Our nation's debt is literally indenturing our children to our international debt holders, but most Americans don't care because they are more concerned about the latest saga involving Snooki on Jersey Shore rather than what really matters, our country’s future.
Showing posts with label healthcare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healthcare. Show all posts

Monday, September 13, 2010

15,000 in Valley vie for jobs at McDonald's

But don't worry your 401k is safe and "Dear Leader" says its your duty as good little Americans to borrow money to buy useless crap from Chinamart.

The middle class is dead in America and you can thank your elected politicians for selling you out to China and India for campaign donations.

15,000 in Valley vie for jobs at McDonald's

More than 15,000 people hoping to land one of 800 to 1,000 part-time jobs available at Arizona McDonald's poured into Valley restaurants Wednesday to fill out forms and interview with store managers.

The seven-hour on-site hiring campaign was spurred by the popularity of the fast-food chain's expanded McCafe product line. The success of recently released beverages such as the frappe and smoothie has fueled employee growth for McDonald's restaurants in Arizona, area supervisor Jerry Gehrke said.

About 100 people applied in person for entry-level positions at each of the 166 restaurants in metropolitan Phoenix. Most locations had anywhere from three to eight openings, ranging from cooking to operating the cash register to performing janitorial duties. Wages begin at $7.25 per hour and increase depending on an applicant's experience, Gehrke said.

"We are seeing college students, professionals out of the workforce, moms and high-school graduates applying for these jobs," Gehrke said. "It's a little bit unusual to see so much diverse work experience."

In other news on the employment front Harley Davidson employees voted for a new contract, which freezes their pay for seven-years, slashes hundreds of jobs and assigns large volumes of the work to part-time workers, who get no healthcare benefits. If the employees had rejected the deal, Harley has said it would have moved its Wisconsin operations to another state, leaving about 1,350 employees out of work. My question is when did China become the 51st state?

Yes, things are "dire" in the labor market but you don't have to take my word for it. Dire is how the IMF describes the situation. However, the solution is not more borrowing as suggested by the IMF as that is the root of the problem.

Americans forgot that they can't live by borrowing money. But we get it now and if we could only get our leaders to understand this very simple concept then things might get back on track.

Friday, April 9, 2010

The Massachusetts Insurance Blackout - Insurers go on strike after Deval Patrick imposes price controls

This week it became impossible in Massachusetts for small businesses and individuals to buy health-care coverage after Governor Deval Patrick imposed price controls on premiums. Read on, because under ObamaCare this kind of political showdown will soon be coming to an insurance market near you.

The Massachusetts small-group market that serves about 800,000 residents shut down after Mr. Patrick kicked off his re-election campaign by presumptively rejecting about 90% of the premium increases the state's insurers had asked regulators to approve. Health costs have run off the rails since former GOP Governor Mitt Romney and Beacon Hill passed universal coverage in 2006, and Mr. Patrick now claims price controls are the sensible response to this ostensibly industry greed.


If you are even a little bit surprised you need to get your head out of your a**. Welcome to the future of Healtcare in America. The best part of the editorial though is the following:

One irony is that Mr. Patrick's own Attorney General and his insurance regulators have concluded—to their apparent surprise—that the reason Massachusetts premiums are the highest in the nation is the underlying cost of health care, not the supposed industry abuses that Mr. Patrick and his political mentor President Obama like to cite.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Healthcare Bill to Cause U.S. Hyperinflation By 2015

Very scary stuff.


FORT LEE, N.J., March 20 /PRNewswire/ -- The National Inflation Association - http://inflation.us - today issued a warning to all Americans of a potential outbreak of hyperinflation in the U.S. by year 2015 caused primarily by the healthcare bill and rising interest payments on our national debt.

Medicare was created in 1966 at a cost of $3 billion per year and the House Ways and Means Committee estimated in 1966 that in 1990 the cost of Medicare would reach $12 billion per year. Instead, the actual cost of Medicare in 1990 was $107 billion (792% more than what was projected) and today Medicare costs $408 billion annually. In 2003, the White House Office of Management and Budget estimated that the Iraq War would have a total cost of $50 to $60 billion. So far, we have already spent $713 billion on the Iraq War (over 1,000% more than what was projected).

