I'm AstralAdvent and i condone the use of page 3
4/13/2011 1:01:23 PM
4/13/2011 1:03:11 PM
i believe it's worded that way to allow for PAs, NPs who also have script privileges.
4/13/2011 1:15:53 PM
silly me referring back to the original post in a thread you made when addressing you in the thread
4/13/2011 1:52:04 PM
ITT we find out that goldielox is a cunt.
4/13/2011 1:59:06 PM
lol - the malice...it burns![Edited on April 13, 2011 at 2:09 PM. Reason : maybe i can get some OTC salve for that?]
4/13/2011 2:07:58 PM
4/13/2011 2:18:25 PM
4/13/2011 2:50:53 PM
Damn I did not realize this provision was part of the new law. I too have used my FSA for years to close the gap between what I funded my account with and how much I spent on co-pays, out of pockets expenses, etc. I was looking at some of my recent receipts from CVS and realized that the stuff that used to be FSA eligible like Advil or cold medicine was not listed at the bottom where they normally show the FSA $ total. What a crock of bullshit.[Edited on April 13, 2011 at 2:53 PM. Reason : df]
4/13/2011 2:52:32 PM
The government drives up healthcare costs with subsidies, then lets you write off certain healthcare expenses - sometimes, or maybe not at all. What a deal (read: gotcha bitches!)
4/13/2011 3:11:26 PM
4/16/2011 12:44:46 AM
4/16/2011 1:22:54 AM
4/16/2011 11:39:47 AM
4/16/2011 11:43:40 AM
^ quite true.Well, at least as easy.
4/16/2011 11:44:24 AM
4/16/2011 11:51:14 AM
4/16/2011 2:28:59 PM
the Constitution doesn't say anything about public education, fire protection or roads and highways either.
4/16/2011 2:40:50 PM
I cancelled my dental insurance because a checkup was cheaper than 6 mos of insurance premiums
4/16/2011 2:49:32 PM
4/16/2011 2:55:54 PM
i wasn't talking about whether or not the federal govt provides it, or even whether or not it's a right. it's someone else's labor that we routinely don't directly pay for. it happens all the time, i'm just pointing out the selective outrage[Edited on April 16, 2011 at 3:03 PM. Reason : .]
4/16/2011 3:03:07 PM
I'm so glad that our Constitution protects our speech, but when it comes to cancer, we're on our own.
4/16/2011 3:07:37 PM
^^^This guy, complains about everything, but we need needs the services he will use them....oh, the GOP wants to cut those services, I hope you get make some money, because if you dont, you gonna be hurting when you become a senior and have to pay out of the ass for everything....I am sure you will be complaining then too.Make sure you have good insurance before you get Joie preggers, dont leech off the taxpayer funding programs....dont have one of those plans that only do pay for if you get your arm cut off.....[Edited on April 16, 2011 at 3:11 PM. Reason : w]
4/16/2011 3:11:06 PM
You're mistaking me for another user, first of all.You never have a right to someone else's labor or property, because rights are negative in nature - you have a right from things. Whenever folks like you do manage to implement your ideas, we end up with lower quality service and exploding prices. Not everyone gets top notch healthcare, no matter how unfair it seems. There's only so much to go around - if that weren't the case, there'd be no use in discussing any of this.[Edited on April 16, 2011 at 3:19 PM. Reason : ]
4/16/2011 3:17:53 PM
4/16/2011 5:47:08 PM
why on earth has this not been moved to the soapbox?
4/16/2011 5:53:31 PM
There's potential for lulz?
4/16/2011 6:05:11 PM
4/16/2011 6:34:17 PM
THE POLITICIAN I'VE NEVER MET YET WORSHIP, IS BETTER THAN THE POLITICIAN YOU'VE NEVER MET YET WORSHIP]
4/16/2011 6:37:59 PM
4/16/2011 6:43:58 PM
4/16/2011 7:47:45 PM
Didn't the government initially get involved in the health care industry because of the skyrocketing inflation of health costs?
4/16/2011 8:29:40 PM
^ ^ i love the presumptuousness, condescension, and cliche.I read cnn far more than fox news. And I don't worship hannity or glenn beck, nor riley, mike church, bortz, or any other conservative radio/tv jockey your feeble mind might instantaneously dismiss.In fact, in many ways, particularly over social issues, I am very liberal. But all that aside, here, in a short list, is the stupidity of your arguments (most of which are apples and oranges):1- survival is irrelevant, especially in the context of our "rights" in the constitution. The constitution doesn't require anyone to take an action to grant another their "rights". It is all about the government refraining from violating those rights it enumerates.2- are you serious??? poor people don't pay taxes (at least no more than a completely inconsequential amount). , they will be benefiting from a system they don't meaningfully contribute to. And btw, I have lived and worked in england, france, and spain and been a part of those glorious health care systems. They were a fucking joke. 3- food stamps and subsidized living are not rights, particularly in a universal sense. They are programs designed to benefit a designated group within our populace, and you are not entitled to them simply from the act of being born in the united states (as is with EVERY OTHER RIGHT IN OUR CONSTITUTION)4- I will wager that I have met more homeless than you have, and although some have "mental issues", it is a trait that is far from all encompassing. But that is neither here no there. Yes, they do have numerous programs they can seek out. But they are not a RIGHT. Every day, soup kitchens and shelters turn away homeless people. It does not mean they can then sue the government, agencies, etc. because they were rejected. THEY DO NOT HAVE A RIGHT TO THOSE SERVICES.[Edited on April 16, 2011 at 8:40 PM. Reason : x]
4/16/2011 8:35:59 PM
Fuck this noise in my chit chat. But I agree with ^ guy.
4/16/2011 8:51:25 PM
4/16/2011 9:04:06 PM
4/16/2011 9:13:47 PM
only read the OPgo to your Nurse at work and have him/her write you the prescriptions. Free and easy
4/16/2011 9:23:56 PM
4/16/2011 9:38:43 PM
There are only a handful of fundamental rights, and getting food stamps is not one of them. There are basic textual rights, but those are ones that we don't really fuss about claiming as rights (speech, expression, jury trial), just about the extent to which they should be protected.In general, nontextual fundamental rights are things like the right to vote and the right to marry.Receiving food stamps is not a constitutional right. It is a statutory right, provided you fit in a certain category, just like the 1968 Fair Housing Act authorizes certain treatment. I didn't waste much time reading your arguments above, so I don't really know what the deal is, but there could of course be an Equal Protection or Due Process claim where some individuals were denied access to statutory privileges and others were not, depending on how that denial happened. So in that case you'd be infringing on a right (EP/DP - 14th Amendment), but it would not be a constitutional right
4/16/2011 9:46:06 PM
^^ It wasn't obvious to me, and private individuals are summonsed to jury duty anyway. ^ I'm not sure I follow... you're talking about 5th amendment protections that are somehow not constitutional rights? I know you said 14th, but whether we're talking about 5th or 14th, doesn't that make it a constitutional right? I'm not trying to be antagonistic I'm just curious because I'm not following your logic.[Edited on April 16, 2011 at 9:52 PM. Reason : ]
4/16/2011 9:46:55 PM
My point is that receiving food stamps is not a right. However, if all white people get food stamps and black people don't, then you are violating the 14th's E.P. clause. Thus, you are being denied your right to E.P. In truth, you could adjust the facts only slightly (or the claim, actually, even with the same facts), and merit a D.P. claim under the 14th (if it was a state/private action) or 5th (if it was a federal act)It depends on what you guys were arguing about in terms of denial as to whether a right is implicated. As for the 5th, it does not have an E.P. clause, so it wouldn't be implicated, although it does also have a D.P. clause.So at its root, there is not a protected fundamental right to food stamps. Education is not even a fundamental right. If the state shut down all of the schools tomorrow, that would be legal. Unless, of course, they tried to do so based on discriminatory intent to prevent integration or something, which would trigger the 14th, and that's what would create standing. Of course, it's not really an issue anyway, because the Court has decided that they aren't going to recognize any new fundamental rights or protected classes.
4/16/2011 10:10:28 PM
4/16/2011 10:16:41 PM
I'm just going based on what the Court has said as to the not recognizing new rights or suspect classes. Of course they could do an about face, but the issue seems to have been settled. If I remember correctly, Rehnquist was pretty explicit about the whole thing, and it's been supported since then. You get rational basis with bite if you're lucky, low level rational basis if you aren't. The door to intermediate and strict scrutiny is closed. If you aren't in, you won't be.And under those standards, if you couldn't say the reason you were denied food stamps was either as a result of your race/gender/national origin/alienage, or that the denial wasn't wholly arbitrary and potentially vindictive, then as long as the state could prove they had a reasonable reason related to a legitimate purpose for denying you, it would likely pass mustard.
4/16/2011 10:35:44 PM
Yes I understand all that although I disagree with notion that the door will be shut forever... or even for my lifetime honestly. I'm just saying that if you're entitled to something, you have a right to it. Also, you're treating the garden variety rights as if they don't even exist. They do exist, and even if they're only subject to a rational basis test, the rights are still there.
4/16/2011 10:42:08 PM
4/16/2011 11:28:16 PM
When you look at our budget, you've gotta wonder how long we will be a first world country. If you met an individual that had to take out 15,000 in debt every year to survive, already had 150,000 in outstanding debt, anticipated that their costs would continue to rise, and had absolutely no workable plan to escape that cycle, would you say that person is doing well and would be doing well in the future? In any case, we'd be much better served by getting the government out of many healthcare and health insurance sectors. We have to shed this model where employers provide their employees with health benefits. It's awful, distorts the market, and is the primary reason that costs are going up and overall health is going down. It just will require sweeping tax changes, and politicians aren't looking to get their hands dirty with that right now.
4/17/2011 3:40:39 PM
So, you think costs would go down if the employers didnt provide it? Are you on crack? Then everyone will go to the ER and guess who will pay the bill........it would be much much worse.....you should consider running for the House in a Tea Party strong district.....
4/17/2011 3:53:44 PM
I would agree with you on basic health services that insurance distorts prices. But on specialty treatment, like cancer treatment, and many life saving surgeries, I don't see how getting rid of employer based health indurance would make those services attainable to everyone. It may lower prices, but considering that many illnesses take people out of work, it's not feasible to do away with employer based health insurance.
4/17/2011 3:57:45 PM
I think the idea he is suggesting there is that employers stop providing insurance, but instead give a commensurate bump in pay so that people go buy their own insurance. That way people would have a better idea of how much their insurance really costs and how much coverage they really need. Employer-sponsored health coverage began during WWII the 1940s when the government limited how much companies could raise wages as a way of controlling inflation. To make up for that, companies could expand the benefits they offered. So they did and the model has remained in place, partly because the IRS does not view health benefits as taxable income.
4/17/2011 4:17:34 PM
That would be more expensive for employers. If employer based health care ended, I could see some salaried people getting raises, but I don't see wage earners getting shit.Considering that at the place I work at, we pay $55 a month. If that were put into my pay a month, I would end up paying about double what I'm paying now.And maybe rates for individuals would fall from the current individual prices, but it sure as hell wouldn't be close to $55/month.
4/17/2011 4:38:29 PM