I-5 wrote:I'm sure Romney knew he was going to pay a heavy, heavy (if not fatal) price politically by not allowing the WH to claim a unanimous acquittal by their own party. My question is, do you think there was any calculation on Mit's part, or is he sincere in what he says about his duty to his faith and his country? I do allow the possibility for both to be true, but I'm leaning more towards the latter.
I'm both surprised and impressed. I also wonder how many chickensh*t republicans secretly agree with him.
RiverDog wrote:I think he was sincere and that there was very little if any political calculation on his part. Romney is from as deep a red state as there is, won is Senate seat by 62% and is not up for re-election until 2024. He's not beholden to Trump like so many other R's that owe their political lives to him. Plus he's a former nominee, and at 68, there's a chance that this could be his last rodeo. He doesn't owe Trump or the Republican party anything. Under those circumstances, it's pretty easy to go against your party and your President if you feel morally obligated as Romney obviously does. Whether or not he would have fallen in line behind the leadership if he were 20 years younger with higher ambitions, I couldn't say. I haven't followed his career that closely.
As far as how many R's secretly agreed with him is anyone's guess. If you want to believe Hawktalk, it's half of the Republican Senate. In my opinion, even though I disagree with them, my gut tells me that most of them don't think what Trump did was right but that his actions didn't rise to the level of a high crime. After all, as the Dems taught us 20 years ago, perjury isn't an impeachable offense even though people regularly go to jail for it. That sets the bar pretty damn high.
I think he was sincere. Trump can't do anything real to Romney. Romney is a super rich guy himself that stopped worrying about money a long time ago. He went with what he thought was right. Good on him. He has mostly distanced himself from the political scumbaggery in general. Most I learned bout Romney was during his presidential run. He pretty much installed an Obamacare like health system in Massachusetts. Romney has always been a centrist business conservative.
idhawkman wrote:Not surprising, I don't believe Romney at all. No other time can you find him using his religion in making a political decision. Basically, I think he's always been a RINO and his vote was to placate the RINO Never Trumper republicans. His reasoning for the decision was even flawed so it was no surprise he did this. I don't think Romney will ever get over Trump winning the presidency when he couldn't and then having Trump pass over him for Secretary of State. Those wounds won't heal for a person like Romney. Oh well... Can't worry about it since Romney really isn't a conservative and never has been.
idhawkman wrote:I do hear though that the Utah legislature is looking at recalling him as their senator or some other admonishment. Not sure what is actually available to them to do though.
idhawkman wrote:Not surprising, I don't believe Romney at all. No other time can you find him using his religion in making a political decision. Basically, I think he's always been a RINO and his vote was to placate the RINO Never Trumper republicans. His reasoning for the decision was even flawed so it was no surprise he did this. I don't think Romney will ever get over Trump winning the presidency when he couldn't and then having Trump pass over him for Secretary of State. Those wounds won't heal for a person like Romney. Oh well... Can't worry about it since Romney really isn't a conservative and never has been.
I do hear though that the Utah legislature is looking at recalling him as their senator or some other admonishment. Not sure what is actually available to them to do though.
Aseahawkfan wrote:It wouldn't surprise me if part of Romney's motivation was big old FU to Trump. Can Idhawkman really say much about it considering the president he supports does and says whatever to exact petty vengeance? Trump is one of the pettiest men I've ever seen. He inspires pettiness and small-minded aggression in others. No surprise there.
RiverDog wrote:Although Romney has been a consistent critic of Trump's, I have my doubts that he was motivated by petty revenge. During the 4 years following his loss to Obama, he never came out and criticized him in an undignified way, certainly not to the same degree that Hillary has been to Trump and members of her own party.
RiverDog wrote:Although Romney has been a consistent critic of Trump's, I have my doubts that he was motivated by petty revenge. During the 4 years following his loss to Obama, he never came out and criticized him in an undignified way, certainly not to the same degree that Hillary has been to Trump and members of her own party.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Romney isn't really a low class guy like Trump. I figure Romney did it because he thought it was the right thing to do with a small FU to Trump as well.
Hawktawk wrote:Hell yeah it feels good to say F you but it wasn't why I did the things I did in the first place. I did what had to happen knowing it wouldnt be popular. Do what's right and let the chips fall. Don't die of a thousand paper cuts going down the wrong path.What goes around comes around . People who take the high road are always better off in the end.
Love me some Mitt.
RiverDog wrote:Case in point is the current status of the Democratic Party. They are so hung up on maintaining their ideological purity that they refuse to table those ideas that are not going to help them win November, so by doing in their minds what they "think is right", they're likely to lose the 2020 election to Donald Trump and set their cause back another 4 years.
idhawkman wrote:4 years? According to Biden it will be lost forever!![]()
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idhawkman wrote:4 years? According to Biden it will be lost forever!![]()
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Aseahawkfan wrote:Extremist thinking been going on both sides for ages. I heard a lot of people saying Bush Jr. would ruin the Republican Party forever due to his wars and corruptions. Look at that, we had another Republican President. I heard Clinton would ruin it for the Democrats. Lo and behold, we had another Democratic President. People thought we would turn super liberal after Obama, lo and behold they voted in a president with a very conservative agenda. All this talk of ends and destruction is more poppycock. Americans are forgetful. If the right person with very good speaking ability selling them on a vision of America they can get behind, they'll vote for him or her regardless of party. It's a pipedream people believe when they think things are done.
