More Troubles for Obamacare

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mattbbpl

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#51  Edited By mattbbpl
Member since 2006 • 23032 Posts

@Fightingfan said:

@Nibroc420 said:

@Fightingfan said:

@GazaAli said:

@zpluffy said:

My neighbor's insurance was cancelled because it doesn't cover maternal care. My neighbor and his wife(56 YEARS OLD) have kids but they are all living on their own now. Now they have have to pay bronze premium at 930 dollars a month because it doesn't cover maternal care, really. Three times their previous cost. On top of that, it doesn't cover their doctor so they have to switch.

It's like giving a paper bag to somebody you see in the street. The guy ask what's in the paper bag. And I say, "It's medical supplies." The guy does NOT WANT it, and yet you still threaten him to take the bag and pay you 100 dollars a month. If he didn't you will hunt him down and make him pay more. The guy ran off...And he left you wondering why people these days can't take a help these days.

Socialism at its maximum.

Like I said I'm not very knowledgeable on Obamacare but this sums up why the general rejection of it.

Nah, it's the implementations and the excessive cost for healthy or moderately healthy people. There's no reason a 20 year old who doesn't smoke or drink should pay $800 monthly.

Everyone is cool with taxes and social security; so socialism can't be the issue. It's probably just the stigma of the name "obamacare".

What what i've read/heard about it, if you're single and making less than 32k yearly, you get subsidies, and if you're married with 2 kids, and making less than 90k a year, you're still getting huge subsidies.

Not sure why the average 20 year old would be paying $800 a month

That's the quote given to me before the subsidies. Didn't bother filling out the application after that; I doubt they'll lower it enough to entice me to actually purchase something I don't need. It was also for the middle tier medical plan; the bronze plan is completely pointless.

WTF is the point in having a 50,000 deductible? I get no medical coverage until I come up with 50k - so I might as well not have medical coverage, and walk to the ER. I liked my old plan of paying $108 a month, Walmart $3 meds, and $40 co-pay prior to Obamacare.

I want Canada's option.

I'm not sure what plan you're looking at, but I can't find any information regarding a bronze plan with a 50k deductible. I'm seeing most with a 5K deductible.

Regardless, the point of having a high deductible plan is to keep premium costs as low as possible while still proving coverage for catastrophic costs that could bankrupt. It's all about actuarial risk being spread to the entire pool for a consideration. The more likely members are to use your plan routinely, the higher the average consideration must be to cover the pool's cost.

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coolbeans90

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#52  Edited By coolbeans90
Member since 2009 • 21305 Posts
@mattbbpl said:

@Makhaidos said:

Yeah, Obamacare has a lot of problems. It would be so much easier if they took down the website altogether and just implemented universal healthcare like the rest of the modern world.

QFT

^

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RedEyedMonster8

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#53 RedEyedMonster8
Member since 2007 • 1348 Posts

@coolbeans90 said:
@mattbbpl said:

@Makhaidos said:

Yeah, Obamacare has a lot of problems. It would be so much easier if they took down the website altogether and just implemented universal healthcare like the rest of the modern world.

QFT

^

Completely agree.

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GamingTitan

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#54 GamingTitan
Member since 2004 • 657 Posts

Troubles with Obamacare indeed. I was just watching CNN and apparently they got some of the numbers for how many people signed up on the website the first week.

The first day they had 6, YES 6, people get signed up!!!

WTF??

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Laihendi

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#55  Edited By Laihendi
Member since 2009 • 5872 Posts

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

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deeliman

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#56  Edited By deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

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Laihendi

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#57  Edited By Laihendi
Member since 2009 • 5872 Posts

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

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Nibroc420

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#58  Edited By Nibroc420
Member since 2007 • 13571 Posts

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

The two are not mutually exclusive...

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deeliman

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#59  Edited By deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

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dave123321

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#60 dave123321
Member since 2003 • 35553 Posts

@deeliman: Cain

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Nibroc420

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#61 Nibroc420
Member since 2007 • 13571 Posts

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

Is this guy a GOP member?
He would have gotten the same amount done, yet have been more entertaining.

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Laihendi

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#62 Laihendi
Member since 2009 • 5872 Posts

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

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Laihendi

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#63  Edited By Laihendi
Member since 2009 • 5872 Posts

@Nibroc420 said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

The two are not mutually exclusive...

Actually, they are. Socialism is a political manifestation of the doctrine that man has no right to exist for his own sake, that his life and his work do not belong to him but rather to society, that the only justification for his existence (as if a man must justify his life) is his service to society, and that society may dispose of his self and the product of his labour in any way "it" pleases for the sake of whatever "it" deems to be its own tribal, collective good. Socialism is democratic tyranny at its only logical conclusion, and it is altogether evil.

