Showing posts tagged conservative
communism-kills:

In the real world, people get fired for this.
“WASHINGTON — He’s been in Congress for nearly 13 years, but Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) has only seen two of his bills pass into law during that time.
Ryan, who Mitt Romney has tapped as his running mate, passed a bill into law in July 2000 that renames a post office in his district. Thanks to Ryan, the post office on 1818 Milton Ave. in Janesville, Wis., is now known as ‘Les Aspin Post Office Building.’
The other time Ryan saw one of his bills become law was in December 2008, with legislation to change the way arrows (as in bows and arrows) are hit with an excise tax. Specifically, his bill amended the Internal Revenue Code to impose a 39-cent tax per arrow shaft, instead of a 12.4 percent tax on the sales price. The bill also ‘includes points suitable for use with arrows in the 11 percent excise tax on arrow parts and accessories.’”

Honestly, and I know since he’s such a joke it’ll be difficult, but I think all the democrats need to take the Paul Ryan threat seriously. Charisma is a very powerful thing.
Also - I really don’t think he’s all that hot. Maybe I’m too young to have a thing for middle aged men yet, but seriously… He actually creeps me out a little. And Romney just reminds me of some uncle that was a middle child and doesn’t know how to handle himself around the family.

communism-kills:

In the real world, people get fired for this.

“WASHINGTON — He’s been in Congress for nearly 13 years, but Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) has only seen two of his bills pass into law during that time.

Ryan, who Mitt Romney has tapped as his running mate, passed a bill into law in July 2000 that renames a post office in his district. Thanks to Ryan, the post office on 1818 Milton Ave. in Janesville, Wis., is now known as ‘Les Aspin Post Office Building.’

The other time Ryan saw one of his bills become law was in December 2008, with legislation to change the way arrows (as in bows and arrows) are hit with an excise tax. Specifically, his bill amended the Internal Revenue Code to impose a 39-cent tax per arrow shaft, instead of a 12.4 percent tax on the sales price. The bill also ‘includes points suitable for use with arrows in the 11 percent excise tax on arrow parts and accessories.’”

Honestly, and I know since he’s such a joke it’ll be difficult, but I think all the democrats need to take the Paul Ryan threat seriously. Charisma is a very powerful thing.

Also - I really don’t think he’s all that hot. Maybe I’m too young to have a thing for middle aged men yet, but seriously… He actually creeps me out a little. And Romney just reminds me of some uncle that was a middle child and doesn’t know how to handle himself around the family.

(Reblogged from truth-has-a-liberal-bias)

16-Year-Old Girl Dies of Cancer After Being Refused Treatment for 3 Weeks Due to Pregnancy

rabbleprochoice:

abaldwin360:

A pregnant 16-year-old in the Dominican Republic died from complications of leukemia, according to CNN. The young woman was forced to wait nearly three weeks to begin chemotherapy to treat her disease as hospital officials initially refused to treat her fearing it could terminate her pregnancy. In the end she lost her life and the pregnancy, and may have died because of the delay in her treatment.

Under an amendment to the Dominican Republic’s constitution which declares that “life begins at conception,” abortion is banned, effectively for any reason. The girl’s leukemia was diagnosed when she was just nine weeks pregnant.

Dominican women’s health advocates told  RH Reality Check  this afternoon that while the doctors and the state refused to allow the girl treatment for leukemia, they made her undergo “ultrasounds to show that the baby was healthy and for her to see it moving.”

read more

This is fucking horrible, and we could see a lot more headlines like this if the pro-life movement had their way.

What’s so “pro-life” about letting the mother and the fetus die? 

But the point is that the baby was born and now has been given life…oh…wait…no…they’re both dead now.

Pro-lifers, I want you to bask in this because this is what you want. This is your fault so own it. Stand up and take responsibility and be proud about what you’ve accomplished in this case: a dead 16-year-old girl and a dead fetus and a grieving family.

Love,

Rabble

Reblogging this again for the commentary.

(Reblogged from rabbleprochoice)

CBO: Obamacare to Cost $1.930 Trillion, Leave 30 Million Uninsured; or, Democrats Can’t Do Arithmetic and Obamacare Sucks Balls

leftybegone:

EVERYBODY REBLOG THIS AND TAG WITH “INDEPENDENT” AND “MODERATE” (AND THE PLURAL VERSIONS OF THOSE WORDS AS WELL).

In order to get Obamacare passed, the Democrats touted the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office’s estimate for the price tag of the law: “only” $938 billion over the first ten years.

As the government never fails to do, however, it failed to correctly estimate the cost. Government estimates are always, as a rule, underestimated. The new price tag of Obamacare, according to the same, non-partisan CBO: $1.930 trillion.

Do you know how much one trillion of something is? Well, first let’s look at how much one billion is:

If you counted off one dollar per second until you reached $1 billion, it would take you 31 years. And that’s just one billion. The federal government spends twenty times that amount in only one single day.

