adrenaline said:
you realize that the most verbal opponents were the medicare recipients?
Yes, what about it? The plan calls for $500 billion in cuts to Medicare to pay for the program. Although I doubt that will happen (that government will actually cut Medicare outlays). The plan also double-counts Medicare, because it claims the $500 billion in cuts will make Medicare more solvent. Well yes, if put into a lockbox, it would. But instead the $500 billion goes to fund the other parts of the healthcare program, so it doesn't make Medicare any more solvent.
When you retire, if medicare is not there, you realize you will have to brave purchasing shoddy individual coverage when you are over the age of 65 and have a fixed income? It also spared private insurance plans from insuring the oldest and the sickest, it left the younger working force to buy their plans.
Programs like Medicare and Social Security are fine, but the way in which they are done is unsustainable and not working. A society needs to take care of people who likely cannot or will not be able to take care of themselves, such as its elderly, mentally disabled, physically disabled, etc...
You realize we spend 400 billion dollars a year on health insurance bureucracy?
It's only going to increase now. The amount of money required to fund the bureaucracy to administer this whole program will be monumental.
Medicare and medicaid is a joy since i only have to hire one biller and coder for them. I have an army ( 45 employees with 5 docs do the math) doing precerts prior auths , fielding phone calls, 6 check in and check out to check insurances on where i can draw labs etc.
Your delusional if you think medicare/medicaid contributes to the cost of health care in this country. I have to pay salaries, workman's comp, disablity, insurance premiums etc for an army of women whose only job is to deal with private health insurance. Tell me that is not wasteful?
Many doctors are grossly under-reimbursed by Medicare and Medicaid to the point that they do not accept any more patients on Medicare or Medicaid. The loss of money from lack of re-imbursement to the private sector by these programs means the private sector has to make up the difference, which contributes to increasing healthcare costs.
as for public education, I am a product of it, my parents subsisted on total salary of less than 35,000 a year after my dad lost his job. My younger brother went to princeton, i went to dartmouth and my sister was too smart and quit Emory to become a ceo of her own software company. There was no way they could afford private education on Long Island New York when tuition over 20 years ago was at least 15,000 a year.
If, from the beginning, we had had a strictly private educational system, private schooling would likely be far cheaper, because there would be far more schools. Because the private sector of schooling is small, it is a lot more costly. Private healthcare in the UK is available for example, but you'd better have some $$$ if you are going to use it because it costs a bundle (plus the NHS will kick not allow you to continue getting services if you use private healthcare there).
so what you are telling me is that only the rich deserve to educate their kids? My mother cleaned houses and my dad worked so there was no home schooling. I don't think you realize even home schoolers have the luxuary of having one working parent? Guess what, in this recession those homeschoolers are back in public school, now that their housing developer dads or real estate dads are completely broke. The wives are cashing in their nursing degrees, or being full time nannies etc.and going back to work. Thank god this country gives that to me should I ever go broke.
Of course not. I'm simply saying that the public education system has many flaws and I don't know if I believe it should ever have been implemented the way it was. It was not at its core designed to educate. No there wasn't any conspiracy but the overall design of it from the various people involved in its development was overall not education. Now that we have it, it's not going anywhere, we can only work to reform it with various policies.
there are numerous studies that show public education does its job.
Sure, but there are also numerous studies I'm sure that talk about the problems within the system too. It has to do its job overall because our nation continues to lead the world in terms of scientific research and so forth.