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deeliman

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#64 deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

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Laihendi

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#65 Laihendi
Member since 2009 • 5872 Posts

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

And I assume you believe that fiat currency is working wonders for the world's economy? Please explain the debt crises currently wrecking America, the EU, etc.

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Nibroc420

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#66 Nibroc420
Member since 2007 • 13571 Posts

@Laihendi said:

@Nibroc420 said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

The two are not mutually exclusive...

Actually, they are. Socialism is a political manifestation of the doctrine that man has no right to exist for his own sake, that his life and his work do not belong to him but rather to society, that the only justification for his existence (as if a man must justify his life) is his service to society, and that society may dispose of his self and the product of his labour in any way "it" pleases for the sake of whatever "it" deems to be its own tribal, collective good. Socialism is democratic tyranny at its only logical conclusion, and it is altogether evil.

lol loving how you instantly go to extremism.

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deeliman

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#67 deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@dave123321 said:

@deeliman: Cain

Joke, right?

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Jimn_tonic

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#68 Jimn_tonic
Member since 2013 • 913 Posts
@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.


Well, he said he wouldn't forcefully dismantle the fed; that he would introduce gold as a competing currency, which would be ideal because the gold standard is laughable in a nation with 300+mil population, and people would just go back to the reserve currency.

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deeliman

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#69 deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

And I assume you believe that fiat currency is working wonders for the world's economy? Please explain the debt crises currently wrecking America, the EU, etc.

And I assume you believe the gold standard would work wonders? Please explain the great depression that was wrecking the economies of every country way way worse than the current debt crisis.

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deeliman

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#70  Edited By deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@Jimn_tonic said:
@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

Well, he said he wouldn't forcefully dismantle the fed; that he would introduce gold as a competing currency, which would be ideal because the gold standard is laughable in a nation with 300+mil population, and people would just go back to the reserve currency.

Still, that isn't the only reason why his presidency would be a disaster.

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deactivated-59f03d6ce656b

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#71  Edited By deactivated-59f03d6ce656b
Member since 2009 • 2944 Posts

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

And I assume you believe that fiat currency is working wonders for the world's economy? Please explain the debt crises currently wrecking America, the EU, etc.

There really is no debt crisis in the U.S so ....

Some countries in the EU have problems but only have problems because they are not able to control their own currency. Which would be the same problem if we went back to the gold standard.

Good example of showing how not being able to control monetary policy leads to economic problems!

Your examples help show why the gold standard is a terrible idea.

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mattbbpl

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#72  Edited By mattbbpl
Member since 2006 • 23032 Posts

@Person0 said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

And I assume you believe that fiat currency is working wonders for the world's economy? Please explain the debt crises currently wrecking America, the EU, etc.

There really is no debt crisis in the U.S so ....

Some countries in the EU have problems but only have problems because they are not able to control their own currency. Which would be the same problem if we went back to the gold standard.

Good example of showing how not being able to control monetary policy leads to economic problems!

Your examples help show why the gold standard is a terrible idea.

We really need to teach economics at an earlier level. A widespread grasp of Monetarism, in particular, would do wonders to dispel some of the misinformation and misunderstandings regarding fiat currencies and the gold standard.

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Barbariser

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#73  Edited By Barbariser
Member since 2009 • 6785 Posts

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

And I assume you believe that fiat currency is working wonders for the world's economy? Please explain the debt crises currently wrecking America, the EU, etc.

We already know what happens when you combine a financial crisis with the gold standard - it's called the Great Depression. Of course Ron Paul and his supporters are effectively economically illiterate so I don't expect any of them to understand this.

ThisWikipedia: This, in the English lang

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The-Apostle

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#74 The-Apostle
Member since 2004 • 12197 Posts

@deeliman said:

@Jimn_tonic said:
@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

Well, he said he wouldn't forcefully dismantle the fed; that he would introduce gold as a competing currency, which would be ideal because the gold standard is laughable in a nation with 300+mil population, and people would just go back to the reserve currency.

Still, that isn't the only reason why his presidency would be a disaster.

As opposed to the current presidency? I'm not a Paul supporter but I'd rather have him than Obama.

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Barbariser

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#75  Edited By Barbariser
Member since 2009 • 6785 Posts

@The-Apostle said:

@deeliman said:

@Jimn_tonic said:
@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

Well, he said he wouldn't forcefully dismantle the fed; that he would introduce gold as a competing currency, which would be ideal because the gold standard is laughable in a nation with 300+mil population, and people would just go back to the reserve currency.

Still, that isn't the only reason why his presidency would be a disaster.

As opposed to the current presidency? I'm not a Paul supporter but I'd rather have him than Obama.

Obama's performance so far has been vastly superior to anything Ron Paul could have achieved in practically every way. Of course, you're an irrational GOP fanatic who's basically wrong about everything so it's not surprising that you would prefer shitty candidates like Ron "Austerity and Gold" Paul.

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Supertoast_GT

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#76  Edited By Supertoast_GT
Member since 2006 • 58 Posts

Personally, terrible new healthcare system that screws the middle class or not, Obama just needs to go. Going against the second amendment and leaving people defenseless against criminals. But nah.... I'm sure the criminals will turn in their guns. Laws like that sure work on drugs. XD He's a full blown traitor. Arming our enemies, and disarming law abiding citizens. I know this went off topic, but GOD I can't wait for 2016.

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deeliman

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#77 deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@The-Apostle said:

@deeliman said:

@Jimn_tonic said:
@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Ron Paul.

That really wasn't hard at all.

LOL

That guy wants the golden standard back. If he gets his way it will have catastrophic consequences for the world economy.

Well, he said he wouldn't forcefully dismantle the fed; that he would introduce gold as a competing currency, which would be ideal because the gold standard is laughable in a nation with 300+mil population, and people would just go back to the reserve currency.

Still, that isn't the only reason why his presidency would be a disaster.

As opposed to the current presidency? I'm not a Paul supporter but I'd rather have him than Obama.

Look, Paul is charismatic. Some of his ideas, like his opposition to militarism and the War on Drugs, appeal to many voters, including liberals. Paul's arguments, however, often lack an empirical basis. History has already demonstrated that many of Paul's proposed solutions will never work. Thus, while some of Paul's ideas sound solid in the abstract, they crumble once they are subjected to widely accepted theories about government and society.

Because Paul's ideas are faulty and dangerous, he would make a terrible president.

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WhiteKnight77

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#78 WhiteKnight77
Member since 2003 • 12605 Posts

@mattbbpl said:

@WhiteKnight77 said:

Cap the price of policies from the get go no matter what level of coverage there is. While Obamacare has instituted basic options for medical insurance policies, prices increased across the board because of it. Maybe have a cap of $150 for basic coverage that includes xrays, office visits, prescription programs, neo-natal care with a $5000 deductible. The next tier could be $200-$300 and a smaller deductible. Maybe a 3rd tier capped at $400 a month with the lowest deductible of maybe $1500. There are some things that Obamacare did get right, but the garbage that we see happening now is not the way to go. Make it affordable so there has to be no taxpayer subsidies as we are seeing now and most certainly do not fine people for not having it. At $150 a month, there is no reason why people could not afford it. Make it mandatory that employers have to offer medical insurance to everyone they employ (would keep part timers from having hours cut).

The above suggestions are just that, suggestions, but do not cost taxpayers anything.

Your proposal caps the prices without addressing any of the drivers of the cost. One of the biggest flaws of Obamacare is that it doesn't do enough to address those drivers, and this proposal removes even the few things it did to address them.

Start there and tweak it. Guys do not need to have insurance coverage of neo-natal care unless something extraordinary happens such as a man all of a sudden gets pregnant. I don't believe in miracles and that would most certainly be one for it to happen. Why should a man have to pay for said coverage of something that he would never use? Also, how do you propose that the R&D that the US medical community does get paid? What other ways can be used to cap prices of procedures? A foot xray can run over $400, but only cost just over $200 if paid without insurance. One might spend $1000s in premiums over the course of a year and still have to pay $25 for a regular office visit and then another $25-$100 for the xrays and another $100 for the radiologist to read it with insurance. Paying cash if one does not have insurance it may cost $300 total compared to $1500 with insurance. What is the incentive to carry insurance other than for emergency medical needs?

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mattbbpl

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#79 mattbbpl
Member since 2006 • 23032 Posts

@WhiteKnight77 said:

@mattbbpl said:

@WhiteKnight77 said:

Cap the price of policies from the get go no matter what level of coverage there is. While Obamacare has instituted basic options for medical insurance policies, prices increased across the board because of it. Maybe have a cap of $150 for basic coverage that includes xrays, office visits, prescription programs, neo-natal care with a $5000 deductible. The next tier could be $200-$300 and a smaller deductible. Maybe a 3rd tier capped at $400 a month with the lowest deductible of maybe $1500. There are some things that Obamacare did get right, but the garbage that we see happening now is not the way to go. Make it affordable so there has to be no taxpayer subsidies as we are seeing now and most certainly do not fine people for not having it. At $150 a month, there is no reason why people could not afford it. Make it mandatory that employers have to offer medical insurance to everyone they employ (would keep part timers from having hours cut).

The above suggestions are just that, suggestions, but do not cost taxpayers anything.

