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Re: Insurers say ''ACA'' fix for canceled health policies could drive up costs

Posted by Olog-hai on Thu Nov 14 17:55:28 2013, in response to Re: Insurers say ''ACA'' fix for canceled health policies could drive up costs, posted by mr mabstoa on Thu Nov 14 16:11:00 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Technocrats = kakocrats.

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Re: Insurers say ''ACA'' fix for canceled health policies could drive up costs

Posted by SMAZ on Thu Nov 14 18:05:33 2013, in response to Insurers say "ACA" fix for canceled health policies could drive up costs, posted by Olog-hai on Thu Nov 14 14:28:25 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
It should NOT be "fixed".

This is exactly what was supposed to happen.

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Re: States to Obama: Screw Your ''Fix''

Posted by chicagomotorman on Thu Nov 14 18:08:09 2013, in response to Re: States to Obama: Screw Your ''Fix'', posted by italianstallion on Thu Nov 14 17:23:06 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
No, the democrats are.

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Re: States to Obama: Screw Your ''Fix''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Thu Nov 14 18:38:58 2013, in response to States to Obama: Screw Your "Fix", posted by Chris R16/R2730 on Thu Nov 14 16:42:05 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Reading comprehension and conservatards ... Washington state has its own WORKING exchange and is ready to proceed with better plans. The article mentions nothing about Arkansas, so where did THAT come from?

Nice to know that the GOP gets giddy when people are getting screwed by their own withholding of financing for the original project and foot dragging all the way to this outcome. :(

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Re: States to Obama: Screw Your ''Fix''

Posted by Spider-Pig on Thu Nov 14 19:02:57 2013, in response to States to Obama: Screw Your "Fix", posted by Chris R16/R2730 on Thu Nov 14 16:42:05 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Good!

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Re: States to Obama: Screw Your ''Fix''

Posted by italianstallion on Thu Nov 14 19:47:12 2013, in response to Re: States to Obama: Screw Your ''Fix'', posted by Chris R16/R2730 on Thu Nov 14 17:26:21 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Asshole, it is of course about allowing the uninsured to get insurance. You and the other well-insured folks who are so self-righteous about this sicken me.

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Re: States to Obama: Screw Your ''Fix''

Posted by italianstallion on Thu Nov 14 19:48:18 2013, in response to Re: States to Obama: Screw Your ''Fix'', posted by DAND124 on Thu Nov 14 17:27:03 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
I read it. What does it matter? I can criticize Democrats too, you know. I think the person is making a political point that screws people.

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ACA exchanges fail to attract the young and healthy

Posted by Olog-hai on Fri Nov 15 10:50:40 2013, in response to Universal Health Care is HERE in these USA! Apply Now. www.healthcare.gov, posted by SMAZ on Tue Oct 1 13:19:06 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Associated Press

Nov 15, 2013 10:23 AM EST

Health exchanges slow to attract young, healthy

By Michael R. Blood
Associated Press
Fears that health insurance exchanges wouldn't attract the young, healthy people needed to make them financially viable are being heightened by the early results of signups in several states.

If it becomes a trend, that could lead to increases in insurance premiums and deductibles next year. Along with the paltry enrollment numbers released this week, officials in a handful of states said those who had managed to sign up were generally older people with medical problems — those with the greatest incentives to get coverage.

It's unclear whether that will persist. Young, healthy people may be more inclined to procrastinate, especially given doubts about the law's technically flawed online signup system. They have until Dec. 15 to sign up if they want to be covered on Jan. 1.

Insurers have warned that they need a wide range of people signing up for coverage because premiums paid by adults in the younger and healthier group, between 18 and 35, are needed to offset the cost of carrying older and sicker customers who typically generate far more in medical bills than they contribute in premiums.

The first set of enrollment data revealed that 106,000 people signed up for coverage nationwide, far short of the 500,000 initial sign-ups the Obama administration had expected. In states where officials discussed more detailed information, it also became apparent that the people who flocked to the exchanges after they opened Oct. 1 were those who were desperate for coverage.

