15%) get inadequate health care? That 45 million statistic is used by Obama and his followers to justify his forcing through congress a crash effort to create a national health care system much like Canada's was before recent privatization, but it doesn't sound like socialized medicine has actually been the solution for 15% of your population.

In the USA it depends on who you are and how much care you can afford.

So what? That's life. Wealth has always meant better health care (on average). The powerful have always gotten better health care. Call it incentive for getting wealthy and powerful. And that's the case even in Canada and Europe today. Don't kid yourself that it's not. Here:

http://www.nber.org/papers/w13429

September 2007

Does Canada's publicly funded, single payer health care system deliver better health outcomes and distribute health resources more equitably than the multi-payer heavily private U.S. system? ... snip ... We also find that Canada has no more abolished the tendency for health status to improve with income than have other countries. Indeed, the health-income gradient is slightly steeper in Canada than it is in the U.S.

What's really infuriating, is that Obama and his chronies in Washington will undoubtedly find medical care OUTSIDE the system they force the rest of us to use. Just like they generally elect out of the education system they've forced the rest of use.

As for drugs, what difference does it make where the research takes place?

What is it you think fuels the development of most new drugs (which are EXTREMELY expensive to create) and new medical technology? It's the profit motive and socialist systems tend to work against that. As a result most new drugs are created by US companies ... not in Canada or any of the socialist countries of Europe. How many large pharmaceutical companies are based in Canada. None. How many are based in Europe? A lot fewer than there were 20 years ago. So I'm concerned that Obama may be about to kill the golden goose that has created so many new and wonderful medicines and technologies. Then who will lay the eggs? Maybe we will just have to do without new drugs ... the ones that might have saved your or your children's life some day.

At the University of Manitoba not far from here, at Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto, researchers are developing drugs.

I'm not saying all research has stopped in socialist systems but I stand by my claim (that I can prove) that by far the bulk of new drugs are being created here in Capitalist America. Not in Canada or Europe. And they are created by pharmaceutical companies operating under the profit system, not in universities. Because developing a drug now costs BILLIONS of dollars (http://pubs.acs.org/cen/topstory/8150/8150notw5.html and http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/abstract/25/2/420 ).

But again , what does that have to do with the health care system in any country.

Are you kidding? You think wonder drugs, vaccines and other new medical technologies that have only come to market because of the free market in the US are unimportant to the quality of your health care system? :rolleyes:

The drugs developed anywhere will be tested in each country and allowed for use or not.

Don't kid yourself. The bulk of the development costs do not reside in testing a drug that's already been approved for use by our FDA. It's almost guaranteed to pass. The bulk of the cost is in the many drugs that failed FDA testing. Here in the US. A cost born by US pharmaceutical companies that only do what they do because they can make a profit doing it. But under socialized systems, such companies are far less successful because the profit motive is discouraged and because governments try (unsuccessfully) to manage everything. Which is why Canada and Europe's drug development system is so much smaller than the one in the United States today. Make the US like your country, and those companies may simply decide the rewards no longer outweight the risks and costs of development.

In fact I have availed myself of my gov't health care in the case of a very serious condition. What would have cost me easily a quarter of a million dollars in the USA cost me only lost wages (above what unemployment insurance paid) for 8 months. ... In the USA, without insurance I would be dead or passing a debt to my relatives.

You sound like you think no one in the US has health insurance or that our private health insurance wouldn't provide the same benefits to someone with your equivalent job that yours does? My costs wouldn't be all that different from yours, I bet. Although I might get treated a little sooner, perhaps. ;)

The demand for socialized medicine comes from those who CLAIM that about 45 million Americans (15% of our population) don't have insurance. Now I've already shown that Canada ... even with a socialized system ... still has at least 15% of its population with clearly inadequate coverage. But let's look at that 45 million figure for the US more closely (don't just believe what Sicko told you):

http://www.businessandmedia.org/printer/2007/20070718153509.aspx

Health Care Lie: '47 Million Uninsured Americans'

7/18/2007

... snip ...

The number of the uninsured who aren’t citizens is nearly 10 million on its own, invalidating all the claims of 40+ million “Americans” without health insurance.

... snip ...

