DavidJames
Penultimate Amazing
The perfect solution fallacy is perfect when reality conflicts with personal bias.
Republicans should have focused more on the demographics from the get go rather than play hardball with the raw sign up numbers. The latter doesn't tell us anything beyond the fact that people signed up through the exchanges where as the former - with the way the ACA was framed out - has tangible impacts on the rates of insurance.Actually, you may find it hard to believe, but Obamacare supporters find the numbers important because they represent people getting health care for the first time in years. I get that conservative nutters think that's meaningless, which is why you followed that paragraph up with:
Republicans should have focused more on the demographics from the get go rather than play hardball with the raw sign up numbers. The latter doesn't tell us anything beyond the fact that people signed up through the exchanges where as the former - with the way the ACA was framed out - has tangible impacts on the rates of insurance.
Sure, if your goal is to win the politics of the argument instead of, get this, making sure more people can see a doctor and get healthy when they're sick.
I'm of the opinion that it's pretty well designed so that most of the time when finances are thin you usually have an affordable solution or at least are not under the mandate. Not perfectly so, and there is room for improvement in the law, but I'd say a large majority find it this way.
Not it wasn't?The law was supposed to solve the problem of uninsured people.
Not it wasn't?
It was meant to do a whole range of things, among them alleviate the problem of the uninsured, lowering the number of uninsured from 55 million to 30 million. More could be accomplished by expanding Medicaid and instituting a public option, but those were made impossible by the right-winger loons.
Not it wasn't?
It was meant to do a whole range of things, among them alleviate the problem of the uninsured, lowering the number of uninsured from 55 million to 30 million. More could be accomplished by expanding Medicaid and instituting a public option, but those were made impossible by the right-winger loons.
You mean Democrats?
I think he meant Bush.![]()
Are you joking?
The Tea Party has had an influence on the current Congressional Republican party. This is not a good influence.
You might dispute* whether the Tea Party are loons, but they are right wing.
*A lot have rather "eccentric" beliefs that tie in with their political outlook. And a lot are loons.
I'm a conservative.
I do not take this as terrible news - I want this to work out, giving affordable care to many who could not get it before while lowering rates for most others.
I suspect the really terrible news lies in the future, with rate hikes, insurance company bailouts, restrictions on where and from whom you can actually get health care, further reduced benefits under Medicare*, or some combination of all four.
Hope I'm wrong, and that none of those come to pass. I really do.
*In four months I'll be eligible for Medicare, so when I hear of funding cuts, it's starting to affect me personally.
You want lower premiums? Cut out insurance companies who are legally taking 20% as profit off the top.
This "statistic" is wrong. Not a little bit wrong, but wildly wrong. So wrong, and so obviously wrong, that I'm left wondering not where this lie came from, but how you ever believed it.