So how long would it take to count off one dollar per second until you reached $1 trillion? 31,688 years. And that’s just one trillion. Obama intends for the federal government to spend almost double that on Obamacare alone in only ten years.  This comes to $528,767,123—more than half a billion dollars—per freaking day over the next ten years.

The 2010 census shows there are just over 46 million people below the poverty line. For the same price tag of Obamacare, the federal government could pay each of those 46 million people $344 per month for ten years.

On top of this mind-blowing government inefficiency, the CBO tells us that Obamacare leaves 30 million people uninsured. Well what in the crap?! Obama and the Democrats said that there are 30 million people in America without health insurance, and yet the CBO says it will leave that same amount uninsured. Obamacare now does nothing but spend money without increasing coverage!

If Obama wanted to solve the problem that Obamacare is “supposed” to solve—that is, giving everybody health insurance—then the government could spend the same amount that Obamacare costs ($1.930 trillion) in order to give those 30 million uninsured people $528 per month. Then they could buy whatever health insurance they wanted without it being controlled by the government! And it wouldn’t leave 30 million uninsured if you did it that way.

This shows us that Obamacare is not about health insurance at all, but about control of our lives. “Once you control people’s health care, you have them in your back pocket.”

I can’t defend this. I have no words.

I stood by Obamacare and it’s flaws. But this flaw is too big to either be completely true or to stand by any longer. Obama has some splainin to do. Bejeesus. I stand by Obama, especially on his stand for all the social issues, but honestly… This changes things.

I will NEVER vote for Romney’s impossible plan or his war on women or LGBT or the poor. I don’t care HOW the right plans on fixing the economy, I will never actively vote for oppression.

Can someone tell me this republican is lying?

EDIT: Read this. And follow him. I had my panic attack prematurely.

(Reblogged from leftybegone)
(Reblogged from andrewmin)

But you won’t get the image without my warning!! Copied and pasted from my fb comment because I’m too lazy to write something new.

Except there is no equal opportunity anymore… Oligopolies control the market. Which is why they don’t need anymore tax breaks or subsidies. Republicans would raise taxes on small businesses and lower them on big business - that’s not equal opportunity.

Can’t have people thinking I support Paul Ryan of all people, blech!

And this was today, after the little squabble. Obviously I’m not the one who’s butthurt anymore, though I respected his wishes no matter how wrong he was.

cognitivedissonance:

Description:

“Isaac Anthony is a conservative six-year-old who knows where he stands on political issues and the upcoming Presidential election.”

When the new hot pundit for your movement is an “armed” six-year-old, it’s time to look at your life and look at your choices.

The two top comments from above:

If a six year old can get it, what’s wrong with the rest of you???
dogwithlaserpointer

ROCK ON LITTLE FELLER !!!! these liberal dipshits want to keep spewing their hate and threats because you exercised your 1st amendment right, and i will bring the whole W.O.L.F. militia and our AR’s to your house to stand guard…you can feel safe knowing we will use our 2nd amendment right to protect you and your family from the obamazombies…..
lustkovar1

W.O.L.F Militia? Wait… what?! Simmer down, guys. You’re making a great argument for gun control. 

Look, if a six-year-old can get it, it’s less political policy and more like Spongebob. Isaac is a minimum of two presidential elections away from voting. But I sincerely doubt he drafted his own soundbites. Loop21 does a great job of breaking his claims down regardless. 

Pro-tip: If the ink on your own birth certificate is barely dry, you don’t get to demand the president’s. 

Actually, check that. An “armed” 6-year-old IS actually the best spokesman for this merry band of miscreants.

This is so unbelievably disturbing… Talk about brainwashing. Someone present this kid with some facts.

Also, loop21 did an awful job of breaking down his argument. On some parts the article almost agreed with the kid, or supported his claim. At one point the video was misquoted.

(Reblogged from cognitivedissonance)
fawfulfan:

