REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

'Obamacare' will reduce US workforce, report finds

POSTED BY: GEEZER
UPDATED: Monday, February 17, 2014 09:37
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 6531
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Sunday, February 9, 2014 9:37 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Are you saying you did it by accident?




You got me, KPO.

The BBC/American conservative axis internet monitor team that follows RWED 24/7 noted your inspired ferreting out of the hidden bias in the BBC article. They contacted me on my implant, and flew me to London on the Koch brothers' stealth SST for consultation. After hours of supercomputer analysis, they decided I should post a reply quoting the CBO report, but leaving out those crucial two words. After returning home by the secret trans-Atlantic hyper-tunnel, I typed and posted the modified sentence.

Unfortunately, since you also figured this out, we'll have to send the NSA memory eraser team in to clean you up. Please leave your front door unlocked so they don't have to break it down.

BWAHAHAHAH!!!
----------------------

Of course it was an accident, you idiot.

Are you sure you're not KIKI in disguise?

BTW: way to take two words out of context.

Read the whole fucking sentence, as you quoted it:

"Correspondingly, the negative effects of exchange subsidies on incentives to work will be relevant primarily for a limited segment of the population - mostly people who have no offer of employee-based coverage and whose income is either below or near 400 percent of the FPL (Federal Poverty Level),"

What part of "negative effects of exchange subsidies on incentives to work..." do you not understand?

What part of "...will be relevant primarily for a limited segment of the population - mostly people who have no offer of employee-based coverage and whose income is either below or near 400 percent of the FPL (Federal Poverty Level)," do you not understand?

I'm starting to believe that you understand nothing but the voices in your head.

Seems to be endemic in the "liberals" here.








"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Sunday, February 9, 2014 9:42 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:
I don't believe him. I had no problem doing so...did you, KPO? I think Geezer is trying to weasel out of admitting he edited the article (I notice he won't respond to my accusations) by writing "cut" and paste and hoping we wouldn't notice. There's no reason he couldn't copy and paste directly from the .pdf; more dishonesty.



I know that your paranoia won't let you believe me, but all my computer has is a basic .pdf reader. I can't copy, make, or edit pdf files, just read or print them.


"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Sunday, February 9, 2014 9:43 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


I think this report makes a number of assumptions about behaviours, and goes with the notion that both individuals/businesses will do everything and anything to minimise health care costs.

I'd say that both individuals and businesses will make decisions based on a variety of factors, that may include reducing hours and or staff, but not necessarily do either.

A business will not reduce its workforce from 100 to 50 just to reduce costs, whereas it may reduce it from 57 to 49. MAY. If reducing your workforce ultimately impacts on the efficiency of the business, it probably wont happen.

Additionally, many employees will not have the option to reduce their hours, or they simply may find its still cost effective to work the same hours and foot a higher healthcare bill.

In the end, this is an adjustment period, and after a few years, people will hardly give it a thought.

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Monday, February 10, 2014 9:42 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Good points, Magons, thank you. And yes, as we've discussed before, in a few years (and hopefully, with adjustments to improve it) this will all be a moot point. Nobody can know exactly how this will all come out until enough time has passed, and I think businesses won't be cutting off their noses to spite their faces, that the results will be more mixed than those on the right are trying to indicate.

As to Geezer; is he saying he can only copy text by typing EVERYTHING himself, or else how does he explain editing out the two sentences in the original BBC article?

And I note he has not addressed my initial argument, that he wasn't "pointing out, first" the difference in CBO's earlier and current estimates, nor do I expect him to.

I'm not convinced.


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Monday, February 10, 2014 2:42 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:
Good points, Magons, thank you. And yes, as we've discussed before, in a few years (and hopefully, with adjustments to improve it) this will all be a moot point. Nobody can know exactly how this will all come out until enough time has passed, and I think businesses won't be cutting off their noses to spite their faces, that the results will be more mixed than those on the right are trying to indicate.

As to Geezer; is he saying he can only copy text by typing EVERYTHING himself, or else how does he explain editing out the two sentences in the original BBC article?

And I note he has not addressed my initial argument, that he wasn't "pointing out, first" the difference in CBO's earlier and current estimates, nor do I expect him to.

I'm not convinced.




If you have something to say to me, please address me directly, and don't drag Magons into your paranoid fantasy.


"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Monday, February 10, 2014 3:09 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


I addressed you REPEATEDLY, concisely and specifically, Geezer; you refused to respond. Your statement is pure, unadulterated bullshit, it's absolutely laughable that you would even make it, given the contents of this thread.

One might mention that this is a free forum and any poster can address anyone or anything they desire, not somewhere that you control who says what to whom. Which you're also completely aware of, so the reasonable assumption is you are trolling, nothing more.

You have shown yourself to be a liar, a coward and a troll in this thread; that direct enough for you?


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Monday, February 10, 2014 3:13 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Dood, seriously, I gotta ask - why should she bother?

You blew her off the first multiple times she asked you directly, just like you blew off SignyMs questions in multiple threads, and KPOs questions in multiple threads, and of course you NEVER respond to me.

So what's going to make this one time she does address you directly any different?

Time to let this thread die and sink into oblivion, eh Geezer? 'Cause you think people will forget and you can resume your trolling some other day. Is that how you're going to roll, Geezer?

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Monday, February 10, 2014 3:34 PM

STORYMARK


He ignores every question, then whines that you didn't ask this one directly to him - yet he STILL doesn't answer the goddamned question.

Ya'll are still trying to talk to someone who clearly either has no interest in it. Another rappy. Worthless.




"Goram it kid, let's frak this thing and go home! Engage!"