In California, the state with the largest uninsured population, most of those who applied were older people with health problems, according to a state health care official. In Kentucky, nearly 3 of 4 enrollees were over 35. In Ohio, groups helping with enrollment described many of those coming to them as older residents who lost their jobs and health coverage during the recession.

"They have been putting off treatment for a long time, just praying they live until they turn 65 and qualify for Medicare," said Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, executive director of the Ohio Association of Foodbanks, which received federal grant money to help people establish coverage.

That people with serious health conditions would be the first to take advantage of the Affordable Care Act was expected. But that direction must shift.

In general, someone in his 60s uses $6 in health care services for every $1 tallied by someone in his 20s, said Nicole Kasabian Evans of the California Association of Health Plans. That makes younger adults a coveted group on industry balance sheets.

If those signing up trend to the elderly and sickly "your insurance is going to cost more and that will discourage those younger people from coming in," warned Lisa Folberg, a vice president with the California Medical Association. Faced with steep prices, younger people could opt to pay a government fine rather than purchase coverage.

The potential for rising monthly premiums and higher policy deductibles is just one deterrent to convincing young people to sign up for coverage on the exchanges. The technological problems that have plagued the federal exchange, which is running in 36 states, and many state-run online marketplaces are slowing enrollment. And scattered reports of data breaches have the potential to scare off even more people.

Efforts to attract adults younger than 35, often referred to as "young invincibles," include multimillion dollar advertising campaigns, which have launched in several states.

In California, Peter Lee, director of the state-run health exchange, said his state's outreach effort taps social media, radio and TV ads, and events at churches, community centers and other venues. To emphasize the point, Covered California included a 27-year-old man who had signed up for coverage during its news conference earlier this week. Such an approach aims to counter the current trend in the state. Lee described October enrollees in California as "older people or people who have health conditions."

"These are people that have been waiting a long time to get covered," he said.

In Colorado, an aggressive campaign from allies of the state-run exchange includes provocative ads. One targeting women combines the promise of free birth control pills with the notion of casual sex. Another ad shows women with a contraption made of alcohol shot glasses glued to an old snow ski. "Saving money on flu shots leaves us more money for fun shots," the ad reads. The day the health exchange launched, male and female models wearing nothing but underwear and "Get Covered" signs passed out fliers on a downtown Denver street.

It's not clear whether the campaign is working. Colorado's exchange has yet to release a demographic breakdown of the 3,700 people who selected an individual policy last month.

"We are making an extra push to reach young adults, and we do expect they're going to take a lot of encouraging because they tend to wait until the last minute," said Myung Kim, spokeswoman for Colorado's exchange.

If such efforts fail and insurance companies end up with too many sick or expensive customers, they might need to increase premiums or eventually leave markets to avoid taking heavy financial losses.

"It's going to be very messy for the next couple of years, until we figure out who is buying insurance," said Glenn Melnick, director of the Center for Health Financing, Policy and Management at the University of Southern California. "There are a lot of pieces of this that are just black boxes right now."

Aetna Chairman and chief executive Mark Bertolini said last month that it was "incredibly important" to get the exchange websites running properly because "the younger, healthier people aren't going to give them more than one shot."


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Re: ACA exchanges slow to attract the young and healthy

Posted by italianstallion on Fri Nov 15 17:17:30 2013, in response to ACA exchanges fail to attract the young and healthy, posted by Olog-hai on Fri Nov 15 10:50:40 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Corrected header - what the AP actually wrote.

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Re: ACA exchanges slow to attract the young and healthy

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Fri Nov 15 21:03:49 2013, in response to Re: ACA exchanges slow to attract the young and healthy, posted by italianstallion on Fri Nov 15 17:17:30 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Olog engaging in a pack of lies? Never! LOL.

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DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning "fix" to ACA

Posted by Olog-hai on Sat Nov 16 22:10:30 2013, in response to Universal Health Care is HERE in these USA! Apply Now. www.healthcare.gov, posted by SMAZ on Tue Oct 1 13:19:06 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Washington Post

D.C. insurance commissioner fired a day after questioning Obamacare fix

By Aaron C. Davis
Published: November 16, 2013
A day after he questioned President Obama’s decision to unwind a major tenet of the health-care law and said the nation’s capital might not go along, D.C. insurance commissioner William P. White was fired.

