Squat and Squabble

Conflicting viewpoints on topical subjects

  • Latest Posts
  • USA Politics
  • Other Stuff
  • Pop’s Pearls of Wisdom
  • Southpaw’s Ramblings
  • About Us

Obamacare: “beep, beep, beeeeeeeeeeee”

March 14, 2017 by Pops 27 Comments

More Legislation! STAT!

Obamacare is a total catastrophe.
Premiums are skyrocketing, deductibles are climbing higher at every policy renewal, the insurers are running from the exchanges to avoid going broke, and consumers are losing options, coverages, providers, and doctors. Federal expenditures are increasing exponentially. The Obamacare fuse is burning ever shorter, and the only reason it didn’t blow up already is because the Dems postponed the worst part of it until 2017 (not coincidentally, after Obama’s term). The entire healthcare system will continue to meltdown unless somebody does something about this onerous mandate, and Republicans are torn between trying to save the existing system or putting a bullet in its head. It should be called “Fukishimacare,” because that describes this program much more accurately.
President Trump doesn’t have a “plan” (even if he calls it that), but he does have a healthcare “goal.” And it’s up to the legislature to craft the plan that can meet his goal. But in this case, neither the Republicans, Democrats, nor God himself can craft a program that will do what they hope to achieve.
There is just no way that health insurance can cover everybody, all the time, for everything, unless the money coming in equals more than the money going out. That’s called capitalism. Obamacare is not “insurance,” it’s a new federal entitlement that is poorly disguised as a plausible business operation. Just like social security, medicare, medicaid, food stamps, earned income credits, and every other grossly underfunded entitlement program – Obamacare is an infant bankruptcy looking for a place to roost. The Obamacare dog won’t hunt, ever.
And this is why: The Office of the Actuary in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services projected that the National Health Expenditure spending in the U.S. in 2016 was about $3.3 trillion. This amount includes healthcare expenses paid for by government ($1.5 trillion) and by private insurance and out-of-pocket by patients ($1.8 trillion). The 2014 U.S. population was 319 million. Do the math. This means that the government spends about $5,000 on healthcare for each person in the U.S., every year. And the people themselves spend another $6,000 per person, every year. That means that the total expenditure for healthcare is about $11,000 per year for each and every man, woman, and child in the U.S.
If the premiums were to cover 100% of those costs, a family of four would be paying $44,000 per year for health insurance. In 2015, the US per capita income was $29,979. So, the only way to make government healthcare “affordable” is to either reduce costs or reduce coverage. Pre-existing condition exclusions, lower reimbursement rates to providers, and lifetime caps are all designed to bring the costs down in relation to the revenues, but admitting those things is politically unacceptable, and raising taxes to increase revenues is unmentionable.

Obamacare is soon to be in a better place.

Total federal revenue from all sources in fiscal year 2015 was about $3.2 trillion. That being the case, nearly half of the entire federal budget is presently expended on less than half of America’s healthcare costs. See the problem?

The reason it won’t work isn’t about the politics, it’s about the economics.

Tweet

Filed Under: USA Politics

Officer Unfriendly

March 12, 2017 by Pops 29 Comments

“One Adam 12, see the man…”

I’m an old white guy, and I never feared the police before. As a child, my peers admired the outreach of “Officer Friendly,” and growing up we were entertained by police shows on TV that portrayed the boys in blue as the good guys, the heroic champions of justice, the protectors of us all. But over the last few decades, that has changed.
Modern police are outfitted like warriors, with body armor and high-powered semi-automatic handguns with large capacity magazines, mace, tasers, riot sticks, and a tactical machine gun in the trunk. Police stations are no longer neighborhood service centers, and walking beat cops have been replaced by mirror sunglassed quasi-soldiers cruising by in dark-windowed SUV’s. Police departments train rooftop snipers, deploy helmeted combat-ready SWAT teams in baklavas and goggles, and operate armored military assault vehicles. Even the fake cops on TV are now portrayed as rough and aggressive outliers who are quick to use violence and excessive force in almost every situation.

The times have changed

Today’s cops are trained very differently than before as well. They are taught that if they fear for their own safety, they may kill. They are told to be assertive, proactive, and use overwhelming force at all times. And they do. A lot. On those occasions when an officer finds it necessary to fire a gun, they will shoot again and again and again, because they are trained to shoot to kill. Center of mass, put them down. The news is filled with the stories of the mentally ill, the intoxicated, the angry, the depressed, and the petty criminals who act erratically, or afraid, or are out of control and aggressive and end up dead at the hands of the police. But is wielding a screwdriver, or a bottle, or even a knife, 20 feet away from armed police, a sufficient threat to justify killing that person? And shooting them four, six, or 17 times? And then there are the stories of the dead citizens who were not a threat to anyone, but they were nevertheless shot by police. The wallet mistaken for a weapon, the cell phone pointed in the wrong direction, the drunk who failed to “show his hands.” Errors favor the police, and people die.  Even an unjustified fear, if felt by a cop, will nearly always justify the shooting of a citizen, armed or not.
Yes, there are many valid arguments supporting the police, who face formidable challenges daily. But when law-abiding citizens are afraid of the police, and worry that they are in danger of being thrown to the ground, or perhaps even shot if they disobey, or move in the wrong manner, or get out of the car during a traffic stop, we have turned an ominous corner.

