Moderator: Community Team
PLAYER57832 wrote:I hope we all become liberal drones.
Also, the number of "child only" policies even offered in ANY state is pretty small, by my experience. Usually is "family" coverage. CHIP is a state-run program, but is funded federally.DangerBoy wrote:I love how Player just casually twists 34 states to 34 private insurers
At this point I'm not certain if it's worthwhile responding with an additional source discounting this as false and incorrect.PLAYER57832 wrote:Exactly! yet, you persist in trying. 34 private insurers do not constitute ALL insurers. Furthermore, CHIP exists, CHIP is actually a better deal for most parents anyway. It covers more and is cheaper.saxitoxin wrote:If you repeat something loudly enough that doesn't make it a fact.PLAYER57832 wrote:[SAXI EDIT FOR CLARITY] Child health care child only health insurance [SAXI EDIT FOR CLARITY] has not "been cancelled in 34 states". A few insurers are attempting to cancel child policies in those states. Whether they are allowed to do that or not is up in question.saxitoxin wrote: You used 150 words to essentially say you don't care about the fact that child health insurance has just been canceled in 34 states, the Obama Corporate Welfare Bill is "just good" and no facts to the contrary are going to change your mind.
DangerBoy wrote:I love how Player just casually twists 34 states to 34 private insurers
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
Yes, child-only insurance....in more than half of the states of the country, or if you like - 34PLAYER57832 wrote:Regardless, my point stands... only some insurance was cancelled. And it represents some very crass "gamesmanship".
It wasn't Democrats that did this. It was the insurers. Insurers who were not offering coverage anyway. They cancelled because the Democrats told them they had to actually cover kids.DangerBoy wrote:Yes, child-only insurance....in more than half of the states of the country, or if you like - 34PLAYER57832 wrote:Regardless, my point stands... only some insurance was cancelled. And it represents some very crass "gamesmanship".
I thought Democrats wanted to help children?
You missed it. The blame game wasn't the point.PLAYER57832 wrote:It wasn't Democrats that did this. It was the insurers. Insurers who were not offering coverage anyway. They cancelled because the Democrats told them they had to actually cover kids.DangerBoy wrote:Yes, child-only insurance....in more than half of the states of the country, or if you like - 34PLAYER57832 wrote:Regardless, my point stands... only some insurance was cancelled. And it represents some very crass "gamesmanship".
I thought Democrats wanted to help children?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
It was Democrats that did this. They did it on a party-line vote. It's a matter of historical record.PLAYER57832 wrote:It wasn't Democrats that did this.It was the insurers.
Your reasoning baffles the mind. What do you think a cancellation of child-only insurance is? In order for the carriers to cancel the coverage it had to have existed in the first place! How do you cancel or stop providing something which never existed?PLAYER57832 wrote:Insurers who were not offering coverage anyway. They cancelled because the Democrats told them they had to actually cover kids.
http://www.patriotsmind.com/2009/08/05/ ... insurance/The left is indeed on the attack against free market capitalism, not just health insurance. This can be seen by their constant rhetoric against the insurance companies, bankers, wall street, and big corporations.
If you haven’t noticed the news lately, they have even begun to blame the ‘town hall’ outcries that are all over the nation on nothing more than insurance company operatives that are purposely planted in the town hall meetings to cause a ruckus. – Unbelievable. For some reason, they can’t seem to accept the fact that the American people want to maintain their freedom in health care, and do not want government bureaucrats to decided their ongoing health decisions.

No, your point is garbage. Its predictable that insurers will try to do what they have done all along, refuse to cover more than a handful of people who truly need insurance. Sadly, instead of turning your anger against the insurance companies and perhaps fighting to move us closer to a real solution, you decide to just attack the progress made and claim it made no benefit.saxitoxin wrote:You missed it. The blame game wasn't the point.PLAYER57832 wrote:It wasn't Democrats that did this. It was the insurers. Insurers who were not offering coverage anyway. They cancelled because the Democrats told them they had to actually cover kids.DangerBoy wrote:Yes, child-only insurance....in more than half of the states of the country, or if you like - 34PLAYER57832 wrote:Regardless, my point stands... only some insurance was cancelled. And it represents some very crass "gamesmanship".
I thought Democrats wanted to help children?