Aseahawkfan wrote:At the moment, I don't see the right Democrat to beat Trump. The candidate with likely the best chance is Sanders. He's radical enough and passionate enough he might just whip up the voting frenzy that would be needed to unseat Trump. After Trump's hit job on Biden and his son, I'm doubtful Biden can beat Trump head to head now.
RiverDog wrote:I'm not going to be so foolish as to predict an outcome this far out. At this time in 2016, I didn't give Trump a snowball's chance in hell of winning the nomination let alone the general election. I just saw a poll in Texas, a state that by almost anyone's math that Trump has to win, where he's up by just 2% over Sanders.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I'm still not sure why you love private healthcare so much and think it is so great. Not even sure what real proof you have that it is better than public healthcare. You keep bringing up the specter of no funding for new procedures and medications, while that has never stopped healthcare advancement in any nation. Even nations with socialized healthcare, they are still investing and looking for ways to improve healthcare.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Do you really hate medicare that much? Is it that bad? Most of what I've head is it operates well enough.
Aseahawkfan wrote:f the private system were working as well as you seem to think it is, we wouldn't even be having people asking for a public option.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Sorry, man. We have problems with private health care.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I don't think the sky will fall like you do with a public option. I think that you are hanging on to past arguments, while not really analyzing how our private system works
RiverDog wrote:My wife and I are both 65, retired, and on Medicare. My former employer has provided us with a very good retiree medical program that gives the two of us $6400/year in health care credits that we can use on anything the IRS determines is a health related expense, like insurance premiums and prescription drugs. The retiree medical program was the critical piece in my retirement planning. I paid $1000+/month in pre-65 insurance premiums for 18 months under their retiree medical plan as I retired at age 63.5. I could have opted to take COBRA for half the cost for those 18 months but I would not have qualified for my employer's retiree medical plan as I had to be enrolled in the pre-65 plan starting the day I retired in order to be eligible for the post-65 plan that pays the health care credits. Those credits will last the rest of my life or until they cease funding the program, which they can do at any time and without notice.
If we go to Medicare for All, it almost certainly will involve a huge tax on employers and they will obviously pull the plug on their retiree medical program as it's completely voluntary on their part. Neither my wife and I or my former employer are alone in this predicament.
I've played by the rules my whole life, stayed out of jail and off drugs, paid my own way through college, worked my arse off pounding the floor on graveyard shifts, sacrificing weekends and tolerated interruptions when I was away from work for over 40 years, saved my money and did a good job planning my retirement. I'm not even having to draw my social security and hopefully won't until age 70, taking me out to 132% of my full retirement amount.
Now here comes Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. They want to take care of me.
Hawktawk wrote:Ill be where you are in many respects in a few more years and the last thing I want is Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders ruining my life. Wait I take that back the absolute worst thing that could happen is 4 more years of Donald Trump unhinged and unfettered. Sanders or Warren would be Trump's most plausible path to victory as well. But no congress Republican or democrat will adopt their agenda at this point. The bottom bottom line when it comes to entitlements RD is NOBODY IS TAKING CARE OF YOUR SS or Medicare. Dems are generally more likely to support it, Rs are more likely to support cuts in it to make it "solvent". Trump did neither for 3 years and suddenly his new budget calls for SS cuts, Medicare cuts, cuts to the CDC in the middle of the Coronavirus![]()
Of course he's asking for another huge military budget increase, it outstrips every other domestic spending program by hundreds of billions.
RD nobody is taking care of SS, the banks and markets are scary right now. Us old geezers gotta hope we make it through the rest of the way before it all comes unhinged
I-5 wrote:Even though I come from a staunchly democrat family background, and I live in Canada with access to quality single payer healthcare, I'm also not ready for a Bernie presidency until he shows hard numbers, or close to it. His believers scare me just as much as Trump's believers.
I'm behind Klobuchar, Pete, and Biden. In that order. If Bloomberg has a chance, I'd pick him over Bernie, too.
RiverDog wrote:What concerns me the most about the move to a single payer system is a decline in the quality of care. The fact is that Medicare doesn't pay doctors and hospitals nearly as well as private insurance, so essentially private insurance is subsidizing people like me that are on Medicare through higher rates for working people on group insurance. My fear is that if they simply add everyone to Medicare without some major revamping of their cost structure, there will be a lot of doctors, clinics, and hospitals that will go out of business, specifically the low volume ones in small or medium size cities, and force everyone into large hospitals and clinics in the big cities so they can use economies of scale to offset their decline in reveune. Doctors will have to see more patients to pay the bills, resulting in longer wait times to get in to see one and shorter and less efficient visits/care as each doctor will have more cases to juggle. Same goes for other medical vendors and suppliers that indirectly get their money from Medicare.
Will it be cheaper? Probably. But will we get better care?
Sanders supporters scare me, but not as much as Trump supporters do. His following is almost like a cult where they'll believe anything he says no matter how preposterous. I haven't seen the same degree of fanaticism with Bernie's supporters like I do with Trump's, but then again, I haven't seen as much of them as I have Trump followers.
Aseahawkfan wrote:How you going to define better care? I listed life expectancy and health metrics from other nations that were better or inline with America and you dismissed those. How you going to rate healthcare then?
RiverDog wrote:Yeah, life expectancy isn't a good metric. The 'quality' of anything is hard to measure. In my industry, we used to measure it by how many complaints we received per unit sold, but that's not always accurate, either, as there's nothing to compare it to but the previous year.
One way that I would look at judging quality is what the average number of patients each doctor serves. The more patients a doctor has, the lesser his ability to deliver quality care to each individual. The more balls a doctor is asked to juggle, the higher the risk that he drops one. We start paying doctors less per patient as we do with Medicare and it's inevitable that they're going to respond by taking on more patients.
Another metric would be how long it takes to see a doctor, a specialist, or have a procedure done. I've heard these horror stories coming out of Canada where there are months long waits to get an MRI, and doing a Google, I see that the average wait time in Canada is 10.6 weeks while here in the US it's 2-4 weeks.
Waiting for treatment has become a defining characteristic of Canadian health care.
https://www.fraserinstitute.org/studies ... anada-2018
Additionally, Canadians are fortunate in that they have good ole Uncle Sam within a couple hours drive of about 80% of their population that acts as a safety net for anyone that happens to fall through their system. We would not have such a luxury.
The ability to fund these ambitious programs is another concern. We spend 3.2% of our GDP on defense. Japan spends 0.9%, Germany 1.2%, Canada 1.3%. The only country on your list that doesn't spend less than half the percent of GDP that we do is the UK at 1.8%.
Our system isn't perfect and I'm open to other means of improving it. But I'm dead set against Medicare for All.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Not sure why you're deadset against it. Seems more fear than fact at this point.
Aseahawkfan wrote:So it's more personal. That's not a fact, but your feeling on the matter, you and your wife.
Facts are measurable and data driven. Personal satisfaction is a data point in a measure of anecdotal evidence, anecdotal evidence is the weakest evidence out there. Not attacking your position, but it isn't evidence based.
I think people should base their support on a public option by looking at the various systems out there in other 1st world nations and compare their efficacy and cost compared to ours. As far as I'm concerned companies have brought this on themselves with their constant attempts to lower the cost of health insurance by trying to go as cheap as possible, employing more part time people, automating, and generally treating the work force as disposable and unimportant. Humans want to survive. If employers are using very inhumane tactics to reduce their labor costs, what choice do they have to but to turn to government to sort it out?
c_hawkbob wrote:Qualitative is opinion. It's a fact that you believe a thing, but you believing that thing is your opinion.
RiverDog wrote:Qualitative facts are factors that are difficult or impossible to measure. If you say "a football game is going on", you are stating a fact but the statement is impossible to measure or quantify.
If I say "I have an opinion on the matter" I am stating a fact, just that I can't weigh or measure it.
RiverDog wrote:Qualitative facts are factors that are difficult or impossible to measure. If you say "a football game is going on", you are stating a fact but the statement is impossible to measure or quantify.
c_hawkbob wrote:That's not true. It's an easy thing to quantify, either there is a football game going on or there isn't.
RiverDog wrote:There are two types of facts: Qualitative and quantitative. What you're talking about is quantitative. My satisfaction with the quality of my health care is every much of a fact as 2+2=4, just a different kind of fact called a qualitative fact that although measurable (rate your satisfaction level from 1-10, with 1 being the lowest and 10 being the highest), no quantified value was offered. "It's raining outside" is a qualitative fact. "It's rained 2 tenths of an inch" makes it a quantitative fact.
It's about time to agree to disagree. I have and will continue to read and learn on the subject as it seems like it's being forced down our throats and I may have no choice in the matter. But at this point, I'm pretty rigid in my opinion as you seem to be with yours.
RiverDog wrote:Qualitative facts are factors that are difficult or impossible to measure. If you say "a football game is going on", you are stating a fact but the statement is impossible to measure or quantify.
c_hawkbob wrote:That's not true. It's an easy thing to quantify, either there is a football game going on or there isn't.
RiverDog wrote:What you're talking about is verification, not quantification. It's easy to tell, or verify, that there's a football game going on, and it is indeed is a qualitative fact, but it's impossible to measure.
c_hawkbob wrote:You're making no sense. Verification is quantification.
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