White was called into a meeting Friday afternoon with one of Mayor Vincent C. Gray’s (D) top deputies and told that the mayor “wants to go in a different direction,” White told The Washington Post on Saturday.

White said the mayoral deputy never said that he was being asked to leave because of his Thursday statement on health care. But he said the timing was hard to ignore. Roughly 24 hours later, White said, he was “basically being told, ‘Thanks, but no thanks.’ ”

White was one of the first insurance commissioners in the nation last week to push back against Obama’s attempt to smooth over part of the botched rollout of the Affordable Care Act: millions of unexpected cancellations of insurance plans.

In persuading Congress to vote for the health-care overhaul, Obama had promised that Americans who liked their insurance plans would be able to keep them. When that turned out to not be the case, Obama apologized last week. And to stem growing bipartisan dissent, he announced Thursday that plans slated to be canceled next year to comply with the legislation could be extended for one year.

While the president’s plan sounded like a simple fix, it rattled the insurance industry, which had set prices for next year based on many of its products changing to comply with the health-care law. Allowing some plans to continue beyond Jan. 1 could also run afoul of provisions in laws passed by dozens of states and the District to implement the Affordable Care Act.

In a statement issued Thursday, White hinted strongly that he opposed the idea.

“The action today undercuts the purpose of the exchanges, including the District’s DC Health Link, by creating exceptions that make it more difficult for them to operate,” the statement said.

He also pointed to a statement issued by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners that said the Obama order “threatens to undermine the new market, and may lead to higher premiums and market disruptions in 2014 and beyond.”

“We concur with that assessment,” White said Thursday.

White’s statement was removed from the department’s Web site sometime before Friday morning. Asked about the removal Friday, spokesman Michael Flagg said the department’s statement had changed.

“Our statement now is that we’re taking a close look at the implications of the president’s announcement on the District’s exchange and we will soon recommend a course of action after taking into consideration the positions of all the stakeholders,” Flagg wrote in an e-mail.

On Saturday, Flagg declined to comment on whether White had been fired, saying the department doesn’t comment on personnel issues.

A senior city official said White’s initial statement was sent to the mayoral communications director, Pedro Ribeiro, only minutes before it was issued publicly. It was not sent to Deputy Mayor Victor Hoskins, White’s immediate supervisor, said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak about a personnel matter.

A formal statement critical of the president should have been closely vetted and approved by the mayor’s office, and White refused to acknowledge the misstep, the official said. White said Hoskins fired him Friday.

White said he thought he would have been derelict in his duties to not quickly make a statement on the president’s announcement.

“Everyone was looking for responses from the regulators. One of my chief concerns is always consistency and clarity in the marketplace — you can’t have something that big sitting out there without responding to it,” he said.

White had served as Gray’s commissioner for the D.C. Department of Insurance, Securities and Banking since February 2011. Prior to last week, his most high-profile and controversial role had been as chief of the department that took control of Chartered Health Plan, the city’s largest manager of health care for low-income residents, amid questions about “irregularities” in its finances.

Chartered was owned by businessman Jeffrey E. Thompson, who has been implicated in funding a $650,000 “shadow campaign” to elect Gray. White oversaw the successful sale of the insurer’s assets, and his department’s handling of the transition has been generally viewed positively.

White said he had known since he took the job that he served at the pleasure of the mayor. He said he was proud of his record and would have stayed.

On the president’s proposed health-care fix, he said: “I wasn’t saying I was against it, I also was saying I didn’t know enough to fully support it — I want to be clear, and I think it is, I was not speaking for Mayor Gray.”

Mike DeBonis contributed to this report.


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Lib columnists: ACA failure could "destroy liberal government"

Posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 00:05:00 2013, in response to Universal Health Care is HERE in these USA! Apply Now. www.healthcare.gov, posted by SMAZ on Tue Oct 1 13:19:06 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
That was uttered by the NYT's David Brooks.

PBS Newshour

Analysis | Air Date: Nov. 15, 2013

Shields and Brooks on waning ACA confidence and its impact on liberal government

Transcript

JUDY WOODRUFF: And to the analysis of Shields and Brooks.

