Election 2020

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  • nots
    Journeyman
    • Jan 2011
    • 2907

    Originally posted by GwynnInTheHall
    What do you consider the middle class?
    I shouldn’t have said middle class...I should have said ‘raise taxes on everyone would be a start’.
    Just for perspective, the federal government took in 3.3 T last year in individual and corporate taxes, which as we know was $1T short of expenses. MFA is expected to cost 3.2T per year according to the Urban Institute*.
    * you can find other organizations where the number is anywhere for 2.8 to 3.6 T.
    I am looking forward to seeing how Sen Warren gets the numbers to balance.

    To specifically answer your question:

    Comment

    • revo
      Administrator
      • Jan 2011
      • 26128

      Mayor Pete surges into 3rd in the latest Iowa Caucus poll, at the expense of Bernie, Harris and Beto, who sinks to a goose egg:

      Code:
      Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucus	Emerson	Warren 23, Biden 23, Sanders 13, [B]Buttigieg 16[/B], Harris 2, Booker 3, Yang 5, Steyer 2, Klobuchar 1, Bullock 4, Gabbard 2, O'Rourke 0, Bennet 1	Tie

      Comment

      • Sour Masher
        MVP
        • Jan 2011
        • 10425

        Originally posted by revo
        Mayor Pete surges into 3rd in the latest Iowa Caucus poll, at the expense of Bernie, Harris and Beto, who sinks to a goose egg:

        Code:
        Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucus	Emerson	Warren 23, Biden 23, Sanders 13, [B]Buttigieg 16[/B], Harris 2, Booker 3, Yang 5, Steyer 2, Klobuchar 1, Bullock 4, Gabbard 2, O'Rourke 0, Bennet 1	Tie
        I had a feeling a move from a moderate was coming, and I thought it would be Mayor Pete. But I was wrong about who he would displace. I figured his uptick would coincide with down numbers for Biden. I still have doubts that he could go the distance based on his age, inexperience in national politics, and, sexual preference (I'd hope we are over the latter, and I know younger people are, but older voters and minority voters, not sure they are).

        Comment

        • GwynnInTheHall
          All Star
          • Jan 2011
          • 9214

          Originally posted by nots
          I shouldn’t have said middle class...I should have said ‘raise taxes on everyone would be a start’.
          Just for perspective, the federal government took in 3.3 T last year in individual and corporate taxes, which as we know was $1T short of expenses. MFA is expected to cost 3.2T per year according to the Urban Institute*.
          * you can find other organizations where the number is anywhere for 2.8 to 3.6 T.
          I am looking forward to seeing how Sen Warren gets the numbers to balance.

          To specifically answer your question:
          https://www.investopedia.com/financi...s-are-you.aspx
          Does she only have to balance it within a Trillion deficit?
          If I whisper my wicked marching orders into the ether with no regard to where or how they may bear fruit, I am blameless should a broken spirit carry those orders out upon the innocent, for it was not my hand that took the action merely my lips which let slip their darkest wish. ~Daniel Devereaux 2011

          Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
          Martin Luther King, Jr.

          Comment

          • Sour Masher
            MVP
            • Jan 2011
            • 10425

            Originally posted by nots
            I shouldn’t have said middle class...I should have said ‘raise taxes on everyone would be a start’.
            Just for perspective, the federal government took in 3.3 T last year in individual and corporate taxes, which as we know was $1T short of expenses. MFA is expected to cost 3.2T per year according to the Urban Institute*.
            * you can find other organizations where the number is anywhere for 2.8 to 3.6 T.
            I am looking forward to seeing how Sen Warren gets the numbers to balance.

            To specifically answer your question:
            https://www.investopedia.com/financi...s-are-you.aspx
            Are those cost estimates in addition to current medicare costs? Also, how much does private insurance cost employees and employers now, on average? A fair comparison would compare only the additonal cost of Med4All above our current medicare and medicaid plans and take into account current costs for insurance. Also, some states already provide additional coverage for children and the poor. Florida, for instance, does that. In such states, looking at how much funding a federal program would free up would be good too.

            Comment

            • Sour Masher
              MVP
              • Jan 2011
              • 10425

              Trump has crazy amounts of money for his campaign already. Record setting--twice as much cash on hand right now than Obama had for his relection bid at this point, and the figure is growing. We see in baseball that the team that spends the most doesn't always win, but it is concerning how much money Trump's side has to play with: https://www.politico.com/news/2019/1...lection-050962

              Comment

              • nots
                Journeyman
                • Jan 2011
                • 2907

                Originally posted by GwynnInTheHall
                Does she only have to balance it within a Trillion deficit?
                I don’t think it’s going to matter, but sure, that would be fine.

                Comment

                • nots
                  Journeyman
                  • Jan 2011
                  • 2907

                  Originally posted by Sour Masher
                  Trump has crazy amounts of money for his campaign already. Record setting--twice as much cash on hand right now than Obama had for his relection bid at this point, and the figure is growing. We see in baseball that the team that spends the most doesn't always win, but it is concerning how much money Trump's side has to play with: https://www.politico.com/news/2019/1...lection-050962
                  All the money in the world didn’t help Hillary last time. I don’t think it’s going to turn the tide for Trump either.

                  Comment

                  • nots
                    Journeyman
                    • Jan 2011
                    • 2907

                    Originally posted by Sour Masher
                    Are those cost estimates in addition to current medicare costs? Also, how much does private insurance cost employees and employers now, on average? A fair comparison would compare only the additonal cost of Med4All above our current medicare and medicaid plans and take into account current costs for insurance. Also, some states already provide additional coverage for children and the poor. Florida, for instance, does that. In such states, looking at how much funding a federal program would free up would be good too.
                    The article DMT posted uses 3.4T instead of the 3.2T I used, but yes those are additional costs.
                    Here it is again:

                    According to new figures: more than the federal government will spend over the coming decade on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid combined.


