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Political Threads This section is for Political Threads - Enter at your own risk. If you say you don't want to see what someone posts - don't read it :hihi:

 
 
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Old 02-10-2015, 08:52 PM   #61
detbuch
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spence View Post
Please explain how the action makes it any easier for criminals to come here, stay...or how they have any access to health care under the ACA.
My main point was not the criminals, but the other immigrants. The criminal bit was just a bit of sarc. But with some, though negligible, truth.

It is physically easy to cross the border. Psychologically it is not as easy. "Hiding in the shadows" is the more difficult part. Removing the fear of deportation makes it psychologically easier to stay. And though the action may only supposedly apply to the millions already here, the notion that we keep reneging on strict immigration enforcement is certainly not a deterrent to more coming. There is not only, among them, the perception that the next immigration "crisis" will result in the same forgiveness, but there is now a large and influential latino immigration lobby which will influence further immigration. Probably, the only thing, other than strict enforcement and border security, that can stop the flow, is lack of opportunity to find gainful employment. Though, from my personal observation in Southwest Detroit, which is heavily latino, many of them "undocumented," the immigrants don't depend just on jobs they can find, but on jobs they create. They can easily outbid indiginous Americans on all manner of construction, landscaping, repair work, and in creating restaurants and various service and retail outlets in the community. They do it cheaper, and live much more simply than the rest of us. My neighborhood, as well as most of Southwest Detroit, has been transformed into a Latino stronghold. They are far more prolific than others in making babies, and, demographically, their influence will grow.

It seems logical that if the reason for the ACA is supposedly to reduce the use of the ER, then millions of illegals who don't have insurance, and don't earn enough, will have to be subsidized.

BTW, executive action has been overused by Presidents, and it has been greatly misused. Executive action, constitutionally, would be appropriate only if it were action within the bounds of the President's enumerated powers. When it is used to create law, especially outside the scope of constitutional executive limitations, such as immigration law, rather than enforcing congressional law, it is unconstitutional. But that has just become a portion of the great flood of constitutional destruction which is washing away our legal foundation.

Last edited by detbuch; 02-10-2015 at 09:38 PM..
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Old 02-10-2015, 09:35 PM   #62
detbuch
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Originally Posted by spence View Post
Spence, do you really support corporate welfare . . . crony capitalism . . . ?? And I thought you feared too much centralization of business. That you didn't like corporations getting too big. Too powerful.

Geeze, whoda thunk that the biggest healthcare corporation would actually like everybody to be forced to buy their stuff. And if they couldn't afford it, the government would subsidize or pay for it. And that the big corps. wouldn't mind at all if a bunch of their previous clients had to pay more and/or have higher deductibles, so long as they were forced to do so. No skin off the corporation's back, and more money, guaranteed, in their pockets.

It seems to me that the concept of insurance is changing. It used to be an advantage for the client to have insurance over those who didn't. Which made it worth buying. Just seems that when insurance is universal, mandated, there is no advantage to having it since everybody does. And it seems that for those who don't get subsidies, the insurance has now become a disadvantage.
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Old 02-10-2015, 10:34 PM   #63
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Just an afterthought to the above. The biggest change in the concept of insurance, it seems to me, is government's increasing intrusion in and control of, various types of insurance. The overall effect is the continuing growth of government power over our lives. It is that growth which is being insured, or, assured.

Last edited by detbuch; 02-10-2015 at 10:41 PM..
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Old 02-12-2015, 01:39 PM   #64
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Quote:
Originally Posted by detbuch View Post
Removing the fear of deportation makes it psychologically easier to stay. And though the action may only supposedly apply to the millions already here, the notion that we keep reneging on strict immigration enforcement is certainly not a deterrent to more coming.

There is not only, among them, the perception that the next immigration "crisis" will result in the same forgiveness, but there is now a large and influential latino immigration lobby which will influence further immigration.
I think the idea our "policy" creates a large draw is overstated. The US economy has improved but the job market is flat. The birth rate in Mexico is declining while their economy is improving. It's just not as an attractive proposition as it once was.

The surge in unaccompanied minors from Central America has shown to be due to regional violence, not a pull towards the US.

Quote:
Probably, the only thing, other than strict enforcement and border security, that can stop the flow, is lack of opportunity to find gainful employment. Though, from my personal observation in Southwest Detroit, which is heavily latino, many of them "undocumented," the immigrants don't depend just on jobs they can find, but on jobs they create. They can easily outbid indiginous Americans on all manner of construction, landscaping, repair work, and in creating restaurants and various service and retail outlets in the community. They do it cheaper, and live much more simply than the rest of us. My neighborhood, as well as most of Southwest Detroit, has been transformed into a Latino stronghold. They are far more prolific than others in making babies, and, demographically, their influence will grow.
I'm not sure if they're more prolific, it's likely about demographics. The white population is aging and the birth rate is slowing. The rise of minority growth is a mega trend, policy isn't going to stop it.

Quote:
It seems logical that if the reason for the ACA is supposedly to reduce the use of the ER, then millions of illegals who don't have insurance, and don't earn enough, will have to be subsidized.
I'd say "a reason" versus "the reason" and according to that article the health industry reports that the ACA is indeed reducing demand on the ER. This doesn't mean you have to subsidize illegals, they'd just be likely behave in a consistent manner.

This may be a bigger issue if the illegal population was growing dramatically, but I believe the net number of illegals is stable and predicted to remain flat.