That's syndicated columnist Mark Shields and New York Times columnist David Brooks.

Welcome to the program, gentlemen.

So, Mark and David, a tough week for the president, culminating in this vote today in the House, 39 Democrats crossing over to vote with Republicans.

Why — what happened? Why is this happening?

DAVID BROOKS: Well, there's a slide.

I have always thought Obamacare wouldn't be repealed and it will essentially go into effect more or less as an enacted. But now, this week, you have to begin to have some doubts. And I say that for a couple reasons. First, on just substance grounds, the reversal on the insurance on the people who had their insurance policies canceled, that's going to do a little, as we said earlier on the program, to make it more likely that the young people do not get involved in the exchange and do not end up subsidizing, so you get a sicker, older pool of people there.

Rates rise, and then you get into this problem where nobody wants to get in because the rates become so high and they end up paying the penalty. So, I think you have got a substantive problem there, which they need those younger people in, or else it just doesn't work. And then the second thing is political.

The administration is now on its back heels. And they're on the back heels on the easy stuff. The stuff up front was the easy stuff. And when the hard challenges come at later enactment dates, when those hit, they will have — people will have no spirit to defend them. And so if we're seeing people peeling off right now, I think when the hard challenges come, there's much more political peril for the White House.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Mark, the president had made this concession yesterday, saying — he's backtracking, saying he was willing to let these insurance companies continue to sign — to sponsor people who already had policies. But that didn't turn out to be enough.

MARK SHIELDS: Well, it did, Judy.

I mean, there were really speculation and realistic expectation that as many as 100 Democrats would desert, but the president yesterday, in his rather uncharacteristically subdued press conference, he was almost glum, it seemed, but that was directed at the House and the Congress in particular.

And the fact that they held it to 39 was seen as somewhat of a victory. But there's no question that there was despair and discouragement in the ranks of Democrats. The president's own job rating has fallen below 40 in several polls. And when a president's job rating is below 40 in midterm congressional elections, the average number of seats lost by that president's party is three dozen.

So that has led to some consternation and anxiety. Democrats just a few weeks ago were bullish about 2014 and the prospects of winning back the House even and upsetting history.

JUDY WOODRUFF: After the government shutdown.

MARK SHIELDS: After the government shutdown, the Republican brand, and we have got 9 percent approval of the Congress, which is essentially the Republican brand in the Congress.

John McCain said, when you're down to 9 percent, you're talking about blood relatives and staff members, and that's it. But when you're — right now, in the most recent survey, the president actually was seen as less able than the Republicans in Congress on handling health care. So there's a real nervousness.

JUDY WOODRUFF: So, it is just politics that caused the president to issue this apology, mea culpa. Mark describes him as glum and down.

DAVID BROOKS: Well, he's unpopular.

It turns out if you sell a health care plan on the basis that we won't increase the debt and nobody will be a loser, then, when there are losers, they get really mad. And there were bound to be losers. And so that's part of it.

But part of it is just the weakening of the law, the weakening of support for the law, and the weakening of the own president's authority to say, trust me, trust me. I'm really struck by the downward slide that he's doing.

I'm a little surprised by it, frankly. And what's interesting is, compared to Reagan and Clinton in their second terms, had very similar popular approval ratings, which were going up at this point. George W. Bush and Barack Obama have extremely similar downward slopes. Bush's went all the way through, caused by Iraq and Katrina, and, in Obama's case, health care and other things.

And one of the things that strikes me is the country has changed, much more cynical, much more anti-Washington and, as a result of that, much less likely to come in a big collective effort to help some uninsured off, so much more skeptical of the law, and, second, when it is not implemented properly, much more punishing on the government. And so that makes it very fragile to me.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Should we be surprised, Mark? There are stories of people out there who are saying, I got coverage that I wouldn't have otherwise gotten because of this new law.

We had an interview way woman this week who is far along in her cancer treatment. And she made no bones about it.

MARK SHIELDS: That's right.

JUDY WOODRUFF: She said, if it weren't for this law…

MARK SHIELDS: That's exactly right.

JUDY WOODRUFF: … my coverage, my — my health care treatment wouldn't be covered. But that's not making a difference, or is it?

