Mitt says "Medicare card! I don't need no stinkin' card!" (user search)
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  Mitt says "Medicare card! I don't need no stinkin' card!" (search mode)
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Author Topic: Mitt says "Medicare card! I don't need no stinkin' card!"  (Read 2690 times)
True Federalist (진정한 연방 주의자)
Ernest
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« on: March 12, 2012, 07:02:00 PM »

(link)

Pure political grandstanding, and it may help him slightly in the primaries, but I can't see where it will help him at all in the general election.

Of course, the dirty little secret of the insurance racket is that the only reason someone as rich as Mitt is even needs insurance is so that he won't be socked with the full price that the uninsured are charged in the current system, but which no insurance provider comes even close to having to pay.
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True Federalist (진정한 연방 주의자)
Ernest
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« Reply #1 on: March 13, 2012, 02:15:41 AM »

"Medicare card!  I don't need no stinkin' card!"

does not appear in the article.

At least be more unbiased in your reporting.

Besides, look at all the money Mitt is saving the taxpayers.  

This was a completely selfless gesture on Mitt's part.

I see you still have not yet received your HUMOR.DLL upgrade since you complain about the humorous spin I put on his decision.

If you think this was selfless, you are more clueless than I think you are pretending to be.

There are a few primary voters who will be impressed by this, which is why I think he is doing it.

But, by making himself have no skin in the game, the fact that he has to personal reason to be worried if he ruins Medicare is likely to make a significant block of swing voters nervous, especially once Obama focus group tests some negative ads.

It really is laughable how he keeps eroding his claim he can bring in the moderates in the general election as he tried to lock down the base and the nomination.
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True Federalist (진정한 연방 주의자)
Ernest
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Posts: 42,144
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« Reply #2 on: March 13, 2012, 08:33:30 PM »

Awesome, Mitt! Can you get rid of these cards as well please?



Mitt might be old enough to have the little words in red that my mother's social security card has but that mine does not.

NOT TO BE USED FOR PURPOSES OF IDENTIFICATION
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True Federalist (진정한 연방 주의자)
Ernest
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Posts: 42,144
United States


« Reply #3 on: March 13, 2012, 11:05:30 PM »

(link)

Pure political grandstanding, and it may help him slightly in the primaries, but I can't see where it will help him at all in the general election.

Of course, the dirty little secret of the insurance racket is that the only reason someone as rich as Mitt is even needs insurance is so that he won't be socked with the full price that the uninsured are charged in the current system, but which no insurance provider comes even close to having to pay.

Is this posting meant to get people to attack and insult someone with more money than than most of us have?

No.  My posting had two parts.  The first was pointing out that I think politically Mitt's decision to forgo Medicare is not going to be helpful to him in the long run.  It might get him a few more primary votes, but it will cost him a few votes in the general election, if he is the nominee.

The second was a diatribe about the health insurance industry.  Mitt is rich enough that in any equitable insurance market with no taxpayer subsidies for employer-provided insurance (I presume he still is getting his insurance from his time at Bain) and no broken price structures (the sticker price the uninsured are charged can be as much as four times the cost an insurance company pays for the exact same treatment) he would be in an excellent position to self-insure.  Even a catastrophic health event would not put him in financial peril, so under an equitable insurance market, he would find it financially beneficial to be uninsured as the expected value of what he would have to pay would be greater than the cost of his premiums.

Instead, because of the double whammy of subsidies and a gimmicked table of charges, it is cheaper to buy insurance than to pay for it himself.  Under our current system, the only people for whom it makes sense to go uninsured are those with no chronic conditions (i.e., no reason to see the doctor regularly) and so few assets that if they do get stuck with one of those inflated medical bills for an unexpected emergency, they have no consequences from filing bankruptcy and so won't paying the sticker price that the insurance companies never pay.
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