Many of the same people pushing the incorrect numbers of uninsured Americans also claim that these people cannot “afford” insurance.

... snip ...

But according to the same Census report, there are 8.3 million uninsured people who make between $50,000 and $74,999 per year and 8.74 million who make more than $75,000 a year. That’s roughly 17 million people who ought to be able to “afford” health insurance because they make substantially more than the median household income of $46,326.

... snip ...

Subtracting non-citizens and those who can afford their own insurance but choose not to purchase it, about 20 million people are left – less than 7 percent of the population.

“Many Americans are uninsured by choice,” wrote Dr. David Gratzer in his book “The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care.”

... snip ...

“Proponents of universal health care often use the 46-million figure -- without context or qualification. It creates the false impression that a huge percentage of the population has fallen through the cracks,” Gratzer told BMI. “Again, that’s not to suggest that there is no problem, but it's very different than the universal-care crowd describes.”

Dr. Grace-Marie Turner, a BMI adviser and president of the Galen Institute, agreed that “the number [on uninsured] is inflated and affects the debate.”

Turner also pointed out that “45 percent of the uninsured are going to have insurance within four months [according to the Congressional Budget Office],” because many are transitioning between jobs and most people get health insurance through their employers.

So what is the true extent of the uninsured “crisis?” The Kaiser Family Foundation, a liberal non-profit frequently quoted by the media, puts the number of uninsured Americans who do not qualify for current government programs and make less than $50,000 a year between 13.9 million and 8.2 million. That is a much smaller figure than the media report.

Should Obama really be making decisions as big as this one on the basis of a LIE? I'm asking you to give me an honest answer.

And by the way, while we are looking, let's look at socialized medicine in Europe:

http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_3_canadian_healthcare.html

Nor were the problems I identified unique to Canada—they characterized all government-run health-care systems. Consider the recent British controversy over a cancer patient who tried to get an appointment with a specialist, only to have it canceled—48 times. More than 1 million Britons must wait for some type of care, with 200,000 in line for longer than six months. ... snip ... In France, the supply of doctors is so limited that during an August 2003 heat wave—when many doctors were on vacation and hospitals were stretched beyond capacity—15,000 elderly citizens died. Across Europe, state-of-the-art drugs aren’t available. And so on.

... snip ...

Americans live 75.3 years on average, fewer than Canadians (77.3) or the French (76.6) or the citizens of any Western European nation save Portugal. Health care influences life expectancy, of course. But a life can end because of a murder, a fall, or a car accident. Such factors aren’t academic—homicide rates in the United States are much higher than in other countries (eight times higher than in France, for instance). In The Business of Health, Robert Ohsfeldt and John Schneider factor out intentional and unintentional injuries from life-expectancy statistics and find that Americans who don’t die in car crashes or homicides outlive people in any other Western country.

And if we measure a health-care system by how well it serves its sick citizens, American medicine excels. Five-year cancer survival rates bear this out. For leukemia, the American survival rate is almost 50 percent; the European rate is just 35 percent. Esophageal carcinoma: 12 percent in the United States, 6 percent in Europe. The survival rate for prostate cancer is 81.2 percent here, yet 61.7 percent in France and down to 44.3 percent in England—a striking variation.

But in any case, we getting far off the OP topic. I suggest we go back to it. So, REGARDLESS of whether socialized medicine like Obama wants would work or not, do you think that loading ourselves and our children with another $8.5 trillion in debt over the next 10 years, with yearly deficits that will never be below half a trillion dollars and that will have grown to over $700 billion a year by the end of that period, is a wise thing for us Americans to do? How is Canada handling debt and deficits?
 
No. Again, you are completely and totally wrong, and have been proven so repeatedly.

That you refuse to acknowledge it, and try to compensate with bluster, is immaterial.

You lose.

Folks, I give you your typical Obama supporter. :D
 
Well that's just silly. If we do nothing and allow the systems to collapse

What's really silly is thinking that I said we'd do nothing or that the system will automatically "collapse" if we don't throw $8.5 trillion PLUS dollars of new debt at it over the next 10 years.

however, if we can generate new technologies to stimulate the economy

That's a pretty big if, given the type of technologies and policies that Obama seems to favor and the track record for government research in inventing new technologies (remember, you already lost that argument). Besides, do you honestly think that if we don't spend $8.5 trillion PLUS dollars on Obama's socialist vision of America, we won't be inventing new technologies in America? :rolleyes: We literally invented much of the modern world without government ever being involved, joobz. I say to Obama, release our government shackles and let us do it again.
 
