It's amusing, when you think about it: The Tea Partiers yell and scream about wanting to get rid of government and "save the country". Yet: The Second..."/>
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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Anti-Government, but don't touch my Medicare
Thursday, April 29, 2010 5:55 PM
FREMDFIRMA
Thursday, April 29, 2010 6:07 PM
MAGONSDAUGHTER
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: I believe in creationism. I also believe in evolution.
Friday, April 30, 2010 7:30 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:hostility is an automatic reaction, a way to defend a belief in the face of evidence against it. When argument fails, belligerence and defensiveness saves the day.
Friday, April 30, 2010 10:51 AM
MAL4PREZ
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: I didn't present my speculations as fact or science. Why should my musings about possible economic motivations have any scientific rigor in them?
Quote:Now, be nice and stop calling me a hypocrite. Or I won't buy Ruddiman's book. :P
Friday, April 30, 2010 11:03 AM
WULFENSTAR
http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg
Friday, April 30, 2010 11:08 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: Quote:hostility is an automatic reaction, a way to defend a belief in the face of evidence against it. When argument fails, belligerence and defensiveness saves the day. Right on. And that's how Rappy, and others, deflect the topic without replying. You forgot to add that exactly the same method works to turn the topic from one thing onto something completely different, which it does just as well from what I see.
Friday, April 30, 2010 2:32 PM
KWICKO
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)
Quote:Originally posted by Wulfenstar: Mal4Prez... Stop being so raciss.
Friday, April 30, 2010 2:38 PM
Quote: As to believing in evolution AND creationism, isn't that what 'Intelligent Design' is all about? The concept that "God" created the world, then let it go to see what happened?
Friday, April 30, 2010 2:47 PM
Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: I don't think folks like Antimason and Causal (and my mom!) are aware of what they do. It's just automatic. But I think it's different with Rappy. He knows exactly what he's doing; he just likes to mess with people.
Friday, April 30, 2010 3:14 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: As to believing in evolution AND creationism, isn't that what 'Intelligent Design' is all about? The concept that "God" created the world, then let it go to see what happened?
Friday, April 30, 2010 4:55 PM
CANTTAKESKY
Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: Because you saw fit to offer a lecture on the scientific method, thus setting yourself up as something of an expert?
Quote:Because you're interested in forming ideas based on real, provable, reality?
Quote:...and you'd like people to have some confidence in the ideas you present?
Quote: Cause let's review: You came out and claimed that scientists are using methods that "do not meet scientific rigor" and that therefore "it is correct to point the shortcomings out."
Quote:Apparently you meant that it is correct for you point out the shortcomings of other people's methods, but it is not correct for me to call out the shortcomings of your methods.
Quote:And yet if I want better, harder evidence from you because I am open to the possibility that you may be wrong, I'm not "playing nice".
Quote:You say: "My reasons for outcry over cap and trade is very different from my outcry over global warming. The first outcry is over cost to businesses and society, and the second outcry is over intellectual exaggeration if not outright fraud." You flat-out call a body of scientific work "fraud" without showing any of that hard evidence you demand from the scientists involved.
Quote:I have been trying to respond to your accusation with a reasonable discussion of the science. Are you capable of doing the same?
Saturday, May 1, 2010 2:05 AM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Yes, I am setting myself as an "expert" on the scientific method. At least, I am claiming to know what the scientific method is.
Quote:I think paranormal phenomena and aliens exist. Do I have scientific proof? No. Do I need to?
Quote:But what worries me is with this focus on hypocrisy, 1) you do not appear to understand the words coming out of my keyboard, and 2) you appear intent on attacking me personally as a hypocrite rather than my positions on GW.
Saturday, May 1, 2010 3:59 AM
Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: I have tried and tried to have that factual discussion of Climate Change with you...
Saturday, May 1, 2010 4:09 AM
Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: Things we could be talking about: Ruddiman's figures (they can be looked at and discussed even if you don't have the book in your hand),..
Saturday, May 1, 2010 7:22 AM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: Things we could be talking about: Ruddiman's figures (they can be looked at and discussed even if you don't have the book in your hand),.. I can't talk about someone's "figures" just because some anonymous person posted those "figures" on the internet. That is not how I roll.
