JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
Yes, you can take this out of context and use it to support your reframing of the argument such that you can argue the subject which you would like to argue. But the article goes forward, in the section you left out, to say...
When we correct for both gimmicks, counting both on- and off-budget costs over the first 10 years of implementation, the total cost of ObamaCare reaches — I’m so sorry about this — $6.25 trillion.
"Total cost", is where the key number came from, the $6T. "Total cost", as the article says, "counting both on-and off-budget costs", is not just "addressing the CBO cost estimate", which you've improperly claimed.
That's the plan that you are arguing for, the $6 trillion dollar plan. Why are you trying to minimize it's cost? Why not just admit that you like every bit of that money your friends want to steal, and the more, the merrier?
Don't worry - it has yet to go through committee, so the cost will go up yet again.
You're wrong. The figure is about the cost to the federal budget.
If it were the total cost in the way you're thinking (the cost to the nation), then $6 trillion over 10 years (what you say "Obamacare" would cost) would be a significant reduction in the total cost.
In 2007, our per-capita healthcare expenditure was over $6000; multiply that by 300 million, and you get an annual total cost of $1.6 trillion. Multiply that by 10 years--and that's ignoring the fact that we know under the status quo costs would continue to rise--and you get $16 trillion.
So if what you say is true, then "Obamacare" would represent a tremendous decrease in healthcare costs.
But the stuff in the OP really is about the cost to the federal budget. Again, the Cato Institute thinks it's a gimmick or a trick not to count premiums paid to private insurance companies as taxes. If you did count those as taxes, they would represent a decrease in the cost to the federal budget.
Also, if this were about the total cost the way you're thinking of it, what difference would it make whether you count the premiums paid as taxes or as premiums?
Last edited: