
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2017/05 ... house.html
Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
Tugger wrote:
I really do not think the majority of Republican legislators truly want to take over responsibility for the nations future healthcare. The ACA,Obamacare, is and has been such an excellent and convenient target. Something upon which they have been able to heap so much of their and their supporter's condemnation upon. I really do not see how they can want to a.) give that up, and b.) bring the inevitable problems and failures (on some level in some way) upon themselves.
LMP737 wrote:Tugger wrote:
I really do not think the majority of Republican legislators truly want to take over responsibility for the nations future healthcare. The ACA,Obamacare, is and has been such an excellent and convenient target. Something upon which they have been able to heap so much of their and their supporter's condemnation upon. I really do not see how they can want to a.) give that up, and b.) bring the inevitable problems and failures (on some level in some way) upon themselves.
Maybe they don't want responsibility for the nations future healthcare. IMO though here's what they want. Dismantling anything Obama did in his eight years is the name of the game now. Former Senator George Voinovich admitted as much when he said that if Obama was for something they had to be against it. Even if it was good for the country. This is just a continuation of that mindset.
FriscoHeavy wrote:
...and democrats don't operate the same way? Give me a break.
Tugger wrote:And now the heat is transferred the Senate and the House breathes a sigh of relief.
KLDC10 wrote:A much-needed win for the Administration and Congress. Hopefully the passage of this bill will give a good dose of momentum to the rest of the Trump/GOP agenda.
FriscoHeavy wrote:...and democrats don't operate the same way? Give me a break.
Mir wrote:Tugger wrote:And now the heat is transferred the Senate and the House breathes a sigh of relief.
We'll see what the CBO says. If the score for this bill is anything like the last, most Republicans in the House will already be on record as having voted for it, after having rushed through the process on a scale never before seen with a bill of this magnitude. There won't be many sighs of relief then.
KLDC10 wrote:A much-needed win for the Administration and Congress. Hopefully the passage of this bill will give a good dose of momentum to the rest of the Trump/GOP agenda.
FriscoHeavy wrote:Now on to the Senate!
Tugger wrote:FriscoHeavy wrote:...and democrats don't operate the same way? Give me a break.
What does this statement have to do with anything? We are talking about your post about the Republicans finally passing their healthcare overhaul. My comment was strictly my thoughts on what may happen next and the Houses motivations to get this passed.Mir wrote:Tugger wrote:And now the heat is transferred the Senate and the House breathes a sigh of relief.
We'll see what the CBO says. If the score for this bill is anything like the last, most Republicans in the House will already be on record as having voted for it, after having rushed through the process on a scale never before seen with a bill of this magnitude. There won't be many sighs of relief then.
The House is still relieved, now no matter what, it is the Senate that will be seen as allowing it or blocking it. They are now the stuckee's.KLDC10 wrote:A much-needed win for the Administration and Congress. Hopefully the passage of this bill will give a good dose of momentum to the rest of the Trump/GOP agenda.
I truly doubt it. We'll have to wait and see but as I said before I can see nothing good ultimately for the Republican's with this. It will simply affect too many people in a likely deleterious way. If it doesn't and the Republican solution works better and smoothly then that will be great. But I hold no illusions about any "single party legislation" of this scale. Look what happened the last time it happened (The Dems passing the original ACA).
Congress must work together. And that is the Republican's biggest failure these past years (not that I don't understand that any Republicans that do work across the aisle won't be attacked by the conservative's version of "fake news" etc.).
Tugg
FriscoHeavy wrote:I thought you wrote a nice piece. I was referring to a comment by the guy after you.
Tugger wrote:To me the Republican's could solve this very quickly if they just passed a law with three basic elements:
Companies must offer the same coverage to all applicants.
All rates must be the same for the same coverage elements for everyone.
States can mandate their own coverage requirements but companies can sell across state lines.
That would address most of the issues before us and the market would sort it out. (But I think the health coverage companies would complain mightily that everyone is not required to sign up/buy in).
Tugg
FriscoHeavy wrote:...and democrats don't operate the same way? Give me a break.
johnboy wrote:The “pro-life” party has become the party of death: New research on why Republicans hate poor and sick people - Salon
https://apple.news/ASABFvPt5Pdij2Ty5QrXkNw
mbmbos wrote:FriscoHeavy wrote:...and democrats don't operate the same way? Give me a break.
Nice deflection.
Have the Democrats declared war on any Republican President, vowing to sabotage any and all attempts to govern? It is painfully obvious the Republican Party doesn't know how to govern, only how to win. It's so shallow and short-sided. And it does a terrible discredit to U.S. citizens.
Dutchy wrote:So whitch problem has been solved and what are the problems are risen by this?
QF29 wrote:It should be the goal of every 1st world country to be able to provide Universal Healthcare for all its citizens.
Ken777 wrote:Can anyone remember when ObamaCare passed and the Conservatives on this board were angrily asking if we had read the boss?
mbmbos wrote:FriscoHeavy wrote:...and democrats don't operate the same way? Give me a break.
Nice deflection.
Have the Democrats declared war on any Republican President, vowing to sabotage any and all attempts to govern? It is painfully obvious the Republican Party doesn't know how to govern, only how to win. It's so shallow and short-sided. And it does a terrible discredit to U.S. citizens.
Tugger wrote:Dutchy wrote:So whitch problem has been solved and what are the problems are risen by this?
From what I have read they don't actually know yet as they haven't provided the whole bill for review.
Flighty wrote:mbmbos wrote:FriscoHeavy wrote:...and democrats don't operate the same way? Give me a break.
Nice deflection.