The Congressional Budget Office is estimating that the healthcare bill will cost $940 billion over the next 10 years, but if history is any indication, the actual cost will likely be several trillion dollars. NIA believes the healthcare bill will be the final nail in the coffin of the U.S. economy and will just about guarantee that we will see hyperinflation by the year 2015.

The U.S. government last week reported a record monthly budget deficit for February 2010 of $220.9 billion. Total tax receipts for the month were only $107.5 billion compared to outlays of $328.4 billion. The total U.S. deficit for the first five months of fiscal year 2010 was $651.6 billion, with tax receipts of $800.5 billion and outlays of $1.45 trillion. The deficit was up 10.5% for the first five months of fiscal year 2010 over the same period in fiscal year 2009.

We are now at a point where if the U.S. government taxed Americans 100% of their income, the tax receipts generated would not be enough to balance the budget. Likewise, if the U.S. government cut 100% of its spending including defense, but kept paying Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, we would still have a budget deficit. NIA believes it will be impossible for the U.S. to have a balanced budget ever again.

The U.S. national debt is now $12.67 trillion of which $8.061 trillion is public debt. Due to the Federal Reserve's artificially low interest rates of 0% to 0.25%, interest payments on our national debt last month were only $16.9 billion, an interest rate of only 2.548% on our public debt. The reason for the spread between our 2.548% interest rate on the public debt and the federal funds rate of 0 to 0.25% is that a portion of our national debt is made up of long-term bonds at higher interest rates.

Our debt ceiling was recently raised to $14.3 trillion, which we are on track to reach in less than a year, sending our public debt up to about $10 trillion. If the Federal Reserve raises the federal funds rate up to just 2% during the next year, NIA believes the interest rate on our public debt could rise to 5% and our annual interest payments will likely rise to $500 million or 23% of projected 2010 tax receipts of $2.165 trillion.

The White House is not projecting for interest payments on the national debt to break the $500 million mark until fiscal year 2014. By then, even if we go by White House projections that the deficit will be cut to $828 billion in 2012, $727 billion in 2013 and $706 billion in 2014, in 2014 we will still be looking at a national debt of over $18.5 trillion with a public portion of around $13.14 trillion. We find it shocking that the White House is projecting an interest rate on our public debt in 2014 of only around 4%.

All of this means that the While House expects the Federal Reserve to leave interest rates at artificially low levels almost indefinitely. However, we know it will be impossible for them to do so without creating a huge outbreak of inflation in the prices of food, energy, clothing, and just about everything else Americans need to live and survive. In order to prevent hyperinflation, we need interest rates to be higher than the rate of inflation.

NIA believes the real rate of U.S. inflation to already be approximately 5%. If the Federal Reserve doesn't raise the federal funds rate to above 5% in the short-term, in our opinion, an outbreak of double-digit inflation is inevitable. By 2014, it is possible the Federal Reserve will be forced to raise the federal funds rate up to above 10% and the public portion of our national debt could exceed $15 trillion. Therefore, in 2014 we could see the interest payments on our national debt reach $1.5 trillion, about triple what is currently being projected and 43% of the government's projected tax receipts that year of $3.455 trillion.

Besides the cost of the healthcare bill and rising interest payments on our national debt, another major catalyst for hyperinflation will be social security payments, which adjust to the CPI-index. As the government's CPI-index rises, so will the social security payments that it owes. This could cause a death-spiral in the U.S. dollar. Inflation is still the last thing on the minds of most Americans, but soon it will be their primary concern.

To receive NIA's latest updates about inflation and the economy, sign-up for the free NIA newsletter at: http://inflation.us

About us:

The National Inflation Association is an organization that is dedicated to preparing Americans for hyperinflation. The NIA offers free membership at http://www.inflation.us and provides its members with articles about the economy and inflation, news stories, important charts not shown by the mainstream media; YouTube videos featuring Jim Rogers, Marc Faber, Ron Paul, Peter Schiff, and others; and profiles of gold, silver, and agriculture companies that we believe could prosper in an inflationary environment.

Contact: Gerard Adams, 1-888-99-NIA US (1888-996-4287), editor@inflation.us


SOURCE National Inflation Association

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Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Companies’ Charges Prompt a Hearing

Why should we surprised that the Democrats are calling fortune 500 companies on the carpet. All they will do is yell at the CEOs and belittle them and blame them for all of societies problems. What we won't hear in these hearings is how we can help these companies relocate their overseas production facilities to the U.S. or what these companies need to get more workers working.