Obamacare brings on some huge changes. But exactly what are these changes, and are they in the best interests of America? Time for a pros and cons discussion! But first, let’s dispel some right-wing lies.
First, it’s not socialism. A socialist health care plan would call for a government takeover and nationalization of health insurance and hospitals. Obamacare is first and foremost about keeping health care in private hands…but regulating unfair business practices so that everyone has access. This is in fact a conservative health care reform plan. The individual mandate was originally proposed by the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing think tank sponsored by the Koch Brothers…the very billionaire oil magnates who engineered the Tea Party movement and are leading the crusade against Obama and his health care reform!
And you can forget about “death panels”…in fact, aside from a (necessary) tax hike on Medicare and other reforms, seniors are barely mentioned in Obamacare at all! Nor is there any way that illegal immigrants could conceivably profit from this system, as I sometimes hear mentioned by conservative opponents, since this is still all in the hands of private business.
Also, this is not, as the persistent right-wing battle cry says, the “largest tax increase in American history”. Larger tax increases throughout American history include the Revenue Acts of 1950 and 1951, the Temporary Surcharge of 1968, the Excess Profits Tax of 1950, the Reagan Tax Increase of 1982, the Tax Increase of 1966, the Oil Windfall Tax of 1980, the Clinton Tax Increase of 1993, and the Bush Tax Increase of 1993…and that’s just in the past 65 years! Plus, it must be noted that many of these tax hikes happened under Republican presidents. So much for that lie, Mitch McConnell. Got anything else for us?
Furthermore, the Republicans’ denigration of Obamacare implies that the individual mandate accounts for most of the tax increase. It doesn’t. Not even close. The law includes Medicare payroll tax hikes, investment income taxes, premium insurance taxes, corporate taxes for insurance providers, etc. The mandate itself raises less money than any of these other tax hikes. This is perfectly logical, since the whole point behind the individual mandate is that you don’t HAVE to pay it unless you voluntarily refuse to buy health insurance.
In addition, there are many provisions to the mandate that exempt people under a variety of situations. Of course, the first provision is if you already have health insurance, or are on Medicaid or Medicare. But you also are exempt from the mandate if you are a member of a religion that opposes health insurance, are an undocumented immigrant, are in prison, are a member of an Indian tribe, have such a low income that you are not required to file an income tax return, or are unable to find insurance that costs less than 8% of your income. Nobody who meets any of these conditions will be taxed if they refuse to buy health insurance.
And just to make sure we cover all the lies, no, Obamacare does not call for the implanting of government tracking chips in people’s brains by 2013. Seriously, there are people who actually say that.
So, moving on, there are many reasons to be grateful for this new law. It ends price discrimination in the insurance industry and guarantees access to virtually every American, including those with pre-existing conditions. It requires large corporations to provide health insurance to all their employees (even Wal-Mart greeters will get corporate-sponsored insurance now). It puts an end to the “doughnut hole” in prescription drug coverage for Medicare. And it allows young adults to stay on their parents’ health plans until the age of 26.
And the mandate? Well, that’s just simple economics, folks. There’s no way the reform could possibly work without it. If people aren’t required to buy health insurance, they would just wait until they got sick to insure themselves. It would totally destroy the insurance industry’s business model, which depends on payout being a low probability. Imagine what our premiums would be if they needed to pay for expensive procedures for 100% of the people on their plans! Only folks like Mitt Romney would be able to afford insurance then.
And speaking of which…
Mitt Romney likes to argue against Obamacare on the grounds that unlike his health care reform, it undermines state sovereignty. Quite apart from the fact that this is a shameless flip-flop from 2008 when he proudly called Romneycare a “model for the nation”, his claim that Obamacare wrests power away from the states isn’t even true!Here’s something that almost nobody knows about Obamacare, because the Republicans have so effectively hushed it up: starting in 2017, states have the right to opt out of Obamacare - PROVIDED that they have a more efficient means of guaranteeing affordable health care to all of their citizens. That means that Massachusetts has the right to opt out of the federal system, and it means that if any other state can come up with a promising alternative, they can opt out of Obamacare too.In other words, the “waiver” that Mitt Romney claims he will give to states on the first day he’s elected president already exists. The difference is that Obama’s waiver encourages states to actually reform their own health care systems, and Romney’s waiver does not.
But let’s not get too excited. There are still some problems with Obamacare.
First of all, it should probably be called not the “Affordable Care Act”, but the “Accessible Care Act”. It’s unclear whether it will truly lower the cost of health care in practice. The Obama Administration makes a great case that it will—decreasing the number of uninsured people to practically zero will put an end to insured citizens footing the bill for those who default on hospital bills, and increased access to preventative care will reduce the demand for expensive lifesaving procedures which make up the bulk of this country’s health care costs. In theory, that sounds great. But what President Obama seems to be overlooking is that these trends never materialized under Romneycare in Massachusetts. People in the Bay State are certainly healthier, happier, and more secure…but they aren’t paying any less for their insurance.
If you talk to conservatives on the street, you’ll often hear legitimate points about health care that their representatives have completely ignored. With all the hysteria about “death panels” and “socialized medicine”, somehow the Republican leaders haven’t grasped the actual problem with Obamacare, which is that it doesn’t address the root causes of why health care is so expensive in this country.There are two conservative health care positions I agree with. The first is tort reform. If we really want to make health care more affordable, we should stop holding doctors accountable for conditions they didn’t spot. Under the law right now, if you get sick because of a condition your doctor could have tested for but didn’t, you have the right to sue him. This means that doctors have an incentive to run as many unnecessary tests as possible so they don’t risk a lawsuit and skyrocketing malpractice insurance.
That’s ridiculous. Suing a doctor because he amputated the wrong leg is well within your rights. Suing a doctor because he didn’t test you for cancer that wasn’t causing symptoms and nobody suspected was there is frivolous. If doctors don’t fear being sued in those situations, they won’t run tons of unneeded tests, which means far lower health care costs for those who actually NEED testing.
That said, I will also caution that previous attempts at tort reform have not been successful. Many states have enacted legislation that sets a cap on the damages that can be awarded to malpractice victims, and this has done nothing to lower costs. But I believe these states have missed the point of tort reform. They may make lawsuits less profitable, but they don’t make it any more difficult for patients to sue, and they don’t make it any less painful for doctors when their malpractice insurance goes up. The real point of tort reform is to change the culture of medical lawsuits—we need a culture of patients who are less likely to prey on their doctors the instant they get cancer, and we need a culture of judges who are more likely to consider such lawsuits frivolous.
It’s not clear what sort of laws we could enact to serve those ends. But it’s also clear that the problems with our legal incentives can’t just be dismissed.
At the same time though, I’m very glad to hear that Obama has himself come out in favor of tort reform. Despite tort reform being a fundamentally conservative view, I believe it ought to be Democrats, not Republicans, who lead the charge, because Republicans have a vested interest in changing the system to suit their campaign finance. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that conservatives embrace a method of health care reform that profoundly impacts lawyers, when lawyers are among the largest donors to the Democratic Party.
One could argue Democrats aren’t exactly in a position to be impartial either. And maybe that’s true. But when it comes to a profession designed specifically to fight for justice, better to risk too little change than too much.The other conservative health care position I support is the idea that we should break down the state barriers and create an unfettered national market for health care. Under the old system, many states had near monopolies on health insurance, enabling many providers to engage in absurd price-gouging.
Obamacare attempts to solve this problem by setting up “state exchanges”…virtual marketplaces in which providers from multiple states can come together and offer a wider range of goods and services to customers. And certainly that will be an improvement, but why create yet another layer of bureaucracy? Really, it would be so much simpler to just do away with state barriers entirely and create laws that defend every insurance provider’s right to sell in any part of the country they want.
With a real free market for health care, we’ll have competition, and competition drives down prices. Let companies in New York sell to people in Nevada. If their cost is lower than the cost of Nevada insurance providers, the local companies will either lower their prices or go out of business. That’s how capitalism works.
Finally, I’m not entirely comfortable with the idea of Obamacare preserving the longstanding American tradition of using the workplace as an intermediary to provide health insurance. Certainly corporations are more capable of bargaining for lower prices in the insurance industry, but shouldn’t the real dream be a gradual push towards a health care market that operates independently? Shouldn’t people still get to keep their health insurance even if they lose their jobs? And if corporations don’t need to pay for their employees’ health insurance, wouldn’t that make them more competitive on a global stage (assuming they use the savings for innovation and not executive bonuses)?
In my view, we should use the German health care system as a model for reform. In Germany, they essentially have multiple private firms and multiple public options, all in competition with one another. Germans without private health insurance automatically get their choice of public plans, but they also pay higher taxes. This is simply one of the best universal health care systems in the world—far better than the clunky single-payer systems of Britain and Canada, which take forever to provide the simplest things for their citizens. And it’s sustainable, too…much cheaper per person than the U.S. system.
But here’s the thing: this isn’t cause for condemnation of Obamacare, it’s cause for expansion. Obamacare still increases coverage and helps millions of people. And it does so by motivating the kind of self-reliance that Republicans claim to love. People need to understand the truth, warts and all. The Republicans owe it to their own ideals to debate openly and apply critical thinking to this issue. If only they would, they could actually improve the President’s reform.

