Rachel Maddow MSNBC‏Verified account @maddow 5m5 minutes ago
should've listed the red states which this will impact the most instead
Rachel Maddow MSNBC‏Verified account @maddow 5m5 minutes ago
If someone would prefer not to purchase healthcare, it is disingenuous to refer to "losing". "Dropping" would be more accurate.It isn't disingenuous. Their presence on the rolls and their premium payments are necessary to the whole thing. Even the republicans recognize this fact. Losing healthy people is very, very bad.
I'm purely talking about the language being used, not what's best or what is a wise choice.I'm sure they're going to agree with that when they voluntarily drop the insurance, get sick and die because they don't have the money to pay for healthcare.
Yep. That's exactly what will happen. Thank god the GOP was there to give them the choice.
There's no defense - I'm asking for a language clarification.Man, this is probably the weirdest defense I've read for this yet.
Why not say they would "drop" their insurance instead of "lose" it, then?It's still considered a "loss" because those people are losing healthcare and the market is losing those premiums. Regardless of whether they want healthcare or not, it's necessary for younger healthy people to pay into the system for it to actually work.
I'm just asking for language clarification.insurance works by having large numbers of people paying into a system, even when healthy, so that the money flowing in can pay for the care of whoever needs it at any given time. expanding health care coverage essential means forcing everyone in society to be involved, whether via a mandate or tax revenue directly paying for a public option/single-payer system.
edit:also, yeah accidents and other unexpected care. if you didn't want health insurance, but then you go to the ER for some surprise health issue or accident, suddenly the system is facing the prospect of eating the costs of saving your life, which in turn would have to be baked into the costs charged for everything else. being willing to take your chances doesn't really make you immortal.
There was a time in my life where I said "no thanks" to health insurance because it added a little to my paycheck, and I had no interest. If I had millions of dollars I wouldn't have gotten it. So I don't think this is true.There are literally zero people that don't want healthcare. There are people that can afford it, people who can't afford it, and people who can afford it but have other priorities. Oh, and people who get it heavily subsidized by their employer instead of the government
The rejection of the ACA was not because people want to die when they get sick or because they think they can afford cancer treatment without any coverage. People who previously had insurance hate the ACA because prices went up. People who didn't, hate the ACA because the coverage is expensive and most plans have shifted to the Republican model of HDHP+HSA which doesn't help most people so they end up paying for nothing. People who could afford it but refuse to because "it won't happen to me" and they would rather buy other luxuries are just shortsighted, not suicidal. People who couldn't afford it received subsidies. Cheap businesses hated the ACA because healthcare is expensive and labor is plentiful so they don't want to cover their employees
None of these groups had the position of "who needs healthcare anyway?"
Right, and those people are definitely "losing" their health insurance, I would say.The vast majority didn't just get insurance because of the fine. The majority on ACA are getting tax credits. With those generous tax credits going away most of them will effectively lose coverage due to not being able to afford it.
Chill out. It's just a question.FUCK THIS.
14 million people will lose it from MEDICAID.
7 million will lose it from EMPLOYER INSURANCE
2 million from the ACA Marketplaces
1 million from other.
And for the record, the 2 million losing from the ACA Marketplace aka non-group insurance will be old people losing insurance they NEED and WANT and being replaces by young, well off healthy people who currently pay the mandate fine instead of insurance.
Thank you for being the only person to even attempt to answer my question. I didn't know those factors about the penalty, so that makes sense.Not that many, IMO. The penalty is easily avoided so long as your employer does not offer you a plan and the least expensive marketplace plan in your state exceeds 8% of your income.
I would guess that the majority of losses will come from Medicaid coverage being dropped and employers dropping plans.
Sure.We can talk about how many of those people were forced to buy into insurance, but likewise I'd like to see how many of that group ended up seeing tangible benefits from having that coverage.
When you have it you tend to use it, which is great for preventative care. And those involuntary buyers still had a real safety net in case of problems.
The bill is awful, and I said that in my last post. I don't understand why so many people are up in arms when I agree that ACHA is awful. I just had a simple question.You do realize it's saying that up to 24 million people who are currently insured will lose Medicade alone? That's not even taking things such as employer insurance into account. That alone is pretty fucking horrifying. People are going to die if this bill gets passed.
Rachel Maddow MSNBC‏Verified account @maddow 5m5 minutes ago
should've listed the red states which this will impact the most instead
There was a time in my life where I said "no thanks" to health insurance because it added a little to my paycheck, and I had no interest. If I had millions of dollars I wouldn't have gotten it. So I don't think this is true.
If someone would prefer not to purchase healthcare, it is disingenuous to refer to "losing". "Dropping" would be more accurate.
I agree it's necessary to have healthy people on to subsidize the sick.
I'm purely talking about the language being used, not what's best or what is a wise choice.
There's no defense - I'm asking for a language clarification.
Why not say they would "drop" their insurance instead of "lose" it, then?
I'm just asking for language clarification.
There was a time in my life where I said "no thanks" to health insurance because it added a little to my paycheck, and I had no interest. If I had millions of dollars I wouldn't have gotten it. So I don't think this is true.
Right, and those people are definitely "losing" their health insurance, I would say.
Chill out. It's just a question.
Thank you for being the only person to even attempt to answer my question. I didn't know those factors about the penalty, so that makes sense.
Sure.
The bill is awful, and I said that in my last post. I don't understand why so many people are up in arms when I agree that ACHA is awful. I just had a simple question.
