GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum

GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum (https://gfy.com/index.php)
-   Fucking Around & Business Discussion (https://gfy.com/forumdisplay.php?f=26)
-   -   RIP liberal health care bill! (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=949061)

DudeRick 01-18-2010 05:03 PM

RIP liberal health care bill!
 
Brown will defeat Coakley tomorrow in Massachusetts and kill this awful bill. I hope that the Democrats will now work with Republicans and create real health care reform!

Barefootsies 01-18-2010 05:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 16759577)
I hope that the Democrats will now work with Republicans and create real health care reform!


nation-x 01-18-2010 05:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 16759577)
Brown will defeat Coakley tomorrow in Massachusetts and kill this awful bill. I hope that the Democrats will now work with Republicans and create real health care reform!

Isn't it funny when idiots post shit they think they know something about? Brown will lose tomorrow but even if he won they would still pass the bill. :2 cents:

kane 01-18-2010 05:10 PM

If he wins the democrats will have one of three choices:

1. The house will vote on the same bill the senate has already passed. If they vote on the exact same bill and pass it then there is no need for another senate vote.

2. Work with the republicans to create a new health care bill that both parties can get behind.

3. Do nothing and there will be no real healh care reform.

Chances are it will be #3. If faced with the idea of passing the senate bill or no bill at all the house may vote for the senate bill, but probably not. The republicans really aren't interested in health care reform so they have no great desire to create any health care bill with or without the democrats so I think options 1 and 2 are going to be off the table.

DudeRick 01-18-2010 05:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nation-x (Post 16759597)
Isn't it funny when idiots post shit they think they know something about? Brown will lose tomorrow but even if he won they would still pass the bill. :2 cents:

If the Democrats put through that bill after tomorrows Massachusetts referendum, the earthquake that will happen in November will make Haiti look like sneeze! :2 cents:

LiveDose 01-18-2010 05:26 PM

This will be an interesting thread to check tomorrow. A lot of confidence on both sides but no one knows what will happen.

nation-x 01-18-2010 05:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 16759644)
If the Democrats put through that bill after tomorrows Massachusetts referendum, the earthquake that will happen in November will make Haiti look like sneeze! :2 cents:

Uhh... I was under the impression that tomorrow was to elect a US Senator to represent the state of Massachusetts... last time I checked only people from Massachusetts can vote in that election... so how does that equal some referendum? You must live in Fox News land... :2 cents: Only one of those GOP propagandist idiots would come up with some twisted ass logic like that.

Rangermoore 01-18-2010 05:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 16759644)
If the Democrats put through that bill after tomorrows Massachusetts referendum, the earthquake that will happen in November will make Haiti look like sneeze! :2 cents:

Right On... :thumbsup

The Truth Hurts 01-18-2010 05:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nation-x (Post 16759597)
Brown will lose tomorrow

not so sure about that....
we've been bombarded by coakley ads for weeks now...
and it seems her entire platform is "scott brown is a republican".
(red letters and all)
even the gaggle of obama loving old fucks that hang out every morning at the store i get my smokes at think she's gonna lose.

nation-x 01-18-2010 05:32 PM

For the record... I oppose the Senate Bill.

kane 01-18-2010 05:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nation-x (Post 16759660)
Uhh... I was under the impression that tomorrow was to elect a US Senator to represent the state of Massachusetts... last time I checked only people from Massachusetts can vote in that election... so how does that equal some referendum? You must live in Fox News land... :2 cents: Only one of those GOP propagandist idiots would come up with some twisted ass logic like that.

Brown's primary platform is "If you want to kill the health care bill, vote for me." If he wins he will give the republicans 41 members that is enough to overcome the cloture the democrats have and it would allow them to effectively filibuster anything they wanted. So, in theory, if he wins it will give the republicans the opportunity to basically bring the senate to a halt any time they want and kill or derail any bill they want. Who knows how often they would actually do this, but if he wins it would be a big weapon for them.

seeandsee 01-18-2010 05:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barefootsies (Post 16759579)

i hope this motherfucker will suffer in such pain, so his eye goes out from temperature while he screams "Monika give me ice", and she brings only big dildo and put in Clinton mouth full of infected Indian sperm and deadly poison full of snake blood :disgust

DateDoc 01-18-2010 05:40 PM

Brown will win tomorrow. Great article in today's Wall Street Journal on Coakley - http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...googlenews_wsj

kane 01-18-2010 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The Truth Hurts (Post 16759667)
not so sure about that....
we've been bombarded by coakley ads for weeks now...
and it seems her entire platform is "scott brown is a republican".
(red letters and all)
even the gaggle of obama loving old fucks that hang out every morning at the store i get my smokes at think she's gonna lose.