By Elizabeth Williamson

Even before AT&T Inc. said Friday that it will take a $1 billion charge in the first-quarter because of the new health-care law, the issue was front-and-center with key lawmakers.

Earlier this week, Caterpillar Inc., Deere & Co., and AK Steel Holding Corp. announced their own hefty one-time charges.

Almost immediately, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman of California and Rep. Bart Stupak of Michigan, chairman of the Oversight and Investigations panel, announced plans to hold an April 21 hearing on “claims by Caterpillar, Verizon, and Deere that provisions in the new health care reform law could adversely affect their company’s ability to provide health insurance to their employees. These assertions appear to conflict with independent analyses, which show that the new law will expand coverage and bring down costs.”

The committee wants the companies’ CEOs testify and provide evidence of the law’s projected impact.


Friday, January 8, 2010

From the WSJ: Medicare and the Mayo Clinic- The famous hospital will no longer take some senior patients

Earlier this week the famous Mayo Clinic stated that it would no longer me accepting some Medicare patients. The reason they gave is very simple, they can't afford it anymore. The Mayo Clinic lost $840 Million last year because of the rates medicare reimburses for services. Now remember part of the new healthcare plan is that they plan to cut $500 Billion in medicare costs over the next decade to save money so they can spend it on Obamacare. So if private hospitals are losing money already what happens when they get reimbursed even less over the next decade. The end result is that we are all going to have to either bailout the Healthcare Industry or just take it over like Frannie and Freddie. We need good solutions to keep healthcare costs down but the garbage coming out of Washington is only going to make it worst.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703436504574640711655886136.html

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Open Letter to Congress To Stop Healthcare Reform

Below is the letter I sent to my Senators and Congressman. I urge you to let your represenatives know how you feel about the $900 billion being spent on healthcare reform.

Dear Senator/Congressman,

I urge you to please support real heath care reform and not the nonsense that is currently being discussed in the House and the Senate.

1. Allow private individuals to deduct 100% of any costs related to medical expenses.
2. Allow Doctors/Hospitals to deduct the full cost of services (using the applicable Medicare formula) that are preformed free of charge for all indigent patients or those who are unable to afford insurance.
3. Stop States from dictating what procedures and tests must be covered by an insurance plan and then preventing people from purchasing insurance for other states.
4. Eliminate federal regulations that discourage small businesses from providing coverage.
5. Give doctors the freedom to collectively negotiate with insurance companies and drive down the cost of medical care.
6. Make every American eligible for a Health Savings Account (HSA), and removing the requirement that individuals must obtain a high-deductible insurance policy before opening an HSA.
7. Enact real Tort Reform for medical malpractice.

Currently the legislation contemplated in the House and Senate is estimated to cost $900 Billion dollars. During good times this type of legislation would be fiscally irresponsible but in a recession it is completely unacceptable. In order to keep the cost for these new programs under $900 Billion the CBO has done some very creative math, which we usually only see on Wall Street right before we have a market crash or a company files for bankruptcy. Most of these new programs do not start until July 1, 2013. Why make the American people wait so long if this is so urgent it needs to be done before the end of this year? Because when CBO estimates how much a piece of legislation is going to cost, it only looks at the next 10 years. By waiting four years to start the expensive parts they make it look less expensive, without it being any less expensive. This preliminary analysis looks at 2010-2019. It doesn't take much more than third grade math to see why starting programs in 2013 (also everyone in Congress will have been reelected before this legislation goes into effect) artificially manipulates the cost estimate. A close observer will also note that one of the most consistent changes in the new draft of the Baucus summary is shifting many start dates from January 1, 2013 to July 1, 2013--cutting 6 extra months of costs out of the CBO estimate. A quick calculation says that if this bill costs $829 billion from mid-2013 through 2019, that's actually about $1.3 trillion over 10 years ($829/78 months = ~$10.6 billion/month x 120 months).