Your proposal caps the prices without addressing any of the drivers of the cost. One of the biggest flaws of Obamacare is that it doesn't do enough to address those drivers, and this proposal removes even the few things it did to address them.

Start there and tweak it. Guys do not need to have insurance coverage of neo-natal care unless something extraordinary happens such as a man all of a sudden gets pregnant. I don't believe in miracles and that would most certainly be one for it to happen. Why should a man have to pay for said coverage of something that he would never use? Also, how do you propose that the R&D that the US medical community does get paid? What other ways can be used to cap prices of procedures? A foot xray can run over $400, but only cost just over $200 if paid without insurance. One might spend $1000s in premiums over the course of a year and still have to pay $25 for a regular office visit and then another $25-$100 for the xrays and another $100 for the radiologist to read it with insurance. Paying cash if one does not have insurance it may cost $300 total compared to $1500 with insurance. What is the incentive to carry insurance other than for emergency medical needs?

You're completely missing the fact that you've given no starting point from which to tweak. You've simply proposed capping the cost of coverage.

One of the reasons this area is so difficult to address is because it's complex and the industry doesn't follow a standard, "agree to pay X dollars for widget Y before the transaction occurs," model. There are numerous factors involved driving up the cost people pay in both premiums and care. Capping the payments without addressing the drivers would only hobble the system even more.

For example, one way in which costs are lowered is by increasing the size of the insurance pool, and yet your most recent post proposes DECREASING the insurance pool for neo-natal care.

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deeliman

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#80 deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

Wouldn't it be better for the US to just copy the healthcare system of another country that performs well or to at least base it on that?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro_health_consumer_index

The could, for example, base it off of 1 of these systems, whichever one would work best in the US.

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#81  Edited By mattbbpl
Member since 2006 • 23032 Posts

@deeliman said:

Wouldn't it be better for the US to just copy the healthcare system of another country that performs well or to at least base it on that?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro_health_consumer_index

The could, for example, base it off of 1 of these systems, whichever one would work best in the US.

A lot of people thought doing so would be a good idea, at least as a starting point. Republicans decried it as socialism that would lead to government dictated death panels.

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deeliman

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#82  Edited By deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@mattbbpl said:

@deeliman said:

Wouldn't it be better for the US to just copy the healthcare system of another country that performs well or to at least base it on that?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro_health_consumer_index

The could, for example, base it off of 1 of these systems, whichever one would work best in the US.

A lot of people thought doing so would be a good idea, at least as a starting point. Republicans decried it as socialism that would lead to government dictated death panels.

Republicans always ruining everything.

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#83  Edited By RedEyedMonster8
Member since 2007 • 1348 Posts

@mattbbpl said:

@deeliman said:

Wouldn't it be better for the US to just copy the healthcare system of another country that performs well or to at least base it on that?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro_health_consumer_index

The could, for example, base it off of 1 of these systems, whichever one would work best in the US.

A lot of people thought doing so would be a good idea, at least as a starting point. Republicans decried it as socialism that would lead to government dictated death panels.

One of the many reasons while I'll never vote republican.

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#84 mattbbpl
Member since 2006 • 23032 Posts

@RedEyedMonster8 said:

@mattbbpl said:

@deeliman said:

Wouldn't it be better for the US to just copy the healthcare system of another country that performs well or to at least base it on that?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro_health_consumer_index

The could, for example, base it off of 1 of these systems, whichever one would work best in the US.

A lot of people thought doing so would be a good idea, at least as a starting point. Republicans decried it as socialism that would lead to government dictated death panels.

One of the many reasons while I'll never vote republican.

I used to do so pretty regularly, but that was back when they were more pragmatic. They've lost so much goodwill with me that there's no way I can vote for a Republican candidate with the party in it's current form.

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#85  Edited By coolbeans90
Member since 2009 • 21305 Posts

@mattbbpl said:

@RedEyedMonster8 said:

@mattbbpl said:

@deeliman said:

Wouldn't it be better for the US to just copy the healthcare system of another country that performs well or to at least base it on that?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro_health_consumer_index

The could, for example, base it off of 1 of these systems, whichever one would work best in the US.

A lot of people thought doing so would be a good idea, at least as a starting point. Republicans decried it as socialism that would lead to government dictated death panels.

One of the many reasons while I'll never vote republican.

I used to do so pretty regularly, but that was back when they were more pragmatic. They've lost so much goodwill with me that there's no way I can vote for a Republican candidate with the party in it's current form.

The current state of affairs is pretty mind-boggling.