I've read some polls that have her up by as many as 6-8 points and other polls have him up by 6-8 points and still others have it dead even.

The only think leaning her way is that Mass is such a liberal state that reality alone should be good for some votes. As with any special election it is all about who can get their supporters to turn out. The website Five Thirty Eight gives Brown 50.2% of the vote and a 74% chance of winning so chances are Coakley's laziness at the beginning of the campaign and her not getting serious until Brown was suddenly a threat may cost her. But with any special election polls are one thing, voter turn out is a whole different thing.

fatfoo 01-18-2010 05:42 PM

I sure love Canada's free health care system. It's good to be a Canadian.

DudeRick 01-18-2010 06:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nation-x (Post 16759676)
For the record... I oppose the Senate Bill.

I assume that means that you prefer the more liberal House bill that includes the government option?

DateDoc 01-18-2010 07:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kane (Post 16759711)
But with any special election polls are one thing, voter turn out is a whole different thing.

And special election voter turnout is typically quite low which is in Brown's favor.

tony286 01-18-2010 07:41 PM

The health care bill is so far from liberal. lol A liberal bill would of been medicare for everyone done. This is so far from that. Its a healthcare and big pharm bail out. lol

pocketkangaroo 01-18-2010 07:53 PM

Yeah, the health care bill is far from liberal. It's much more pro-big business than anything. It's why so many of these industries are behind it.

Brujah 01-18-2010 08:07 PM

Quote:

"America stands at a historic crossroads. At last, we are close to making real health insurance reform a reality. We face one critical, final choice, between action and inaction. We know where the path of inaction leads to: more uninsured Americans, more families struggling to keep up with skyrocketing premiums, higher federal budget deficits, and health costs so much higher than any other country's they will cripple us economically.

Our only responsible choice is the path of action. Does this bill read exactly how I would write it? No. Does it contain everything everyone wants? Of course not. But America can't afford to let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

And this is a good bill: it increases the security of those who already have insurance and gives every American access to affordable coverage; and contains comprehensive efforts to control costs and improve quality, with more information on best practices, and comparative costs and results. The bill will shift the power away from the insurance companies and into the hands of consumers.

Take it from someone who knows: these chances don't come around every day. Allowing this effort to fall short now would be a colossal blunder -- both politically for our party and, far more important, for the physical, fiscal, and economic health of our country."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/1..._n_396159.html

tony286 01-18-2010 08:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pocketkangaroo (Post 16759973)
Yeah, the health care bill is far from liberal. It's much more pro-big business than anything. It's why so many of these industries are behind it.

Thank you. People keep calling this guy liberal and Im like where? He is George Bush Lite lol

GregE 01-18-2010 08:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nation-x (Post 16759676)
For the record... I oppose the Senate Bill.

The senate bill sucks. What's more, the house bill is only marginally better.

Bottom line: Lieberman killed any chance of real reform weeks ago. What we're left with are a pair of lame bills that propose to force Americans to buy overpriced insurance from private companies with a track record that's worse than horrible.

No wonder Obama's numbers are sinking like a stone.

The Democratic Party better get it's act together and fast cause the Palin/Beck 2012 option is fast approaching :(

kane 01-18-2010 08:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DateDoc (Post 16759946)
And special election voter turnout is typically quite low which is in Brown's favor.

Yep the standard republican plan is to pander to the base, shift a little towards the center then hope for rain on election day. They know their base will show up and vote. If the weather sucks the liberals often stay home and light up the bong.

Sausage 01-18-2010 08:53 PM

I hope it goes through, i will be on the phone to my broker 1st thing trying to get some US Insurance stocks! Sure thing :)

DudeRick 01-18-2010 08:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brujah (Post 16759988)

Your quote steers to a point of view that I disagree with! Democrats have brought this failure upon themselves in my opinion. There were numerous, necessary additions to any serious health care bill from the Repubs that liberals dismissed. This is responsible for its failure!

pocketkangaroo 01-18-2010 08:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 16760050)
Your quote steers to a point of view that I disagree with! Democrats have brought this failure upon themselves in my opinion. There were numerous, necessary additions to any serious health care bill from the Republications that liberals dismissed. This is responsible for its failure!

