Quote from Misthos:
I have not studied enough of this bill to make a clear opinion yet. However, there is one issue I see come up a lot - and that is the requirement to buy health insurance.
What is everyone's opinion of an uninsured person going to an emergency room for life saving treatment. Should they be turned away? Would you turn them away and let them die?
If you do decide to treat them, doesn't society ultimately bear the cost?
Quote from Misthos:
I have not studied enough of this bill to make a clear opinion yet. However, there is one issue I see come up a lot - and that is the requirement to buy health insurance.
What is everyone's opinion of an uninsured person going to an emergency room for life saving treatment. Should they be turned away? Would you turn them away and let them die?
If you do decide to treat them, doesn't society ultimately bear the cost?
Quote from 4EXJOE:
Yes if they don't have a driver license nor intend to drive.
Remember driving is a privledge, not a right.
Quote from achilles28:
According to the CBO, by 2016, the cheapest family health care plan that Americans will be required to buy under the law will cost $12,000 per year. The average family plan will cost $15,200. A family of four making $88,201 per yearâor more than 400 percent of the poverty levelâwill not receive any federal subsidy to purchase such a plan. They will pay taxes, however, to subsidize the health care purchases of people earning less than 400 percent of poverty.
http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/63118
Quote from peilthetraveler:
So the average policy will run $1,000 to $1,250 per month. Hell, I pay $1100 per month for my house, so this policy will cost me as much as a house.
Funny because one of the selling points for this bill was that americans were going bankrupt and losing their homes because of medical bills, so now its like basically buying a home to keep you from losing your home.
Wow...a family of 4 making 88k after taxes and medical will actually be taking home maybe 35k. I really have to wonder what the lifestyle difference would be now between someone making 88k and someone making 35k per year. Probably nothing as the 35k per year gets the subsidies plus the EIC credit every year. This bill basically just wiped out the standard of living for an entire income bracket.
Quote from stock piker:
You're not forced to purchase insurance on a car you own but don't drive. I see it as a potentially efficient means of distributing the costs of the uninsured, catastrophic liability.
Why should the 21 hick who breaks his neck riding a quad be covered under uninsured hospital care simply because he doesn't feel the need to pay for health insurance?