The entire health care bill is a lie, from the way it's been sold, to the intentions behind the bill, and the way it's covered in the media.
All I'm saying is this, as the population gets older, costs are going to continue to rise. All this bill is going to do is force the healthy and the rich to pay for the elderly and sick. Some people will argue that's the right thing to do but the problem is it's not sustainable. There's no way to pay for this bill going forward and the fact that the Obama administration lies about it is disgusting.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Thursday, March 18, 2010
American Opinions on Health Care
43% Favor Health Care Plan, 53% Oppose"
I think it's obvious the vast majority of Americans don't want Obamacare. Let's face facts, if you take away the people that will benefit from health care subsidies, you're left with a small percentage of people in the far left that support health care reform. Conversely, the vast majority of people that are against health care reform are average people who are against it based on their ideological values.
I know it would be impossible to poll that, but if you looked at people who are for and against reform based solely on their ideologies and not what the perceived financial impact would be on them, I think you would have 25% of respondents saying they're for health care reform and 75% against.
Glenn Beck had a very interesting chart illustrating how every time Obama doesn't get his way, he resorts to legislative tricks to bypass the checks and balances the constitution provides. Obama likes to say the American people aren't concerned with the process. I think we've woken up, and while that may have been true in the past, I think millions of Americans are now very very interested in the process, and are disgusted by it.
I think it's obvious the vast majority of Americans don't want Obamacare. Let's face facts, if you take away the people that will benefit from health care subsidies, you're left with a small percentage of people in the far left that support health care reform. Conversely, the vast majority of people that are against health care reform are average people who are against it based on their ideological values.
I know it would be impossible to poll that, but if you looked at people who are for and against reform based solely on their ideologies and not what the perceived financial impact would be on them, I think you would have 25% of respondents saying they're for health care reform and 75% against.
Glenn Beck had a very interesting chart illustrating how every time Obama doesn't get his way, he resorts to legislative tricks to bypass the checks and balances the constitution provides. Obama likes to say the American people aren't concerned with the process. I think we've woken up, and while that may have been true in the past, I think millions of Americans are now very very interested in the process, and are disgusted by it.
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Still Talking About Health Care
When viewed from the perspective of future generations, it is much easier to see the significance of historic events than when viewed while such events occur. The historian has the benefit of perspective. We live in historic times.
If one were to write a fictional drama about government intrigue, I find it hard to believe there would be more twists and turns than this current Health Care debate. By every indication, the majority of Americans want President Obama's health care bill stopped. The rebukes by the American people has been stunning.
So many people that have never been politically active are saying, enough is enough. It's not difficult to see why. The United States is in the midst of a severe recession and while the effects on our citizens has been dramatic, the effect on government can only be described as catastrophic. So many state and local governments are literally running out of money. These states are being forced to redefine their roles in the lives of their citizens.
Only a few years ago, any politician brazen enough to attack government unions as being too strong, and their employees overpaid, would have been labeled an extremist. Now, these views are widely accepted, if not universally agreed upon. So why the change of opinion? The answer is simple, common sense.
You don't have to be a doctor of economics to see that a a worker retiring at the age of 60 and being paid 90% of their salary plus benefits for the next 25 years isn't good for the solvency of the entity that pays them. While this may not be much of a problem for the federal government, yet, it's a huge problem for state and local governments where these payments are much higher in terms of percentage of revenues.
At this point, the only thing that has saved these governments from being forced to cut their budgets and reduce the number of employees in any significant fashion has been the stimulus bill. Now that stimulus funds have been spent, these state and local governments have to figure out how to pay their own bills, and the shortfalls many of them are facing are enormous.
What gives these issues historical importance is the fact that this is only the beginning. The causes of these problems are the demographic shifts that are ongoing and are only going to accelerate. The ratio of taxpayers to tax receivers is dropping and the recession has merely accelerated a problem that's been long in the making.
Just like the federal government hasn't acknowledged in any significant way, medicare and social security shortfalls, the states only addressed these problems when faced with an inability to pay their bills. As more baby boomers begin receiving medicare and social security benefits, obviously their percentage of gdp is going to spike and the United States government will find itself in a similar quandary.
Yet here we are discussing another government entitlement. This is a text book definition of the term counter-intuitive. The American people know all this, so why do the Democrats continue to push forward with something as unpopular as health care reform? The answer is simple. It's worked for them in the past.
If they pass health care, they can then argue that Republicans will be trying to take away peoples' benefits. These argument might not save Democrats up for reelection this November, but give people a few years to get used to the idea of health care subsidies and it's an entirely different ballgame. So basically, Democrats are hoping to create another segment of the population that is dependent on them for their well being.
Put in that context, it sounds fairly corrupt, but it's part of our system of government. We're a representative democracy and if a politician can create a constituency, literally more power to them.
If one were to write a fictional drama about government intrigue, I find it hard to believe there would be more twists and turns than this current Health Care debate. By every indication, the majority of Americans want President Obama's health care bill stopped. The rebukes by the American people has been stunning.