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Monday, February 10, 2014 3:45 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:



If you have something to say to me, please address me directly, and don't drag Magons into your paranoid fantasy.





Not much of a paranoid fantasy really

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Monday, February 10, 2014 4:51 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Of course it was an accident

I wanted to ask and hear you say it. I don't think you're the kind of person who would straight out lie. I wanted to see if you're the kind of person who would make it sound like it was an accident when it wasn't.

So I'll accept that it was an accident. But the fact remains that you unfaithfully gave a quote, accidentally/subconsciously adapting it to suit your argument. I'd be horrified and apologetic if I'd done that. You seem to be indignant and frothy.

Quote:

What part of " negative effects of exchange subsidies on incentives to work..." do you not understand?

I understand the word negative. It means something's gone down. The context (in the unedited quote) tells us that it is people's incentive to work that has gone down (and that this applies particularly to people in the lower income bracket). But as I've shown, a negative effect on a person's incentive to work is not necessarily a negative effect on the person themselves - which is what the BBC article was implying.

Do you want to try again and find a quote in the CBO report that supports the BBC quote? Or should we accept that the BBC report was badly written?

By the way, we still haven't heard why you edited the BBC article.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Monday, February 10, 2014 5:05 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

I don't believe him. Why couldn't he COPY and paste?

I actually had difficulty copying and pasting from that report. And I noticed that Geezer incorrectly typed 'who's' instead of 'whose', so I believe that he re-typed the quote.

As for why he left out the exact two words that would change the quote's meaning, my guess is that he read the quote to mean what he wanted it to, and then when he came to type it his mind was happy to jettison a couple of words that got in the way of his 'meaning'.

I don't know. Either that or he's lying about not doing it on purpose.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Monday, February 10, 2014 7:30 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


So, Niki

Just curious - do you have anything else you'd like to say on the topic (before Geezer intruded and it became all about his trolling)?

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Tuesday, February 11, 2014 8:50 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:
I addressed you REPEATEDLY, concisely and specifically, Geezer; you refused to respond. Your statement is pure, unadulterated bullshit, it's absolutely laughable that you would even make it, given the contents of this thread.

One might mention that this is a free forum and any poster can address anyone or anything they desire, not somewhere that you control who says what to whom. Which you're also completely aware of, so the reasonable assumption is you are trolling, nothing more.

You have shown yourself to be a liar, a coward and a troll in this thread; that direct enough for you?



Niki, there are two reasons that I don't answer some of your accusations.

1. Many are buried somewhere in three or four pages of text, so it's difficult to actually find them. Being concise instead of posting reams of quotes and ramblings would make your posts a bit more understandable.


2. Many of your accusations are so obviously dead wrong anyone looking at the thread can see it, so there's no point in responding.

example:

Quote:

2. Then I discovered he omitted two paragraphs from the article he posted:
Quote:


'Empowered'

But the White House said the impact on the workforce would be due to voluntary steps by workers rather than businesses cutting jobs.

The law will leave people "empowered to make choices about their own lives and livelihoods", said White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.

He added that the law would allow participants the freedom to retire early or become stay-at-home parents.




Paragraphs underline were edited out of what Geezer posted. Those are important points, showing AGAIN that the reduction in work force would be voluntary, not job losses.



But those paragraphs were, are, and have always been in my original post. Look at it and see. (Yes. I know. You'll go all KIKI and accuse me of editing it after the fact, but I didn't.)

Then there's...

Quote:

Geezer, tho' your title obviously highlights the reduction in workforce


Quote:

You titled this thread "'Obamacare' will reduce US workforce, report finds"


Still not my title. The BBC's title.







"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Tuesday, February 11, 2014 8:56 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

Of course it was an accident

I wanted to ask and hear you say it. I don't think you're the kind of person who would straight out lie. I wanted to see if you're the kind of person who would make it sound like it was an accident when it wasn't.

So I'll accept that it was an accident. But the fact remains that you unfaithfully gave a quote, accidentally/subconsciously adapting it to suit your argument. I'd be horrified and apologetic if I'd done that. You seem to be indignant and frothy.



So you actually don't believe me then.



Quote:

By the way, we still haven't heard why you edited the BBC article.


Because I didn't?

See the post above.


"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Tuesday, February 11, 2014 9:50 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


No, Kiki; I endeavored to make my points as clearly as I could, and the CBO has come out and clarified the issue themselves, so I think the issue has been well covered.

As to Geezer's last two posts however, this has gotten utterly incredible. Geezer's gotten truly weird, and I'll address that before I leave this thread.

The article as it appears now in Geezer's post:
Quote:

"The middle class is getting squeezed in this economy, and this CBO report confirms that Obamacare is making it worse," Republican House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said in a statement.

'Empowered'

But the White House said the impact on the workforce would be due to voluntary steps by workers rather than businesses cutting jobs.


The glitches that plagued the healthcare website during its October rollout would probably result in one million fewer enrolled participants than initially anticipated, the CBO found.

Six million people are now forecast to sign up for coverage by this year.

The president's Democratic allies have been trying to distance themselves from the issue in the lead-up to November's elections.
The law will leave people "empowered to make choices about their own lives and livelihoods", said White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.

He added that the law would allow participants the freedom to retire early or become stay-at-home parents.

Those polls will determine which political party holds sway in Congress for the final two years of Mr Obama's presidency.



The original article:
Quote:

"The middle class is getting squeezed in this economy, and this CBO report confirms that Obamacare is making it worse," Republican House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said in a statement.

'Empowered'

But the White House said the impact on the workforce would be due to voluntary steps by workers rather than businesses cutting jobs.