MARK SHIELDS: Well, it's — I think there are two points here, Judy, that make it beyond politics.

The first is that the administration made the decision to sell it on the basis of this is — everybody's a winner, it really was ouchless and painless, instead of making the counterargument, which was the natural argument, that, look, we are hurting as a people when 38 million people are not covered.

It means that they end up in emergency rooms getting emergency coverage, which is terribly expensive, which the rest of us pay for, and they're not healthy, and this is not the way a civilized society does it. It would be in our economic interest, it would be in our justice interest as a society. And we're going to ask everybody to pitch in a little, and it's going to be in your long-term interest to do so.

That wasn't the case made. And what has happened…

JUDY WOODRUFF: But why wasn't it?

MARK SHIELDS: Why wasn't it? Because they decided, obviously, to sell it the other way. It's not going — it's going to be painless, maybe in part because of what David suggested, a skepticism that people were willing to accept such a sacrifice, even though limited though it was.

The other thing is, let's be very blunt about it. The president said time and again that nobody is going to lose his insurance or her insurance if they like it. And so, driven to one of two conclusions, that is — wasn't a true statement. And you're driven to one of two conclusions.

Either the president was almost — almost negligently uncurious in not asking about what the answer was, or he made the choice to trade his considerable reputation and record of integrity for short-term political gain. That's why they had to come and that's why there was such consternation in the ranks.

JUDY WOODRUFF: How do you explain it, David, what happened, with the president acknowledging yesterday that he wasn't on top of it?

DAVID BROOKS: Yes, I think it is politics.

They knew that they — getting this thing passed — we were there — it was hard. And so they were pulling out every political stop in the book. And a lot of those political stops have made it harder now. The first early one was, they were really late in issuing the regulations because they didn't want them to come out during the campaign so Romney could attack them.

As a result, the whole implementation got pushed back, and that's part of the reason the Web site is such a mess. And then they made this political calculation. Then they made the — that they weren't going to tell you there will be losers here. And they made the political calculation there would be no deficit effects. They made a whole series of political calculations.

And, frankly, it hasn't stopped. What the president said this week was a political gesture. He backtracked substantively. It was a pseudo-backtrack, because the state commissioner is not going to go along, because the insurance companies are not going to go along. So, I like the apology. I like the honesty of it. But you have got to have an honest non-political policy to go with it.

And, to me, he's still playing little political games there just to try to get a fewer defections in the House, rather than really coming full out and saying, OK, let's try to fix this.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, that's my question. What could they be saying? What could he be doing and saying at this point to get beyond this?

MARK SHIELDS: Well, in a personal sense, I think the president has to be more resolute.

I mean, it has to be, this is on my watch. In a strange way, all the retrospectives about John Kennedy come back to haunt him at this point. Kennedy at the time of Bay of Pigs came out and said, this is mine. This is my responsibility. I take the blame for it. Success has many fathers. Failure is an orphan. This is mine.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, he said that yesterday. But you're saying he didn't.

MARK SHIELDS: No, he didn't. No, he didn't. He really didn't.

He said, my team. We fumbled.

JUDY WOODRUFF: That's right. That's right.

MARK SHIELDS: It wasn't — it wasn't, this is mine and I'm going to make sure that it never happens again. I mean, this has got to work.

Judy, this is beyond the Obama administration. If this goes down, if the Obama — if health care, the Affordable Care Act is deemed a failure, this is the end — I really mean it — of liberal government, in the sense of any sense that government as an instrument of social justice, an engine of economic progress, which is what divides Democrats from Republicans — that's what Democrats believe.

And that's what Democrats believe. Time and again, social programs have made the difference in this country. The public confidence in that will be so depleted, so diminished, that I really think the change — the equation of American politics changes.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Is your view that dire?

DAVID BROOKS: I agree with that.

I think it's — I don't know if it's permanent, but it will be a severe blow to the idea of expanded liberal governments. My big thought is, are we no longer the kind of country in which you can pass this sort of thing? And by that, I mean, when you were passing the New Deal or the Great Society, there were winners and losers.

But the losers felt part of a larger collective and they said, OK, I'm going to take a hit for the team. We may no longer have that sense of being part of a larger collective, so when you're a loser, you just say, I'm a loser. And, as a result, you're just not willing to be part of the group.