                    Note the part where Warren’s wealth tax is going to only generate 2.75T over the next decade ($275B/year).

                    Comment

                    • Sour Masher
                      MVP
                      • Jan 2011
                      • 10425

                      Originally posted by nots
                      The article DMT posted uses 3.4T instead of the 3.2T I used, but yes those are additional costs.
                      Here it is again:

                      According to new figures: more than the federal government will spend over the coming decade on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid combined.


                      Note the part where Warren’s wealth tax is going to only generate 2.75T over the next decade ($275B/year).
                      I don't see how she could propose a plan that generates enough revenue to get it done without doing what is never politically viable--raising taxes of the middle class. It won't matter if she tries to explain that they will save money by not paying for insurance or getting offsetting raises, like Bernie has. It just won't work. A substantial tax increase on the majority of Americans will never pass. I'd love to hear the plan B--what less expensive option will she try to get done that adds coverage for the greatest number of un-covered Americans, but that is probably not politically wise for her to get into now as she fends off Bernie on the left. Heck, I'd love to hear the same plan from Bernie, but that won't happen. Neither wants to give ground to the other on hardline support for Med4All.

                      Comment

                      • Kevin Seitzer
                        All Star
                        • Jan 2011
                        • 9175

                        Maybe I don't understand enough about Medicare for All, but why would it be so much more expensive for the United States to implement a single-payer health care system, as opposed to other Western developed countries?

                        I can see in other areas, for example, high-speed train networks and mass transit, why what works in Europe doesn't work in the U.S., because our country is more spread out and many of our big cities are more sprawling, having been based around the automobile rather than the horse and the ox-cart. But I don't particularly see why health care should be vastly different between the U.S. and Europe.

                        If insurance companies and big pharma have to keep their huge cuts that they are currently taking from the system, then sure, we will be much more expensive, but isn't the point of going to single-payer to get rid of all that unproductive overhead?
                        "Jesus said to them, 'Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.'"

                        Comment

                        • Sour Masher
                          MVP
                          • Jan 2011
                          • 10425

                          Originally posted by Kevin Seitzer
                          Maybe I don't understand enough about Medicare for All, but why would it be so much more expensive for the United States to implement a single-payer health care system, as opposed to other Western developed countries?

                          I can see in other areas, for example, high-speed train networks and mass transit, why what works in Europe doesn't work in the U.S., because our country is more spread out and many of our big cities are more sprawling, having been based around the automobile rather than the horse and the ox-cart. But I don't particularly see why health care should be vastly different between the U.S. and Europe.

                          If insurance companies and big pharma have to keep their huge cuts that they are currently taking from the system, then sure, we will be much more expensive, but isn't the point of going to single-payer to get rid of all that unproductive overhead?
                          I've long been perplexed by this as well. Logically, if you keep payments for services and drugs the same (and they should actually go down) and cut out the middle man that is the insurance industry, and the many billions in profits they make, the net cost for Med4All should be less. Yes, it would cost jobs, even if we have a system allowing for supplemental insurance like our current medicare does, but the cost should go down.

                          What I assume that means is that while taxes would go up to pay for health care, on the whole, health care will cost less for Americans, but the key there is that if you are comparing coverage for all vs coverage for all, and we do not have that right now. That health care that was once unavailable will become available to millions who did not have it, so that extra coverage makes the overall cost higher than before. So, both sides are right. It will cost more, but it is also the cheapest way to get coverage for everyone. I assume is we hypothetically bought health insurance for every uninsured American through private insurance carriers, the added cost would exceed 3.2T a year. In short, the difference in cost is the difference between millions uninsured vs everyone insured, minus the cost savings we get by going to a single payer system.

                          Comment

                          • revo
                            Administrator
                            • Jan 2011
                            • 26128

                            Nancy Pelosi's favorability percentage is 44%, the highest in a decade, according to a new CNN poll.

                            Comment

                            • Ken
                              Administrator
                              • Feb 2016
                              • 10979

                              Originally posted by Sour Masher
                              I assume is we hypothetically bought health insurance for every uninsured American through private insurance carriers, the added cost would exceed 3.2T a year.
                              I don't think that is correct. Looking at various sources and assuming worst case, it looks like there are ~50 million uninsured. If we assume the added costs for insuring those individuals exceeds 3.2T, that equates to $64,000 a year for insurance. Average insurance premiums are less than $500 per month for an individual, or $6K annually. So we would be an entire factor of 10 off here.

                              Comment

                              • Teenwolf
                                Journeyman
                                • Jan 2011
                                • 3850

                                The same study that cites a $34 Tn cost for Medicare for All also projects a $50 Tn cost for the current system. Bernie says so at the beginning of this clip. "If we do nothing about health care, I believe the estimate is that we would pay $50 Tn" is his quote.

                                Every study is different. The previous study from the Koch brothers think tank Mercatus had found Medicare for All would cost $32 Tn, but estimated the system as is would cost $34 Tn. I don't believe that any of the studies analyzing cost have show a higher projected cost than the current disastrous system. But that's never mentioned.

                                Larry David was once being heckled, long before any success. Heckler says "I'm taking my dog over to fuck your mother, weekly." Larry responds "I hate to tell you this, but your dog isn't liking it."

                                Comment

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