The law will leave people "empowered to make choices about their own lives and livelihoods", said White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.

He added that the law would allow participants the freedom to retire early or become stay-at-home parents.

The glitches that plagued the healthcare website during its October rollout would probably result in one million fewer enrolled participants than initially anticipated, the CBO found.

Six million people are now forecast to sign up for coverage by this year.

The president's Democratic allies have been trying to distance themselves from the issue in the lead-up to November's elections.

Those polls will determine which political party holds sway in Congress for the final two years of Mr Obama's presidency.



I don't believe him. I looked the first time; they weren't there, and now they're there in a different place in the article? I can't guarantee I ran a "search" for those sentences, but it's what I normally would do.

Add to that the fact that he's never addressed his lie that he was "pointing out, first" the difference in the CBO's numbers, the omission of the other two words KPO caught which changed the meaning, and his responding to others for several posts before "clarifying" the two missing sentences (my writing long is bullshit, I addressed these three issues extremely clearly more than once), and yeah, I think he went back and edited.

And yes, KPO, I didn't believe Geezer would stoop to the kind of bullshit our resident troll does, either, previously, but he's now lost all credibility with me. As such, I've had it with his games. I've struggled with Geezer's specious arguments for a long time, trying to treat him as a legitimate opponent, this was the last straw. He can go on playing them by himself from here on.


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Tuesday, February 11, 2014 10:58 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Quote:
So I'll accept that it was an accident. But the fact remains that you unfaithfully gave a quote, accidentally/subconsciously adapting it to suit your argument.


So you actually don't believe me then.


Huh??

Quote:

Quote:
By the way, we still haven't heard why you edited the BBC article.


Because I didn't?


Yes you did. Two of the paragraphs have been taken out and put back in the wrong place. How, and why, did that happen?

As for the whole 'negative' impact thing, this is how the CBO in their recent blog post, describe the people that the BBC article described as 'hard hit':

Quote:

...when the labor market is strong and people decide on their own to retire, to leave work to take care of their families, or to cut back on their hours to pursue other interests, those people presumably think they are better off (or they would not be making the voluntary choices they are making). As a result, other people are generally happy for them and do not describe them as having “lost their jobs.”

Have the people described above been 'negatively affected' Geezer?

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Tuesday, February 11, 2014 11:49 AM

STORYMARK


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:


So I'll accept that it was an accident. But the fact remains that you unfaithfully gave a quote, accidentally/subconsciously adapting it to suit your argument. I'd be horrified and apologetic if I'd done that. You seem to be indignant and frothy.



So you actually don't believe me then.



Jesus, do you even try to read before saying this shit?




"Goram it kid, let's frak this thing and go home! Engage!"

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Tuesday, February 11, 2014 12:26 PM

BIGDAMNNOBODY


Quote:

Originally posted by Storymark:
Jesus, do you even try to read before saying this shit?


Please explain to the class what this response has to do with Obamacare and the US workforce.

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Tuesday, February 11, 2014 1:43 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Yep.

I can't work more than 30 hours a week now on average since that's considered "full time" under Obamacare. I was bitching about this 6 months ago. Glad to know that it's at least "news" now.

The only good I see coming from this is that I'll NEVER be in danger of hitting the threshold that will cut my food stamps. I'll be damned if I work 2 part time jobs to make ends meet now. I'd sooner live in a house at least 10 degrees colder than most mere mortals could suffer for this bitter winter and use the money I saved to pay future bills instead of putting it on my credit card.






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Wednesday, February 12, 2014 9:46 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

Quote:
So I'll accept that it was an accident. But the fact remains that you unfaithfully gave a quote, accidentally/subconsciously adapting it to suit your argument.


So you actually don't believe me then.


Huh??



You're still assuming that I modified it to suit my argument. If so, you don't believe I left anything out by accident.

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:
By the way, we still haven't heard why you edited the BBC article.


Because I didn't?


Yes you did. Two of the paragraphs have been taken out and put back in the wrong place. How, and why, did that happen?



I copied it and posted it. I wondered at the time about the paragraph structure. Perhaps The BBC corrected it later. It's been known to happen.

Quote:

As for the whole 'negative' impact thing, this is how the CBO in their recent blog post, describe the people that the BBC article described as 'hard hit':

Quote:

...when the labor market is strong and people decide on their own to retire, to leave work to take care of their families, or to cut back on their hours to pursue other interests, those people presumably think they are better off (or they would not be making the voluntary choices they are making). As a result, other people are generally happy for them and do not describe them as having “lost their jobs.”

Have the people described above been 'negatively affected' Geezer?



Let's see, the BBC described - "Lower-income workers will be hardest hit, limiting their hours to avoid losing federal subsidies."

This apparently based on the CBO statement that - "Correspondingly, the negative effects of exchange subsidies on incentives to work will be relevant primarily for a limited segment of the population - mostly people who have no offer of employee-based coverage and whose income is either below or near 400 percent of the FPL (Federal Poverty Level),"

Since your quote from the CBO blog (which one, BTW?) doesn't refer to negative effects or low income workers at all, I'd say the blog is talking about a different group of people than the low-income workers mentioned in both the BBC story and the CBO report.




"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Wednesday, February 12, 2014 3:23 PM

STORYMARK


Quote:

Originally posted by BIGDAMNNOBODY:
Quote:

Originally posted by Storymark:
Jesus, do you even try to read before saying this shit?


Please explain to the class what this response has to do with Obamacare and the US workforce.



Awwww, that's adorable, given that you never, ever comment on the subject of any thread, and just fling shit.