And the penalty for being part of the loser just makes you want to hit whoever made you the loser.

JUDY WOODRUFF: And you're saying that that just doesn't…

DAVID BROOKS: Well, we have lower social trust, lower faith in the institutions, lower sense of collectivity.

And those are deep social trends that have been building for decades, but it just makes it much harder to sustain this kind of big legislation.

MARK SHIELDS: The we-ness of our society, the we, that we're all in it together, has really been diminished.

Now, the one thing that could save the Democrats, having given that apocalyptic assessment, is the Republicans. I mean, nobody in his right mind or her right mind looks at a hearing, a statement, an investigation, a press release given by any Republican and comes to the conclusion that they're really interested in covering people who aren't covered.

They are rooting for failure. I mean, it's so transparent, and so obvious, whether it's Darrell Issa, whether it's Reince Priebus, the chairman. They're just cheering for failure. There's not a sense of what we can do to make this work, or this isn't going to work, but we're going to come up with something better. There just isn't.

DAVID BROOKS: We're sort of not in the business of covering politics anymore. We're in the business of covering this mutual masochism race, where one side stabs themselves in the arm and then the other side stabs themselves in the arm. Whoever does it last loses the election.

JUDY WOODRUFF: That's gruesome.

But do you agree with Mark's point that the Republicans have the ability to — I mean, that, thanks to the Republicans, this may not be the end of what the Democrats believe in?

DAVID BROOKS: Well, I do think the Republicans should come up with an alternative. And a lot of the policy people in the Republican Party have tried to suggest them.

But if you're running for Senate in North Carolina this time or whatever House, marginal House race, if you're a Republican, you don't need an alternative right now. You can just say you're against it, and you will be fine.

JUDY WOODRUFF: All right, less than a minute, quick prediction, sense of it, immigration reform.

House Speaker John Boehner, Mark, said this week he — the House will not take up the Senate-passed legislation. What does it mean? Is immigration on life support? Could it live? What? What do you see?

MARK SHIELDS: I guess it could come back, Judy.

You have the American business community. You have religious leaders, civil rights leaders, Democrats and Republicans, large majorities all in favor of immigration reform. And the speaker has said no. And, apparently, he sees no political cost or calculus involved.

DAVID BROOKS: Yes. He's avoided a short-term blowup to his speakership, because he won't have a fight, but his party has a long-term problem on this issue.

MARK SHIELDS: Right.

DAVID BROOKS: And unless he takes it up, that long-term problem will remain.

JUDY WOODRUFF: All right, well, there is nothing of a problem about Mark and David.

We thank you very much for being with us. Thank you both.


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Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 00:25:33 2013, in response to DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning "fix" to ACA, posted by Olog-hai on Sat Nov 16 22:10:30 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
All agency heads serve "at the pleasure of" the executive. In civil service, the golden rule is "know what to kiss and when." Nothing to see here.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 00:30:45 2013, in response to Lib columnists: ACA failure could "destroy liberal government", posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 00:05:00 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Heh. OK ... let's see what you can dig up from the Village Voice now. :)

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by mr mabstoa on Sun Nov 17 02:53:46 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 00:30:45 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
You are something else!
If its a source you normally approve your answer is "now you believe what what they say!"?
If its a source you don't approve your answer is "I don't believe them, they are not honest"!
Can you please give a list of approved media sources then :/

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by mr mabstoa on Sun Nov 17 02:54:29 2013, in response to Lib columnists: ACA failure could "destroy liberal government", posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 00:05:00 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
YAY!

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 03:29:06 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by mr mabstoa on Sun Nov 17 02:53:46 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Indeed I *am* something else! Geez, guy ... how long you been watching my sidewalk act? I mean really. :)

And no, you've still got it all wrong brah ... if I see it, and it'll generate butthurt, I'ma gonna post it. I don't play that "honesty" game ... subchat has been way past that for years now. Think of me as an alternate Luch, delighting at throwing things over the transom and seeing if fire engines show up. Sheesh.