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#86 WhiteKnight77
Member since 2003 • 12605 Posts

@mattbbpl said:

@WhiteKnight77 said:

@mattbbpl said:

@WhiteKnight77 said:

Cap the price of policies from the get go no matter what level of coverage there is. While Obamacare has instituted basic options for medical insurance policies, prices increased across the board because of it. Maybe have a cap of $150 for basic coverage that includes xrays, office visits, prescription programs, neo-natal care with a $5000 deductible. The next tier could be $200-$300 and a smaller deductible. Maybe a 3rd tier capped at $400 a month with the lowest deductible of maybe $1500. There are some things that Obamacare did get right, but the garbage that we see happening now is not the way to go. Make it affordable so there has to be no taxpayer subsidies as we are seeing now and most certainly do not fine people for not having it. At $150 a month, there is no reason why people could not afford it. Make it mandatory that employers have to offer medical insurance to everyone they employ (would keep part timers from having hours cut).

The above suggestions are just that, suggestions, but do not cost taxpayers anything.

Your proposal caps the prices without addressing any of the drivers of the cost. One of the biggest flaws of Obamacare is that it doesn't do enough to address those drivers, and this proposal removes even the few things it did to address them.

Start there and tweak it. Guys do not need to have insurance coverage of neo-natal care unless something extraordinary happens such as a man all of a sudden gets pregnant. I don't believe in miracles and that would most certainly be one for it to happen. Why should a man have to pay for said coverage of something that he would never use? Also, how do you propose that the R&D that the US medical community does get paid? What other ways can be used to cap prices of procedures? A foot xray can run over $400, but only cost just over $200 if paid without insurance. One might spend $1000s in premiums over the course of a year and still have to pay $25 for a regular office visit and then another $25-$100 for the xrays and another $100 for the radiologist to read it with insurance. Paying cash if one does not have insurance it may cost $300 total compared to $1500 with insurance. What is the incentive to carry insurance other than for emergency medical needs?

You're completely missing the fact that you've given no starting point from which to tweak. You've simply proposed capping the cost of coverage.

One of the reasons this area is so difficult to address is because it's complex and the industry doesn't follow a standard, "agree to pay X dollars for widget Y before the transaction occurs," model. There are numerous factors involved driving up the cost people pay in both premiums and care. Capping the payments without addressing the drivers would only hobble the system even more.

For example, one way in which costs are lowered is by increasing the size of the insurance pool, and yet your most recent post proposes DECREASING the insurance pool for neo-natal care.

People in the US are cost conscience over everything. Lower the cost of something, they are more liable to buy it. Lower the cost of health insurance, more people will buy it. That is the premise behind my idea. Lower the cost of a procedure and people will not object to it. The biggest thing people complain about is that insurance is so expensive, so what does Obamacare do? It jacks up the prices of some insurance policies, the ones people want or already have and the taxpayer will subsidize a portion of others if they fall into a particular income range. What is fair about that? The left talks about making everything fair or equal for everyone, but the AFA does not do that.

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#87 Jimn_tonic
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@deeliman said:

Look, Paul is charismatic. Some of his ideas, like his opposition to militarism and the War on Drugs, appeal to many voters, including liberals. Paul's arguments, however, often lack an empirical basis. History has already demonstrated that many of Paul's proposed solutions will never work. Thus, while some of Paul's ideas sound solid in the abstract, they crumble once they are subjected to widely accepted theories about government and society.

Because Paul's ideas are faulty and dangerous, he would make a terrible president.

pretty much.

that can be reflected just by looking at what he's done in congress. he served twelve terms, proposed 200+ bills, and a whopping 1 has passed..way to "bring people together" ronnie!

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#88 cain006
Member since 2008 • 8625 Posts

@Fightingfan said:

@GazaAli said:

@zpluffy said:

My neighbor's insurance was cancelled because it doesn't cover maternal care. My neighbor and his wife(56 YEARS OLD) have kids but they are all living on their own now. Now they have have to pay bronze premium at 930 dollars a month because it doesn't cover maternal care, really. Three times their previous cost. On top of that, it doesn't cover their doctor so they have to switch.

It's like giving a paper bag to somebody you see in the street. The guy ask what's in the paper bag. And I say, "It's medical supplies." The guy does NOT WANT it, and yet you still threaten him to take the bag and pay you 100 dollars a month. If he didn't you will hunt him down and make him pay more. The guy ran off...And he left you wondering why people these days can't take a help these days.

Socialism at its maximum.

Like I said I'm not very knowledgeable on Obamacare but this sums up why the general rejection of it.

Nah, it's the implementations and the excessive cost for healthy or moderately healthy people. There's no reason a 20 year old who doesn't smoke or drink should pay $800 monthly.

Everyone is cool with taxes and social security; so socialism can't be the issue. It's probably just the stigma of the name "obamacare".