The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
Intentions or goodwill are not the issue when you can no longer take your baby to the doctor and it now has to sit crying in the corner bleeding out of its eyeballs and with puss oozing from its ears.
PLAYER57832 wrote:I hope we all become liberal drones.
DangerBoy wrote: I was actually hoping for that title
Foiled again by Saxi!
I did turn my anger against the insurance companies. Obama is the insurance industry's spokesman.PLAYER57832 wrote:Sadly, instead of turning your anger against the insurance companies and perhaps fighting to move us blah blah blah ...
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that. They decided that they could not make enough profit from insuring kids. Democrats just told them they had to cover ALL kids and not the select few they used to cover.saxitoxin wrote: The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
You, and the corporate Democrats, have chosen to support the insurance industry's bought-and-paid-for pitch man.[/quote]saxitoxin wrote:I did turn my anger against the insurance companies. Obama is the insurance industry's spokesman.PLAYER57832 wrote:Sadly, instead of turning your anger against the insurance companies and perhaps fighting to move us blah blah blah ...
When talking about public policies, one must be aware that with every intention (good or bad), there are intended and unintended consequences.PLAYER57832 wrote:The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that. They decided that they could not make enough profit from insuring kids. Democrats just told them they had to cover ALL kids and not the select few they used to cover.saxitoxin wrote: The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
You entirely ignore the real point, which is that insurers have not really covered any but a few people for some time. That kid you mentioned with "puss draining". Likely would be on Medicaid anyway. A few might be lucky enough to have real insurance. Others might be wealthy enough that they either would pay for the care themselves. Either way, this just puts the reality up in front of everyone instead of continuing the illusion that insurers actually cover sick people.
Oh, but people like Player are going to change this BS "Free will" stuff, right Player?PLAYER57832 wrote:The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that....saxitoxin wrote: The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
BULLSEYE! OOPS oh shit please don't report my incivility. DEAD ON BALLS accurate. OH, shucks...um....Correct!BigBallinStalin wrote:Now I'm speculating (regarding the above with insurers cutting coverage to childs), but the main intention of a few in the government is that by forcing insurers to take these drastic cuts, they further annoy the American public, who in turn look towards a government-provided healthcare service. Why did that happen? Because certain members of the government were pushing laws to restrict their future competition and turn the public against them. (That's what I'd do if I wanted the government more in control of health care services to guarantee future votes).
Yeah, right, by your logic why bother with any laws. Why even require worker safety, why eliminate slavery, why require anything.BigBallinStalin wrote:When talking about public policies, one must be aware that with every intention (good or bad), there are intended and unintended consequences.PLAYER57832 wrote:The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that. They decided that they could not make enough profit from insuring kids. Democrats just told them they had to cover ALL kids and not the select few they used to cover.saxitoxin wrote: The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
You entirely ignore the real point, which is that insurers have not really covered any but a few people for some time. That kid you mentioned with "puss draining". Likely would be on Medicaid anyway. A few might be lucky enough to have real insurance. Others might be wealthy enough that they either would pay for the care themselves. Either way, this just puts the reality up in front of everyone instead of continuing the illusion that insurers actually cover sick people.
When a law forces insurers to behave a certain way, they'll look at their costs and say, "well, we can't do that or we all go under;" therefore, they have to take certain cuts (like dropping child coverage).
This is similar to a law dictating that all bread should be sold for $1.50 and no more than $1.50. It sounds noble, but the unintended consequences are great. It just forces more businesses to make tremendous cuts or all together forces them out of business because hardly any business can really compete with such a restriction.
That's not going by my logic at all. I'm not arguing about the "why we have laws" question. I'm trying to point out why companies behave a certain manner. It's because some law changes their incentives.PLAYER57832 wrote:Yeah, right, by your logic why bother with any laws. Why even require worker safety, why eliminate slavery, why require anything.BigBallinStalin wrote:When talking about public policies, one must be aware that with every intention (good or bad), there are intended and unintended consequences.PLAYER57832 wrote:The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that. They decided that they could not make enough profit from insuring kids. Democrats just told them they had to cover ALL kids and not the select few they used to cover.saxitoxin wrote: The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
You entirely ignore the real point, which is that insurers have not really covered any but a few people for some time. That kid you mentioned with "puss draining". Likely would be on Medicaid anyway. A few might be lucky enough to have real insurance. Others might be wealthy enough that they either would pay for the care themselves. Either way, this just puts the reality up in front of everyone instead of continuing the illusion that insurers actually cover sick people.
