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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#1 |
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I LIKE!
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 7,819
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WB, I clearly said that humans have polluted the planet. I am all for air quality standards and certain common sense regulations to prevent making rivers toxic, etc. I also do completely understand the concept of the "heat island", which is what Phoenix has become. However, adding greenery to a desert that never had any major greenery isn't much of an option.
Climate science is so overwhelmingly complex I do not think it is possible for us to predict it well, much less influence it. And in terms of who the scientists work for....I'm sure there's some dishonest and those with a particular agenda on ALL sides. I don't think for a moment that just because a scientist says there is man made global warming that they are free from political or capitalistic influences, and I find it insulting, really, that only the common belief is that scientists who dispute man made global warming must be crooked or paid shills of the oil industry. Hell, one major one is one of the founders of greenpeace (who now is for the elimination of old growth forests because of positive impacts on the environment). |
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#2 |
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Kink of Swank
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Really? Why do I need a social security card to get a job?
Do you think it's fine to have to be enrolled in a government pension plan to qualify for employment? What's the difference between that and having to be enrolled in a either a government or privately-run health insurance plan? |
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#3 |
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I LIKE!
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 7,819
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There is none. I despise the whole concept of social security. It is a government sponsored pyramid scheme. However, the existance of social security does not mean I should accept further intrusion, does it?
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#4 |
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Nevermind
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What I love is that elected officials do not have to pay either SS or for their own medical benefits, at least from what I understand. I'm with Alex as to waiting to see what sorts of proposals she actually makes before making any judgments.
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#5 |
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 13,354
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Well, if it is private insurance not provided by the employer, what business is it of the government to mandate you do it before you can be employed?
If the government wants to mandate that I have insurance, it makes no sense to make employers the gatekeeper for the governments enforcement. Create an Internal Insurance Service and require that we file annual paperwork with the government proving coverage and creating criminal liabilities if we don't. Otherwise it is feels like saying I can't get a job (that doesn't involve a car) without me providing my employer with evidence that I have car insurance. Social security presentation is a requirement for employment because all legal citizens are automatically enrolled and the employers are required to withhold payroll taxes (regardless of your actual status) and provide detailed reporting on who gets credit for that contribution. That is, the employer has a vital role in the government program. Since all legal residences are enrolled automatically, it is also secondarily evidence that you are legally eligible for employment. If the employer is not involved in the insurance, I fail to see what role the employer has in it; it strikes me as a personal matter. If health coverage would be a requirement for employment that is a pretty startling shift from the move towards health insurance being a obligation of employment to being an obligation for employment. If it is government run and provided health insurance, then again, I wonder what the necessity would be in making the employer the middle man of enforcement? If it is somewhere in between then I'll wait and see what actual proposals she makes. Her interview on NPR today still had most insurance being provided by employers and creating incentives and tax breaks to encourage increasingly small business to offer insurance. |
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#6 | |
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Kink of Swank
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Quote:
scaeagles' opinion notwithstanding, social security is routinely considered the best thing the federal government has ever done. I daresay a requirement that everyone be health insured which resulted in everyone having health insurance would be similarly popular, and similarly devised by the people FOR the people. If it became a legal requirement for every working citizen to have such health insurance, employers would no more be the "gatekeeper" for that than they are now for social security. I haven't heard any details of Hillary's plan ... but if part of the health insurance premium were to be paid by the citizen and part by their employer ... then the situation would be quite similar to social security vis-a-vis an employer's current right to require a social security number for prospective employees. |
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#7 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Da' Beach
Posts: 2,957
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Hmm. I wonder what the costs of this 'mandatory' insurance would be? Seems that a lot of people who make a certain amount of money {more than the average people, but, still with the costs of living, never seems to be enough to cover everything} they get no breaks. Meaning, would the part the employer covered be according to what the person makes? And, it sounds like the person has to come to the table with said insurance.
And, does this punish the person who can't afford insurance at their income level? Or encourage others not to work hard enough to be at a certain level to keep them at low income status, etc.? Insurance is expensive. When the Hubster was laid off for four months, we had Cobra. It was almost/over $800. a month. I think that was also not the normal price, but, what his company would be paying {minus his portion}. And remember, he was unemployed. And, what type of insurance would be offered? I reached enough hours/length at my part time job to qualify for insurance. But, it was pretty darn lame. It was something, but, really, if I saved the premiums myself I could probably, if I got sick, go to a doctor and then ask for generic prescriptions. It didn't cover any major illnesses.
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Summa' time....when the livins' easy......... |
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#8 | |
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I Floop the Pig
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Quote:
The other consideration is that theoretically any change that would start to require coverage for all citizens/residents would coincide with major changes in pricing structure in the industry, as well as supplements from the government. Looking at Massachusetts as an example, they not only required residents to carry insurance, but if I'm remembering the details correctly they required insurers to offer a low-cost minimal plan as an option and introduced funding for low-income families to get them on that plan.
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'He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.' -TJ |
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#9 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Da' Beach
Posts: 2,957
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You are right with that. We didn't have any pre-existing conditions, but, we had two boys. We have used our insurance for different things and just felt we needed to keep up the coverage that we had. Emergency room visits, all medications, testing, etc.
Well, also, we thought he'd be right back at the same position way more quickly than four months.....and when he did get back to work it was a different insurance. Now, they don't cover our oldest {they will in March, they say...} and cover half of the costs. Which is over $1,000. That is why I wonder about the costs of what they are going to supposedly offer. Will our costs be the same anyways? And, if we are unemployed, will we still be stuck at that rate {red tape and all}. Right now my daughter has no insurance and I am trying to find a local doctor for her for basic checkups.
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Summa' time....when the livins' easy......... |
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#10 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 13,354
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Quote:
The very sentence "you might provide proof that you're insured as part of a job interview" says this is not employee provided or funded insurance. That's why that sentence in combination with her NPR interview yesterday makes little sense since that does have employers being the dominant provider and you can proof you have what you'll be given after getting the job. And I still stand by saying that if it is universal governmentally mandated health insurance then making the employers the gatekeepers makes absolutely no sense. Because then you are doing nothing to monitor compliance by the unemployed. Unlike governmentally mandated health insurance (presumably) possession of a social security number is really only relevant if you're working. Yes, I can think of proposals where employer involvement in health care is necessary. Just not any that should come up in the job interview. Heck, even your social security information doesn't come up at that point in the process. |
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