Business decisions are based on future expectations, and businesses don't share Obama's vision of what will happoen in the next few years.

Which is why the market keeps going down down down. Looks like it may get to 6000 quicker than even I thought.
 
I'm aware that taxes are necessary to provide funding for infrastructure, but my problem is not necessarily with the taxes themselves being "redistribution of wealth" it's this idea that there's a classification that deems someone as "too wealthy" to such a degree that they are obliged to pay more in order to help the lower and middle class.

That's the nature of a progressive income tax. Obama didn't invent it, and it's been the case through Democratic and Republican administrations.

It's not socialism.

Taxes for revenue I can agree with, using tax as a medium to move wealth from one group to another is not something I can agree with, particularly granted that this consideration ignores people who legitimately earn their keep.

Well, again, though, this is the case for all programs funded by taxation. Any time someone receives a different value of government services than what they pay in taxation, this occurs.

Example: A homeless, jobless man who has no income and pays no taxes will still use the streets and sidewalks. If he is the victim of a crime, he can go to the police and press charges. His children can still go to a public school and get an education.

Even if he takes no public assistance (unemployment, food stamps, etc) whatsoever, he is receiving a number of taxpayer-funded services without having paid a penny in taxes. And this would still be the case whether there was a flat tax or progressive income tax.

This, too, is "redistribution of wealth." Those who have the ability to work and pay taxes are paying for the services he receives, despite the fact that he's putting nothing in.

Which is why I consider the "redistribution of wealth" meme to be void of substance. Even in Republitopia, where there are no federally funded public assistance programs and everyone pays a flat tax rate, "redistribution of wealth" would still be going on.

Of course it is... in the context which you're arguing at least. "Raising taxes" is a red herring at best, it's the principal behind the tax increases which make it class warfare is it not?

No. It is not. Not unless you think Obama is secretly planning some sort of insurrection by the proletariat. (I find that unlikely, but weirder opinions have been voiced here before.)

Isn't the argument your pushing along the lines of the top percentile of income earners are suppressing the potential of the middle and lower classes?

Uh, no, I'm not "pushing" any such argument. At all. I really have no idea where you got that from.

This is class warfare by wealth; the rich class versus the poor.

Class warfare means class warfare. It means war between economic classes. We don't see that with Obama, or even the faintest hint of it.

The very principle by which Obama is planning to tax individuals and couples making over 250,000 dollars a year. This is what Hugo Chavez does in Venezuela (the application of which I will not be comparing with Obama's due to the obvious differences between them).

So you'll compare Obama's tax plan to Chavez', but you won't compare them. :confused:

This is arguably what Palin's policy does in Alaska.

So Sarah Palin is pushing class warfare? :confused:

Essentially Obama and many who agree with his ideals are drawing an imaginary line in the income earning tiers and labeling it as a boundary between the rich and the middle class and poor. Essentially because those people are making more than the rest of us they have a mandatory duty to share their wealth with the rest of us -- not through charity -- but rather through taxation with the intent of shifting the tax burden. The examples you cite are based largely on ideological principals, not the wealth based principals I'm talking about.

Again...That's nothing more than progressive taxation. Been around for decades, even during the administration of St. Reagan.

The problem is however although I can agree with a lot of the material they have to say about this subject, I don't always agree with how many of the conservative outlets argue it. Taxation in itself is supposed to be a "non-partisan" (i can't think of the other word I want to use for this) means for the country to maintain an income that sustains it. What Obama is advocating is penalizing one tax bracket because by his definition of "rich" they make too much money.

Obama is not "advocating" this. It has been the case literally for decades; people who make more money pay a higher percentage in taxes.

The fact that you're talking as though Obama came up with this idea all on his own indicates that the FUD is working. Sadly.
 
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
How about redistribution of wealth? Would you not agree that's a hallmark characteristic of socialist (and communist) systems?