This is veerryyy long for those with short attention spans (i.e. me) but very worth it. Very detailed, very clear, and full of very juicy facts. I love facts, don’t you?
I bolded the shit I’ve been saying and the new stuff I thought very interesting, but left the tail end alone because really you should just read the whole thing.

fawfulfan:

Obamacare brings on some huge changes. But exactly what are these changes, and are they in the best interests of America? Time for a pros and cons discussion! But first, let’s dispel some right-wing lies.

First, it’s not socialism. A socialist health care plan would call for a government takeover and nationalization of health insurance and hospitals. Obamacare is first and foremost about keeping health care in private hands…but regulating unfair business practices so that everyone has access. This is in fact a conservative health care reform plan. The individual mandate was originally proposed by the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing think tank sponsored by the Koch Brothers…the very billionaire oil magnates who engineered the Tea Party movement and are leading the crusade against Obama and his health care reform!

And you can forget about “death panels”…in fact, aside from a (necessary) tax hike on Medicare and other reforms, seniors are barely mentioned in Obamacare at all! Nor is there any way that illegal immigrants could conceivably profit from this system, as I sometimes hear mentioned by conservative opponents, since this is still all in the hands of private business.

Also, this is not, as the persistent right-wing battle cry says, the “largest tax increase in American history”. Larger tax increases throughout American history include the Revenue Acts of 1950 and 1951, the Temporary Surcharge of 1968, the Excess Profits Tax of 1950, the Reagan Tax Increase of 1982, the Tax Increase of 1966, the Oil Windfall Tax of 1980, the Clinton Tax Increase of 1993, and the Bush Tax Increase of 1993…and that’s just in the past 65 years! Plus, it must be noted that many of these tax hikes happened under Republican presidents. So much for that lie, Mitch McConnell. Got anything else for us?