What would it be like if citizens who feared for their own safety began to shoot the police officers?

I have news for you – that’s already happening……

Tweet

Filed Under: Other Stuff

Spring Break 2017

March 11, 2017 by Pops 27 Comments

Good luck explaining this photo in your next job interview!

Once again, the youth of America escape from the rigors of marching in campus protests, hiding in safe spaces, and repelling assaults upon their fragile sensitivities. There is only so much academic stress that a snowflake can handle before they find a need to return to the seashore, get severely intoxicated, flail around while being mostly naked, and trash public property somewhere other than the quad back on the campus.

So long as nobody gets severely injured or ends up dead, I suppose this annual ritual of higher education is fairly innocuous – a futile exercise of flipping the bird at the “establishment” before they graduate and become part of the system they abhor.

South Beach in Miami

(After all, they will need to earn enough money to pay off the student loans before they can afford to move out of their parents’ house.)


But even after they are grown up, the children still refuse to clean up their room.

Tweet

Filed Under: Other Stuff

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27
  • …
  • 42
  • Next Page »

Log In

Please log into the site.

Search

RSS Fox News

  • Final hurdles cleared to deport Abrego Garcia to Liberia, Trump admin says
    President Donald Trump's administration asks federal judge to approve Kilmar Abrego Garcia's deportation to Liberia, arguing legal hurdles are cleared.
  • Iran smuggled $1B to Hezbollah this year despite US sanctions, Treasury official says
    Iran smuggled at least $1 billion to terrorist proxy Hezbollah despite heavy sanctions this year, according to U.S. Treasury Department officials.
  • ‘Genocide can’t be ignored’: GOP lawmaker backs Trump’s threat of military action in Nigeria
    Trump designates Nigeria as country of concern over Christian killings, with Rep. Riley Moore warning military action possible as U.S. considers sanctions.
  • Vance fires up Marines on military branch's 250th birthday: ‘Kick the enemy’s a-- and come home safe’
    Marine veteran Vice President JD Vance shares personal military stories and vows proper mission support at historic Marine Corps 250th birthday ball in Washington, D.C.
  • Senate could take test vote on new spending bill as early as Sunday afternoon
    A fragile coalition emerged, and Senate Democrats may break with the party to pass a spending bill, potentially ending the shutdown but scoring no healthcare wins.
  • Reckoning looms for politicians as longest government shutdown persists
    Government shutdown enters day 39 as Congress faces political reckoning with both parties at risk of voter backlash over failed negotiations and mounting consequences.
  • Newsom tells Texas crowd taking back House is 'the whole thing' for Democrats in 2026
    The California governor celebrated Proposition 50's victory Saturday, calling the redistricting battle "the whole thing" for Democratic hopes in upcoming midterm elections.
  • Republicans turn their attention to bashing Obamacare as shutdown enters day 39
    Sen. Lindsey Graham called for replacing Obamacare with a better system as Republicans blast the Affordable Care Act amid ongoing government funding disputes.

RSS CNN International

  • Trump pleads not guilty to 34 felony counts
  • READ: Trump indictment related to hush money payment
  • Russian authorities detain suspect over St. Petersburg cafe blast
  • Hundreds of millions at risk from Chinese shopping app malware
  • The haunting Masters meltdown that changed Rory McIlroy's career
    Slumped on his club, head buried in his arm, Rory McIlroy looked on the verge of tears.
  • Scientists film deepest ever fish on seabed off Japan
    Cruising at a depth of 8,336 meters (over 27,000 feet) just above the seabed, a young snailfish has become the deepest fish ever filmed by scientists during a probe into the abyss of the northern Pacific Ocean.
  • See the world's deepest fish
    Scientists captured the unknown snailfish species at a depth of more than 27,000 feet, as part of an expedition in trenches off Japan.
  • The $500 billion beauty industry's 'green' ambitions are a patchwork at best. And they're falling short
    The escalating climate crisis is shifting many people's purchasing patterns and this extends to the $500 billion dollar global beauty industry which is grappling with a range of sustainability challenges across product manufacturing, packaging and disposal.

Archives

  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in