That's crazy, I checked out mine and there was a silver one for $190 a month.

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#89  Edited By mattbbpl
Member since 2006 • 23032 Posts

@WhiteKnight77 said:

@mattbbpl said:

@WhiteKnight77 said:

@mattbbpl said:

@WhiteKnight77 said:

Cap the price of policies from the get go no matter what level of coverage there is. While Obamacare has instituted basic options for medical insurance policies, prices increased across the board because of it. Maybe have a cap of $150 for basic coverage that includes xrays, office visits, prescription programs, neo-natal care with a $5000 deductible. The next tier could be $200-$300 and a smaller deductible. Maybe a 3rd tier capped at $400 a month with the lowest deductible of maybe $1500. There are some things that Obamacare did get right, but the garbage that we see happening now is not the way to go. Make it affordable so there has to be no taxpayer subsidies as we are seeing now and most certainly do not fine people for not having it. At $150 a month, there is no reason why people could not afford it. Make it mandatory that employers have to offer medical insurance to everyone they employ (would keep part timers from having hours cut).

The above suggestions are just that, suggestions, but do not cost taxpayers anything.

Your proposal caps the prices without addressing any of the drivers of the cost. One of the biggest flaws of Obamacare is that it doesn't do enough to address those drivers, and this proposal removes even the few things it did to address them.

Start there and tweak it. Guys do not need to have insurance coverage of neo-natal care unless something extraordinary happens such as a man all of a sudden gets pregnant. I don't believe in miracles and that would most certainly be one for it to happen. Why should a man have to pay for said coverage of something that he would never use? Also, how do you propose that the R&D that the US medical community does get paid? What other ways can be used to cap prices of procedures? A foot xray can run over $400, but only cost just over $200 if paid without insurance. One might spend $1000s in premiums over the course of a year and still have to pay $25 for a regular office visit and then another $25-$100 for the xrays and another $100 for the radiologist to read it with insurance. Paying cash if one does not have insurance it may cost $300 total compared to $1500 with insurance. What is the incentive to carry insurance other than for emergency medical needs?

You're completely missing the fact that you've given no starting point from which to tweak. You've simply proposed capping the cost of coverage.

One of the reasons this area is so difficult to address is because it's complex and the industry doesn't follow a standard, "agree to pay X dollars for widget Y before the transaction occurs," model. There are numerous factors involved driving up the cost people pay in both premiums and care. Capping the payments without addressing the drivers would only hobble the system even more.

For example, one way in which costs are lowered is by increasing the size of the insurance pool, and yet your most recent post proposes DECREASING the insurance pool for neo-natal care.

People in the US are cost conscience over everything. Lower the cost of something, they are more liable to buy it. Lower the cost of health insurance, more people will buy it. That is the premise behind my idea. Lower the cost of a procedure and people will not object to it. The biggest thing people complain about is that insurance is so expensive, so what does Obamacare do? It jacks up the prices of some insurance policies, the ones people want or already have and the taxpayer will subsidize a portion of others if they fall into a particular income range. What is fair about that? The left talks about making everything fair or equal for everyone, but the AFA does not do that.

I don't think I follow your proposal. It sounds like your saying that you intend to legislatively cap what the plans will cost, everyone will get them because they're cheaper, and that will make the underlying costs of care and administration conform to the caps you set.

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#90 deactivated-5b1e62582e305
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I was going to read through this thread but I noticed it was made by WhiteKnight77 (GOP drone) and has Laihendi and nibroc going at it. ewwww

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#91 deeliman
Member since 2013 • 4027 Posts

@WhiteKnight77 said:

@mattbbpl said:

@WhiteKnight77 said:

@mattbbpl said:

@WhiteKnight77 said:

Cap the price of policies from the get go no matter what level of coverage there is. While Obamacare has instituted basic options for medical insurance policies, prices increased across the board because of it. Maybe have a cap of $150 for basic coverage that includes xrays, office visits, prescription programs, neo-natal care with a $5000 deductible. The next tier could be $200-$300 and a smaller deductible. Maybe a 3rd tier capped at $400 a month with the lowest deductible of maybe $1500. There are some things that Obamacare did get right, but the garbage that we see happening now is not the way to go. Make it affordable so there has to be no taxpayer subsidies as we are seeing now and most certainly do not fine people for not having it. At $150 a month, there is no reason why people could not afford it. Make it mandatory that employers have to offer medical insurance to everyone they employ (would keep part timers from having hours cut).

The above suggestions are just that, suggestions, but do not cost taxpayers anything.

Your proposal caps the prices without addressing any of the drivers of the cost. One of the biggest flaws of Obamacare is that it doesn't do enough to address those drivers, and this proposal removes even the few things it did to address them.

