Health Care Question.

Mar 23, 2010 23:20

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alryssa March 24 2010, 06:38:01 UTC
Here is what that "mandate" means ( ... )

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autobotsrollout March 24 2010, 06:39:18 UTC
I want universal health care. But I'm told this bill contains a provision where Americans will be REQUIRED to purchase health care, and will have their payments subsidized by the government. If they don't purchase health care, they will be fined.

However, REQUIRING someone to purchase health care at all seems completely wrong to me. You can just choose not to drive a car for car insurance and the like, but you can't choose to not be alive - suicide is illegal.

Look at it like this. I live in a country with universal health care.

The benefit of universal health care is lower cost. You get lower cost because you get a bigger risk pool: IE, everybody. That's how health insurance works, after all: healthy people subsidize the costs of sick people, assuming that some day they will get sick and then it will be up to other healthy people to subsidize them, and so on and so forth.

But the requirement of universal healthcare is universal enrolment. I don't get to say "welp I feel pretty good right now so I'ma skip paying my healthcare ( ... )

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lithera March 24 2010, 06:45:37 UTC
*points up*

As usual, Mr. Prime here says it all better and faster than I can manage.

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flusterbunny March 24 2010, 07:09:44 UTC
Ah, thank you both. I was concerned about whether or not there were poverty exemptions and the like, because I know how much of a cornholing I got from having to buy COBRA coverage during my unemployed year. It seemed sort of oxymoronic to say 'let's cover these poor people by forcing them to buy health care.' Obviously, I've not done my homework.

If, by chance, a challenge DID go to the Supreme Court, do they have the option of essentially 'line-item overturning' one aspect of the HCR bill, or is it all or nothing?

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candidgamera March 24 2010, 14:30:06 UTC
Obviously, the leader of the Autobots will have a more nuanced legal opinion than I, but the Supremes can invalidate portions of a law without affecting the substantive whole, should they choose to do so.

Everything I'm seeing from people with credible legal opinions is that this law is not unconstitutional; we have numerous similar examples of things in this country, none of which have been invalidated.

http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2010/03/constitutionality-of-mandatory.html - more info.

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vazjr March 24 2010, 13:00:55 UTC
I don't remember El-Jay skills to hyperlink this right now, but try this copy/pasting this addy if you want more education on the Reconciliation Act:

http://www.kff.org/healthreform/upload/housesenatebill_final.pdf

Focus on the left column. It's sponsored by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Not aware of any left or right bias they might have, but I've been relying on their chart comparisons to help me get a clue as to what's going on.

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