No.

Would you agree that a hallmark of communist systems is redistribution of wealth?
 
However, a trillion dollars at 3.5% interest, which is what T-bills are currently paying, is $35 billion a year. Indefinitely. So if I assume your numbers are correct I could argue that the real cost of saving 3.5 million jobs is 7 billion a year. $2000 a job. Pretty cheap.

Well gosh. Then I guess what Obama should do is just eliminate most taxes and borrow enough money that he can create these *cheap* jobs for everyone. It will be paradise. Forever. With free healthcare. :rolleyes:
 
Contrary to what BAC seems to think, Obama is not promoting a single-payer health system

Oh yeah?

Here's what he told an AFL-CIO Conference in June of 2008:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpAyan1fXCE

I happen to be a proponent of single-payer, universal health care"

Here's what he told a town hall meeting in August of 2008:

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2008/08/19/obama-touts-single-payer-system/

“If I were designing a system from scratch, I would probably go ahead with a single-payer system,” Obama told some 1,800 people at a town-hall style meeting on the economy.

Did he lie to you folks, AGAIN? :D

This leads me to believe that the Right simply has no ideas.

And you didn't vote for Obama? Call me a skeptic. :D
 
Oh yeah?

Here's what he told an AFL-CIO Conference in June of 2008:

And yet, during the campaign, the plan that he proposed was not a single-payer system.

Hillary Clinton was supporting a single-payer system. The two fought about it quite a bit. It doesn't surprise me that you don't recall.

And you didn't vote for Obama? Call me a skeptic. :D
No, I'd never call you that. I'll just call you the same thing I've been calling you: Wrong.

ETA: What I find really funny (and I mean, really funny; I'm sitting here snickering) is just how completely off-base you are. I do support single-payer health care. The fact that Obama does not is one of the reasons I didn't support his candidacy.
 
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Oh yeah?

Here's what he told an AFL-CIO Conference in June of 2008:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpAyan1fXCE



Here's what he told a town hall meeting in August of 2008:

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2008/08/19/obama-touts-single-payer-system/



Did he lie to you folks, AGAIN? :D

Let's see: Cleon says that Obama is not promoting a single-payer health system.

BAC posts a quote where Obama states "If I were designing a system from scratch, I would probably go ahead with a single-payer system,”

Is Obama "designing a system from scratch", BAC? HMMMMM?

If he were PROMOTING a single payer system, BAC, would he say that this is the system that he would use if he were designing a system FROM SCRATCH? HMMMMMM? Don't you think he would just say something like "I support a single payer system" instead? Hmmmmmm?

Do the proposals Obama presented during the presidential campaign call for a single payer, BAC? HMMMMMMM? Why not? Do you think, perhaps, it is because he is NOT promoting a single payer system? HMMMMM?

If you asked me, I'd say the liar here is clear, as Obama is clearly NOT promoting a single payer system, as you claim. Who do you think that would be, BAC? Hmmmmmm?

:D
 
Essentially Obama and many who agree with his ideals are drawing an imaginary line in the income earning tiers and labeling it as a boundary between the rich and the middle class and poor.

And to show how arbitrary that line is, consider that in March of 2008, all the democrat candidates (including Obama) voted to increase taxes on anyone making more than $31,850 dollars. And that was at the time democrats were starting to say only the rich would suffer if they were made our leadership. So I don't really think we can count on that boundary staying were it now is during the rest of Obama's rule.

What Obama is advocating is penalizing one tax bracket because by his definition of "rich" they make too much money.

It's worse than that. He's also engaging in intergenerational redistribution of wealth to a degree rarely seen before. The OP is not just about raising taxes on the rich but on increasing the National Debt a phenomenal amount to fund services he wants to supply to his constituents NOW. The Debt will have to be paid off with the wealth created by our children and their children. And they don't even get a vote in the matter. Now that's really theft.
 
The point Llewellyn was making is the same point I was making; that "redistribution of wealth" can mean a great many things, and is not, in itself, indicative of a socialist state.
In a socialist state, the state owns the means of production.

Alaska's oil revenue distribution is not socialist, neither is anything Obama has done yet.

What a stupid derail!
 

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