Start there and tweak it. Guys do not need to have insurance coverage of neo-natal care unless something extraordinary happens such as a man all of a sudden gets pregnant. I don't believe in miracles and that would most certainly be one for it to happen. Why should a man have to pay for said coverage of something that he would never use? Also, how do you propose that the R&D that the US medical community does get paid? What other ways can be used to cap prices of procedures? A foot xray can run over $400, but only cost just over $200 if paid without insurance. One might spend $1000s in premiums over the course of a year and still have to pay $25 for a regular office visit and then another $25-$100 for the xrays and another $100 for the radiologist to read it with insurance. Paying cash if one does not have insurance it may cost $300 total compared to $1500 with insurance. What is the incentive to carry insurance other than for emergency medical needs?

You're completely missing the fact that you've given no starting point from which to tweak. You've simply proposed capping the cost of coverage.

One of the reasons this area is so difficult to address is because it's complex and the industry doesn't follow a standard, "agree to pay X dollars for widget Y before the transaction occurs," model. There are numerous factors involved driving up the cost people pay in both premiums and care. Capping the payments without addressing the drivers would only hobble the system even more.

For example, one way in which costs are lowered is by increasing the size of the insurance pool, and yet your most recent post proposes DECREASING the insurance pool for neo-natal care.

People in the US are cost conscience over everything. Lower the cost of something, they are more liable to buy it. Lower the cost of health insurance, more people will buy it. That is the premise behind my idea. Lower the cost of a procedure and people will not object to it. The biggest thing people complain about is that insurance is so expensive, so what does Obamacare do? It jacks up the prices of some insurance policies, the ones people want or already have and the taxpayer will subsidize a portion of others if they fall into a particular income range. What is fair about that? The left talks about making everything fair or equal for everyone, but the AFA does not do that.

How exactly will you make healthcare costs go down?

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#92  Edited By GazaAli
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@coolbeans90 said:
@mattbbpl said:

@Makhaidos said:

Yeah, Obamacare has a lot of problems. It would be so much easier if they took down the website altogether and just implemented universal healthcare like the rest of the modern world.

QFT

^

Does that mean the U.S now has both a nationalized and a privatized healthcare systems at the same time? Like the government offers healthcare and so does the private sector?

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#93 Makhaidos
Member since 2013 • 2162 Posts

@GazaAli said:

@coolbeans90 said:
@mattbbpl said:

@Makhaidos said:

Yeah, Obamacare has a lot of problems. It would be so much easier if they took down the website altogether and just implemented universal healthcare like the rest of the modern world.

QFT

^

Does that mean the U.S now has both a nationalized and a privatized healthcare systems at the same time? Like the government offers healthcare and so does the private sector?

No. That was going to be the public option, but Republicans threw a conniption fit and it was thrown out. All the government does is provide a marketplace where private providers list their services and where they can be compared. The government also has new requirements and standards in healthcare and insurance, as in who can receive it and why, etc. The government doesn't provide health insurance or care (beyond medicaid). Yet.

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#94 GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@Makhaidos said:

No. That was going to be the public option, but Republicans threw a conniption fit and it was thrown out. All the government does is provide a marketplace where private providers list their services and where they can be compared. The government also has new requirements and standards in healthcare and insurance, as in who can receive it and why, etc. The government doesn't provide health insurance or care (beyond medicaid). Yet.

All the ruckus and the commotion about Obamacare are just for this? I thought it was an attempt of a universal and nationalized healthcare system. Am I missing something here? Aside from what you already mentioned, what is health.gov supposed to achieve?

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#95 Makhaidos
Member since 2013 • 2162 Posts

@GazaAli said:

@Makhaidos said:

No. That was going to be the public option, but Republicans threw a conniption fit and it was thrown out. All the government does is provide a marketplace where private providers list their services and where they can be compared. The government also has new requirements and standards in healthcare and insurance, as in who can receive it and why, etc. The government doesn't provide health insurance or care (beyond medicaid). Yet.

All the ruckus and the commotion about Obamacare are just for this? I thought it was an attempt of a universal and nationalized healthcare system. Am I missing something here? Aside from what you already mentioned, what is health.gov supposed to achieve?

Health.gov is the marketplace. It answers questions about the affordable care act (I hate calling it "Obamacare," because this bill is Republican-made and was Republican-supported all the way until Obama came along and thought it was a good idea) and it matches you with possible providers based on your income, need, wants, etc.

It is in no way national healthcare, which is a shame, because that's what Obama originally wanted and what liberals still want.

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#96  Edited By whipassmt
Member since 2007 • 15375 Posts

@Nibroc420 said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

@deeliman said:

@Laihendi said:

Obama is terrible and everything he is responsible for is terrible.

