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Actually, bedub, I heard that the healthcare bill cuts $50 billion in Medicare spending. So you'd have to adjust your specious numbers a bit for that.SultanOfSurreal wrote:bedub1 wrote:Right now "Healthcare"(medicare & Medicaid) take up about 20% of the expenditures, and appears to cover about 100 million Americans. The current population is about 300 million. So to cover everybody else the "healthcare" would then be 60% of the payouts.
man i just love specious reasoning
So instead of 7.35 trillion it would be 7.3 trillion. I don't that that's TOO relevant to the numbers we are dealing with....thegreekdog wrote:Actually, bedub, I heard that the healthcare bill cuts $50 billion in Medicare spending. So you'd have to adjust your specious numbers a bit for that.SultanOfSurreal wrote:bedub1 wrote:Right now "Healthcare"(medicare & Medicaid) take up about 20% of the expenditures, and appears to cover about 100 million Americans. The current population is about 300 million. So to cover everybody else the "healthcare" would then be 60% of the payouts.
man i just love specious reasoning
Wow... You are aware there are other thing in social programmes apart from social security, you know, like benefits. These all increase in a recession as more people are out of work. How do you now understand that? I never said less social security or more social security, I said social programmes, learn to fcking read.72o wrote:I love how you can say that social programs (of which social security is one) increase when the economy is bad, and in the same breath, say that costs of social programs are automatic and predictable.Titanic wrote:Dollars and proportions will be exactly the same. If you are spending more dollars on one thing then another then the proportion for that thing is going to be larger....72o wrote:I was comparing dollars, not proportions. You're making the claim that if the economy was better, we'd be spending less on Social Security and more on defense spending?Titanic wrote:Maybe you need an economics lesson. 2010 is a horrible year to look at a budget to prove the effects of social spending. It was written in the middle of the largest recession in 70 years and as anyone with a basic economic understanding knows during recessions tax receipts go down and social spending goes up, thus making the proportion allocated to social spending higher during those years then in the norm (which is why I used the 2008 budget).72o wrote: Now, do you need a math lesson also?
If the economy is bad we will spend more on social programmes, if it is good we spend less on social programmes. Defence will stay pretty constant unless there are planned cuts or increases by the politicians. The social programmes costs are fairly automatic in the budget, the defence can be artificially decided.
I ask my question again. You are making the claim that if the economy was better, we would pay out less Social Security? How is that possible, if the costs are automatic? Does that mean less people turn 65 when the economy is good? Less families lose a wage earner due to death?

72o wrote:We were comparing social security to defense spending. It was you who pointed out that social security was actually smaller than defense spending in 2008 if you include the overseas contingency numbers.
You said it was bad to use 2010 numbers because social security would be up in 2010 since the economy was bad. That was your reasoning for using 2008 numbers.
I'm pointing out that your reasoning sucks, the only reason you like 2008 numbers better is because they support your hypothesis.
Social SPENDING, not social SECURITY. ffs, you really are unbelievable.2010 is a horrible year to look at a budget to prove the effects of social spending.
Care to explain how nearly every Rich nation affords universal health care with better results than the current US system for lower costs?bedub1 wrote:current is 5.25 trillion
40% of 5.25 trillion is 2.1 trillion
5.25 trillion plus 2.1 trillion is 7.35 trillion.
7.35 trillion is what percent of the 14.2 trillion GDP?
Answer is 52%.
So would you like to see US federal government spending to increase from 37% of GDP to 52% of GDP to cover "Universal healthcare"?
'' But we aint like other countries, weez belive in freedom "Baron Von PWN wrote:Care to explain how nearly every Rich nation affords universal health care with better results than the current US system for lower costs?bedub1 wrote:current is 5.25 trillion
40% of 5.25 trillion is 2.1 trillion
5.25 trillion plus 2.1 trillion is 7.35 trillion.
7.35 trillion is what percent of the 14.2 trillion GDP?
Answer is 52%.
So would you like to see US federal government spending to increase from 37% of GDP to 52% of GDP to cover "Universal healthcare"?