But since you're slow - I was asking if grandpa had actually read what he quoted - because his response to it seemed rather tone-deaf to the actual point, about his hubris over being wrong. Seriously - how stupid are you fucks? He quotes the part that says they believe him - and then states they don't.

But that's okay - you're too fuckin stupid to grasp such a concept as responding to what's actually written, rather than what you imagine.




"Goram it kid, let's frak this thing and go home! Engage!"

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Wednesday, February 12, 2014 6:57 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

You're still assuming that I modified it to suit my argument.

If you knew what 'subconsciously' meant you would know that this precludes your doing anything 'on purpose'. And when you see that I actually typed 'accidentally/subconsciously' it's even clearer that I'm not accusing you of doing anything on purpose. On the contrary I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt. But you're still finding reason to whine, and play the victim, somehow.

Quote:

I copied it and posted it. I wondered at the time about the paragraph structure. Perhaps The BBC corrected it later. It's been known to happen.

Sounds plausible. The non-douche thing to do would've been to give this explanation about 50 posts ago.

Quote:

Since your quote from the CBO blog (which one, BTW?) doesn't refer to negative effects or low income workers at all, I'd say the blog is talking about a different group of people


http://www.cbo.gov/publication/45096

From the blog post:

Quote:

Q: Will 2.5 Million People Lose Their Jobs in 2024 Because of the ACA?
A: No, we would not describe our estimates in that way.

We wrote in the report: “CBO estimates that the ACA will reduce the total number of hours worked, on net, by about 1.5 percent to 2.0 percent during the period from 2017 to 2024, almost entirely because workers will choose to supply less labor.” The reason for the reduction in the supply of labor is that the provisions of the ACA reduce the incentive to work for certain subsets of the population.

For example, under the ACA, health insurance subsidies are provided to some people with low income and are phased out as their income rises; as a result, a portion of the added income from working more would be offset by a loss of some or all of the subsidies, which represents an implicit tax on earnings. Also, the ACA’s subsidies effectively boost the income of recipients, which will lead some of them to decide they can work less and still maintain or improve their standard of living. Therefore, some people will decide not to work or to work fewer hours than would otherwise be the case—including some people who will choose to retire earlier than they would have otherwise, and some people who will work less themselves and rely more on a spouse’s earnings. (Many other factors influence decisions about working, including, for example, income and payroll taxes and the cost of commuting and child care. Moreover, under current economic conditions, a substantial number of people who would like to work cannot find a job.)

Because the longer-term reduction in work is expected to come almost entirely from a decline in the amount of labor that workers choose to supply in response to the changes in their incentives, we do not think it is accurate to say that the reduction stems from people “losing” their jobs.


There. With this blog post the CBO was clarifying some of the points in their report, in response to all the misunderstandings that flew up around it. Thus it is referring to the same group of people, largely low income, that they talked about in their report. The 'negative effects' on people's incentive to work are talked about and explained at length.

And here's my quoted section, directly following on:

Quote:

Here’s a useful way to think about the choice of wording: When firms do not have enough business and decide to lay people off, the people who are laid off are generally worse off and are therefore unhappy about what is happening. As a result, other people express their sympathy to those people for having “lost their jobs” due to forces beyond their control. In contrast, when the labor market is strong and people decide on their own to retire, to leave work to take care of their families, or to cut back on their hours to pursue other interests, those people presumably think they are better off (or they would not be making the voluntary choices they are making). As a result, other people are generally happy for them and do not describe them as having “lost their jobs.”

Thus, there is a critical difference between, on the one hand, people who leave a job for reasons beyond their control and, on the other hand, people who choose not to work or to work less. The wording that people use to describe those differing circumstances reflects the different reactions of the people involved. In our report, we indicated that “the estimated reduction [in employment] stems almost entirely from a net decline in the amount of labor that workers choose to supply,” so we think the language of “losing a job” does not fit.



It's not personal. It's just war.

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Thursday, February 13, 2014 9:32 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

You're still assuming that I modified it to suit my argument.

If you knew what 'subconsciously' meant you would know that this precludes your doing anything 'on purpose'. And when you see that I actually typed 'accidentally/subconsciously' it's even clearer that I'm not accusing you of doing anything on purpose. On the contrary I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt. But you're still finding reason to whine, and play the victim, somehow.



I have some idea what subconsciously means. The issue is with you suggesting I modified something to suit my argument, subconsciously or no.

Quote:

Quote:

I copied it and posted it. I wondered at the time about the paragraph structure. Perhaps The BBC corrected it later. It's been known to happen.

Sounds plausible. The non-douche thing to do would've been to give this explanation about 50 posts ago.



Actually, the non-douche thing would have been to not accuse folks you disagree with of sneakily modifying things on purpose to suit their argument.

Sort'a like this...

"Did you doctor this quote Geezer?"

"Anything to say in your defence, Geezer?"

"Are you saying you did it by accident?"

"I wanted to see if you're the kind of person who would make it sound like it was an accident when it wasn't."



Quote:

Quote:

Since your quote from the CBO blog (which one, BTW?) doesn't refer to negative effects or low income workers at all, I'd say the blog is talking about a different group of people


http://www.cbo.gov/publication/45096

From the blog post:

Quote:

Q: Will 2.5 Million People Lose Their Jobs in 2024 Because of the ACA?
A: No, we would not describe our estimates in that way...



There. With this blog post the CBO was clarifying some of the points in their report, in response to all the misunderstandings that flew up around it. Thus it is referring to the same group of people, largely low income, that they talked about in their report. The 'negative effects' on people's incentive to work are talked about and explained at length.