"Approved media sources?" Nope ... you forget I *was* the media. I know how it works. Now if you'd said "Approved media SOUSES" then I'd be all on board and flinging poo on YOUR side of the fence. But then what fun would THAT be? Heh.

Dewd ... I thought we understood each other ... heh. Politics makes for the BEST comedy.



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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 03:32:40 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by mr mabstoa on Sun Nov 17 02:54:29 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
So PBS is off the hook now? ;)



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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by AlM on Sun Nov 17 03:59:03 2013, in response to Lib columnists: ACA failure could "destroy liberal government", posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 00:05:00 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Liberal government is already dead.

ACA is Romneycare. Income tax rates and welfare spending are way lower than when Reagan was president.



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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 04:12:10 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by AlM on Sun Nov 17 03:59:03 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
He won't be happy until ALL of us are owned by the Maafa (spelling is correct).

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by rockparkman on Sun Nov 17 08:05:23 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 04:12:10 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Who is the Maafa?!?!?

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by Fred G on Sun Nov 17 08:26:33 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by rockparkman on Sun Nov 17 08:05:23 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Mothers Against Animal Fat Appetizers.

They totally ratfucked Ritz Crackers with their demands.

Your pal,
Fred

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Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA

Posted by Chris R16/R2730 on Sun Nov 17 09:40:05 2013, in response to Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA, posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 00:25:33 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Imagine a Republican firing a general for criticizing the Iraq war....one day later.

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Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA

Posted by SMAZ on Sun Nov 17 10:35:03 2013, in response to Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA, posted by Chris R16/R2730 on Sun Nov 17 09:40:05 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Imagine a Republican firing a general for criticizing the Iraq war.



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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SMAZ on Sun Nov 17 10:47:23 2013, in response to Lib columnists: ACA failure could "destroy liberal government", posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 00:05:00 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Am I supposed to care what a right-winger says?

Why was Brooks for this plan when proposed by the GOP before he was against it?

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by Fred G on Sun Nov 17 12:02:50 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by SMAZ on Sun Nov 17 10:47:23 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Why was Brooks for this plan when proposed by the GOP before he was against it?

Cuz that's how they roll. Suddenly the contents are bad if the wrapper is different.

your pal,
Fred

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Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA

Posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 14:56:34 2013, in response to Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA, posted by Chris R16/R2730 on Sun Nov 17 09:40:05 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
All they can do is imagine.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 15:40:25 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by rockparkman on Sun Nov 17 08:05:23 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Glad you asked! The MAAFA is a Kiswahili term for "terrible occurrence" or "great disaster."

https://www.google.com/search?q=Maafa

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by DAnD124 on Sun Nov 17 15:41:20 2013, in response to Lib columnists: ACA failure could "destroy liberal government", posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 00:05:00 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
when did David Brooks become a liberal?

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Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 15:51:11 2013, in response to Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA, posted by SMAZ on Sun Nov 17 10:35:03 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Heh. Whoops. :)

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Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 15:51:31 2013, in response to Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA, posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 14:56:34 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Missed Smaz' post, eh? :)

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 15:53:48 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by DAnD124 on Sun Nov 17 15:41:20 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
When was he anything but a liberal? He self-admittedly started as a liberal and only claimed to be "conservative" when observing which way the wind was blowing. Believing he was conservative at any time is like believing that Mitt Romney is in any way conservative.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 15:54:45 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by SMAZ on Sun Nov 17 10:47:23 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Am I supposed to care what a right-winger says?

Ain't no right-wingers here. Brooks is an historic and current liberal.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 15:56:50 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by Fred G on Sun Nov 17 12:02:50 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
No . . . Brooks is what he is. He was always liberal.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 16:19:11 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 15:53:48 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
So you're suggesting that if a dog farts into the wind, you might become a conseravative? Good thing we have a cat. :)

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 16:20:37 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 16:19:11 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
If a moonbat farts into the wind, David Brooks might become a conservative, to be sure.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 16:37:53 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 16:20:37 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Well there ya are ... release the kraken then!

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Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA

Posted by AlM on Sun Nov 17 20:00:27 2013, in response to Re: DC insurance commissioner fired one day after questioning ''fix'' to ACA, posted by Chris R16/R2730 on Sun Nov 17 09:40:05 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
You do realize, don't you, that the DC Insurance Commissioner serves at the pleasure of the Mayor of Washington, not the President?