Magic.Baron Von PWN wrote:Care to explain how nearly every Rich nation affords universal health care with better results than the current US system for lower costs?bedub1 wrote:current is 5.25 trillion
40% of 5.25 trillion is 2.1 trillion
5.25 trillion plus 2.1 trillion is 7.35 trillion.
7.35 trillion is what percent of the 14.2 trillion GDP?
Answer is 52%.
So would you like to see US federal government spending to increase from 37% of GDP to 52% of GDP to cover "Universal healthcare"?
Private companies would make such mistakes. Then they'd either scrap the program or change it, learn from their mistakes, and move on. The government doesn't do any of those things.Snorri1234 wrote:Seriously, that's their explanation. The US government has some magic flaw that means it always fucks it up according to them. They unironically point towards Social Security and other programs with the firm belief that PRIVATE companies would never make such mistakes ever.
Actually, we think things are different in Europe because you guys (and by you guys, I mean Europeans and Americans who want us to be like Europeans) keep telling us how much better it is over there. Maybe it's ignorance, but we're getting bad information if it's untrue.Snorri1234 wrote:The best thing about it is that they act like it's different for Europe because Europe doesn't have problems with their social programs. Ah, ignorance.
sure. they cut quality and availability. any more brain busters? The biggest problem with US healthcare, plain and simple....Baron Von PWN wrote:Care to explain how nearly every Rich nation affords universal health care with better results than the current US system for lower costs?bedub1 wrote:current is 5.25 trillion
40% of 5.25 trillion is 2.1 trillion
5.25 trillion plus 2.1 trillion is 7.35 trillion.
7.35 trillion is what percent of the 14.2 trillion GDP?
Answer is 52%.
So would you like to see US federal government spending to increase from 37% of GDP to 52% of GDP to cover "Universal healthcare"?
Bollocks. Not only does the government do that, but companies aren't that superawesome. They frequently waste loads of money on things. Perhaps the government is inefficient in things, but so are a lot of companies.thegreekdog wrote:Private companies would make such mistakes. Then they'd either scrap the program or change it, learn from their mistakes, and move on. The government doesn't do any of those things.Snorri1234 wrote:Seriously, that's their explanation. The US government has some magic flaw that means it always fucks it up according to them. They unironically point towards Social Security and other programs with the firm belief that PRIVATE companies would never make such mistakes ever.
It is better over here.That doesn't mean we don't have problems, we just don't blow them out of proportion.Actually, we think things are different in Europe because you guys (and by you guys, I mean Europeans and Americans who want us to be like Europeans) keep telling us how much better it is over there. Maybe it's ignorance, but we're getting bad information if it's untrue.Snorri1234 wrote:The best thing about it is that they act like it's different for Europe because Europe doesn't have problems with their social programs. Ah, ignorance.
Then how come we live longer, have lower infant mortality rates, are more satisfied with our service and come out higher in the overall healthcare rankings?Phatscotty wrote:sure. they cut quality and availability. any more brain busters? The biggest problem with US healthcare, plain and simple....Baron Von PWN wrote:Care to explain how nearly every Rich nation affords universal health care with better results than the current US system for lower costs?bedub1 wrote:current is 5.25 trillion
40% of 5.25 trillion is 2.1 trillion
5.25 trillion plus 2.1 trillion is 7.35 trillion.
7.35 trillion is what percent of the 14.2 trillion GDP?
Answer is 52%.
So would you like to see US federal government spending to increase from 37% of GDP to 52% of GDP to cover "Universal healthcare"?
IT'S TOO AVAILABLE!
because we have and have had the best health care system in the worldTitanic wrote:Then how come we live longer, have lower infant mortality rates, are more satisfied with our service and come out higher in the overall healthcare rankings?Phatscotty wrote:sure. they cut quality and availability. any more brain busters? The biggest problem with US healthcare, plain and simple....Baron Von PWN wrote:Care to explain how nearly every Rich nation affords universal health care with better results than the current US system for lower costs?bedub1 wrote:current is 5.25 trillion
40% of 5.25 trillion is 2.1 trillion
5.25 trillion plus 2.1 trillion is 7.35 trillion.
7.35 trillion is what percent of the 14.2 trillion GDP?
Answer is 52%.