So many people that have never been politically active are saying, enough is enough. It's not difficult to see why. The United States is in the midst of a severe recession and while the effects on our citizens has been dramatic, the effect on government can only be described as catastrophic. So many state and local governments are literally running out of money. These states are being forced to redefine their roles in the lives of their citizens.
Only a few years ago, any politician brazen enough to attack government unions as being too strong, and their employees overpaid, would have been labeled an extremist. Now, these views are widely accepted, if not universally agreed upon. So why the change of opinion? The answer is simple, common sense.
You don't have to be a doctor of economics to see that a a worker retiring at the age of 60 and being paid 90% of their salary plus benefits for the next 25 years isn't good for the solvency of the entity that pays them. While this may not be much of a problem for the federal government, yet, it's a huge problem for state and local governments where these payments are much higher in terms of percentage of revenues.
At this point, the only thing that has saved these governments from being forced to cut their budgets and reduce the number of employees in any significant fashion has been the stimulus bill. Now that stimulus funds have been spent, these state and local governments have to figure out how to pay their own bills, and the shortfalls many of them are facing are enormous.
What gives these issues historical importance is the fact that this is only the beginning. The causes of these problems are the demographic shifts that are ongoing and are only going to accelerate. The ratio of taxpayers to tax receivers is dropping and the recession has merely accelerated a problem that's been long in the making.
Just like the federal government hasn't acknowledged in any significant way, medicare and social security shortfalls, the states only addressed these problems when faced with an inability to pay their bills. As more baby boomers begin receiving medicare and social security benefits, obviously their percentage of gdp is going to spike and the United States government will find itself in a similar quandary.
Yet here we are discussing another government entitlement. This is a text book definition of the term counter-intuitive. The American people know all this, so why do the Democrats continue to push forward with something as unpopular as health care reform? The answer is simple. It's worked for them in the past.
If they pass health care, they can then argue that Republicans will be trying to take away peoples' benefits. These argument might not save Democrats up for reelection this November, but give people a few years to get used to the idea of health care subsidies and it's an entirely different ballgame. So basically, Democrats are hoping to create another segment of the population that is dependent on them for their well being.
Put in that context, it sounds fairly corrupt, but it's part of our system of government. We're a representative democracy and if a politician can create a constituency, literally more power to them.
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Unemployment Extensions and Jim Bunning
"A law that provided stopgap road funding and longer and more generous unemployment benefits and health insurance subsidies for the jobless expired Monday."
Jim Bunning seems to be the first person to finally get specific on spending. Unfortunately for him, he found out what every politician already knows: Don't get specific on cutting spending. When the last stimulus bill was passed over a year ago, 62% of U.S. voters wanted the plan to include more tax cuts and less government spending.
We have to assume that the percentage would be much higher if you simply asked people whether the government should just cut spending, but here we have a case where a lawmaker finally takes a concrete stand on the issue of government spending, and he's getting slammed in the media, and by his own party.
I have a few examples of the many problems with unemployment benefits.
1. I know a couple and the husband receives unemployment and did not even ATTEMPT to find work until a few weeks before his benefits were scheduled to run out.
2. A few of my employees have called out of work to attend unemployment hearings even though that is highly frowned upon by the EDD and they offer telephone hearings. This is indicative of how much they really want to work because they know they have that government safety net.
3. I've seen a few people that would not have cared if the government offered unemployment to the underemployed but now that they know the government offers it, they apply for it.
If you take people that could otherwise find employment, and allow them to do nothing but collect government benefits, you're reducing our country's gdp, which in turn, makes us all that much poorer.
Besides, the President could easily just use stimulus funds to extend these benefits. He won't because he's the biggest government spender in US history and the stimulus is going to be used for reelecting Democrats. I applaud Jim Bunning for NOT being a politician on this issue.
Jim Bunning seems to be the first person to finally get specific on spending. Unfortunately for him, he found out what every politician already knows: Don't get specific on cutting spending. When the last stimulus bill was passed over a year ago, 62% of U.S. voters wanted the plan to include more tax cuts and less government spending.
We have to assume that the percentage would be much higher if you simply asked people whether the government should just cut spending, but here we have a case where a lawmaker finally takes a concrete stand on the issue of government spending, and he's getting slammed in the media, and by his own party.
I have a few examples of the many problems with unemployment benefits.
1. I know a couple and the husband receives unemployment and did not even ATTEMPT to find work until a few weeks before his benefits were scheduled to run out.
2. A few of my employees have called out of work to attend unemployment hearings even though that is highly frowned upon by the EDD and they offer telephone hearings. This is indicative of how much they really want to work because they know they have that government safety net.
3. I've seen a few people that would not have cared if the government offered unemployment to the underemployed but now that they know the government offers it, they apply for it.
If you take people that could otherwise find employment, and allow them to do nothing but collect government benefits, you're reducing our country's gdp, which in turn, makes us all that much poorer.
Besides, the President could easily just use stimulus funds to extend these benefits. He won't because he's the biggest government spender in US history and the stimulus is going to be used for reelecting Democrats. I applaud Jim Bunning for NOT being a politician on this issue.
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