Like what?

theking 01-18-2010 09:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pocketkangaroo (Post 16760053)
Like what?

I think maybe tort reform and across state lines purchase of health insurance...I could be wrong...but I don't think that either is in either the House or Senate bills.

DudeRick 01-18-2010 09:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pocketkangaroo (Post 16760053)
Like what?

Gawd... You Democrats just dont listen... Here are the top 10...

-- Voluntary purchasing pools: Give individuals and small businesses the opportunities that large businesses and the government have to seek lower insurance costs.

-- Portability: As people change jobs or move across state lines, they change insurance plans. By allowing consumers to "own" their policies, insurers would have incentive to make more investments in prevention and in managing chronic conditions.

-- Lawsuit reform: It makes no sense to ignore one of the biggest cost drivers in the system -- the cost of defensive medicine, largely driven by lawsuits. Worse, many doctors have stopped performing high-risk procedures for fear of liability.

-- Require coverage of preexisting conditions: Insurance should not be least accessible when it is needed most. Companies should be incentivized to focus on delivering high-quality effective care, not to avoid covering the sick.

-- Transparency and payment reform: Consumers have more information when choosing a car or restaurant than when selecting a health-care provider. Provider quality and cost should be plainly available to consumers, and payment systems should be based on outcomes, not volume. Today's system results in wide variations in treatment instead of the consistent application of best practices. We must reward efficiency and quality.

-- Electronic medical records: The current system of paper records threatens patient privacy and leads to bad outcomes and higher costs.

-- Tax-free health savings accounts: HSAs have helped reduce costs for employers and consumers. Some businesses have seen their costs decrease by double-digit percentages. But current regulations discourage individuals and small businesses from utilizing HSAs.

-- Reward healthy lifestyle choices: Providing premium rebates and other incentives to people who make healthy choices or participate in management of their chronic diseases has been shown to reduce costs and improve health.

-- Cover young adults: A large portion of the uninsured are people who cannot afford coverage after they have "aged out" of their parents' policies. Permitting young people to stay on their parents' plans longer would reduce the number of uninsured and keep healthy people in insurance risk pools -- helping to lower premiums for everyone.

-- Refundable tax credits (for the uninsured and those who would benefit from greater flexibility of coverage): Redirecting some of the billions already spent on the uninsured will help make non-emergency care outside the emergency room affordable for millions and will provide choices of coverage through the private market rather than forcing people into a government-run system. We should trust American families to make choices for themselves while we ensure they have access to quality, affordable health care.

Vendzilla 01-18-2010 09:11 PM

Just going to watch the election and see what happens, if nothing else, I think that if a republican wins in Mass and that other dems are seeing their failing numbers, they might adopt a new path to keep their jobs!

Brujah 01-18-2010 09:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 16760072)
Gawd... You Democrats just dont listen... Here are the top 10...

-- Voluntary purchasing pools: Give individuals and small businesses the opportunities that large businesses and the government have to seek lower insurance costs.

-- Portability: As people change jobs or move across state lines, they change insurance plans. By allowing consumers to "own" their policies, insurers would have incentive to make more investments in prevention and in managing chronic conditions.

-- Lawsuit reform: It makes no sense to ignore one of the biggest cost drivers in the system -- the cost of defensive medicine, largely driven by lawsuits. Worse, many doctors have stopped performing high-risk procedures for fear of liability.

-- Require coverage of preexisting conditions: Insurance should not be least accessible when it is needed most. Companies should be incentivized to focus on delivering high-quality effective care, not to avoid covering the sick.

-- Transparency and payment reform: Consumers have more information when choosing a car or restaurant than when selecting a health-care provider. Provider quality and cost should be plainly available to consumers, and payment systems should be based on outcomes, not volume. Today's system results in wide variations in treatment instead of the consistent application of best practices. We must reward efficiency and quality.

-- Electronic medical records: The current system of paper records threatens patient privacy and leads to bad outcomes and higher costs.

-- Tax-free health savings accounts: HSAs have helped reduce costs for employers and consumers. Some businesses have seen their costs decrease by double-digit percentages. But current regulations discourage individuals and small businesses from utilizing HSAs.

-- Reward healthy lifestyle choices: Providing premium rebates and other incentives to people who make healthy choices or participate in management of their chronic diseases has been shown to reduce costs and improve health.

-- Cover young adults: A large portion of the uninsured are people who cannot afford coverage after they have "aged out" of their parents' policies. Permitting young people to stay on their parents' plans longer would reduce the number of uninsured and keep healthy people in insurance risk pools -- helping to lower premiums for everyone.