Has Bloomberg or Giuliani never fired anyone for publicly disagreeing with him?




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Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare

Posted by mr mabstoa on Mon Nov 18 00:45:26 2013, in response to Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare, posted by bingbong on Sat Nov 9 10:47:22 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
So the Democratic party adopted a plan from the opposition to hurt themselves?

Liberalism IS a mental disorder!

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Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare

Posted by Olog-hai on Mon Nov 18 00:49:31 2013, in response to Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare, posted by mr mabstoa on Mon Nov 18 00:45:26 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Sure, an alleged "plan from the opposition" that none of the opposition voted for. That lie's worn thin rather quickly.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by mr mabstoa on Mon Nov 18 00:51:05 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 03:29:06 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
You win again my brother!

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by Olog-hai on Mon Nov 18 00:52:56 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by SelkirkTMO on Sun Nov 17 00:30:45 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
y u no believe pee-bs?

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Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare

Posted by mr mabstoa on Mon Nov 18 00:53:46 2013, in response to Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare, posted by Olog-hai on Mon Nov 18 00:49:31 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
And a few on the winning side were bribed to pass it.

Now 39 are against something that the opposition created

Hey :)

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Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Mon Nov 18 00:53:52 2013, in response to Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare, posted by Olog-hai on Mon Nov 18 00:49:31 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
So the dems fell for a ruse. And the republicans fell for Obama's ruse and shut down the country, something even Al Qaeda couldn't pull off.

Score: 1 1

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Mon Nov 18 00:55:56 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by mr mabstoa on Mon Nov 18 00:51:05 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
It's not so much about winning as it is about having some fun. Moo. :)

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Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare

Posted by Olog-hai on Mon Nov 18 01:01:26 2013, in response to Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare, posted by mr mabstoa on Mon Nov 18 00:53:46 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
The notion that the Heritage Foundation as a unit would have the government mandate the citizens to buy healthcare is beyond absurd, besides. The whole thing is on Dr. Stuart M. Butler. He specifically said in his report:

Note: Nothing written here is to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of The Heritage Foundation or as an attempt to aid or hinder the passage of any bill before Congress.
. . . but the libs try to paint it as both.

Never mind Butler's about face on that individual mandate.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Mon Nov 18 01:03:09 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by Olog-hai on Mon Nov 18 00:52:56 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
I suppose you can chalk it up to all those years I spent in journalism. I genuinely don't care what anyone else thinks about things. I know how to research and form my own opinions on matters that I care about. These folks have to honor the clock with deadlines and quotas. Whether they care or not, when the bell rings, they have to submit SOMETHING or they're done. When you're on deadline, ordinary care and research go out the window in order to make that deadline with an appropriate length of copy. Period.

I was fortunate except when I did broadcast news. When I write (and I'm still a contributing columnist here and there) I take my time and turn in my story only when I am done or feel like doing so. I'm not on deadline when I research and write stuff up. Makes a hell of a difference in the quality of the work, especially when it's technical writing like I do.

But no, I'm perfectly capable of forming my own opinion, I don't have to wait in line like others to get my turn in front of the dispenser. :)

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Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare

Posted by SelkirkTMO on Mon Nov 18 01:04:45 2013, in response to Re: White House considering expanding subsidy eligibility for healthcare, posted by Olog-hai on Mon Nov 18 01:01:26 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Well gee willikers, Doctor Science ... then how did it become law? :)

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SMAZ on Mon Nov 18 01:24:01 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by Olog-hai on Sun Nov 17 15:54:45 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Brooks is an historic and current liberal.

Brooks = AlM of the right-wing.

Dangerous people they are.
Pat Buchanan, Ted Cruz, Michelle Bachmann and Glenn Beck are not dangerous.

People like Brooks are dangerous because they sound reasonable.

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Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government''

Posted by SMAZ on Mon Nov 18 01:37:13 2013, in response to Re: Lib columnists: ACA failure could ''destroy liberal government'', posted by DAnD124 on Sun Nov 17 15:41:20 2013.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Augusto Pinochet is a liberal to Olog.

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