Fair enough, I had a typo - thanks for pointing that out.First of all, your post said healthcare not health insurance and that is what I was responding to, but let's go with it. I don't argue against the idea that there are plenty of people that choose not to buy health insurance. Both pre and post ACA. My point is that people are doing so because of financial considerations, which is exactly what you stated: "because it added a little to my paycheck" Not because they're cool with the actual consequence of not having coverage.
As for the "if I had millions of dollars" scenario show me one wealthy person without health coverage. You're willing to piss away all your money on one expensive illness? Rich people have more insurance than anyone
So about 3 million from the mandate? You're right, you did answer my question. I was just put off by you telling me to fuck off for some strange reason.Uh, no. I answered your question. You asked how many and I showed where the drops come from.
Mostly medicaid and employer provided insurance. That's 21 of the 24 million. None of these people deal with the mandate at all.
I literally posted the chart that answers your question from the CBO and you ignored the answer.
Anybody who "loses" health insurance is because they can't afford it, not because they don't want it.
edit: The people on medicaid are not "dropping" it in the classical sense. Nor are the employer sponsored people. And this is all semantics, regardless. If you drop insurance because you can no longer afford it, it's not different than losing it.
I'm not assuming anything. I thought Trump has ZERO chance of being the president like 12 months ago and look where we are now.So- I'm assuming this is now almost assuredly DOA in the Senate.
If it even makes it past the House.
Fair enough, I had a typo - thanks for pointing that out.
I was cool with not having coverage. I wouldn't have gotten coverage if I were wealthy. I just considered it to be a waste of money in my youth.
Fair enough, I had a typo - thanks for pointing that out.
I was cool with not having coverage. I wouldn't have gotten coverage if I were wealthy. I just considered it to be a waste of money in my youth.
So about 3 million from the mandate? You're right, you did answer my question. I was just put off by you telling me to fuck off for some strange reason.
I agree that dropping insurance because you can't afford it is the equivalent of losing insurance.
I'm not assuming anything. I thought Trump has ZERO chance of being the president like 12 months ago and look where we are now.
So- I'm assuming this is now almost assuredly DOA in the Senate.
If it even makes it past the House.
Who's going to vote against it ?So- I'm assuming this is now almost assuredly DOA in the Senate.
If it even makes it past the House.
If someone would prefer not to purchase healthcare, it is disingenuous to refer to "losing". "Dropping" would be more accurate.
I agree it's necessary to have healthy people on to subsidize the sick.
Who's going to vote against it ?
Most of that increase would stem from repealing the penalties associated with the individual mandate. Some of those people would choose not to have insurance because they chose to be covered by insurance under current law only to avoid paying the penalties, and some people would forgo insurance in response to higher premiums.
For the majority of my life ACA was not a thing. I have been talking about a single payer system for nearly 20 years. Yet we are no closer today to making it a reality than we were 20 years ago.
Short answer is NO.
Long answer is that prior to ACA there were programs that paid for basic healthcare care but few people qualified and even fewer knew about them. Also it varied from state to state.
I'll believe it when we see the final votes in the Senate. Until then I'll assume that these fucks fall in line like they did with Devos.
I expect the GOP shills to parrot the deficit savings every time anyone brings up loss of coverage. "No, I wont answer your question, but look over here! More money for the military!"
Ben Casselman‏Verified account @bencasselman 2m2 minutes ago
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Key context for the CBO's est. that AHCA would reduce deficit by $337 billion: Projected deficit is $8.6 TRILLION over same period.
Who's going to vote against it ?
There was a time in my life where I said "no thanks" to health insurance because it added a little to my paycheck, and I had no interest. If I had millions of dollars I wouldn't have gotten it.
Who's going to vote against it ?
If we're going to axe something, take a look at how much we spend on military spending. That'll never happen though.
I still don't see the need to be so disrespectful. My sentence had an "if" because it was demonstrating a hypothetical - it wasn't an opinion I was pushing.I didn't tell you to fuck off. I said "fuck this," as in "It seems to me that if 14 million people didn't want it before, and will drop it after ACHA, it's a bit disingenuous to frame the situation as people "losing" their insurance." And poor people.
Fuck this! This whole premise. Fuck it! Because it's not correct! So I showed why.
"3 million from the mandate." No. In fact, I'd argue zero. Or close to it. Because almost all the people in the marketplaces dropping insurance are going to be older people who can no longer afford it which you agree is the same as losing it.
The funny thing about the AHCA is that there will be a higher percentage of healthy, younger people in the pool than under the ACA with the mandate. Of course, that was the case pre-ACA too.
So while the marketplaces will drop in amount of people covered, it will also SHIFT who is covered. And the people dropping insurance will almost entirely not be from the mandate because the mandate fine is too small. but almost exclusively from middle aged and almost elderly people who can no longer afford it.
I think it's losing if people wanted it and can't keep it, and that seems to be most of the cases.No, it's losing. The mechanism which caused them to buy insurance and pay premiums will be removed. When that happens they are lost from the rolls. There is nothing disingenuous or inaccurate about it. The mandate is a fundamental pillar and it's keeping people in. If the pillar goes away those who were in but now aren't were lost.
Legislators have it good - they should share.Oddly enough, nobody in Congress says "no thanks" to their health insurance (even pre-ACA), despite them having a payroll deduction for their portion.
Glad I won't have healthcare so a fucking dickwad can buy an extra yacht.
The GOP fucking over one of their most loyal demographics, older voters. I can only hope the fear of being left to die without affordable health coverage is something they care more about than bigotry.
Colorado single payer vote was a pretty resounding no. Also, I don't live in any of those states. The discussion at Fed level is almost non existent.