3. You could get a subsidy to buy insurance if you make less than $88,000 per year for a family of four.
Starting in 2014, the health care reform bill provides subsidies for people who don't get insurance from their employers and therefore have to buy it on their own. The size of the subsidy depends on your income, whether you're single or have a family, your age, and where you live.
Here are a few examples:
• A 40-year old individual making $30,000 a year in a medium-cost area of the country will get an $850 subsidy toward buying a policy, which should cost about $3,500, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation subsidy calculator.
• A 40-year-old in the same city who has a family of four and is making $60,000 will get a $4,220 subsidy toward a policy that costs $9,435.
Yup. There's no way one could read something like the Federalist Papers and think "Yeah, I think people who ratified the Constitution would be cool with all this." No way. If we want to mandate insurance, we should amend the Constitution. Luckily for own good, the "anointed" have effectively done that for us so we don't have to go through the messy procedure as outlined in article 5.Nope not close at all.
It's just a matter of time before things start going wrong and rather than admitting this was a bad idea, they'll be calling for more government intervention. Welcome to utopia!...such surrogates not only lack the detailed and direct knowledge of the innumerable circumstances surrounding each of the millions of individuals whose decisions they are preempting, they lack the incentives of direct gain and loss from being right or wrong, and they have every incentive to persist in mistaken policies (from which they suffer little), rather than admit to being wrong (from which they could suffer much).
why require us to have one when we don't need/want it? isn't it better if the government manages the tax money better so that it can provide such access without depending on us?
It's like saying, "I am such a great driver so I don't need no stinking insurance!"
the major difference is.... when I drive... I am responsible for other people as the result of the consequence of my action (driver error).
In health care - I am responsible only for myself.
Not quite true when you look at the results of health care that affect the others in your life, as well as society as a whole.
the mourning? eh. I guess I wasn't coddled at birth
Yup. There's no way one could read something like the Federalist Papers and think "Yeah, I think people who ratified the Constitution would be cool with all this." No way. If we want to mandate insurance, we should amend the Constitution. Luckily for own good, the "anointed" have effectively done that for us so we don't have to go through the messy procedure as outlined in article 5.
Thomas Sowell's The Vision of the Anointed does a great job explaining the mentality behind this whole thing. Here's a quote:
It's just a matter of time before things start going wrong and rather than admitting this was a bad idea, they'll be calling for more government intervention. Welcome to utopia!
Exactly.....They are already hedging their bets with "not perfect". That is why I hope the GOP doesn't take the 2010 mid terms.....I don't want there to be any excuses when this tanks. We can save it in 2012 before it gets too bad.
Interesting view!
No matter what happens, there will always be an excuse. There will always be someone to blame and demagogue. They blamed Republicans when Republicans were at their weakest point in generations. When Democrats pull the "not perfect" card, we need to remind them that they're the ones that rushed through a massively complex bill with huge implications before anyone could really understand it. We're the ones who said it wouldn't work as advertised. When Republicans are in power and Democrats blame Republicans for messing it up, we need to point out that we were the ones that said it would be a bad idea to hand over this much control to the government regardless of which side is in power.Exactly.....They are already hedging their bets with "not perfect". That is why I hope the GOP doesn't take the 2010 mid terms.....I don't want there to be any excuses when this tanks. We can save it in 2012 before it gets too bad.
Exactly.....They are already hedging their bets with "not perfect". That is why I hope the GOP doesn't take the 2010 mid terms.....I don't want there to be any excuses when this tanks. We can save it in 2012 before it gets too bad.
It is a little different. My thinking has been, and I posted this a month ago, it is better to let this run it's course, fail and repair than to stop it mid run and risk the chance that we will end up trying it again.
Allowing it to run its course could cost us trillions of dollars extra along with interest which will further drain the U.S. economy even more. Not only that but tramples the people's right to choose their own insurance whether it's govt or private. This health care requirement will simply devastate small/med sized businesses putting many of them out of business. Do we really want that?
And it could prove to be a success, which will leave a lot of naysaying ADers in the position of eating their words.