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Agnosticsherbet
Agnosticsherbet's Journal
Agnosticsherbet's Journal
September 27, 2016
Trump is drinking a lot if water. He is Rubioesque.
September 27, 2016
Stop POUTING!
September 27, 2016
Jesus Feck, man, quit talking about your money. It is not what you have done for you.
September 27, 2016
Trump is Raging Bullshit!
September 26, 2016
This is the best discussion of the differing views on health care that I have seen. I Pefer Clinton's.
The Health Care Reform Proposals of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump
The Health Care Reform Proposals of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump
As president, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump would take the nation down distinctly different paths on health care. In this post, we summarize the health reform proposals of each candidate, anddrawing on new estimates by Christine Eibner and colleagues at RAND Healthcompare the proposals implications for the total number of people with insurance coverage, peoples out-of-pocket health care costs, and the federal budget.
RANDs analysis is based on publicly available health care proposals on the candidates websites. Where these proposals lacked sufficient clarity for modeling, RAND sought additional information from the campaigns. When answers were not forthcoming, or did not fully resolve questions, RAND made reasonable assumptions that were reviewed and critiqued by independent experts. RAND modeled only those proposals for which it had adequate detail and technical capacity.
The Starting Point
As a starting point, Clinton and Trump propose dramatically different approaches to the Affordable Care Act (ACA): Clinton would maintain the ACA and Trump would repeal it. In estimating the impact of Trumps proposal, RAND assumes a full repeal of the law including insurance subsidies, expanded eligibility for Medicaid, and individual market reforms such as bans against preexisting condition exclusions. RAND also assumes that repeal would eliminate the ACAs financing mechanisms such as its Medicare payment reforms and taxes on health plans and medical devices. Consequently, RAND estimates that compared to maintaining the ACA as is, repeal would cause nearly 20 million people to lose their insurance in 2018, increase average premium and out-of-pocket costs for people who buy insurance on their own, and increase the federal deficit. Trumps repeal of the ACA would increase the federal deficit because the loss of savings from the laws Medicare reforms and revenues from fees and taxes would be greater than savings from the elimination of insurance subsidies and the Medicaid expansion.
This is the best discussion of the differing views on health care that I have seen. I Pefer Clinton's.
September 22, 2016
I heard this interview this morning. The interview spent more time discussing Trump's lie concerning birtherism, and it highlights the different editorial policies of NPR and the New York Times.
'New York Times' Editor: 'We Owed It To Our Readers' To Call Trump Claims Lie
'New York Times' Editor: 'We Owed It To Our Readers' To Call Trump Claims Lie
The New York Times recently published a story that examined the way that Donald Trump's presidential campaign promoted his tax plan. Trump had offered a big tax break to businesses, and his campaign told a leading business group he supported the tax break. He got their endorsement. Then his campaign told independent budget analysts he was against the same tax break.
The New York Times called this a lie specifically, "the trillion-dollar lie."
The Times is using that word "lie" often in its coverage of Donald Trump, and Dean Baquet, the paper's executive editor, explains why on NPR's Morning Edition.
I heard this interview this morning. The interview spent more time discussing Trump's lie concerning birtherism, and it highlights the different editorial policies of NPR and the New York Times.