Saturday, May 1, 2010 8:07 AM
Saturday, May 1, 2010 1:07 PM
Saturday, May 1, 2010 1:30 PM
Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: I'd wish you could have extended that kind of courtesy to me about Ruddiman--to at least hear me out, ...
Quote:I think you have great ideas, if only you'd dispassionately let them be discussed and debated. I'll be here whenever you want to pick it up again.
Saturday, May 1, 2010 1:32 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Fremdfirma: So always, ALWAYS question it, even and especially when it seems most sound, whether it be faith, personal experience, or science.
Saturday, May 1, 2010 5:11 PM
Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: So now you're all scientific rigor. It does seem to come and go.
Monday, May 3, 2010 2:45 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: So now you're all scientific rigor. It does seem to come and go. Let me explain it using small words. If I am talking about science, I use science. If I am talking about something that is not science, I don't use science.
Monday, May 3, 2010 3:15 PM
DREAMTROVE
Monday, May 3, 2010 3:28 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: So, yes, govt. performs a function in protecting you from a govt. created situation. Yeah, ultimately, I would much rather go to the doctor myself and pay regular cash, whatever it really merits, the result of the devaluation of three bucks, probably the $60 my local clinic charges, not $1500. When they prescribe me medicine, it should cost a couple dollars, not $200. If I want to completely opt out of the system, treat myself with herbs that I grow myself, that should be an option, and no one should fine my family $750 a head for doing so.
Monday, May 3, 2010 4:08 PM
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 12:54 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Mal I suspect the bill will pull us in deeper in locking the industry to the practice. Maybe you live in the middle of nowhere like I do. We had a small town doctor who died some years back. Another doctor came here from Slovakia to take over. It lasted a couple of years, but the regulations required him to have certain equipment, that equipment was under patent, those patents demanded high licensing fees that only a hospital could afford, the hospital was only willing to loan it out if the operation turned a profit. It didn't, because there weren't enough patients, because there wasn't enough population... so...
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 2:48 AM
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 7:40 AM
Quote:Make several recipient non-profit corporations, no screw that, for profit corporations (if there's no profit in the company, they'll find it in corruption.) Then these companies can make competitive bids to pay for healthcare
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 3:13 PM
Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: ... and besides there's this web page that tells about the bad science in full scientific detail that you don't need to take the time to explain because... you're not talking science.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 3:21 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: I reject the idea that the government is to blame for the higher cost of health insurance, or health care. We'll just have to agree to disagree on that one.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 5:14 PM
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 6:07 PM
ANTIMASON
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 9:18 AM
Quote:I don't think the enormous cost of clinical trials and licensing of drugs/physicians and malpractice lawsuits/insurance, which are ultimately absorbed by the consumer, can be disputed.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 9:19 AM
Quote:if there's no profit in the company, they'll find it in corruption.
Quote: Given 1) and 2) the government has created a situation in which healthcare is not something that people can afford.
Quote:Personally, I cannot logically conclude anything other than a US regulation would be the potential cause
Quote: Specifically, the fact here is the advent of the intervention of *our* govt. into *this* healthcare system, which was accompanied by soaring prices, sort of like the coincidence of college tuition and the trading of student loans [you didn’t finish that sentence]. It's sort of obvious that one caused the other, even though, yes, correlation does not prove causality, because when you have enough statistical data, and any reason, then it makes sense, failing something else.