Furthermore, the Republicans’ denigration of Obamacare implies that the individual mandate accounts for most of the tax increase. It doesn’t. Not even close. The law includes Medicare payroll tax hikes, investment income taxes, premium insurance taxes, corporate taxes for insurance providers, etc. The mandate itself raises less money than any of these other tax hikes. This is perfectly logical, since the whole point behind the individual mandate is that you don’t HAVE to pay it unless you voluntarily refuse to buy health insurance.

In addition, there are many provisions to the mandate that exempt people under a variety of situations. Of course, the first provision is if you already have health insurance, or are on Medicaid or Medicare. But you also are exempt from the mandate if you are a member of a religion that opposes health insurance, are an undocumented immigrant, are in prison, are a member of an Indian tribe, have such a low income that you are not required to file an income tax return, or are unable to find insurance that costs less than 8% of your income. Nobody who meets any of these conditions will be taxed if they refuse to buy health insurance.

And just to make sure we cover all the lies, no, Obamacare does not call for the implanting of government tracking chips in people’s brains by 2013. Seriously, there are people who actually say that.

So, moving on, there are many reasons to be grateful for this new law. It ends price discrimination in the insurance industry and guarantees access to virtually every American, including those with pre-existing conditions. It requires large corporations to provide health insurance to all their employees (even Wal-Mart greeters will get corporate-sponsored insurance now). It puts an end to the “doughnut hole” in prescription drug coverage for Medicare. And it allows young adults to stay on their parents’ health plans until the age of 26.

And the mandate? Well, that’s just simple economics, folks. There’s no way the reform could possibly work without it. If people aren’t required to buy health insurance, they would just wait until they got sick to insure themselves. It would totally destroy the insurance industry’s business model, which depends on payout being a low probability. Imagine what our premiums would be if they needed to pay for expensive procedures for 100% of the people on their plans! Only folks like Mitt Romney would be able to afford insurance then.

And speaking of which…

Mitt Romney likes to argue against Obamacare on the grounds that unlike his health care reform, it undermines state sovereignty. Quite apart from the fact that this is a shameless flip-flop from 2008 when he proudly called Romneycare a “model for the nation”, his claim that Obamacare wrests power away from the states isn’t even true!

Here’s something that almost nobody knows about Obamacare, because the Republicans have so effectively hushed it up: starting in 2017, states have the right to opt out of Obamacare - PROVIDED that they have a more efficient means of guaranteeing affordable health care to all of their citizens. That means that Massachusetts has the right to opt out of the federal system, and it means that if any other state can come up with a promising alternative, they can opt out of Obamacare too.

In other words, the “waiver” that Mitt Romney claims he will give to states on the first day he’s elected president already exists. The difference is that Obama’s waiver encourages states to actually reform their own health care systems, and Romney’s waiver does not.

But let’s not get too excited. There are still some problems with Obamacare.

First of all, it should probably be called not the “Affordable Care Act”, but the “Accessible Care Act”. It’s unclear whether it will truly lower the cost of health care in practice. The Obama Administration makes a great case that it will—decreasing the number of uninsured people to practically zero will put an end to insured citizens footing the bill for those who default on hospital bills, and increased access to preventative care will reduce the demand for expensive lifesaving procedures which make up the bulk of this country’s health care costs. In theory, that sounds great. But what President Obama seems to be overlooking is that these trends never materialized under Romneycare in Massachusetts. People in the Bay State are certainly healthier, happier, and more secure…but they aren’t paying any less for their insurance.

If you talk to conservatives on the street, you’ll often hear legitimate points about health care that their representatives have completely ignored. With all the hysteria about “death panels” and “socialized medicine”, somehow the Republican leaders haven’t grasped the actual problem with Obamacare, which is that it doesn’t address the root causes of why health care is so expensive in this country.

There are two conservative health care positions I agree with. The first is tort reform. If we really want to make health care more affordable, we should stop holding doctors accountable for conditions they didn’t spot. Under the law right now, if you get sick because of a condition your doctor could have tested for but didn’t, you have the right to sue him. This means that doctors have an incentive to run as many unnecessary tests as possible so they don’t risk a lawsuit and skyrocketing malpractice insurance.

That’s ridiculous. Suing a doctor because he amputated the wrong leg is well within your rights. Suing a doctor because he didn’t test you for cancer that wasn’t causing symptoms and nobody suspected was there is frivolous. If doctors don’t fear being sued in those situations, they won’t run tons of unneeded tests, which means far lower health care costs for those who actually NEED testing.

That said, I will also caution that previous attempts at tort reform have not been successful. Many states have enacted legislation that sets a cap on the damages that can be awarded to malpractice victims, and this has done nothing to lower costs. But I believe these states have missed the point of tort reform. They may make lawsuits less profitable, but they don’t make it any more difficult for patients to sue, and they don’t make it any less painful for doctors when their malpractice insurance goes up. The real point of tort reform is to change the culture of medical lawsuits—we need a culture of patients who are less likely to prey on their doctors the instant they get cancer, and we need a culture of judges who are more likely to consider such lawsuits frivolous.

It’s not clear what sort of laws we could enact to serve those ends. But it’s also clear that the problems with our legal incentives can’t just be dismissed.

