McCain's Healthcare "Plan"

squashed:

When I called McCain’s campaign to ask about how he and Palin were going to change “corruption and greed” on Wall Street, I was promised that a press release would be issued shortly. Since McCain doesn’t actually have an economic plan, I’ll have to talk about another McCain policy.

McCain’s Healthcare Plan could as well be called a “healthcare plot” in the sense that a plot is like a plan—but bad. He is offering a refundable $5000 tax credit in exchange for taxing health benefits. The end result is that on average, everything should work out about the way it does—except more people will have private insurance and fewer will have employer-sponsored insurance. But there’s a funny thing about averages.

Three economists went moose hunting. They stumbled across a majestic bull. The first economist shot, missing by ten feet to the left. The second economist shot, missing by ten feet to the right. The third economist shouted, “We nailed it!”

This is the problem with McCain’s plan. When you drop employer-sponsored healthcare, you end up with a bunch of people who, while able to spend as much on health insurance as others, are uninsurable because of chronic conditions. The whole point of insurance is cost spreading—but nobody wants to pay the costs of the chronically ill. The young and healthy make out pretty well. Five thousand dollars may be enough to insure them. The old and less healthy will be in terrible shape because their insurance—if it’s even available—will run much more than $5000. This plan transfers health societal health spending from those who need it to those who don’t.

Now, you might say, “Surely states could pass some sort of consumer protection laws to stop this from occurring.” And they can—except that McCain has thought of this one as well. He wants to “break down artificial boundaries” along state lines. In other words, he wants to allow health insurance companies to do the same thing credit card companies do in finding the state with the fewest consumer protection laws and market their product nationally from there. Not only does this reduce states abilities to protect their own citizens, this puts pressure to race to the bottom to attract the insurers.

Oh. And I should clarify that that $5000 credit is not going to you. It’s going to the health insurance company. This plan will reign in health spending by reigning in health.

shadowfirebird:

via Neatorama

shadowfirebird:

via Neatorama

“ Get out of bed with an excitement to start the day. ”

Cassandra: 25 Things a Pessimist Should Try Before They Die

And this is only Nr.1. but enough to prompt a post.

(via inkscar)

“ The founders did not create liberty for America, but America for liberty, which they understood as part of universal law. The notion of an America that was above other nations because we were somehow better, already “saved”—rather than an America that was continually called to become better, continually charged with saving itself—is an idea that only came into vogue about fifty years after the revolution of 1776. This idea emerged out of the religious revival movement called the Second Great Awakening. The founders and the greatest Americans of the previous generation would have been apoplectic at the conception that the U.S. is simply saved, simply special, whether or not it does good works. Rather, our calling America to face itself is central to the task the founders and great Americans explicitly left us. ”

Naomi Wolf (via azspot)

Is an app necessary?

Gotta say, I’m one of the first to buy apps out of the iTunes App store (even get burned when the prices drop after I pay $9.99 for something.)

But is there a need for a Tumblr app? I mean really. The Tumblr page is formatted perfectly on my iPod Touch and creating posts is a breeze.

The apps that are up there seem to miss the great ability Tumblr gives users of reblogging others’ posts since they doesn’t give you the list of followers you may have. The apps are limited to posting bits, but don’t even feature a Save option so I could start a post and come back to it later. That’d be nice at least.

Still gonna use Tumblr.com here. Just wish this thing wouldn’t autocorrect Tumblr to Tumble all the time. >sigh

“ He’s going to be Bush on steroids. His hawkish views now are very dangerous. He puts military at the top of foreign policy rather than diplomacy, just like George Bush does. He and other neoconservatives are dedicated to converting the world to democracy and free markets, and they want to do it through the barrel of a gun. ”

John H. Johns, retired brigadier general who studied with McCain at the War College (via azspot)

bijan:


BAGnewsNotes: Why Obama
Amazing photo. I wish I had been there.

bijan:

BAGnewsNotes: Why Obama

Amazing photo. I wish I had been there.

(via livejamie)

(via livejamie)

Stimpy!
(via chris-o)

Stimpy!

(via chris-o)

goldenfiddle:

The space between the A and the V kills me. 

goldenfiddle:

The space between the A and the V kills me.