Quote:Health care costs in the US are disproportionately high for many reasons. Use of costly new technologies and drugs: Such use may be the largest single factor increasing health care costs. Use may be appropriate or inappropriate, but in either case, cost is increased. Increased costs of health care goods and services: Drug costs have increased. One reason is the increasing cost of developing a new drug, often in the vicinity of $1 billion. The cost of drug development decreases the economic incentive to develop drugs with lower profit potentials or public health in general (eg, vaccines, antibiotics). Marketing of new drugs and devices: Intensive marketing to physicians and consumers (with direct-to-consumer advertising) has been suggested as a cause of overuse of costly new technologies and drugs. Some of these new measures may be no more effective than older, less costly ones. Overuse of specialty care: Specialists are increasingly providing more care; reasons may include a decreasing number of primary care physicians and an increased desire by patients to see a specialist. Specialty care is often more expensive than primary care; specialists have higher fees and may do more testing (often pursuing less common diagnoses) than primary care physicians. Also, evaluation and treatment of a patient who could have been managed by a single primary care physician may require more than one specialist. High administrative costs: The percentage of health care dollars spent on administration is estimated to be 20 to > 30%. Most administrative costs are generated by private insurance, and most of those costs are generated by marketing and underwriting, processes that do not improve medical care. Also, the existence of numerous private insurance plans in the same geographic area typically increases health care providers' costs by making processing (eg, claim submission, coding) complicated and time-consuming Physician fees: Physicians in the US are more highly compensated relative to other professionals than physicians in many other countries. This disparity occurs partly because physicians in other countries typically spend far less on their medical education and malpractice insurance than those in the US and have lower office overhead. Malpractice costs: The issue of malpractice adds to the cost of medicine directly and indirectly (by triggering defensive medicine). The direct cost is the malpractice insurance premiums paid by physicians, other providers, health care institutions, and medical drug and device manufacturers. These premiums, which cover claim settlements and malpractice insurance company overhead and profits, must ultimately be paid from health care revenues. Defensive medicine: Defensive medicine refers to diagnostic or treatment procedures that providers do to guard against the possibility of malpractice litigation, even though such procedures may not be warranted clinically. For example, a physician may hospitalize a patient who is likely to do well with outpatient treatment to avoid a lawsuit in the unlikely event of an adverse outcome. Aging of the population: Although often cited as a factor, population aging is probably not responsible for recent increased costs because the generation now in old age has not yet increased disproportionately; also, more effective health care has tended to delay serious illness in this generation. However, the aging of baby boomers may affect costs more as the proportion of the population > 65 increases from about 12% currently to about 20% after 2030.
Quote:The New York Times’ Paul Krugman noted that a major reason for the high spending is $98 billion a year in excessive administrative costs. U.S. doctors’ high average incomes of $274,000 for specialists and $173,000 for general practitioners are the source of another $58 billion of the difference each year. The high costs are not due to doctors’ charges per procedure, but to how many patients they see and how many procedures they perform – a volume of business 60 percent higher here than elsewhere. The U.S. also spends $57- $66 billion a year more for drugs than other developed countries, mostly because drug companies are able to charge, on average, 60 to 70 percent more for brand-name prescription drugs. The study estimates the cost of providing full medical care to all of America’s uninsured at $77 billion annually.Quote: http://acpp.info/2007/03/02/study-examines-reasons-behind-high-us-health-care-costs/ Quote: Factors that contribute to current high levels of U.S. expenditures, inefficiency, and waste. overuse, inappropriate, or ineffective use of care; • payment incentives that reward the delivery of more services, without consideration to clinical value or cost-effectiveness; • market power of insurers, providers, and the health industry, including pharmaceutical companies, device manufacturers, and other suppliers to set prices above competitive market levels; • a low ratio of primary to specialty care physicians and services; • access barriers to preventive and primary care that contribute to avoidable hospital admissions, emergency department use, and complications of chronic and acute disease; • a lack of well-coordinated care that leads to unsafe, duplicative, or conflicting care; • inadequate information systems and information exchange; and • high administrative costs, including the high proportion of insurance premiums used to cover overhead costs, the complexity of insurance benefit design and duplicative and uncoordinated requirements, and administrative costs for providers. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/usr_doc/Davis_slowinggrowthUShltcareexpenditureswhatareoptions_989.pdf?section=4039 That’s some of what I found. Do you disagree that these things contribute to the high cost of health care? If you could clarify what you mean about me missing your points, as those were the only ones I was addressing in my post, I’ll try to better understand. "I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10
