Forum Shop Market
Seeds FAQ Tools
SEE OUR MARIJUANA SEED GUIDE FOR THE BEST STRAINS
Looking for Legal Marijuana look no further!
Go Back   Marijuana Growing > Cannabis Cafe > Politics


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1    
Old 12-17-2007, 08:13 PM
ViRedd's Avatar
Marijuana EXPERT
Mr. Ganja
ViRedd is offline
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Socialist Republic of Kalifornia
Posts: 12,114
ViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond reputeViRedd has a reputation beyond repute
Points: 44,744, Level: 30 Points: 44,744, Level: 30 Points: 44,744, Level: 30
Activity: 10% Activity: 10% Activity: 10%
Default Ron Paul on Health Care ...
Lowering the Cost of Health Care
by Ron Paulby Ron Paul
As a medical doctor, I’ve seen first-hand how bureaucratic red tape interferes with the doctor-patient relationship and drives costs higher. The current system of third-party payers takes decision-making away from doctors, leaving patients feeling rushed and worsening the quality of care. Yet health insurance premiums and drug costs keep rising. Clearly a new approach is needed. Congress needs to craft innovative legislation that makes health care more affordable without raising taxes or increasing the deficit. It also needs to repeal bad laws that keep health care costs higher than necessary.

We should remember that HMOs did not arise because of free-market demand, but rather because of government mandates. The HMO Act of 1973 requires all but the smallest employers to offer their employees HMO coverage, and the tax code allows businesses – but not individuals – to deduct the cost of health insurance premiums. The result is the illogical coupling of employment and health insurance, which often leaves the unemployed without needed catastrophic coverage.

While many in Congress are happy to criticize HMOs today, the public never hears how the present system was imposed upon the American people by federal law. As usual, government intervention in the private market failed to deliver the promised benefits and caused unintended consequences, but Congress never blames itself for the problems created by bad laws. Instead, we are told more government – in the form of “universal coverage” – is the answer. But government already is involved in roughly two-thirds of all health care spending, through Medicare, Medicaid, and other programs.

For decades, the U.S. healthcare system was the envy of the entire world. Not coincidentally, there was far less government involvement in medicine during this time. America had the finest doctors and hospitals, patients enjoyed high-quality, affordable medical care, and thousands of private charities provided health services for the poor. Doctors focused on treating patients, without the red tape and threat of lawsuits that plague the profession today. Most Americans paid cash for basic services, and had insurance only for major illnesses and accidents. This meant both doctors and patients had an incentive to keep costs down, as the patient was directly responsible for payment, rather than an HMO or government program.

The lesson is clear: when government and other third parties get involved, health care costs spiral. The answer is not a system of outright socialized medicine, but rather a system that encourages everyone – doctors, hospitals, patients, and drug companies – to keep costs down. As long as “somebody else” is paying the bill, the bill will be too high.

The following are bills Congress should pass to reduce health care costs and leave more money in the pockets of families:

HR 3075 provides truly comprehensive health care reform by allowing families to claim a tax credit for the rising cost of health insurance premiums. With many families now spending close to $1000 or even more for their monthly premiums, they need real tax relief – including a dollar-for-dollar credit for every cent they spend on health care premiums – to make medical care more affordable.

HR 3076 is specifically designed to address the medical malpractice crisis that threatens to drive thousands of American doctors – especially obstetricians – out of business. The bill provides a dollar-for-dollar tax credit that permits consumers to purchase "negative outcomes" insurance prior to undergoing surgery or other serious medical treatments. Negative outcomes insurance is a novel approach that guarantees those harmed receive fair compensation, while reducing the burden of costly malpractice litigation on the health care system. Patients receive this insurance payout without having to endure lengthy lawsuits, and without having to give away a large portion of their award to a trial lawyer. This also drastically reduces the costs imposed on physicians and hospitals by malpractice litigation. Under HR 3076, individuals can purchase negative outcomes insurance at essentially no cost.

HR 3077 makes it more affordable for parents to provide health care for their children. It creates a $500 per child tax credit for medical expenses and prescription drugs that are not reimbursed by insurance. It also creates a $3,000 tax credit for dependent children with terminal illnesses, cancer, or disabilities. Parents who are struggling to pay for their children's medical care, especially when those children have serious health problems or special needs, need every extra dollar.

HR 3078 is commonsense, compassionate legislation for those suffering from cancer or other terminal illnesses. The sad reality is that many patients battling serious illnesses will never collect Social Security benefits – yet they continue to pay into the Social Security system. When facing a medical crisis, those patients need every extra dollar to pay for medical care, travel, and family matters. HR 3078 waives the employee portion of Social Security payroll taxes (or self-employment taxes) for individuals with documented serious illnesses or cancer. It also suspends Social Security taxes for primary caregivers with a sick spouse or child. There is no justification or excuse for collecting Social Security taxes from sick individuals who literally are fighting for their lives.


August 23, 2006










Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
__________________
Liberals are people that will believe anything twice.
Reply With Quote
  #2    
Old 12-18-2007, 12:44 PM
medicineman's Avatar
Marijuana EXPERT
Mr. Ganja
medicineman is offline
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: North of mexico and south of Canada
Posts: 12,604
medicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond reputemedicineman has a reputation beyond repute
Points: 40,508, Level: 28 Points: 40,508, Level: 28 Points: 40,508, Level: 28
Activity: 18% Activity: 18% Activity: 18%
Well that is not good enough for me. That has no provision for universal coverage which is what is needed. Also I take offense with this: HR 3076 is specifically designed to address the medical malpractice crisis that threatens to drive thousands of American doctors – especially obstetricians – out of business. This Bill would shift the liability to the patient. The doctor would not be responsible for malpractice. This would allow bad doctors off the hook for mutilating a patient and causing irreparable harm. I agree that frivolous lawsuits should be quashed, but legitimate malpractice mutilation with long term effects should be compensated and the doctor held accountable.

Untill the country accepts universal health care and removes the profit from the medical corporate giants, there will be strife in the medical community and in the general community. A no profit universal health care system can and would be feasable if we could convince those congressmen to stop taking money from the medical corporations. We must enact Lobby reform first, then hold their feet to the fire. The end result would be well worth it.
__________________
Life is good, the water is sweet. The ground keeps moving beneath my feet.
 

Tags
care, health, paul, ron

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Thread

Thread Starter

Forum

Replies

Last Post

Capitalism and health care medicineman Politics 27 10-07-2007 12:20 PM
No Health Care? ViRedd Politics 3 09-06-2007 12:20 AM
Health care medicineman Politics 10 02-05-2007 04:51 PM
The case for national health care medicineman Politics 0 11-28-2006 11:35 PM
Health care, a light at the end of the tunnel medicineman Politics 0 11-16-2006 12:37 AM

Posting Rules

You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Come Check out a new Poker Forum for the online poker community

All times are GMT -7. The time now is 05:32 PM.
Powered by vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2009 Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.

Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.3.2