At the same time though, I’m very glad to hear that Obama has himself come out in favor of tort reform. Despite tort reform being a fundamentally conservative view, I believe it ought to be Democrats, not Republicans, who lead the charge, because Republicans have a vested interest in changing the system to suit their campaign finance. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that conservatives embrace a method of health care reform that profoundly impacts lawyers, when lawyers are among the largest donors to the Democratic Party.

One could argue Democrats aren’t exactly in a position to be impartial either. And maybe that’s true. But when it comes to a profession designed specifically to fight for justice, better to risk too little change than too much.

The other conservative health care position I support is the idea that we should break down the state barriers and create an unfettered national market for health care. Under the old system, many states had near monopolies on health insurance, enabling many providers to engage in absurd price-gouging.

Obamacare attempts to solve this problem by setting up “state exchanges”…virtual marketplaces in which providers from multiple states can come together and offer a wider range of goods and services to customers. And certainly that will be an improvement, but why create yet another layer of bureaucracy? Really, it would be so much simpler to just do away with state barriers entirely and create laws that defend every insurance provider’s right to sell in any part of the country they want.

With a real free market for health care, we’ll have competition, and competition drives down prices. Let companies in New York sell to people in Nevada. If their cost is lower than the cost of Nevada insurance providers, the local companies will either lower their prices or go out of business. That’s how capitalism works.

Finally, I’m not entirely comfortable with the idea of Obamacare preserving the longstanding American tradition of using the workplace as an intermediary to provide health insurance. Certainly corporations are more capable of bargaining for lower prices in the insurance industry, but shouldn’t the real dream be a gradual push towards a health care market that operates independently? Shouldn’t people still get to keep their health insurance even if they lose their jobs? And if corporations don’t need to pay for their employees’ health insurance, wouldn’t that make them more competitive on a global stage (assuming they use the savings for innovation and not executive bonuses)?

In my view, we should use the German health care system as a model for reform. In Germany, they essentially have multiple private firms and multiple public options, all in competition with one another. Germans without private health insurance automatically get their choice of public plans, but they also pay higher taxes. This is simply one of the best universal health care systems in the world—far better than the clunky single-payer systems of Britain and Canada, which take forever to provide the simplest things for their citizens. And it’s sustainable, too…much cheaper per person than the U.S. system.

But here’s the thing: this isn’t cause for condemnation of Obamacare, it’s cause for expansion. Obamacare still increases coverage and helps millions of people. And it does so by motivating the kind of self-reliance that Republicans claim to love. People need to understand the truth, warts and all. The Republicans owe it to their own ideals to debate openly and apply critical thinking to this issue. If only they would, they could actually improve the President’s reform.

This is veerryyy long for those with short attention spans (i.e. me) but very worth it. Very detailed, very clear, and full of very juicy facts. I love facts, don’t you?

I bolded the shit I’ve been saying and the new stuff I thought very interesting, but left the tail end alone because really you should just read the whole thing.

(Source: barackobama)

(Reblogged from fawfulfan)
(Reblogged from youmightbeaconservative)
(Reblogged from greenstate)

leftybegone:

Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant video. So simple.

Oh my god. So much wrong with this.

Let’s forget that it works in practice, that it is currently working, that there is a very long list of countries who prove it works in practice. Lets concentrate on our theories about how it works and ignore the proof that these theories are wrong. Because I’m a republican and I don’t like to live in reality, I like to live in my own world. Lets get something straight: If something work in theory, but not in practice, then the theories are wrong. If something works in practice, but not in theory, then the theories are wrong.

A) So we don’t pay for public schooling? That’s not just a right, that’s MANDATORY. Even if your kids are in private schools. Even if you don’t even have any kids. Actually, especially if you don’t have any kids, because those with kids get tax BREAKS for having kids. The childless are paying more in taxes for children than the parents are!

B) You aren’t automatically provided with healthcare, for free. You pay for it. You don’t have free access to it, you just have the right to not be denied it if you can pay. no more pre-existing condition bullshit. If you can’t afford it then you are either on medicare, medicaid, or you don’t get it. But wait, if you don’t get it, shouldn’t you be taxed? If you are too poor to afford healthcare then you are obviously too poor to afford the tax on it. Only those who can afford it and choose not get it are taxed.

C) There is a reason you are taxed if you don’t get it: Since medical insurance is now guaranteed to those with pre-existing conditions now (because it wasn’t before) they don’t want everyone to go out and get insurance when they get hurt or sick only to then drop the policy when the bill is paid. THAT would be paying for everyone’s medical bill, because they aren’t continuously paying for the insurance, only paying when they need it.

D) Technically, if you can’t afford food, it is still available to you. There is TANF, and SNAP, and there are food banks and homeless shelters. This food or assistance isn’t guaranteed to you, no, but it is there. And you’re obviously ok with the homeless, but you’re ok with letting people starve? Sure, food shouldn’t be guaranteed, people need to work. But shouldn’t help be guaranteed if you qualify? You really do think that all poor people deserve to be poor don’t you?