Reading further, there are several other red flags present in the CBO analysis. Enactment of the Baucus approach will add approximately $900 billion to the federal budget. That money will have to come from somewhere. Half of it will come from massive cuts in Medicare Advantage, while the other half will be generated by new taxes on high-end insurance, higher income taxes, and new levies on drugs and innovative medical devices. There are a variety of provisions in the bill designed to generate revenue, including $426 billion in Medicare and Medicare Advantage benefit cuts, $4 billion in new fines imposed on those who do not purchase insurance (fining people who can’t afford insurance makes absolutely no sense and if the person can afford the fine then let them live with the costs for not choosing to get heath insurance), $201 billion in new levies on health insurance companies with high-end health insurance plans, $180 billion in new taxes on medical devices and drugs (including breast milk pumps), $83 billion in new income taxes on individuals, and $25 billion in new taxes on employers.

There will also be significant reductions in Medicare reimbursements to hospitals, which will in turn generate more cost shifting from such facilities to the patients using them. Although Congress is likely to revisit this issue after passage of the Bill much as they are today trying to stop the 21% drop in Medicare payments to Doctors scheduled to occur in January, which were originally enacted to cut the cost of Medicare. Senate Democrats are proposing to upend that arrangement and instead freeze doctor payments at this year's level for the next decade. They seek to do so in a bill -- separate from the overhaul legislation -- that they said would shore up the government health program for the elderly. The cost to just freeze Medicare payments at current levels is -- $247 billion over 10 years. If inflation continues at 3% annual, as it generally does unless the recession turns into a depression, what type of Doctor is going to see Medicare patients in 2015 when all of his own living expenses; food, fuel, housing and his own medical insurance have risen but not his pay. Even Congress gets a pay raise (2.8% in 2009) even though unemployment is at a 25 year high and people are losing their homes daily to foreclosure but I digress.

The government programs that provide health care to the poor would expand to cover nearly one in five Americans under health insurance legislation pending in Congress, putting pressure on federal and state budgets. Medicaid, one of the fastest-growing government programs for two decades, and the State Children's Health Insurance Program would grow from about 50 million people today to more than 60 million in 2019, according to data from the Congressional Budget Office and Kaiser Family Foundation. That would be the biggest single expansion since Medicaid was created in 1965. The expansion is designed to cover the poorest adults among the nation's 46.3 million uninsured. It would change a program aimed mostly at children, people with disabilities and elderly nursing home residents into one that includes more low-income parents and, for the first time in 45 states, adults without children.

Medicaid grew in the 1990s as children ages 6 to 18 were added. Now adults would be covered up to 133% of the federal poverty line, or about $14,440 for individuals. The federal government paid $258 billion for Medicaid in 2009, about 57% of total costs, but would pay 90% of the expansion. States would pay about $33 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Most of the 14 million adults who would be added over the next decade lack insurance and get health care at emergency rooms and community health centers. The federal government pays some of that cost, but hospital payments would be reduced. Most of the costs to cover the uninsured are absorbed by the facilities or passed on by insurers to employers and employees in the form of higher premiums. Because new Medicaid beneficiaries would use more health care services than they do now, government costs would increase.

• Can states afford it? Medicaid already consumes about 22% of state budgets, and 13 million people are eligible but not enrolled.
• Can states handle the expansion? Fourteen states, half of them in the South, only accept parents at less than 50% of the poverty level, so the expansion would be vast. Aging computer systems used to set eligibility may not be up to the task.
• Will there be enough doctors? Many parts of the country already face an acute shortage of general practitioners, 35% of whom did not accept new Medicaid patients last year. House legislation would require states to raise Medicaid payment rates to doctors, but Senate legislation would not.

New Jersey has a projected budget gap of nearly $8 Billion for 2011. We can no longer afford these types of social programs. I urge you to please reconsider your positions on health care reform. If you truly believe that the bills pending in Congress are the solution then please increase taxes to cover the full costs of these measures. We can no longer afford to borrow money. We must learn that things cost money and that the Federal Reserve is not a piggy bank. My children’s’ futures are in your hands.

Regards,

Friday, October 9, 2009

Health Care Speechwriter for Edwards, Obama & Clinton Without Insurance Now -- Politics Daily

While I don't agree with the writer's thoughts that Medicare for all would be a good plan, she makes some very compelling arguments. I hope that people will make up and realize that we need reform to the healthcare system not a whole new government system.