So you expect that the CBO will go back and edit this part of the report?

"Correspondingly, the negative effects of exchange subsidies on incentives to work will be relevant primarily for a limited segment of the population - mostly people who have no offer of employee-based coverage and whose income is either below or near 400 percent of the FPL (Federal Poverty Level),"

That's the basis of my comment...

"If you read "Number and Types of Worker Likely To Be Affected", starting on page 119, you'll see that it's folks who are incentivized by the availability of subsidized health care payments (i.e. folks not making much money) who will be most likely to work less hours. This is folks who are on the cusp of poverty, and may be dissuaded from moving up the economic ladder by fear of loss of the subsidy."

I still feel that way.

I have noted above that the subsidies under the ACA will benefit some folks, but I'm concerned about those that choose not to try and advance only because they must rely on the subsidy to get insurance to cover their families.




"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Thursday, February 13, 2014 2:39 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

The issue is with you suggesting I modified something to suit my argument, subconsciously or no.

Those two words change the meaning of the sentence from what you want it to mean, to what I want it to mean. I find it hard to believe that those two specific words were omitted by complete random coincidence. For me this whole incident is illustrative of your ability to ignore things that don't quite fit your narrative. You ignored those two words when you read the sentence, which allowed you to misunderstand it. And then, it's no surprise when you came to retype the sentence that those were the two words you missed.

Quote:

Actually, the non-douche thing would have been to not accuse folks you disagree with of sneakily modifying things on purpose to suit their argument.

Those were questions, not accusations, and I largely accepted your answers.

Quote:

This is folks who are on the cusp of poverty, and may be dissuaded from moving up the economic ladder by fear of loss of the subsidy."

As I've already pointed out, the CBO has a very different view of the people being affected by the law:

"when the labor market is strong and people decide on their own to retire, to leave work to take care of their families, or to cut back on their hours to pursue other interests, those people presumably think they are better off (or they would not be making the voluntary choices they are making). As a result, other people are generally happy for them"

To be fair Geezer I think you have a point. The healthcare law (as with any provision that gives help to the poor) will create some dependency, and in effect erode some people's incentive to advance themselves. But that's not the full picture. It's not even the main picture. It's a small part of the picture.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Friday, February 14, 2014 8:26 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
I find it hard to believe that those two specific words were omitted by complete random coincidence. For me this whole incident is illustrative of your ability to ignore things that don't quite fit your narrative. You ignored those two words when you read the sentence, which allowed you to misunderstand it. And then, it's no surprise when you came to retype the sentence that those were the two words you missed.



So you're still accusing me of changing the sentence to fit my narrative.

Quote:

Quote:

Actually, the non-douche thing would have been to not accuse folks you disagree with of sneakily modifying things on purpose to suit their argument.

Those were questions, not accusations, and I largely accepted your answers.




Bullshit.

When you ask if I doctored something (instead of asking if I made a mistake), or if I have anything to say in my defense, those are accusations, and you know it.

Quote:

Quote:

This is folks who are on the cusp of poverty, and may be dissuaded from moving up the economic ladder by fear of loss of the subsidy."

As I've already pointed out, the CBO has a very different view of the people being affected by the law:

"when the labor market is strong and people decide on their own to retire, to leave work to take care of their families, or to cut back on their hours to pursue other interests, those people presumably think they are better off (or they would not be making the voluntary choices they are making). As a result, other people are generally happy for them"



Unfortunately, the labor market is not strong right now, as is noted elsewhere in the CBO's blog as is the fact that the subsidies are an implicit tax on the poorer workers.

Quote:

For example, under the ACA, health insurance subsidies are provided to some people with low income and are phased out as their income rises; as a result, a portion of the added income from working more would be offset by a loss of some or all of the subsidies, which represents an implicit tax on earnings. Also, the ACA’s subsidies effectively boost the income of recipients, which will lead some of them to decide they can work less and still maintain or improve their standard of living. Therefore, some people will decide not to work or to work fewer hours than would otherwise be the case—including some people who will choose to retire earlier than they would have otherwise, and some people who will work less themselves and rely more on a spouse’s earnings. (Many other factors influence decisions about working, including, for example, income and payroll taxes and the cost of commuting and child care. Moreover, under current economic conditions, a substantial number of people who would like to work cannot find a job.)



Quote:

To be fair Geezer I think you have a point. The healthcare law (as with any provision that gives help to the poor) will create some dependency, and in effect erode some people's incentive to advance themselves. But that's not the full picture. It's not even the main picture. It's a small part of the picture.



Plenty of folks here pointing out good things about the ACA, including me. I also see issues with some of the provisions and the lack of planning for implementation. This apparently makes some folks very angry.


"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Friday, February 14, 2014 10:01 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:
You won't get anywhere, KPO, any more than I did. Note he's not responded to me since I called him on his dishonesty. I assume he'd claim that in "switching between screens" he also "missed" those two paragraphs he left out in his original quoting of the article. If he even bothered, which he hasn't.

I'd say "give it up". Geez wants this to go away so he can start anew twisting things on some other issue. He's never going to answer my challenge about his lie that he was "just" pointing out the difference between the CBO's previous numbers and the new ones, and that he just happened to find the article "interesting". After all, he's totally non-partisan, remember?

Under the title Stupidity in Economic Discourse
Quote:

. . . he pulls multiple fast ones, asserting things that he says are conclusions of the CBO report when they aren’t — they’re his own views, pulled out of, um, thin air, or maybe someplace else, which he is projecting onto the budget office to make them seem authoritative. . . .

