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08 November 2009

Health Care Reform and Debate That Never Happened

by: Dark Wraith

The Baltimore Sun has a writer who publishes "Jay Hancock's Blog," and Mr. Hancock's entry for November 6, 2009, is entitled, "Profiles in wimpiness," briefly citing several leading voices calling for approval of pending health care reform legislation.

Mr. Hancock first quotes Paul Krugman, a fellow whom I have harshly criticized, both in writing and on my Internet talk radio show. Even the most meritorious of ideas will have its share of oafs littering the parade route, and Dr. Krugman's unconscionable intellectual prostitution for countries that massively undervalue their currencies against the U.S. dollar qualifies for the blue ribbon parade award for the Float That Should Be Shot, notwithstanding his Nobel Prize in economics this year (a prize previously granted to the very epitome of oafishness on the speaking tour parade, the late Right-wing extremist and howlingly lackluster "intellectual," Milton Friedman).

One comment, written by someone using the pseudonym "MrRational," on Mr. Hancock's article struck me:
I still remain opposed to the entire scheme.

Corporate and Government are two sides of the same nannyism coin. Neither can be expected to solve anything for us.

But to the degree that either is allowed a brief or responsibility...
make it a narrowly focused one.

there are three basic levels/categories of care:
1) the 80% that constitutes everyone's day to day uses which should be paid for out of pocket (by most of us) on a fee for service basis to the provider we choose. (and yes, people with some conditions can expect to pay more for that basic care than people who don't have those conditions.)

2) the 10 % that will occasionally crop up beyond those routine year to year expenses that we can mitigate the budget impact of by having some back stop insurance (or an HSA) which we also pay for on our own and most will use very similarly to how we use our homeowner or auto insurance.

3) The 10% that NO ONE can reasonably expect to afford or in most instance to even insure against privately. These catastrophic and traumatic bankrupting expenses are the perfect category for and reasonable limit to a government plan with a tax supported 100% actuarial base.

If we are willing to be truly honest we can add a fourth category:
4) Stop pretending that anyone gets out alive by refusing to flog and abuse our elderly loved ones and call it medicine.

We can make it more complicated but there is no reason to.


I have not had much success in recent years with getting my comments I write published at reputable Websites. The Leftist site truthout.org — persistently begging for donations while doing little more than republishing other sites' content — will not post any comment I write, The Huffington Post only rarely lets one of my comments through, and the same goes for CNN.com; hence, I no longer bother visiting these sites much. Long-time readers here at Big Brass Blog know very well that my style of writing does not include the use of profanity or unrealistically hyperbolic literary imagery unless in the service of occasional satire.

Okay, I did use an obscenity, a profanity, and several vulgarities in writing about Paris Hilton's early release from incarceration; in my own weak defense, however, once in a blue moon, the mockery of uniform rule of law that is the American justice system bunches my boxers. As a broad principle, however, I write what could be published just about anywhere children would not be a target audience.

Still, I get censored. My short-lived gig writing for OpEdNews is over: one of the sneering, Leftist editors there got appallingly nasty in rejecting an article I subsequently published here to the usual, decent number of hits. The Institutional Liberal Manual of Style seems to be widely available to dwarfs at places like truthout.org and other caves on the Left Bank of the American river of ideological polarization. (As an aside, in a few days I shall republish excerpts from that article because those sentiments I expressed there are every bit as timely now as they were in the late Winter when I first wrote them.)

With all of the above as admittedly somewhat unshaped background, I nevertheless offered a follow-on comment at Jay Hancock's Blog. To my surprise, it was published this morning in unedited form.

I am herewith offering it to my own readers here at my online properties of Dark Wraith Publishing to the purpose of providing one more means by which I may speak to the debate over health care reform.
The comment by "MrRational" is worthwhile, although I have no particular use for the idea that we cannot take care of the poor, especially the children in this condition, who need basic medical services but who cannot afford to have them on a readily available basis. As a quite affluent society, we can surely afford to take care of people whose earnings make keeping body and soul together a challenge, and those people will number in the many millions, even in an industrialized society such as ours so long as we choose a form of economic organization where there are winners and losers, as well as stark differences in the long-term, even inter-generational fortunes of those two groups.