-- Refundable tax credits (for the uninsured and those who would benefit from greater flexibility of coverage): Redirecting some of the billions already spent on the uninsured will help make non-emergency care outside the emergency room affordable for millions and will provide choices of coverage through the private market rather than forcing people into a government-run system. We should trust American families to make choices for themselves while we ensure they have access to quality, affordable health care.

Some good stuff in there

GatorB 01-18-2010 10:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 16759577)
Brown will defeat Coakley tomorrow in Massachusetts and kill this awful bill. I hope that the Democrats will now work with Republicans and create real health care reform!

No it won't. There will be ZERO health care reform. Enjoy the continuation of the crappy health care system we have had for decades and will continue to have more many more years. DO NOT BITCH ABOUT HOW CRAPPY HEALTHCARE IS ANYMORE. What you wanted was health care bill defeated so you are about to get what you deserve.

Was this bill perfect? No. No such thing as a prefect bill could EVER be passed. The fact remains THE STAUS QUO IS NOT AN OPTION. But people like you are too stupid to see that's exactly what you are about to get.

If you actually think you're going to get some kind of whatever you feel is "real" healthcare reform then you are very naive or just plain retarded. And honestly I have yet to hear ONE response from hater about what THEIR idea of healthcare reform is. Sorry if you want to say something is a bad idea but you don't have better idea of your own then seriously you really need to STFU.

GatorB 01-18-2010 10:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 16760072)
Gawd... You Democrats just dont listen... Here are the top 10...

-- Voluntary purchasing pools: Give individuals and small businesses the opportunities that large businesses and the government have to seek lower insurance costs.

-- Portability: As people change jobs or move across state lines, they change insurance plans. By allowing consumers to "own" their policies, insurers would have incentive to make more investments in prevention and in managing chronic conditions.

-- Lawsuit reform: It makes no sense to ignore one of the biggest cost drivers in the system -- the cost of defensive medicine, largely driven by lawsuits. Worse, many doctors have stopped performing high-risk procedures for fear of liability.

-- Require coverage of preexisting conditions: Insurance should not be least accessible when it is needed most. Companies should be incentivized to focus on delivering high-quality effective care, not to avoid covering the sick.

-- Transparency and payment reform: Consumers have more information when choosing a car or restaurant than when selecting a health-care provider. Provider quality and cost should be plainly available to consumers, and payment systems should be based on outcomes, not volume. Today's system results in wide variations in treatment instead of the consistent application of best practices. We must reward efficiency and quality.

-- Electronic medical records: The current system of paper records threatens patient privacy and leads to bad outcomes and higher costs.

-- Tax-free health savings accounts: HSAs have helped reduce costs for employers and consumers. Some businesses have seen their costs decrease by double-digit percentages. But current regulations discourage individuals and small businesses from utilizing HSAs.

-- Reward healthy lifestyle choices: Providing premium rebates and other incentives to people who make healthy choices or participate in management of their chronic diseases has been shown to reduce costs and improve health.

-- Cover young adults: A large portion of the uninsured are people who cannot afford coverage after they have "aged out" of their parents' policies. Permitting young people to stay on their parents' plans longer would reduce the number of uninsured and keep healthy people in insurance risk pools -- helping to lower premiums for everyone.

-- Refundable tax credits (for the uninsured and those who would benefit from greater flexibility of coverage): Redirecting some of the billions already spent on the uninsured will help make non-emergency care outside the emergency room affordable for millions and will provide choices of coverage through the private market rather than forcing people into a government-run system. We should trust American families to make choices for themselves while we ensure they have access to quality, affordable health care.

actually most of these are in the health care bill you want dead.

and as fas a this

Lawsuit reform: It makes no sense to ignore one of the biggest cost drivers in the system -- the cost of defensive medicine, largely driven by lawsuits. Worse, many doctors have stopped performing high-risk procedures for fear of liability.

basically what you want is if a doctor and or hospital fucks up you want them to say "Oh bad sorry" and that's it. No punishment and no compensation for victims. Just so you can save a few bucks. Allegedgly save.

GatorB 01-18-2010 10:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by theking (Post 16760060)
I think maybe tort reform and across state lines purchase of health insurance...I could be wrong...but I don't think that either is in either the House or Senate bills.

I know for a FACT that across the state lines purcahses IS in at least one of these bills. But you can forget about that now. Enjoy being limited for your insurance choices for the next 10 years. Congrats.