Still better than any GOP member.

I guess I can understand why you might think that if you love socialism and hate freedom.

You can have both...

Also, please name 1 GOP member who wanted to run for president in 2012 who would be better than Obama.

Is this guy a GOP member?

He would have gotten the same amount done, yet have been more entertaining.

I don't think he's a Republican. I think the name of his party is The "The Rent is Too Damn High Party".

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#97 whipassmt
Member since 2007 • 15375 Posts

@GazaAli said:

@zpluffy said:

@GazaAli:

If a person is getting screwed heavily by these changes big time, he will oppose and complain about it, even if it's still standing. There is nothing pathetic about that.

I will not claim to be very knowledgeable on Obamacare, despite that I have a general idea about it and what people complain about. That's beside the point.

The idea is that Americans react to every little change this way. Obamacare, gun laws, gay marriage, tax policies and the list goes on and on. I think it has become practically impossible to change things or get anything done in the U.S.

Why you gotta change things? As the saying goes if it ain't broke don't fix it. If things are working fine, why bother changing?

As Agent Phil Coulson says "People tend to confuse the words 'new' and 'improved'".

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#98  Edited By GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@whipassmt said:

@GazaAli said:

@zpluffy said:

@GazaAli:

If a person is getting screwed heavily by these changes big time, he will oppose and complain about it, even if it's still standing. There is nothing pathetic about that.

I will not claim to be very knowledgeable on Obamacare, despite that I have a general idea about it and what people complain about. That's beside the point.

The idea is that Americans react to every little change this way. Obamacare, gun laws, gay marriage, tax policies and the list goes on and on. I think it has become practically impossible to change things or get anything done in the U.S.

Why you gotta change things? As the saying goes if it ain't broke don't fix it. If things are working fine, why bother changing?

As Agent Phil Coulson says "People tend to confuse the words 'new' and 'improved'".

You have to change things because life and everything that's going on in it is of no static nature. If you're not moving forward then you necessarily moving backwards. The world changes radically by the day, the notion that you're not moving at all means you're moving backwards.

On the level of the state, if its not progressing, even if its institutions and policies are perceived to be beneficial and progressive enough, then stagnation and staleness are making their way on all level of public affairs and social order. It will be left behind while other states lead the way.

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#99  Edited By GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@Makhaidos said:

@GazaAli said:

@Makhaidos said:

No. That was going to be the public option, but Republicans threw a conniption fit and it was thrown out. All the government does is provide a marketplace where private providers list their services and where they can be compared. The government also has new requirements and standards in healthcare and insurance, as in who can receive it and why, etc. The government doesn't provide health insurance or care (beyond medicaid). Yet.

All the ruckus and the commotion about Obamacare are just for this? I thought it was an attempt of a universal and nationalized healthcare system. Am I missing something here? Aside from what you already mentioned, what is health.gov supposed to achieve?

Health.gov is the marketplace. It answers questions about the affordable care act (I hate calling it "Obamacare," because this bill is Republican-made and was Republican-supported all the way until Obama came along and thought it was a good idea) and it matches you with possible providers based on your income, need, wants, etc.

It is in no way national healthcare, which is a shame, because that's what Obama originally wanted and what liberals still want.

Its a shame the U.S doesn't have a national healthcare system like all civil and modern states do. Its even more shameful that all this opposition is just against a small step like this that doesn't live up to being an actual change.

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#100 Makhaidos
Member since 2013 • 2162 Posts

@GazaAli said:

@Makhaidos said:

@GazaAli said:

@Makhaidos said:

No. That was going to be the public option, but Republicans threw a conniption fit and it was thrown out. All the government does is provide a marketplace where private providers list their services and where they can be compared. The government also has new requirements and standards in healthcare and insurance, as in who can receive it and why, etc. The government doesn't provide health insurance or care (beyond medicaid). Yet.

All the ruckus and the commotion about Obamacare are just for this? I thought it was an attempt of a universal and nationalized healthcare system. Am I missing something here? Aside from what you already mentioned, what is health.gov supposed to achieve?

Health.gov is the marketplace. It answers questions about the affordable care act (I hate calling it "Obamacare," because this bill is Republican-made and was Republican-supported all the way until Obama came along and thought it was a good idea) and it matches you with possible providers based on your income, need, wants, etc.

It is in no way national healthcare, which is a shame, because that's what Obama originally wanted and what liberals still want.

Its a shame the U.S doesn't have a national healthcare system like all civil and modern states do. Its even more shameful that all this opposition is just against a small step like this that doesn't live up to being an actual change.

Eh. Our government is designed to make changes very difficult and incremental. The fact that we got this far in the span of a single term is really monumental.