So would you like to see US federal government spending to increase from 37% of GDP to 52% of GDP to cover "Universal healthcare"?
IT'S TOO AVAILABLE!
Wait, what? You're health care system is the best, because it's worse?Phatscotty wrote:because we have and have had the best health care system in the worldTitanic wrote:Then how come we live longer, have lower infant mortality rates, are more satisfied with our service and come out higher in the overall healthcare rankings?

Snorri1234 wrote:But it's irrelevant. Can you explain to me why the US government would f*ck things up while European governments don't?
What?Snorri1234 wrote:It is better over here.That doesn't mean we don't have problems, we just don't blow them out of proportion.
Hmm so lower quality and lower availability results in better health, gothca.Phatscotty wrote:sure. they cut quality and availability. any more brain busters? The biggest problem with US healthcare, plain and simple....Baron Von PWN wrote:Care to explain how nearly every Rich nation affords universal health care with better results than the current US system for lower costs?bedub1 wrote:current is 5.25 trillion
40% of 5.25 trillion is 2.1 trillion
5.25 trillion plus 2.1 trillion is 7.35 trillion.
7.35 trillion is what percent of the 14.2 trillion GDP?
Answer is 52%.
So would you like to see US federal government spending to increase from 37% of GDP to 52% of GDP to cover "Universal healthcare"?
IT'S TOO AVAILABLE!
Thats logic you just can't argue with.hecter wrote:Wait, what? You're health care system is the best, because it's worse?Phatscotty wrote:because we have and have had the best health care system in the worldTitanic wrote:Then how come we live longer, have lower infant mortality rates, are more satisfied with our service and come out higher in the overall healthcare rankings?
Our government wastes about as much money as yours does. (in percentages that is.) They bought unbelievably expensive fighter-jets (JSF), give 50,000 euro trips for Antillean criminal youths to get back in touch with their roots, spend 2 billion laying a subway in amsterdam and then realize it actually needs another 2 billion and so on.thegreekdog wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:But it's irrelevant. Can you explain to me why the US government would f*ck things up while European governments don't?What?Snorri1234 wrote:It is better over here.That doesn't mean we don't have problems, we just don't blow them out of proportion.
The only difference I can see between your healthcare system and our healthcare system is that you spend less money (per person) on your healthcare... and I'm sure there are people that will argue that point.Snorri1234 wrote:Our government wastes about as much money as yours does. (in percentages that is.) They bought unbelievably expensive fighter-jets (JSF), give 50,000 euro trips for Antillean criminal youths to get back in touch with their roots, spend 2 billion laying a subway in amsterdam and then realize it actually needs another 2 billion and so on.thegreekdog wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:But it's irrelevant. Can you explain to me why the US government would f*ck things up while European governments don't?What?Snorri1234 wrote:It is better over here.That doesn't mean we don't have problems, we just don't blow them out of proportion.
Point is, they waste money and still our health-care system outpeforms yours on a lot of things. Yes, not optimally and there are things that could do better but there is effort to chance that.
So why would your government make a worse system?
They could argue that point but that would be incredibly dumb.thegreekdog wrote: The only difference I can see between your healthcare system and our healthcare system is that you spend less money (per person) on your healthcare... and I'm sure there are people that will argue that point.
Yeah yeah but that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about how the argument that the government sucks isn't any good. Maybe there is a "third way", but I am primarly concerned with dispelling wrong assumptions about the second way.My question is not whether government healthcare will outperform healthcare now. My question is whether there are ways to fix healthcare without government healthcare. I don't think our default should be... "well, we don't like what we have now... let's let the government do it." Because, once the government starts doing it, it's not going private again. My concern with our government goes beyond military spending... it goes to things like, for example, giving $X billion to a senator from Louisiana and the black hole that is social security. It goes beyond party politics.
In that case, I expect you to never complain about the "corporations are evil" argument.thegreekdog wrote:I think "the government is dumb" is a good enough argument for finding a third way.
jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
Yeah... that's not going to happen. C'mon, I'm Mr. Corporation.pimpdave wrote:In that case, I expect you to never complain about the "corporations are evil" argument.thegreekdog wrote:I think "the government is dumb" is a good enough argument for finding a third way.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"