angel2write
Diamond Member
Ok, I'm probably going to regret opening this can of worms quickly.
But I'm going to be brave here and state something that goes against the flow of comments I'm reading elsewhere on this forum.
I think Obama's healthcare plan is a horrible idea. (gasp, shock, surprise!)
As others have pointed out elsewhere in this section, the USA is on the financial rocks. Obama is printing money, passing out handouts, and increasing our load of debt at a time when our trillion-dollar debt is doubling every three to five years.
This is bad for reasons that should be very obvious to anyone who pays bills. We have too much debt, not enough income. If the debt gets too bad, our economy will totally collapse. No one will get health care. Think great depression and kids starving in the streets. Foreclosure on a national scale. No more bailouts, because there is no one to do the bailing. A run on banks. Currency going into rapid inflation like it did in Germany after the second world war. We will lose our homes, jobs, schools, etc. And there will be no handouts, no section 8 housing, no Medicaid, no Medicare, no Social Security (which has been bankrupt for a while).
As my ex-father-in-law said so eloquently, you can't get blood from a turnip. If the money is not there to pay for something, the money is not there.
If the healthcare bill passes as is, we may be able to afford it for a few years. For a few years, everyone in America will have health coverage. But what will happen in twenty years as our debt continues to snowball, our birthrate continues to decline, and more and more people go on welfare as they lose their jobs to recession or companies moving overseas? HOW LONG do people think the free handouts can last?
Lest I seem heartless, I would like to comment that I think poor people do deserve healthcare. My parents are insuranceless and going through cancer and another major illness right now. They have received every care they could need, testing, treatments, chemo, etc through the St. Mary's Bonsecours hospital and through a clinic run by a combination of... wait for it.... Christian churches in Richmond. When my family and I researched clinics for them, we found not less than 19 free clinics in Richmond. We live in a small town here, and there are at least two free clinics available here.
I believe that when the government takes over the charity business, they bureacratize it and turn it into a money-wasting machine. Much like our public education system (a subject for another time...)
We lived for a time in Canada under the lovely national health care system there. Everyone complained about it constantly. The inefficiency. How they could never get enough doctors because doctors couldn't make enough money to make it worth the training. People crossing the border to the US to get health care there. Sloppiness all over the board. If our system goes nationalized, where will we cross the border to? Mexico?
Having the government take over our health care system means it will be run JUST AS lovingly and efficiently as our current Medicare system. Anybody here on that? How's that working out for you?
From what I hear they kept cutting the payments on everything and disallowing more and more procedures because they CAN'T MAKE THE BOOKS BALANCE. They can't pay the bills, people. Fewer and fewer mental health providers will even take Medicare patients because they don't pay enough to keep them in practice. Nursing homes have to ration the number of Medicare beds to keep their doors open. And it's not just selfishness. Doctors and nursing homes have a lot of expenses to meet, including expensive educations to pay off, expensive equipment that costs a whole lot more than your house, employees, buildings, utilities, medications, supplies (that are outrageously expensive) and last but not least, malpractice insurance.
The single best thing we could do for the American health system would be to make better laws about nuisance lawsuits against doctors. The mal-practice insurance these people have to carry is incredible.
Wanting to give every man, woman, and child in America access to health care is a good goal. Something we should do. But is the way our government is going about it the right way? I sincerely doubt it. Which is why I remain a much-maligned, conservative, religious right-wing type person who voted against, and will vote against Obama and all his money-printing ilk as long as they keep running for office on a "free handouts!" platform.
They accuse us "religious right" people of not caring about poor people. But do you know who funds the food banks, homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters, adoption and pregnancy care centers, free medical clinics, and clothing closets across the US? The freaking religious right!!!
Sigh.
I am now getting down off my soap box.
But I'm going to be brave here and state something that goes against the flow of comments I'm reading elsewhere on this forum.
I think Obama's healthcare plan is a horrible idea. (gasp, shock, surprise!)
As others have pointed out elsewhere in this section, the USA is on the financial rocks. Obama is printing money, passing out handouts, and increasing our load of debt at a time when our trillion-dollar debt is doubling every three to five years.
This is bad for reasons that should be very obvious to anyone who pays bills. We have too much debt, not enough income. If the debt gets too bad, our economy will totally collapse. No one will get health care. Think great depression and kids starving in the streets. Foreclosure on a national scale. No more bailouts, because there is no one to do the bailing. A run on banks. Currency going into rapid inflation like it did in Germany after the second world war. We will lose our homes, jobs, schools, etc. And there will be no handouts, no section 8 housing, no Medicaid, no Medicare, no Social Security (which has been bankrupt for a while).
As my ex-father-in-law said so eloquently, you can't get blood from a turnip. If the money is not there to pay for something, the money is not there.
If the healthcare bill passes as is, we may be able to afford it for a few years. For a few years, everyone in America will have health coverage. But what will happen in twenty years as our debt continues to snowball, our birthrate continues to decline, and more and more people go on welfare as they lose their jobs to recession or companies moving overseas? HOW LONG do people think the free handouts can last?
Lest I seem heartless, I would like to comment that I think poor people do deserve healthcare. My parents are insuranceless and going through cancer and another major illness right now. They have received every care they could need, testing, treatments, chemo, etc through the St. Mary's Bonsecours hospital and through a clinic run by a combination of... wait for it.... Christian churches in Richmond. When my family and I researched clinics for them, we found not less than 19 free clinics in Richmond. We live in a small town here, and there are at least two free clinics available here.
I believe that when the government takes over the charity business, they bureacratize it and turn it into a money-wasting machine. Much like our public education system (a subject for another time...)
We lived for a time in Canada under the lovely national health care system there. Everyone complained about it constantly. The inefficiency. How they could never get enough doctors because doctors couldn't make enough money to make it worth the training. People crossing the border to the US to get health care there. Sloppiness all over the board. If our system goes nationalized, where will we cross the border to? Mexico?
Having the government take over our health care system means it will be run JUST AS lovingly and efficiently as our current Medicare system. Anybody here on that? How's that working out for you?
From what I hear they kept cutting the payments on everything and disallowing more and more procedures because they CAN'T MAKE THE BOOKS BALANCE. They can't pay the bills, people. Fewer and fewer mental health providers will even take Medicare patients because they don't pay enough to keep them in practice. Nursing homes have to ration the number of Medicare beds to keep their doors open. And it's not just selfishness. Doctors and nursing homes have a lot of expenses to meet, including expensive educations to pay off, expensive equipment that costs a whole lot more than your house, employees, buildings, utilities, medications, supplies (that are outrageously expensive) and last but not least, malpractice insurance.
The single best thing we could do for the American health system would be to make better laws about nuisance lawsuits against doctors. The mal-practice insurance these people have to carry is incredible.
Wanting to give every man, woman, and child in America access to health care is a good goal. Something we should do. But is the way our government is going about it the right way? I sincerely doubt it. Which is why I remain a much-maligned, conservative, religious right-wing type person who voted against, and will vote against Obama and all his money-printing ilk as long as they keep running for office on a "free handouts!" platform.
They accuse us "religious right" people of not caring about poor people. But do you know who funds the food banks, homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters, adoption and pregnancy care centers, free medical clinics, and clothing closets across the US? The freaking religious right!!!
Sigh.
I am now getting down off my soap box.