Quote: http://acpp.info/2007/03/02/study-examines-reasons-behind-high-us-health-care-costs/ Quote: Factors that contribute to current high levels of U.S. expenditures, inefficiency, and waste. overuse, inappropriate, or ineffective use of care; • payment incentives that reward the delivery of more services, without consideration to clinical value or cost-effectiveness; • market power of insurers, providers, and the health industry, including pharmaceutical companies, device manufacturers, and other suppliers to set prices above competitive market levels; • a low ratio of primary to specialty care physicians and services; • access barriers to preventive and primary care that contribute to avoidable hospital admissions, emergency department use, and complications of chronic and acute disease; • a lack of well-coordinated care that leads to unsafe, duplicative, or conflicting care; • inadequate information systems and information exchange; and • high administrative costs, including the high proportion of insurance premiums used to cover overhead costs, the complexity of insurance benefit design and duplicative and uncoordinated requirements, and administrative costs for providers. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/usr_doc/Davis_slowinggrowthUShltcareexpenditureswhatareoptions_989.pdf?section=4039 That’s some of what I found. Do you disagree that these things contribute to the high cost of health care? If you could clarify what you mean about me missing your points, as those were the only ones I was addressing in my post, I’ll try to better understand. "I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10
Quote: Factors that contribute to current high levels of U.S. expenditures, inefficiency, and waste. overuse, inappropriate, or ineffective use of care; • payment incentives that reward the delivery of more services, without consideration to clinical value or cost-effectiveness; • market power of insurers, providers, and the health industry, including pharmaceutical companies, device manufacturers, and other suppliers to set prices above competitive market levels; • a low ratio of primary to specialty care physicians and services; • access barriers to preventive and primary care that contribute to avoidable hospital admissions, emergency department use, and complications of chronic and acute disease; • a lack of well-coordinated care that leads to unsafe, duplicative, or conflicting care; • inadequate information systems and information exchange; and • high administrative costs, including the high proportion of insurance premiums used to cover overhead costs, the complexity of insurance benefit design and duplicative and uncoordinated requirements, and administrative costs for providers.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 9:42 AM
Quote: being a party that promotes civil liberties, meanwhile simultaneously encouraging government to grow so large and intrusive
Quote: dont let the government decide what a woman does with her body! except when she needs a doctors visit
Quote: someones gotta pay for that. and dont try to regulate your own bodily intake of salt, trans fats or marijuana- we're too stupid to take care of ourselves
Quote: they deserve special privelages under the law
Quote: why the constant demoniziation of americans, upset at a government which has bankrupted its peoples futures?
Quote: you throw your support behind.. what? the millions of illegal immigrants who are up in arms, demanding access to taxpayer funded entitlements such schools, hospitals, prisons, jobs?
Quote: but because we are bankrupt, and can barely pay for these services for american.. we must be 'racists
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 10:34 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: I meant to say I reject the government as the SOLE, or even the BIGGEST cause.
Quote: What do I blame? ...Increased costs of health care goods and services: Drug costs have increased. One reason is the increasing cost of developing a new drug, often in the vicinity of $1 billion. The cost of drug development decreases the economic incentive to develop drugs with lower profit potentials or public health in general (eg, vaccines, antibiotics). ....Clinical trials are done by the pharmaceutical companies; are you saying the government is responsible for that?
Quote:They’d have to do clinical trials no matter what, wouldn’t they?
Quote:Licensing isn’t that expensive, as far as I know;
Quote:you blame the government for making malpractice illegal? If they hadn’t, doctors could do whatever they want;...