It is most unfortunate that a "progressively conservative" approach to reform was never in the cards for the debate in Washington; however, as a purely academic exercise, I note three major points that are missing in Mr. Rational's comment.

First and foremost is the matter of price transparency. Doctors, medical centers, and hospitals all hide their prices, which thwarts the very foundation of competition that would cabin those prices within an envelope formed by profitability and affordability. As a professor, I make a big issue of this. Price transparency is crucial if the demand and supply sides are to discover prices that clear markets efficiently; but no serious federal or state proposals have been fielded to mandate publicly available price disclosures for a standard list of medical services and treatments.

Second — and this point goes far, far beyond the health care industry — we are using antitrust laws written in the first half of the 20th Century to deal with markets of the 21st Century and the market power of concentrated industries in an age where "deregulation" has allowed the argument for scale economies to sway regulatory oversight despite overwhelmingly larger, social and economic interests that are harmed by compacted industries. The Federal Trade Commission frets about "unfair and deceptive" advertising, it uses antiquated metrics like the HHI to measure market concentration, and it chases market concentrators after they've become too large to bust (as in the case of Microsoft, and as in the case now of Google).

Third, and finally, the rampant lack of education in basics of economics and business allows far too many people to get by with no understanding of such concepts as "moral hazard" and "adverse selection." This ensures a debate where only Right-wing conservatives bring up these ideas, and usually in offensive ways, making the underlying concepts as loathsome as everything else Right-wing conservatives talk about. If we are to have a truly informed debate, it would be so much better if the dancing, naked clowns of the Right (as I've called them in my writings) would shut up so the legitimate points they are mimicking could be brought up by people who aren't dancing, naked clowns.

Unfortunately, as it now stands, the only health care "reform" being discussed is really just health care repair, and it's sloppy repair done by self-serving politicians. Some things never change.

That's politics.

For the record, I am opposed to the health care reform bill in the form that the U.S. House of Representatives has just passed. I will sharpen my attack as time goes on, but I can assure readers here that those Right-wing clowns in the entertainment industry, along with their Republican sidekicks in Congress, will never be outside the scope of my criticism, either. Nothing irritates me more than intellectual fools and entertainment industry charlatans. They make legitimate debate next to impossible, so I hold them in particular contempt, even as I do the same for the Democrats in Congress who don't have the guts to write a genuine health care reform bill, much less a real, comprehensive overhaul of this country's miserably failed antitrust, financial services, and privacy laws.

I shall write what is on my mind and leave to the Democrats such ideals as compromise and accommodation, which those same Democrats over the past decade have turned into rank, disgraceful appeasement by another name.


The Dark Wraith is officially on yet another roll.


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Sunday Morning Musings

by: Debra

The commentators at Faux News want the military to screen Muslims and thinks that they should be treated as potential threats.  How 1940s.   And just a few days after running the story of the 442nd Regiment and the 65thh anniversary of their rescue of a Texas infantry regiment during WWII.  Crazy people are just that, crazy.  It doesn't mean that everyone who is Muslim is crazy.  Or a terrorist.

Emphasizing the three Rs means that other courses get lost, such as history.  A survey in Britain revealed that kids between 9 and 15 have a rather inaccurate view of the past, such as Hitler was a soccer coach and Auschwitz was a WWII amusement park.  The Holocaust was the celebration of the end of the war and that America entered the war because a nuclear bomb was dropped on Pearl Harbor. 
Twelve percent of respondents said the symbol of Britain's Remembrance Day is the golden arches of McDonald's, rather than the poppy.
I wonder how American kids would have answered the questions.

The insurance company rescue bill has passed.  Thank goodness I have VA health care.  My doctor actually listens to me, explains his reasoning and follows up to make sure he covered all the bases.  Everyone should be so lucky.  The minute health care reform became about insurance reform the battle was lost.  Money talked and reform walked.  Health care will not become less expensive and as more companies move their jobs overseas there will be fewer jobs that provide health insurance benefits.  Soon the only people who will have coverage will be the Congress critters, their constituents can only hope that Doctors Without Borders will provide services to Americans in addition to serving other Third World countries.