When a law forces insurers to behave a certain way, they'll look at their costs and say, "well, we can't do that or we all go under;" therefore, they have to take certain cuts (like dropping child coverage).
This is similar to a law dictating that all bread should be sold for $1.50 and no more than $1.50. It sounds noble, but the unintended consequences are great. It just forces more businesses to make tremendous cuts or all together forces them out of business because hardly any business can really compete with such a restriction.
...PLAYER57832 wrote:OF COURSE there are "consequences". But, far too many of those claimed by corporate bigwigs really amounts to "we might have to give up a bit of our profit, so we're just going stomp our feet and throw a tantrum until they give us our money back".
Again, the REAL point is that these insurers cut kids becuase they actually might have to cover them. Why would that even make business sense? Because they were not really covering kids before the law. They took paren't money, offered some minimal coverage, but then left the real problems for taxpayers.
So, now that money from parents stays in the parent's pockets and the rest pretty much remains the same. Only more people are aware that there is a problem now.
BINGO, and business incentive for profit can either work for or against the country as a whole. In the case of healthcare insurers, they have for a long time been allowed to maintaint he illusion of offering coverage while actually just taking profits from mostly healthy people and dumping huge numbers of unhealthy people onto the taxpayers.BigBallinStalin wrote:That's not going by my logic at all. I'm not arguing about the "why we have laws" question. I'm trying to point out why companies behave a certain manner. It's because some law changes their incentives.PLAYER57832 wrote:Yeah, right, by your logic why bother with any laws. Why even require worker safety, why eliminate slavery, why require anything.BigBallinStalin wrote:When talking about public policies, one must be aware that with every intention (good or bad), there are intended and unintended consequences.PLAYER57832 wrote:The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that. They decided that they could not make enough profit from insuring kids. Democrats just told them they had to cover ALL kids and not the select few they used to cover.saxitoxin wrote: The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
You entirely ignore the real point, which is that insurers have not really covered any but a few people for some time. That kid you mentioned with "puss draining". Likely would be on Medicaid anyway. A few might be lucky enough to have real insurance. Others might be wealthy enough that they either would pay for the care themselves. Either way, this just puts the reality up in front of everyone instead of continuing the illusion that insurers actually cover sick people.
When a law forces insurers to behave a certain way, they'll look at their costs and say, "well, we can't do that or we all go under;" therefore, they have to take certain cuts (like dropping child coverage).
This is similar to a law dictating that all bread should be sold for $1.50 and no more than $1.50. It sounds noble, but the unintended consequences are great. It just forces more businesses to make tremendous cuts or all together forces them out of business because hardly any business can really compete with such a restriction.
...PLAYER57832 wrote:OF COURSE there are "consequences". But, far too many of those claimed by corporate bigwigs really amounts to "we might have to give up a bit of our profit, so we're just going stomp our feet and throw a tantrum until they give us our money back".
Again, the REAL point is that these insurers cut kids becuase they actually might have to cover them. Why would that even make business sense? Because they were not really covering kids before the law. They took paren't money, offered some minimal coverage, but then left the real problems for taxpayers.
So, now that money from parents stays in the parent's pockets and the rest pretty much remains the same. Only more people are aware that there is a problem now.
No, I understand complete. You want to pretend otherwise. Listening to right wing sources (even those that masquerade as "middle of the road") will do that to you.BigBallinStalin wrote:You still fail to see why these insurers cut provisions... I suggest rereading and rewriting a more coherent response.
LOL.. The insurance actions speak for themselves. If they were actually covering sick kids, then why the benefit to bailing when required to suddenly offer them insurance? It would only make sense if they were not covering those kids before.BigBallinStalin wrote:If they didn't provide cover for kids earlier, then prove it.