E) A right to basic healthcare is not the same as working hard to afford more. To afford luxury. Socialism is NOT communism. You don’t get the same luxuries as they do because you aren’t working for it or paying for it. You get what’s necessary to keep you alive because I’m sorry, but we feel like you shouldn’t have to die, especially if it’s preventable.

F) HEALTH INSURANCE ALREADY IS POOLED RESOURCES. Technically, you aren’t paying for someone else, you are paying for yourself. If you don’t use it, YOU NEVER GET THAT MONEY BACK, so it goes to paying for the child with cancer, and that’s your fault for not getting hurt or sick. But if you do get hurt or sick, that money is there to help pay for YOU. Let say you really are “paying for everyone else”. If that 600 lb. man who smokes and doesn’t wear a helmet uses your insurance company, guess what. You ARE paying for him. But guess what?! He’s also paying for YOU. THAT’S HOW POOLED RESOURCES WORKS. Obamacare is not government healthcare. WRONG WRONG WRONG WRONG WROOOOONNNGGGGG. People are STILL paying for insurance using insurance companies. Who’s your insurance company, I will go get and PAY for a policy so you can pay for me. See how dumb that sounds? It’s like saying I’ll pay you for that money.

G) Yes, we should pay doctors on the quality of their care, not on the number of patients. Wait… I think… I think that was mentioned in, wait, no, yeah, it was, THAT IS IN PPaACA, aka “Obamacare”.

H) Medical bills are through the roof for more than just malpractice. I don’t know the statistics or numbers but I’m willing to bet unpaid E.R. costs are more costly than the malpractice suits are. I wonder how they can afford to treat all of those people who are uninsured and don’t pay their bill? Oh, I know! I know! They mark up YOUR bill, so YOU can pay for them. Also, big business pharmaceutical companies are making %100+ profit on their drugs (just google Pfizer, they’re reeaalll bad). Granted, I’m sure at least some of that goes to research and design, but I would love to see some expenses statements from these guys.

I) You didn’t even explain that last statement, is it supposed to mean something?

(Reblogged from leftybegone)

Pre-Existing Conditions

leftybegone:

“It’s unfair that people with pre-existing conditions should have to pay their medical bills.”

1) Life isn’t fair. Suck it up. And vote Republican to truly fix health-care problems.

2) If it’s not fair for them to pay for their own bills, it’s doubly unfair that Ipay for their bills.

I can’t deal with these illogical idiots anymore. It’s a weakness of mine today, but there it is.

I don’t think the argument is that it’s unfair they have to pay their medical bills. I think the argument is that it’s unfair they don’t have equal access to health insurance. i.e. they can’t afford to pay their medical bills, so instead they use the E.R more frequently, but of course they can’t afford that cost either ergo YOU ARE ALREADY PAYING FOR THEIR MEDICAL BILLS. I went to the E.R uninsured. $2000. I couldn’t afford to pay that. I’m sure the hospital got the money someway though, otherwise they’d all be broke. 

(Reblogged from leftybegone)

santorum2016:

lolingatliberals replied to your post: I don’t believe you matured out of Marxism because republicanism is impractical and much, much more idealistic than Marxism or even Leftism. I don’t think you were ever a Marxist.

His logic would be flawed in more then the obvious sense — More people have converted from extreme Liberal ideologies then people have from comparable Conservative ones. Just as well, the ENTIRE premise of Conservatism is realism and practicality.

Exactly. Idealism and impracticality are almost synonymous with leftism. 

A) Cite your sources, I will eat my words when I see some tangible evidence that “more people have converted from extreme Liberal ideologies [than] people have from have from comparable Conservative ones” because frankly I don’t think I believe you. And what does “comparable Conservative ones” mean? Are there incomparable conservative ideologies?

B) Idealism and impracticality:

