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King Sid the Great 87 wrote:I wouldn't be concerned with it. Those pesky Bush-era tax cuts were only put in place to benefit the wealthy anyway. Middle class receives no benefit.

ExPatriatePen wrote:King Sid the Great 87 wrote:I wouldn't be concerned with it. Those pesky Bush-era tax cuts were only put in place to benefit the wealthy anyway. Middle class receives no benefit.
You may want to check the numbers again.
The Bush Era cuts absolutely benefited the middle class.
Unless that comment was sarcasm and I missed it entirely. (Why don't people use emoticons?)



DelPen wrote:I think anytime someone uses the word "pesky" sarcasm should be noted



Troy Loney wrote:Once you enact entitlements it's almost impossible to take them away.
I heard a proposal to raise the SS age to 67, this helps to sustain Social Security, which isn't really the problem, because SS can easily be extended with just some slight adjustemts like raising the age and raising the 100K cut off a little. Medicaire is unsustainable, just like everyting a bout our bloated healthcare system. We just need to switch to a single payer system, remove the employee based healthcare. Get it under the government, the current heathcare platform doesn't work with an aging demographic.


ExPatriatePen wrote:The FICA limit for 2012 was $110,100. For 2013 it's $113,700.
I'm all for raising eligibility ages (Our life expectancies after all, are much greater than they were when the program was started)
I'm also for "means testing".
You have to take a hard look at some of these disability cases though. I know a guy who rides a Harley all summer long. (On Sundays he's known to ride about 120 miles out to Montauk and back), yet he's got full disability for a bad back.
I'm sorry, but if you can ride a Harley every day, you can sit at a desk and make telemarketing calls or something.
As far as raising the FICA limits, Let's not kid ourselves, if you're going to raise the limits AND means test, it's A TAX. Pure and simple.
As far as single payer, I've never seen the costs of ANYTHING go down when the government is paying the bill. It just doesn't happen.


Pavel Bure wrote:http://www.naturalnews.com/038297_marijuana_decriminalization_Colorado_federal_government.html
Obviously a super subjective article but I'd say the main idea will hold true. The Fed will find a way to overturn the state laws. I don't really care about pot one way or another but like alcohol I have no problem if it is used responsibly.

Troy Loney wrote:Once you enact entitlements it's almost impossible to take them away.
I heard a proposal to raise the SS age to 67, this helps to sustain Social Security, which isn't really the problem, because SS can easily be extended with just some slight adjustemts like raising the age and raising the 100K cut off a little. Medicaire is unsustainable, just like everyting a bout our bloated healthcare system. We just need to switch to a single payer system, remove the employee based healthcare. Get it under the government, the current heathcare platform doesn't work with an aging demographic.
ExPatriatePen wrote:As far as single payer, I've never seen the costs of ANYTHING go down when the government is paying the bill. It just doesn't happen.

tifosi77 wrote:ExPatriatePen wrote:As far as single payer, I've never seen the costs of ANYTHING go down when the government is paying the bill. It just doesn't happen.
And yet the U.S. - almost alone in the developed world with a non-public healthcare system - spends more money (by a significant factor) than nations with proper government-run healthcare systems, and achieves nowhere near the level of outcomes.
Something like 5% of the population accounts for roughly half the total healthcare expenditures in this country, while half the population accounts for something like 4% of healthcare spending. And by having healthcare linked to your job, you open up coverage gaps for people in transitional phases of their careers (or jobless) and you put American companies at sometimes crippling competitive disadvantages.
Your argument is putting philosophy ('government bad!') in front of observable facts (single payer systems the world over do a better job of controlling costs). The administrative overhead of the roughly 100 or so private insurance companies in this country runs at around 30% - a little more than $300 billion annually - and much of that (if not most) comes from the way claims are reviewed and, preferably, denied. That same cost for Medicare? Under 3%.
Based on fact and not philosophy, the objective arguments against a single-payer system are not all that strong. And that's before you even get into the morality questions raised by profiteering off the sick and infirm (or, more accurately, not paying for sick people's healthcare after years of paying into the pool).





KennyTheKangaroo wrote:kenny the kangaroo thinks most taxpayers dont understand how the 15% capital gains tax benefitted not only the rich but also the average joe.



Letang Is The Truth wrote:No it's not

Grunthy wrote:Letang Is The Truth wrote:No it's not
Best comeback I ever heard.
have you ever worked in healthcare? Do you know how much malpractice insurance costs doctors? Do you know how much that cost is built into tests and checkups? I could keep going but it looks like you wouldn't understand.

The national average for ob-gyns' annual premiums, according to Strunk, is $30,000, although in some areas it can reach a staggering $140,000. In comparison, premiums for internal medicine physicians can range from $3,782 in Arkansas to $28,548 in New York's Nassau and Suffolk counties, according to the monthly newsletter Medical Liability Monitor.

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