Posted by examinerebb on 11/4/2014 9:17:00 AM (view original):
Obamacare never had a shot to lower healthcare premiums. Sure, it was sold that way to Americans who either wanted to believe or weren't paying attention (or both), but the number of healthy individuals you'd have to sign up to balance the scales is unattainable, especially with the toothless penalties. Obamacare was designed to put us one step closer to the single-payer system liberals love so much. We are now at a point where Obamacare can't be repealed, because anyone seeking to do so would be shouted down with the "you can't take coverage away from people" emotional rhetoric. Much like meaningful welfare reform can't be approached without the "you can't take money away from poor people" shouting. We'll soon be hearing the argument that it's inhumane to take insurance away from the American people, and that these numbers would change if everyone were buying their insurance through the same place. That the government can't exercise the leverage needed to lower premiums without more people on the government exchange plans. The same people who believed before will believe that as well, and welcome to single-payer. Kudos to the liberals for pulling it off. Once again they've created an expanded base of invested voters, to the great detriment of many working Americans.
The worst part is, the conservatives have brought this on themselves. Their inability to make any kind of rational argument, with common sense clearly on their side in many cases, is unbelievably disheartening. They're too easily distracted by meaningless B.S. (I couldn't give a sh*t if Obama played golf right after a press conference on ISIS - I'd want to play golf and download for a few hours too if the fate of the free world rested largely on my shoulders) to put together a resonant argument in favor of what's best for the country. Maybe they don't even know. I fear we're at a point now where people become politicians for the fame and money. If no one truly cares about doing right by the American people, pandering to the lowest common denominator is the easiest, most effective way to keep the camera time and campaign contributions coming. And both parties seem content to do just that.
This is a two-way street really. Yes, conservatives are to blame for not making a rational argument. The problem is that the people you are trying to reach don't respond to rational arguments.
I've had discussions about a myriad of issues (yes I have an opinion on them first, so I have taken a side), only to find that almost nobody I talk to understands anything about what they believe and why they believe it. For example:
1. What happens when tax rates go down across the board (and the associated provable facts of what happens to treasury revenue and share of the tax burden)?
2. Is a 400% interest rate on small value short term loans (otherwise known as payday loans) "insane" or "predatory"? Why or why not?
3. If government limits the price that doctors are allowed to charge, what happens to the supply of doctors? (See what happens when usury limits are applied to the payday loan industry)
4. Is CEO pay too high? Why or why not? (Should the
government do something about that?
5. Is the right to choose abortion for women based on whether the fetus is a life? (You'd be surprised at what people cite for justification for choice)
These are just a few. I bring them up because in my experience, it doesn't matter how rational your argument is when people are irrational in their expectations and not motivated enough to peal back their own layers of thought. Try having a rational conversation about abortion with people. It happens, but it's pretty rare. In my case, I know there is a rational side to the pro-choice argument - I disagree with it, but it can be discussed. But the public argument is nothing but hysterics and misrepresentation.
With an agenda-driven press (I know this from personal family experience) and power hungry politicians in both parties, you won't get rationality unless the public as a whole demands it. The public is way too concerned with their tech devices and pop culture to care about substance....or becoming rational.