  1. Assuming America is equal opportunity and that everyone is in a position to make it in this world and they don’t need help and should be ashamed to ask for it.
  2. Assuming that even if someone couldn’t pull themselves up by their bootstraps that their neighbors will help, or their church will help, or some stranger will help and that the government doesn’t need to interfere at all because everyone is willing to help everyone. (Wait… So does that mean conservatives will help me pay to go to the clinic? Because I can’t afford insurance. Y’all sure are nice!)
  3. Assuming poor people and the homeless deserve to be like that and that there’s no way a hard-working person could end up like that.
  4. Assuming America is a Christian nation. HAHAHAHA!!
  5. Assuming the Bible is always the answer and isn’t outdated at all.
  6. Assuming everyone will be okay with following a rather strict set of rules based on a religion they don’t believe in, and that if they don’t they have no right to be here and will leave.
  7. Assuming that all of the Founding Fathers were Christian and that we know exactly what they envisioned for America. BTW they weren’t.
  8. Assuming that what the Founding Fathers envisioned for America is still entirely applicable/accurate. Notice I said entirely. Don’t misinterpret that, I love the constitution and the bill of rights and all that good stuff.
  9. Assuming
  10. Assuming that marriage is solely christian and/or for procreation and that it is in no way a legal contract and that there are no legal benefits that people are being excluded from getting
  11. Assuming being LGBT is reversible/curable/optional
  12. Assuming making abortion illegal will stop women from getting abortions.
  13. Assuming all unwanted babies will get adopted
  14. Assuming there is room in orphanages and foster homes and that those places don’t need any reform because they are wonderful places to raise children.
  15. Assuming mothers with unwanted babies won’t abuse them.
  16. Assuming mothers with unwanted babies won’t just toss them in the dumpster 
  17. Assuming all mothers are able to safely give birth.
  18. Assuming people who don’t want kids are willing to practice celibacy. 
  19. Assuming not teaching about sex will prevent kids from having it
  20. Assuming that even with religion all kids have enough frontal lobe development to make sound decisions when it comes to, well, anything.
  21. Assuming that big business won’t screw over the little guy.
  22. Assuming giving trickle down economics a third (fourth?) chance will work. Sorry, I’ve only been politically conscious a few years now, I’m a young’n.
  23. Assuming that capitalism isn’t dog-eat-dog and doesn’t need some regulations.
  24. Assuming most big business won’t do anything possible to make profit even if it means polluting the earth and poisoning/abusing people.
  25. Assuming our way of life is sustainable.
  26. Assuming we don’t need to change
  27. Assuming the earth isn’t in trouble.
  28. Assuming we don’t need gun control because it doesn’t matter if felons and desperate people and crazy people have guns because all the important people have MORE and BIGGER guns.
  29. Assuming that the majority won’t oppress the minority without government intervention.
  30. Assuming racism is over
  31. Assuming everyone has equal rights
  32. Assuming ignoring a problem/mistake and/or rewriting history will make it go away.
  33. Assuming mistakes not taught won’t repeat themselves.
  34. Assuming other countries can take care of themselves and don’t need our help. Besides, who are we to intervene? 
  35. Assuming illegal immigrants will willingly go home (LOL ROMNEY) or that deportation and a bigger fence will solve the problem.
  36. Assuming Americans want the jobs immigrants “steal” 
  37. Assuming bombing will solve any problem (This jab is for Obama too though, he disappointed me there.)
  38. Assuming America is the best place on earth ever and doesn’t need reform because your life is perfect.

God, I feel like I’m forgetting some stuff… This will probably be edited many times. Feel free to contribute input.

Anyway. WHO’S IDEALISTIC AND IMPRACTICAL NOW, BITCH?! Lol well, liberals a bit still, yeah. But you besta check yo self before you wreck yo self! I don’t know where you live, but it sure sounds nice… Now tell me again how conservatives are practical and realistic? Can you muster 38 or more points please?

Also I realize I asked for citation and then I didn’t cite anything so if you want me to cite something just ask. I’ve looked most of this stuff up before and just don’t feel like doing it again… I tried to avoid general and vague statistics, but I know the word most snuck in somewhere.

(Reblogged from santorum2016-deactivated2012121)

youcanalwayshavemorethannothing:

ricksantorum-2012:

Obama loves illegal immigrants more than actual Americans……. who would have thought??

Obama loves LOYAL immigrants more than he loves Americans who are supposed to loyally serve their commander and chief but are in fact questioning his authority. He can have all the opinions he wants, but if he serves then he serves the president of the U.S and to publicly denounce him could imply he’s also capable of acting out, and that deserves a discharge. You do not question command, you follow it. Guys like him are usually (probably) the reason behind humiliating scandals like torturing prisoners and such.

(Source: facebook.com)

(Reblogged from youcanalwayshavemorethannothing)

(and the failure of liberalism)

youcanalwayshavemorethannothing:

ricksantorum-2012:

marxmaterialized:

residueatlas:

I feel like I can add this to the title of every essay I write these days.

Not even failure, man. It’s doing exactly what it’s supposed to, fuck us over and advance the bourgeoisie.

Yes!! Instead let us talk about the successes of Marxism and Communism: over 100 million killed, no democracy, no elections, no ownership. Show me ONE successful communist country you totalitarian FREAKS of nature? Communism and Islamism are the exact opposite of civilization.

I’m pretty sure I have never supported communism or Marxism, ever. You really need to learn the difference. Like really badly. I’m sorry you feel threatened, but maybe if you better educated yourself you would realize that we aren’t trying to fuck over anybody, that’s kind of the whole morale behind liberalism, in case you never realized. I’d send you wikipedia posts, something I know you could understand, but I’m sure you would say that wikipedia is run by liberals and that some liberal wrote those false definitions…

I think we all have figured out that communism and Marxism don’t work (you forgot to slander socialism sweetie! Even though everyone knows it’s working great in Europe!) but what you have failed to figure out is that “Dog-eat-dog capitalism”, or Reaganomics, doesn’t work either. How many more presidents do we need to prove that to you? At least one more apparently. Or did you just conveniently forget about Bush?

Speaking of wikipedia, the page on Reagan is quite flattering for him actually. Makes me almost want to like the guy.

(Reblogged from youcanalwayshavemorethannothing)