Sacramento politicians are whining again.  The poor widdle babies.  Making $116,000 a year and they're protesting a cut to their additional $35,000 a year per diem rate, a $400 month car allowance and free health care.  Their constituents are unemployed or work for companies who have cut benefits and increased premiums and the state lawmakers don't think it's fair for them to have to do the same. An 18 percent cut in benefits has them up in arms while other state employees who actually provide services to the public and make much less have had their salaries cut by 18 percent by eliminating their work days and calling it a furlough. It must be nice to have a job where the first requirement is that you are clueless.  Marie Antoinette would be so proud.

Yes, the Second Amendment guarantees the right to bear arms, but why does someone who isn't a member of a "well regulated militia" have the right to deprive innocent bystanders of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?  The last few days the news has been filled with the unfortunate shootings at Ft. Hood, Orlando and now Amarillo.  It's pretty sad when a tourist can't stop in a bar without being shot for no reason.  How many dead people will it take before American society realizes that not everyone can or should have a gun?  Charles Whitman shocked the nation in 1966 and forty three years later nuts are still running around with guns and a willingness to use them.

Diarrhea of the mouth?  You betcha!  Someone as ethically and morally challenged as the quitbull should keep her mouth shut and attend to the problems in her own family before telling other people what they can, cannot or might do.

I want a cloaking device.  Not to hide me, just my fat.  I'm more into the Eureka personal model than the Star Trek battleship model.

Debsweb



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Buying the Farm

by: Lisa Ranger

null

Green acres is the place for me.
Farm livin' is the life for me.
Land spreadin' out so far and wide
Keep Manhattan, just give me that countryside
--Green Acres, Vic Mizzy

The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie
-- deliberate, contrived and dishonest, but the myth
-- persistent, persuasive and unrealistic
--John F. Kennedy
_________________


FarmVille.com's come-on is, "Grow delicious fruits and vegetables and raise adorable animals on your very own farm!" Except it isn't your farm -- it's a virtual farm in the ether.

But if you buy into it, you will fritter away precious hours harvesting those ersatz blueberries in your futile quest for money and satisfaction. Strawberries grow in four hours; eggplant, two days. So unless you buy into the Perelandra paradigm, real life this ain't.

FarmVille is currently the most popular Facebook application, with over 60 million subscribers. In a real life nostalgic for the ideal, Washington farmer Donna Schoonover says of her participation in the simulacra farming, "This was a way to remind myself of the mythology of farming, and why I started farming in the first place" (To Harvest Squash, Click Here.) Farm Town, MyFarm and Farm Life are other, less popular, online farming games.

Self-described "Hardcore player" Beck Roberts, 49, plaintively says "they will die if you don’t tend to them," which is why she "sometimes set[s] her clock at night to make sure she tends to high-maintenance plants at two-hour intervals" (Facebook's 11 Million Farmers.)

Adam Nash on his site Psychohistory plots out the game dynamics in, "The Personal Economics of FarmVille". He says most people play for coins, but a few are playing for experience points, which he ignores in his tabulations, obviously a lesser goal.

The Pet Rock was a wonderful spoof of the self-absorption of the Me Decade, which hadn't the time for such trivialities as tending to the needs of others. Ditto the Chia Pet, which did however require some sporadic watering (but little else).

In 1996 the Tamagotchi pet was introduced -- really, a brightly colored plastic egg with three buttons which would allow the owner to feed, play, clean, or ascertain its "age, discipline, hunger, happiness and other statistics." With neglect, your Tamagotchi would die, a source of deep shame.

The AIBO (Artificial Intelligence robot, homonymous with pal in Japanese) was introduced by Sony in 1999, but discontinued in 2006. It was a brief venture into AI in which the AIBO owner could "teach" the robotic dog certain commands, without having the inconvenience of feeding or scooping poop. As with a Tamagotchi, if one got bored, AIBO could be switched off and banished to a corner.

So why the fascination with virtual pets and plants? It's a beautiful day, and I can't wait to go out. Is it that people do not want to dirty their hands? Do they yearn for connection, but not so much so that they are willing to take on all that true commitment requires?

Do they they feel they will fail, and there is less grieving involved in the death of a Tamagotchi? The burial -- an unceremonious toss on the rubbish heap, is certainly easier and less costly and time-consuming than the real thing. After all, a new and updated model awaits.

Why would one connect with the simulacrum when the real awaits?


Cross-posted from Ranger Against War


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