It works like this: Conservatives in general, and conservative economists in particular, often have a very narrow vision of what economics is all about — namely supply, demand, and incentives. Anything that interferes with the sacred functioning of markets or reduces the incentive to produce must be a bad thing; any time a progressive economist supports policies that don’t fit neatly into this orthodoxy, it must be because he doesn’t understand Econ 101. And conservative economists are so sure of this that they can’t be bothered to actually read what the progressives write — at the first hint of deviation from laissez-faire, they stop paying attention and begin debating with the stupid progressive in their mind, not the real economist out there.

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/02/14/stupidity-in-economic-disc
ourse
/ FEB 14, 7:39 AM

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly

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Friday, February 14, 2014 11:40 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

So you're still accusing me of changing the sentence to fit my narrative.

Well you DID, the question is whether it was purposeful or subconscious (or completely accidental, I suppose, but that seems less likely).

Quote:

When you ask if I doctored something (instead of asking if I made a mistake), or if I have anything to say in my defense , those are accusations, and you know it.

They're still not accusations. And if you don't want people to be suspicious of you for changing the meaning of quotes, be more careful when you're transcribing them.

Quote:

as is the fact that the subsidies are an implicit tax on the poorer workers.

Hence their incentives to work have decreased. Which is what we've been talking about. This isn't a new point you're raising here.

Quote:

Unfortunately, the labor market is not strong right now


See the BBC article, the CBO is talking about the period 2017-2021, when, according to projections, the labour market will be stronger than it is now.

Understand that the CBO in that blog post is trying to explain the difference between 2.3 million workers being laid off because of an economic squeeze, and the equivalent of 2.3 million workers leaving the workforce voluntarily in ordinary, healthy economic conditions. But it doesn't make that big of a difference if the labour market is somewhat less than healthy, the distinction is still completely valid.

Quote:

I also see issues with some of the provisions and the lack of planning for implementation.

The lowering of incentives to work and the 'implicit tax on earnings' effect is not unique to Obamacare. It's a downside to ALL provisions that benefit the poor. If you're poor, you get aid. If you stop being poor through self-advancement, that aid is withdrawn. Hence the government is, in a sense, making work pay less well. This is the implicit tax. But the alternative to government playing this role, of providing a safety net, is to have a society where some people live in misery, and grinding poverty.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Friday, February 14, 2014 12:49 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


The problem with you, Geezer, is that you like to think you're reasonable. But the reality is that you're reasonable, but only to the point where an issue cuts across your assumptions... which is most of the time. After that, instead of using your big brain to learn, you use it to defend your assumptions.

Every step of they way, you've biased your arguments - and your quotes- to say exactly the opposite of what the CBO said. (And no, I don't think the BBC changed the article... they list corrections at the end of an article when it's been changed). I'm not making a big deal out of this single event, but you show a pattern of using that big brain of yours to delete huge chunks of data, obliterate decades of history, miss myriad obvious connections (like the Bush - Bandar "Bush" -Al Qaida connection), and avoid answering direct, repeated questions.

You know that we humans really don't really see what's in front of us. Even a simple sense like vision is heavily processed, which is why we can be fooled by magic tricks. Perceptions are deeply directed by what we want, or are afraid of. People misperceive things all of the time. So when people make a glaring mistake... like pulling into traffic without seeing that vehicle heading in their direction .... or consistently misquoting/ misrepresenting what someone else said... people would be far better off admitting the mistake, backtracking to the source of the error, doing actual LEARNING, and rooting out whatever it was that misled them in the first place.



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Friday, February 14, 2014 1:33 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

as is the fact that the subsidies are an implicit tax on the poorer workers.

Hence their incentives to work have decreased. Which is what we've been talking about. This isn't a new point you're raising here.



I know. It is my point. That folks are incentivized to not try and advance by the implicit tax of the subsidy. This may be fine if you're closing in on retirement, but folks in their early twenties who need health insurance for themselves and possibly a child are being held back from earning more, which may affect their standard of living, the possibility of higher education for children, and the amount of retirement income they'll have.

You didn't understand this by now?

Quote:

Quote:

Unfortunately, the labor market is not strong right now


See the BBC article, the CBO is talking about the period 2017-2021, when, according to projections, the labour market will be stronger than it is now.



And you can predict the labor market now? How about some stock tips while you're at it?

Quote:

Understand that the CBO in that blog post is trying to explain the difference between 2.3 million workers being laid off because of an economic squeeze, and the equivalent of 2.3 million workers leaving the workforce voluntarily in ordinary, healthy economic conditions. But it doesn't make that big of a difference if the labour market is somewhat less than healthy, the distinction is still completely valid.


Yes, teacher. I understand that jobs won't be lost, just workforce equivalent hours.

Quote:

The lowering of incentives to work and the 'implicit tax on earnings' effect is not unique to Obamacare. It's a downside to ALL provisions that benefit the poor. If you're poor, you get aid. If you stop being poor through self-advancement, that aid is withdrawn. Hence the government is, in a sense, making work pay less well. This is the implicit tax. But the alternative to government playing this role, of providing a safety net, is to have a society where some people live in misery, and grinding poverty.


But in most such programs the reduction in benefits is pretty much dollar-for-dollar. The subsidy is not like that, cutting off dramatically when you reach the 400% FPL limit.

As noted above...

Quote:

And it's a good deal for some, Using the Kaiser Subsidy calculator Kiki introduced in another thread, we have a 60 year old woman living in Albany Ga. and making $47,000, paying $12,264 for insurance with no subsidy. If she drops her income by $2,000, to $45,000, She'd receive a $7,989 subsidy, for a net $5,989 benefit.


