Jump to content

The Affordable Care Act II - Because Mr. Obama Loves You All


Recommended Posts

GOOD LORD: Terminally ill baby Charlie Gard’s parents ‘utterly distraught’ after losing final appeal in European court – meaning their son’s life support WILL be switched off.

 

It gets worse:

 

Chris Gard, 32, and Connie Yates, 31, wanted to take their 10-month-old son – who suffers from a rare genetic condition and has brain damage – to the US to undergo a therapy trial.

Doctors at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children in London, where Charlie is being cared for, said they wanted him to be able to ‘die with dignity’.

But the couple, from Bedfont, west London, raised almost £1.4million so they could take their son to America but a series of courts ruled in favour of the British doctors.

It comes after specialists at Great Ormond Street said therapy in the US is experimental and will not help and added that life support should stop.

And after losing legal battles in the UK, Charlie’s parents were hoping judges in Strasbourg, France, would come to their aid.

But on Tuesday afternoon, the ECHR rejected a last-ditch plea and their ‘final’ decision means the baby’s life support machine will be switched off.

The ECHR announced the application to the court by the parents was ‘inadmissible’ and added that
their decision was ‘final’.

 

 

 

The single payer calls the shots.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's how it goes. Canada never legalized the use of Thalidomide... quite fortunately. Terrible tragedies make for very harsh decisions. We've rejected a few contoversial US treatments in Canada recently, who knows how it would have gone.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

The federal funding myth has already been debunked numerous times. (blue states subsidizing red states lie).

 

These studies use the metric of % of federal funds that constitute a state's budget. This means that red states (low state taxes) have a higher proportion of their budget tied to federal funds than blue states (high state taxes) along with large disparities in population density that leads to higher infrastructure costs (roads) per capita.

 

Like the wage gap myth, it's about looking into how the numbers were gathered.

 

The best way to see who are the freeloaders is looking at welfare costs per capita, and 9/10 states are all blue, with NY and California leading the way (because cost of living is so high). Which makes sense.

 

-when something looks wrong, you should always ask yourself why.

 

That makes sense and I appreciate the clarification. Is their a link you used to get those stats? Basically, poorer deep red states keep their costs of living down making consumption standards higher for the poor and middle class while it's the opposite in the "richer" deep blue states where income and consumption inequality is higher.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Terri Schiavo was an American.

 

Completely different.

 

Single payer and Charlie Gard: When euthanasia becomes a duty

 

FTA:

 

The couple had raised nearly £1.4 million for that effort, which would have ended NHS involvement in the case, but the courts decided that they — and not the parents — were in position to decide that death rather than potential treatment was what was best for the child. Now the parents cannot even take the baby home to allow him to die there rather than in hospital, even though they pledged to cover all the costs:

 

Note that there was no disagreement between the parents over the course of care they wanted for Charlie. The two of them have lived at the hospital with their baby, and have been equally united in their desire to try anything to save his life. This is not a dispute between relatives over who should have control over care (as was the issue in the Terri Schiavo case) but whether the state or the parents should have the final say. In a single-payer system such as NHS, the courts have clearly ruled that the state has more standing on whether to allow someone to die than the person or his/her nearest relations. And now, the state — through its socialized-medicine providers — refuse to even allow the death to take place under the circumstances desired by the family.

 

Critics have long warned that the embrace of euthanasia would eventually transform it from a choice to a duty, and that certainly seems to be what happened in the tragic case of Charlie Gard.

 

You’ll see it a lot, and eventually not just in Europe, either. Socialized medicine requires rationing by the state rather than by private-market forces, and that will be true in the US if we continue to go down the single-payer sinkhole.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Medicaid Spending Caps Are More Complex Than They Seem

 

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/449054/senate-health-care-bills-medicaid-caps-are-more-complicated-you-think

 

Much has been said about the per capita spending caps on Medicaid in the Senate health-care bill. But little attention has been paid to the fact that the spending caps are not uniform. Most importantly, there are special rules for the disabled and the elderly, who together account for about one-quarter of Medicaid enrollment.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Should markets determine who receives healthcare and who doesn't though? Incorporated insurance companies are required by law to make as much money as possible, and the less care they give, the bigger their profits are. That's a great system for making money, but a poor system for providing healthcare.

 

As far as doctor shortages, the answer to that is to subsidize the higher education disciplines that are in demand (and also to think twice about giving money to people getting a communications degree).

Uh, can you show me where this law is?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As in the earlier pieces I linked to, we are seeing anti-single-payer people say, “this is what happens when government takes over,” and others criticize insurance companies..................

 

But Charlie Gard is not being denied resources. In fact, his parents have raised money for treatment in the U.S. This is about *power*.

 

 

 

 

Specifically this is about who makes the medical decision to give up: the state or his parents. State says he must die—for his own good.

 

 

Again, it’s not that the state is saying, “we won’t provide more help.” It’s actively saying he has to die. *That* is the problem here

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We follow common law.

 

Why don't you ask a lawyer that you may know in how the Newmark decision codifies the common law that corporations are required by law to make as much money as possible.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

https://www.reddit.com/r/law/comments/3pv8bh/is_it_really_true_that_corporations_are_legally/

 

It's all laid out there better than I have the time to write about.

I stupidly ignored GG's advice and read your link and it does not back up your claims. You basically said that insurance companies are required to charge as much as they can and give out as little as they can. That's why capitalism and competition are so great. It keeps those big bad corporations in check. The only time things get out of whack is when the government steps in and tries to upend market forces.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I stupidly ignored GG's advice and read your link and it does not back up your claims. You basically said that insurance companies are required to charge as much as they can and give out as little as they can. That's why capitalism and competition are so great. It keeps those big bad corporations in check. The only time things get out of whack is when the government steps in and tries to upend market forces.

Or when the government effectively creates and sanctions monopoly via regulation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We follow common law.

 

In 1999, Justice Stephen Breyer protested the Court’s refusal to hear the appeal of a prisoner who argued that spending more than two decades on death row amounted to cruel and unusual punishment, and thus violated the Eighth Amendment. Quoting legal opinions from Jamaica, India, Zimbabwe, and the European Court of Human Rights, Breyer observed in a dissenting opinion in Knight v. Florida that “a growing number of courts outside the United States . . . have held that lengthy delay in administering a lawful death penalty renders ultimate execution inhuman, degrading or unusually cruel.”

 

More recently, in an opinion concurring with the Court’s decision to uphold the affirmative-action program at the University of Michigan Law School, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg relied on the United Nations’ International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Any excuse not to read is a good one.

 

I read it. It's still moronic.

 

I also read eBay v Newmark. It doesn't say anything about "corporations must make as much money as possible." It does say that corporations should maximize shareholder benefit, which is not even remotely the same thing.

 

But you're going to claim it is the same thing, I'm sure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

I read it. It's still moronic.

 

I also read eBay v Newmark. It doesn't say anything about "corporations must make as much money as possible." It does say that corporations should maximize shareholder benefit, which is not even remotely the same thing.

 

But you're going to claim it is the same thing, I'm sure.

 

When the corporations have a fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders (as is the case for insurance companies), it is the same thing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

When the corporations have a fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders (as is the case for insurance companies), it is the same thing.

Things that are different are not the same.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...