When the rest of us are required to support your employees, yes, that "free will" stuff does go out the window.Phatscotty wrote:Oh, but people like Player are going to change this BS "Free will" stuff, right Player?PLAYER57832 wrote:The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that....saxitoxin wrote: The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
But privately-provided insurance is still useful... Sure, it should be profitable, and yes it does encourage them to cut benefits, but is that really a question that can be solved through legal means or should the US provide even more healthcare by directly competing with the private sector?PLAYER57832 wrote:BINGO, and business incentive for profit can either work for or against the country as a whole. In the case of healthcare insurers, they have for a long time been allowed to maintaint he illusion of offering coverage while actually just taking profits from mostly healthy people and dumping huge numbers of unhealthy people onto the taxpayers.BigBallinStalin wrote:That's not going by my logic at all. I'm not arguing about the "why we have laws" question. I'm trying to point out why companies behave a certain manner. It's because some law changes their incentives.PLAYER57832 wrote:Yeah, right, by your logic why bother with any laws. Why even require worker safety, why eliminate slavery, why require anything.BigBallinStalin wrote:When talking about public policies, one must be aware that with every intention (good or bad), there are intended and unintended consequences.PLAYER57832 wrote:
The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that. They decided that they could not make enough profit from insuring kids. Democrats just told them they had to cover ALL kids and not the select few they used to cover.
You entirely ignore the real point, which is that insurers have not really covered any but a few people for some time. That kid you mentioned with "puss draining". Likely would be on Medicaid anyway. A few might be lucky enough to have real insurance. Others might be wealthy enough that they either would pay for the care themselves. Either way, this just puts the reality up in front of everyone instead of continuing the illusion that insurers actually cover sick people.
When a law forces insurers to behave a certain way, they'll look at their costs and say, "well, we can't do that or we all go under;" therefore, they have to take certain cuts (like dropping child coverage).
This is similar to a law dictating that all bread should be sold for $1.50 and no more than $1.50. It sounds noble, but the unintended consequences are great. It just forces more businesses to make tremendous cuts or all together forces them out of business because hardly any business can really compete with such a restriction.
What right wing sources do I listen to?PLAYER57832 wrote:No, I understand complete. You want to pretend otherwise. Listening to right wing sources (even those that masquerade as "middle of the road") will do that to you.BigBallinStalin wrote:You still fail to see why these insurers cut provisions... I suggest rereading and rewriting a more coherent response.
LOL.. The insurance actions speak for themselves. If they were actually covering sick kids, then why the benefit to bailing when required to suddenly offer them insurance? It would only make sense if they were not covering those kids before.BigBallinStalin wrote:If they didn't provide cover for kids earlier, then prove it.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
You make these assumptions, but never bother to even look at the systems in other countries. The bottom line is that insurance profit has not moved to lower overall health costs at all. One of the big reasons is that the people who purchase insurance are not the ones who use it. There are other reasons, too.BigBallinStalin wrote:
But privately-provided insurance is still useful... Sure, it should be profitable, and yes it does encourage them to cut benefits, but is that really a question that can be solved through legal means or should the US provide even more healthcare by directly competing with the private sector?
LOLBigBallinStalin wrote:The current government plan of expanding healthcare into the private sector is not good at all. There are better alternatives.
What right wing sources do I listen to?PLAYER57832 wrote:No, I understand complete. You want to pretend otherwise. Listening to right wing sources (even those that masquerade as "middle of the road") will do that to you.BigBallinStalin wrote:You still fail to see why these insurers cut provisions... I suggest rereading and rewriting a more coherent response.
LOL.. The insurance actions speak for themselves. If they were actually covering sick kids, then why the benefit to bailing when required to suddenly offer them insurance? It would only make sense if they were not covering those kids before.BigBallinStalin wrote:If they didn't provide cover for kids earlier, then prove it.
I made that comment several posts back.BigBallinStalin wrote:That's a good point, but not all kids were not covered, not all plans were scrapped...
Ah, you see? That's the point I was getting at earlier. Before, insurance companies didn't cover all kids, but now they're legally bound to cover ALL kids--regardless of the cost. The government is either stupid, or they want to force insurance companies to reduce their profits, which in turn incentivizes them to take drastic actions.PLAYER57832 wrote:The insurers were not forced to take the action they did. They did that of their own free will, because they are still allowed to do that. They decided that they could not make enough profit from insuring kids. Democrats just told them they had to cover ALL kids and not the select few they used to cover.saxitoxin wrote: The point was the corporate Democrats took an action, that produced a reaction - the elimination of child-only health insurance in 34 states.
.