So if this were a 25 year old woman, and she were offered a better job with a $3,000 pay raise, she'd actually lose almost $5,000 a year in real money.




"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Friday, February 14, 2014 1:38 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
The problem with you, Geezer, is that you like to think you're reasonable. But the reality is that you're reasonable, but only to the point where an issue cuts across your assumptions... which is most of the time. After that, instead of using your big brain to learn, you use it to defend your assumptions.



Not surprisingly, this is pretty much the way I see you, KPO, and Niki.

I point out that there may be some particular thing wrong with one of your pet laws, or parties, or politicians, or whatever, and you can't see it as showing something that could be improved, but an attack on all you hold dear.

I've particularly enjoyed when you call me or Auraptor trolls in threads that we started.


"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Friday, February 14, 2014 3:00 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


KPO, you can keep going, but somewhere along the line you're going to have to accept that you will never get through to Geezer and he will never admit he did anything wrong.
Quote:

folks in their early twenties who need health insurance for themselves and possibly a child are being held back from earning more, which may affect their standard of living, the possibility of higher education for children, and the amount of retirement income they'll have.

That might make sense, if it weren't for today's reality. Look at how salaries have NOT increased in a very long time, while the cost of living has continued to go up. The idea that anyone's being "held back" from "earning more" is a complete fallacy, right along the lines with "if you work hard, you'll get rich".

Leaving out all the elderly who have busted their asses to go on working long past the time it was healthy for them, just to keep health insurance, people's standard of living could only be IMPROVED if they weren't FORCED to work X amount of hours WITHOUT HEALTH INSURANCE, while praying they could survive getting sick or injured, which was the case before the ACA.

As you pointed out,
Quote:

But the alternative to government playing this role, of providing a safety net, is to have a society where some people live in misery, and grinding poverty.
That's a point Geezer is totally unwilling to address in any way; in his argument, there are only two alternatives: work more hours and "advance", or work less hours and get a subsidy. The fact is that without the ACA, people today would go on working more hours WITHOUT advancing, without any safety net; that's part of what the ACA is attempting to fix.

Geezer argues one side of everything; the doesn't mention or take into account the other side, he maximizes his negative assumptions, and he nit picks any potential positives.

I also reject his idea that the BBC changed THEIR copy; I read the entire thing from the link when he put it up, and noticed right off that there were seven paragraphs after the negative subheading and only three one-sentence, vague paragraphs under "empowerment", none of which addressed all the potential positives the CBO has enumerated. That was enough for me when I read it to see that it was slanted, and I enumerated that...BBC didn't change their text, period. And yet again, he has never ONCE addressed the clear refutation of his argument that he was "first, pointing out..." (which reads as if that, and merely finding the article "interesting" was his only focus). Handwriting's on the wall, as far as I'm concerned.


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Friday, February 14, 2014 4:07 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

I point out that there may be some particular thing wrong with one of your pet laws, or parties, or politicians, or whatever, and you can't see it as showing something that could be improved, but an attack on all you hold dear.
Seriously??

I'd like you to show me who my "pet politicians" are, and which ones are my "pet laws" and "pet parties". I'd like to think I'm an equal-opportunity critic. What I hope to attack are belief systems.

Also, I take responsibility for my posts and comments. If someone can show me where I've made a logical error, missed important facts, made erroneous connections, or over-emphasized the importance of one event or process over another, I learn from it and move on.

But I've hardly every gotten to that point with anyone on this board. I would LOVE TO get into a discussion where we manage to get past all of the crap that is usually spewed across the board... the rappy-facts, strawmen, ad hominems, exceptionalism (moral relativism), partisanship, religiosity of all stripes (including libertarianism), and on and on and on...


I would pass out from shock, I would, if a thread actually went like...

A) I support this!
B) What do you mean by "this"?
A) I mean (provides alternate explanation and definition)
B) So, why do you support "this"
A) Because "this" will achieve "that"?
B) Really? How?
A) Thru mechanisms blotz and blortz.
B) But what about blitz? Blitz has been show to produce yix.
A) Because yaps won't allow it.
B) So, really, what you're trying to achieve is not exactly "that", but "that+-". Is that your goal?
A) Yes
B) Why would you want that goal?
A) Because I believe in efdom....
B) Efdom has never been show to exist. I believe in fedom instead


Usually, when you get to the point of a conversation, you come to an assumption, belief or ethic. If people are willing to have their beliefs examined by others, and to examine themselves, THAT'S when real learning takes place.

But like I said, this has almost never occurred here, as far as I recall. There was one instance where someone posted "I never thought of that" and actually changed their mind.


I've had many beliefs eliminated in a lifetime of learning. The latest was using "efficiency" as a paradigm. Once I realized how erroneous that was, I haven't mentally referenced it since. An earlier assumption that societies evolve towards betterment was knocked off its pedestal by Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed (Jared Diamond). In fact, the whole idea of "nature" as useful paradigm for human development is looking pretty silly. I've learned a lot from FREM, from RUE, even CTS (altho we got into some serious dogfights, her graph on disease reduction over the centuries was instructive) and too many others to name.

In the reverse, when people's favorite beliefs are challenged here, they either go off and sulk, or break the nearest beer-bottle over the bar and turn a discussion into a bar-fight, using any and all dirty tricks possible. WTF??? Whatever happened to just talking rationally?



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Saturday, February 15, 2014 8:24 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Seriously??

I'd like you to show me who my "pet politicians" are, and which ones are my "pet laws" and "pet parties".



So you, KPO and NIKI aren't tenaciously defending the ACA in this thread from any suggestion that it might have flaws?