GatorB 01-18-2010 10:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kane (Post 16759685)
Brown's primary platform is "If you want to kill the health care bill, vote for me." If he wins he will give the republicans 41 members that is enough to overcome the cloture the democrats have and it would allow them to effectively filibuster anything they wanted. So, in theory, if he wins it will give the republicans the opportunity to basically bring the senate to a halt any time they want and kill or derail any bill they want. Who knows how often they would actually do this, but if he wins it would be a big weapon for them.

And nothing will get done and in 2012 they can say "See Obama didn't do anything". Then if another repub gets elected president and they take over Congress again then they will do for healthcare what they did between 2001-2007 which is NOTHING. Except pass some bills that favor the insurance companies and do nothing or patients. Oh wait, my bad, the GOP did pass the prescription drug bill which is costing us taxpayers a MINIMUM of a half a TRILLION over the first 10 years of the program.

GatorB 01-18-2010 10:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rangermoore (Post 16759664)
Right On... :thumbsup

Yes and people will fuck themselves over again. Sometimes people never learn.

Seriously why is 50% of America is retarded. Ok you claim to want healthcare reform but when it is presented you hate it? Huh? Do you want reform or not? Oh wait it costs too much. So you want reform that costs nothing. Ok that's work in FANTASYLAND. I live in the REAL WORLD. I'm GROWN UP enough to realize nothing is perfect. Waiting for perfection means waiting forever.

Not one single person that wants health care reform but is against this bill has plan of thier own. If you do post it. If not STFU until you come up with something better.

theking 01-18-2010 10:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GatorB (Post 16760186)
I know for a FACT that across the state lines purcahses IS in at least one of these bills. But you can forget about that now. Enjoy being limited for your insurance choices for the next 10 years. Congrats.

I will not be affected one way or the other...with or without health care reform. It may possibly be in the House bill...but is not in the Senate bill...and I personally do not think it is in either bill. BTW...I have stated all along...and at this point continue to state...that I do not think the current Congress will present the President with a bill for his signature.

Vendzilla 01-18-2010 11:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GatorB (Post 16760209)

Seriously why is 50% of America is retarded. Ok you claim to want healthcare reform but when it is presented you hate it?

It really hasn't been presented very well

I think if the president had sat down with Democrats and GOP reps and hammered out a deal that both could agree on and did the whole thing with no pork spending and open to C-Span, it would be a better bill, you know like the president promised when her ran for office, don't you agree?
He promised bipartisanship, yeah that happened
He promised no pork spending, strike two
He promised open debate on C-Span, strike three
People are pissed that no one is listening and now the same thing is going to happen to Obama that happened to Clinton in 94, he lost control of the house and senate and had to change his path as a president, which lead to him getting reelected.
People can debate whether the health bill is good or bad right now, but the fact that Mass. might elect a GOP to replace Ted Kennedy is telling the government they aren't happy with the way things are going

PornMD 01-19-2010 12:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GatorB (Post 16760209)
Seriously why is 50% of America is retarded. Ok you claim to want healthcare reform but when it is presented you hate it? Huh?

I want bigger things to be fixed first. Health care is one of the least of this country's worries. I'm worried about being able to afford staying in my home. I'm worried about my sister being able to get a job after her company finding an excuse to fire her after 12 years of being one of their most acclaimed employees. I'm worried about seeing another airport security issue come up seemingly every new week. I'm worried about our president practically begging China to keep investing in the US and basically confirming that we are their bitch.

Health care reform is something that should happen. I just don't get why Obama felt the need to blow nearly his entire first year to try and make it happen while so many other things are much bigger problems right now. Or look at it this way - the health care system is the same one that was in place while Bush was president...was there ANYONE considering it the biggest problem we were facing while he was in office? Anyone at all? I'm not republican or democrat. To be honest I'm becoming anti-politician entirely with each passing year. So many people making so much money getting such little done while letting bad situations get worse.

dav3 01-19-2010 12:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fatfoo (Post 16759717)
I sure love Canada's free health care system. It's good to be a Canadian.

Must be nice.

tiger 01-19-2010 12:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tony404 (Post 16759954)
The health care bill is so far from liberal. lol A liberal bill would of been medicare for everyone done. This is so far from that. Its a healthcare and big pharm bail out. lol

:2 cents::2 cents:

Insurance companies love where this is going just look at insurance stocks performance as this gets closer to passing.


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 01:06 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123