Have the Democrats declared war on any Republican President, vowing to sabotage any and all attempts to govern? It is painfully obvious the Republican Party doesn't know how to govern, only how to win. It's so shallow and short-sided. And it does a terrible discredit to U.S. citizens.
Absolutely, HRC is part of the 'resistance' against the American people's chosen president... not sure how you more explicitly involved in a trite war against the US than that.
And, the Republicans did the same when they denied Obama's Supreme Court appointment. That was awful.
I think both parties are despicable, but, on that topic, HRC is hardly a decent Democrat and Trump is far from your normal Republican.
seb146 wrote:When Nancy Pelosi said "let's just pass it and see what's in it" the howls and whines from the right of "we need to stop this NOW!" were completely overwhelming. The right didn't even finish writing this debacle and their followers are saying "let's just pass it and see what's in it."
Ken777 wrote:IIRC Clinton received THREE MILLION MORE VOTES than Trump. Doesn't that make Clinton the peoples chosen choice, with Trump winning the Electoral College vote?
In terms of "the people's choice" Clinton won and Trump lost.![]()
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Dutchy wrote:So which problem has been solved and what are the problems are risen by this?
KLDC10 wrote:A much-needed win for the Administration and Congress. Hopefully the passage of this bill will give a good dose of momentum to the rest of the Trump/GOP agenda.
MaverickM11 wrote:What a wonderful and #blessed day of prayer y'all! The pro life party of Jay-zus has voted to drop kick 24+ million people off their healthcare and make just about anything a preexisting condition. On top of that, while they were salivating at the prospect of full-tilt LGBTQ discrimination under the guise of "religious freedom", they got a total nothing burger that promises to stop enforcing a law that hasn't been enforced, well, pretty much ever. But the best part is who was standing over head evangelical Trump's shoulder? None other than Paula White, who will--not joking--sell you a "resurrection seeds" for $1144, because John 11:44. She's such a transparent grifter even evangelicals think she's shady.So all in all a wonderful day all around for the American people, many of whom with preexisting conditions may soon have nothing but prayer as a healthcare option--but it will be affordable! Until the GOP finds a way to charge them for that too.
FriscoHeavy wrote:Tugger wrote:To me the Republican's could solve this very quickly if they just passed a law with three basic elements:
Companies must offer the same coverage to all applicants.
All rates must be the same for the same coverage elements for everyone.
States can mandate their own coverage requirements but companies can sell across state lines.
That would address most of the issues before us and the market would sort it out. (But I think the health coverage companies would complain mightily that everyone is not required to sign up/buy in).
Tugg
I agree with these points, especially the 3rd one. I certainly do not think this bill is perfect yet, but hopefully a step in the right direction. We need something new.
DLFREEBIRD wrote:[ ignoring the mandate that they cover specified services like pregnancy care? This is a joke. Anybody with half a brain knows that Trump tackled Obamacare first so he would have the money to fund his tax cuts for the wealthy.
jetero wrote:The only way we can win back the country is to stop condescending to people because they're "Christian" (what a friggin joke!) and white, as tempting as it may be. Let's focus the criticism solely on the party of hypocrites and its absolutely shameless purveyors. .
DLFREEBIRD wrote:FriscoHeavy wrote:Tugger wrote:To me the Republican's could solve this very quickly if they just passed a law with three basic elements:
Companies must offer the same coverage to all applicants.
All rates must be the same for the same coverage elements for everyone.
States can mandate their own coverage requirements but companies can sell across state lines.
That would address most of the issues before us and the market would sort it out. (But I think the health coverage companies would complain mightily that everyone is not required to sign up/buy in).
Tugg
I agree with these points, especially the 3rd one. I certainly do not think this bill is perfect yet, but hopefully a step in the right direction. We need something new.
What do you mean we need something new? A far higher rate for those who have pre-existing conditions? Boosting the price for older consumers , ignoring the mandate that they cover specified services like pregnancy care? This is a joke. Anybody with half a brain knows that Trump tackled Obamacare first so he would have the money to fund his tax cuts for the wealthy.
EA CO AS wrote:Ken777 wrote:IIRC Clinton received THREE MILLION MORE VOTES than Trump. Doesn't that make Clinton the peoples chosen choice, with Trump winning the Electoral College vote?
In terms of "the people's choice" Clinton won and Trump lost.![]()
![]()
Which would matter if we elected people by popular vote.
But we don't.
EA CO AS wrote:seb146 wrote:When Nancy Pelosi said "let's just pass it and see what's in it" the howls and whines from the right of "we need to stop this NOW!" were completely overwhelming. The right didn't even finish writing this debacle and their followers are saying "let's just pass it and see what's in it."
I don't agree with either side on this, but as the saying goes, what's good for the goose....
Francoflier wrote:I suppose the best way for Trump voters to finally realize how much of an incompetent, self-interested elitist retard they blindly voted for is for their very own hero to unleash his worst onto them. Too bad it'll cost many of them their medical coverage, life savings or even their life..
QF29 wrote:Since his election, he more or less spewed stupid comments like "everyone will be covered" that the GOP laughed off.
EA CO AS wrote:seb146 wrote:When Nancy Pelosi said "let's just pass it and see what's in it" the howls and whines from the right of "we need to stop this NOW!" were completely overwhelming. The right didn't even finish writing this debacle and their followers are saying "let's just pass it and see what's in it."
I don't agree with either side on this, but as the saying goes, what's good for the goose....
tommy1808 wrote:QF29 wrote:Since his election, he more or less spewed stupid comments like "everyone will be covered" that the GOP laughed off.
He wanted way better coverage at *much* lower premiums for *everyone*.
In short, there are only two options:
1. He Lied
2 he is too stupid
I'll go with one.
Best regards
Thomas