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 10:51 AM
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 11:33 AM
PERFESSERGEE
Quote:I did read your posts in their entirety, and I apologize I did not express myself clearly enough to show it. In my view, it's like this. There is science, and there is "science." Real science, good science, makes observations, tests hypotheses in experimentation, measures data, and calculates statistical probabilities that the measured data reflects the influence of the independent variable rather than random fluctuations. Then they retest it, and so forth. This is the scientific method. Not every field allows for this kind of experimentation and data measurement. So other fields do the best they can, taking measurements, calculating correlations, look for patterns. In recent years, they have had the benefit of computer modeling as an added tool. Strictly speaking, none of these fields do rigorous science, since there is no experimentation to test hypotheses. However, they still carry the label of a "science" because they dutifully carry out the first steps of the scientific method the best they can--observation and hypothesis. I like to call disciplines that engage in experimentation "science," and disciplines limited to observation and hypotheses, "quasi-science." Much of the social and behavioral sciences, medicine, paleontology, paleogeology, and climate studies are quasi-sciences. They cannot engage in experimentation and lack the most critical tool of the scientific method.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 1:30 PM
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 6:45 PM
Quote:Originally posted by perfessergee: I think you either don't understand the philosophy and methodology of science or you are misrepresenting it. Experimentation is by no means the only way of conducting true science, and it never has been.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 7:14 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: And how do you propose to lower the costs of those two? I'm certainly amenable to lowering them, but I don't see how it could be done.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 7:23 PM
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 8:47 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky] 2. Open the market, part 2. Make drugs available at different phases of the clinical trial process, with prices commensurate with the level of testing. It takes a drug around 8 years to go through the trials. Consumers are absorbing 8 years of very expensive research at the end. If someone wants to try a drug, knowing that it has not yet been tested, early in the trial saga, he should be able to buy it and get it cheaper than if someone prefers to wait until the end of the 8 years. This also solves the orphan drug problems and experimental drug problems. Of course, it goes without saying the drugs should come with thoroughly informed consent of all the risks.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010 9:03 PM
Quote: niki2- Anti: I never attacked the Tea Party in the way you described, so I won’t address that.
Quote:i have to stop you right there. Do you want facts and figures showing that Republican administrations have grown the government far more than Democratic ones? I can provide them, and the cites, if you’d like. It’s a fact. I hate to tell you, but it’s REPUBLICANS which are limiting the right of a woman to choose what to do with her body, via laws and other tactics, not the “liberals”.
Quote: We can disagree about that one, as I happen to think it is government’s job to protect EVERYONE, and given the situation of “poor, minorities, homosexuals and transgenders”—you’re forgetting women, by the way—I think the government trying to give them equal protection under the law is a good thing. We do NOT give them special rights; in fact, when it comes to homosexuals, we definitely PREVENT them from exercising their rights in several ways, especially marriage, serving in the military, and more, and transgenders are hugely persecuted. It’s not special treatmen to give all people the same rights. At least that’s what I believe; you obviously believe differently.
Quote: Lobbyists USE the government to get special treatment, special laws; it’s not because government sticks its nose in for the most part, it’s to gain laws that increase their profits. There are tons of facts and cites on that one, too, if you want them.
Quote: Well, I’m not sure there’s any “throwing of support” behind anyone specific; we’re against SPECIAL TREATMENT of anyone, singling out a class of citizens—for myself, it is largely because it pre-empts the right of ANY citizen the police decide MIGHT be illegal. I’ve never seen any illegal immigrants DEMAND access to those things you listed; when it comes to entitlements, they get none, when it comes to prisons, there are more minorities behind bars than anyone else—you think they DEMANDED that?? Nor did they “demand” jobs, they take lower-paying jobs than a citizen would consider to survive, and it’s our GOVERNMENT which makes that possible. Hosppitals and schools I’ll give you; tho’ again never DEMANDED, I’m not much in favor of letting people die on the streets, tho’ free schooling is something I’m on the fence about.
Thursday, May 6, 2010 3:47 AM
Thursday, May 6, 2010 3:50 AM
Thursday, May 6, 2010 6:20 AM
Thursday, May 6, 2010 6:22 AM
Thursday, May 6, 2010 6:54 AM
Quote: they are now totally committed to collectivism and statism.
Quote: the constitution already protected us from environmental abuses and monopolies-
Quote: lobbyists exist because the government assumes oversight of a particular industry
Thursday, May 6, 2010 7:13 PM
Quote: niki2- Anti: Good, I’m glad we got that cleared up. I was just checking. I respect many members of the Tea Party, I just think they’re misled. Tho’ I do lump them together and occasionally make fun of them, I’m usually talking about the more absurd ones, and I do find some of their positions confused and at odds with one another (see title of this thread). That’s all.
Quote: I understand you have little use for the Republicans, but it is to dismiss the Democrats as you do with which I disagree. I don’t see the opposite as you do, but I think currently the Republicans are the ones who are misguided, and frequently led by people and organizations with their own agenda, which is NOT the good of the people or the country, but themselves.
Thursday, May 6, 2010 10:56 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: the tea party arose because there was no party that was consistent with libertarian ideals of personal liberty and freedom from coercion!
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