
Originally Posted by
falcondfw
Joan,
Are you sure it was Reagan and not George Bush that destroyed everything? Seems to me over the last 3.5 years the favorite whipping post of the left is George Bush.
Employers offer health coverage for one reason and one reason only. Too attract the best workers. That is what free markets and competition do. They make companies compete for the best candidates. As a result, many times, the employer with the best package gets the best employees.
Couching this as a completely moral issue is ridiculous. There are so many factors that go into reform decisions. Is there a moral component? definitely. Everyone should have compassion for their fellow man and their fellow Americans. But in no way are these reform decisions only moral ones. Besides, Obamacare has nothing to do with compassion or healthcare. It is all about control. Dictating what we must do or dey will spank us bad widdle amewicans wif a nasty old tax, err I mean penalty, er i mean tax (Whenever Obama makes up his mind about what it is, let me know.).
I think you are reaching with the taxes vs. abortion idea. Seriously reaching. Honestly, that is the first time I have heard/seen anybody state that. Yes, a lot of religious conservatives object to the abortion and contraception mandates in the bill. I'm sorry. I know we will never agree on this, but the government has absolutely no business telling private, religious organizations what things have to be included in the health care they offer. Especially if what the government demands is completely repugnant to those religions and opposition to those demands is a major part of the beliefs of those religions (and it ain't just Catholics). Ever hear of separation of Church and state? A school can't say the Pledge of Allegiance because it has the word God in it. But that same government has no problem telling religions that they have to pay to support killing of babies or the prevention of creating them. Now THAT is Hypocrisy.Senseless and Immoral wars? Really? Tell that to the 3,000 people who died in the twin towers. Oooopppssss. That's right, you can't. Tell that to most of their families and they would probably slap the taste out of your mouth. Or how about telling that to the soldiers who have gone over there to make it impossible for those murderous bastards to attack us again. And yes, in this case, I have the right to say it. If you didn't serve, I don't want to hear your pacifist BS. Go live in Switzerland. But don't dare insult those who died on 9/11 or those who serve.
45,000 deaths a year? I'd like to see what kind of examination of those numbers they did. How many of those are illegals who work in higher risk jobs like roofing or out in the blazing sun picking vegetables all day or other risky jobs illegals do? You want to keep paying for people who are breaking the law to be here? I don't. I'm bloody tired of it. And how many of those deaths are from younger people who have deliberately chosen not to pay for health insurance and get in a car wreck or have some other kind of accident. If you look at it, the article clearly says you had to participate in a survey to be counted in the study. How were participants chosen? Was it random? Or was there some kind of control group? Again, they may have not had health insurance when they died, but that depends on when they died, doesn't it? They could have had health insurance for 20 years and gotten laid off the month before. As a contract programmer, I work sometimes 6 months in a bad year. I have insurance when I am working, but when I am between contracts, I don't. So am I insured? Am I uninsured? I am between contracts right now. If I die today, would I be counted in the uninsured statistics? I am supposed to start a new job Monday. Will I be counted as insured?
Surveys and polls can be skewed any way you want based on how the study is done or how the question is asked. Look at how the Labor Department skews the unemployment numbers.
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