Quote:

Also, I take responsibility for my posts and comments. If someone can show me where I've made a logical error, missed important facts, made erroneous connections, or over-emphasized the importance of one event or process over another, I learn from it and move on.


Right. Like you're doing in the El Nino thread?




"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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Saturday, February 15, 2014 2:59 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

I'd like you to show me who my "pet politicians" are, and which ones are my "pet laws" and "pet parties".-signy
So you, KPO and NIKI aren't tenaciously defending the ACA in this thread from any suggestion that it might have flaws?-geezer

Um... am I defending the ACA? I think my criticisms of the ACA, and the general notion of mandated private insurance, would have been long, loud, and bitter enough to have made an impact by now! All I'm doing is reacting to the mis-interpretation of the CBO report.

Quote:

Also, I take responsibility for my posts and comments. If someone can show me where I've made a logical error, missed important facts, made erroneous connections, or over-emphasized the importance of one event or process over another, I learn from it and move on. -signy

Right. Like you're doing in the El Nino thread?-geezer

I've said over and over in that thread that I have absolutely no idea of the point you're trying to make. I've asked over and over again for explanations, and have re-explained myself over and over again with the idea that we will at least figure out what it is we're disagreeing about. It seems to me that we're truly talking past each other. But here... http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=57477&p=1#9
63154

...see for yourself. I continue to respond on-point, and attempt to understand you, and to make myself understood. I "get" that you're frustrated with the lack of common understanding, but... what's your beef with me?

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Saturday, February 15, 2014 4:20 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
Right. Like you're doing in the El Nino thread?

Geeze, you're acting like a troll on both threads. I'd like to think it's not on purpose.


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Saturday, February 15, 2014 4:25 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Geezer is frustrated with me because I don't see at all (and I mean not AT ALL. Complete blank to me!) what he sees so clearly. I think this is a genuine misunderstanding.


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Saturday, February 15, 2014 8:40 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

I know. It is my point. That folks are incentivized to not try and advance by the implicit tax of the subsidy. This may be fine if you're closing in on retirement, but folks in their early twenties who need health insurance for themselves and possibly a child are being held back from earning more, which may affect their standard of living, the possibility of higher education for children, and the amount of retirement income they'll have.

You didn't understand this by now?


Try not to combine douche-ish condescension with imbecility. You've made this point before, I addressed it saying that you have a point, but that this is only a small part of the picture. Your only response to this is to repeat your point again, and again...

Quote:

And you can predict the labor market now?

The CBO is in the business of making predictions based off economic forecasts/assumptions.

Quote:

Yes, teacher. I understand that jobs won't be lost, just workforce equivalent hours.

Nice, but while giving me sass you completely missed the point. I was explaining why the CBO included the words 'when the labour market is strong' in that sentence. But it doesn't matter...

Quote:

So if this were a 25 year old woman, and she were offered a better job with a $3,000 pay raise, she'd actually lose almost $5,000 a year in real money.

Geezer, Geezer. You had to overreach didn't you? If that lady from Georgia were 25, and not 60, have you seen what happens to her premiums on the calculator? With a $3000 pay rise her premium rises from $4275 to $4537. In other words, by not very much. She would GAIN almost all of her pay rise (although we shouldn't forget about tax).

You have highlighted something interesting though, with the 60 year old woman, and I'm sorry I didn't notice it earlier. For a rare few there is quite a strong disincentive to earn more. Points I would make:

1. This is limited to people who are on or just below the 400% of poverty income threshold, getting pay raises just above it.
2. This is limited to people who are relatively old, or sick - and hence have high premiums
3. People in this situation could work something out with their employer so that they didn't lose out financially. The employer could offer a smaller pay rise, or the employer could work slightly less hours, or a combination of the two. This seems to be what the CBO assumes will happen.
4. This seems like a glitch to me, a small problem, that ought to be addressed. In an ideal world both parties would work together to fix the shortcomings in Obamacare. Until that day should we keep the small problems in perspective, and not hype them up for partisan reasons?

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Sunday, February 16, 2014 2:10 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


KPO, that was beautifully done. You have far more patience than I, and you are far more courteous. "In an ideal world both parties would work together to fix the shortcomings in Obamacare." Amen. But as for "Until that day should we keep the small problems in perspective, and not hype them up for partisan reasons?" Good luck!

I'm only chiming in to respond to "So you, KPO and NIKI aren't tenaciously defending the ACA in this thread from any suggestion that it might have flaws?" That is such complete bullshit that it made me guffaw. How many, many times have I stated quite clearly that I DON'T like the ACA, it's a bastardization of private enterprise, but which was the only thing that could even conceivably be passed? I've been very clear that, like SSI or Medicare (or Bush's Part D), the ACA is not a good thing to start but all we can get, and now it's up to us to IMPROVE it. I've been extremely clear, repeatedly, so once again, with that sentence Geezer is obviously lying and trolling. This particular thread has been the final wake-up call for me, or rather the straw that broke the camel's back, since I've been awake, just continuing to try and communicate fairly. But with this thread he's been just too blatant and too dishonest.


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Monday, February 17, 2014 9:37 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
Right. Like you're doing in the El Nino thread?

Geeze, you're acting like a troll on both threads. I'd like to think it's not on purpose.




"Troll" in this instance meaning I disagree with your pals' viewpoints, in a thread I started?

Are NIKI's multipage posts about something completely outside of the scope of the original posts (republican comments) trolling to you?


"When your heart breaks, you choose what to fill the cracks with. Love or hate. But hate won't ever heal. Only love can do that."

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