Health Care Speechwriter for Edwards, Obama & Clinton Without Insurance Now -- Politics Daily

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Opps- Obama Caught Handing Out Lab Coats to Dr.s in Photo Op


From the NY Post- Obama had a photo op yesterday with Doctors that support healthcare reform but just to make sure that we, the stupid masses, knew they were doctors he gave them a free lab coat. I wondered if they were embroidered with the Presidential Seal. Quite a nice gift don't you think.




White House's botched 'op'
By CHARLES HURT, Post Correspondent

Last Updated: 10:59 AM, October 6, 2009

Posted: 3:05 AM, October 6, 2009

WASHINGTON -- President Obama yesterday rolled out the red carpet -- and handed out doctors' white coats as well, just so nobody missed his hard-sell health-care message.

In a heavy-handed attempt at reviving support for health-care reform, the White House orchestrated a massive photo op to buttress its claim that front-line physicians support Obama.

PHOTOS: OBAMA'S BOTCHED PHOTO OP

OBAMA LIFTS HEALTH CARE ADDRESS -- FROM HIMSELF

A sea of 150 white-coated doctors, all enthusiastically supportive of the president and representing all 50 states, looked as if they were at a costume party as they posed in the Rose Garden before hearing Obama's pitch for the Democratic overhaul bills moving through Congress.

The physicians, all invited guests, were told to bring their white lab coats to make sure that TV cameras captured the image.

But some docs apparently forgot, failing to meet the White House dress code by showing up in business suits or dresses.

So the White House rustled up white coats for them and handed them to the suited physicians who had taken seats in the sun-splashed lawn area.

All this to provide a visual counter to complaints from other doctors that pending legislation is bad news for the medical profession.

"Nobody has more credibility with the American people on this issue than you do," Obama told his guests.

The president was flanked by four white-coated doctors at a podium as he delivered his pep talk.

"When you cut through all the noise and all the distractions that are out there, I think what's most telling is that some of the people who are most supportive of reform are the very medical professionals who know the health-care system best," the president said.

"I want to thank every single doctor who is here," Obama said. "And I especially want to thank you for agreeing to fan out across the country and make the case about why this reform effort is so desperately needed."

Underlying the strictly photo-op nature of the event, The Associated Press noted that Obama broke no new ground in his remarks.

The president told the doctors that if they back him, "I'm confident we are going to get health reform passed this year."

The Republican National Committee shot back with a response from Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), who was an orthopedic surgeon before being elected to Congress.

"Today, the president wants you to believe that the medical community supports his government takeover of health care. Don't be fooled," Price said.

He said he had spoken to "thousands of my colleagues" who oppose the Democrats' legislation.

House Minority Leader Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio) said large numbers of doctors fear it would cripple their ability to care for patients.

"Members of the medical community -- who deal with red tape day in and day out -- rightly recognize that the Democrats' government takeover would weaken the doctor-patient relationship that is so critical to making the right health-care decisions," he said.

Obama made no mention of the "public option" -- a controversial government-run insurance plan favored by liberal Democrats -- in his Rose Garden spiel.

A key version of the legislation, which doesn't include the public option, is expected to reach the Senate floor for debate later this month.

churt@nypost.com

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Democrats stifle Republican health care plans | Washington Examiner

Why am I not surprised that the NYT or WP or MSNBC or CNN has not covered these proposals. If the Democrats would read the polls they would find out that the Republican bills are exactly the types of changes to healthcare that Americans want to occur. We do not want or need socialized medicine and most of Europe no longer wants it either. We are broke people. We don't even fully fund medicare and medicaid right so how are we going to pay for everyone's healthcare. Sure we can borrow some more money but in case you haven't noticed the Chinese are more interested in gold than treasuries. Plus the annointed one just started a trade war with a country we owe an awful lot of money to and who we rely upon for all those cheap goodies we buy at the store everything from tvs to pencils. Sure free healthcare for all would be nice but so would a free house, a free car, free food, and free cloths just ask the Soviets how that worked out.


Democrats stifle Republican health care plans | Washington Examiner

Friday, July 24, 2009

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Healthcare Is a Good, Not a Right- by Ron Paul

We all know nationalized healthcare doesn't work. If it worked why then are the wealthy in Canada and Europe coming to the U.S. for their heathcare. Ron Paul is a doctor and I believe his bill would bring healthcare costs down.

Healthcare Is a Good, Not a Right