Quote:
BTW, executive action has been overused by Presidents, and it has been greatly misused. Executive action, constitutionally, would be appropriate only if it were action within the bounds of the President's enumerated powers. When it is used to create law, especially outside the scope of constitutional executive limitations, such as immigration law, rather than enforcing congressional law, it is unconstitutional. But that has just become a portion of the great flood of constitutional destruction which is washing away our legal foundation.
I think we'd all like to see bi-partisan reform but until the tea partay phenomenon fades I doubt there's much chance...
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Old 02-12-2015, 08:05 PM   #65
detbuch
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I think the idea our "policy" creates a large draw is overstated.

Our non or inadequate enforcement of "policy" permits the "draw."

The US economy has improved but the job market is flat.

That is a strange "improvement" indeed. The greatest number or percentage not participating in the work force in mucho time, yet they can't find a job in the improved economy. And a 4 trillion dollar federal budget requested by POTUS. And food stamps distributed in far greater numbers than ever. And national debt keeps soaring. Hey, but big health insurance companies are going to make even more than ever. And much of their expanding "earnings" will be through mandated client participation, (very helpful when government herds people into your store) and at higher rates and or deductibles for many in order to help defray the cost to other newbies. Or simply donated by the government--to be paid for in higher taxes by regular people ("folks,as Obama might say). Folks, who, btw, were supposed to be relieved by the ACA of the cost of the uninsured "folks" who had been free riders. Oh well, sometimes, often, always, things just don't work out as promised. Just one of those unforeseen and unfortunate consequences--oh wait, it WAS foreseen, just, somehow, didn't come out of the President's mouth in the right string of pretty words when he promised how wonderful the ACA was going to be. There seems to be this rather socialistic trend of job growth or economic "improvement" by government fiat or influence. Sort of like the government is the third party employer or stuffer of dollars into the pockets of the big money folks. I can see, by this formula, how an economy can get "better" (pumping money which has no relation to the market into Wall Street and mandating that "folks" buy stuff, even "subsidizing" the ones who can't afford it) but employment can remain "flat."

The birth rate in Mexico is declining while their economy is improving. It's just not as an attractive proposition as it once was.

You make that sound like a winner. Birth rate goes down as the economy improves. Sounds like that addition by subtraction stuff. Maybe we should try some of that. White "folks" seem to be doing their birth-rate part. And their immigration numbers are kept lower even though there are many on the waiting list. But somehow our population rises beyond that demographic . . . oh, yeah. There's those millions of illegals. And their birth rate here is higher than white folks. Hmmph. Might be part of the cause of that huge number not participating in the work force. But wait . . . the ACA mandates paid for birth control. And planned parenthood has certainly been doing yeoman's service in that area. Just can't seem to keep up with that pesky, unproductive, production of babies some folks just seem to want to participate in. Don't worry, the government will figure a way to make folks have only their limited fair share of children. Worked out well for China. We'll, no doubt, do it better.

The surge in unaccompanied minors from Central America has shown to be due to regional violence, not a pull towards the US.

Funny, I thought that regional violence has been going on for quite some time. How come those unaccompanied minors took so long to figure out it was good to surge? Maybe they recently heard about the success of the surge in Iraq. But the "pull" thing, though, that's a little trickier. In some respects, it was more like a "push." The unaccompanied minors from Guatemala or Honduras, forget which, weren't allowed to stay in Mexico (even though the economy was getting better there--well, all the more reason to keep the population down). It seems that the Mexican government was expecting them. Gosh I wonder how they could have been so prescient. We certainly weren't prepared. Well, that's right, our intelligence community just doesn't seem to get it right at critical times. And so the Mexican authorities put them on trains and directed them to the American border. It seems, though, and that's the trickier part, that there were some signals being sent that the unaccompanied minors would be welcomed here. Maybe why the parents of the unaccompanied minors weren't so worried as parents usually are of sending their unaccompanied minors unaccompanied to far off foreign lands with no certainty of how they would survive when, or if, they got there.

I'm not sure if they're more prolific, it's likely about demographics. The white population is aging and the birth rate is slowing.

Gee . . . it sounds like the demographics, indeed, say that their birth rate is more prolific than the white folks.

The rise of minority growth is a mega trend, policy isn't going to stop it.

Aw shucks! I thought that maybe the free birth control and planned parenthood and better economy would stop it. Well, if we are doomed to be defeated by the latino mega trend (I can relate--the Lions use the megatron, Calvin Johnson, to defeat their enemies) it might be a buffer against any mega trend by Muslim demographic war.

I'd say "a reason" versus "the reason" and according to that article the health industry reports that the ACA is indeed reducing demand on the ER. This doesn't mean you have to subsidize illegals, they'd just be likely behave in a consistent manner.

OK. Now you really got me. WTF is "a consistent manner"? If you don't want them going to the ER, and they don't make enough money to pay for health insurance, and they are not subsidized, in what consistent manner must they behave in order to stay out of the ER? Consistently not get sick?

This may be a bigger issue if the illegal population was growing dramatically, but I believe the net number of illegals is stable and predicted to remain flat.

Predicted!?! If that's the clincher, then we can rest assured that the number won't "remain flat." Anyway, the illegal population, has already grown dramatically. We don't even know how much. Since the last immigration "reform" the illegal population has grown by estimates anywhere from 11 to 30 million, or more. And if no more illegals were to come here, those millions already here will give birth at higher rates than other folks. And, either the job market will have to dramatically expand, or there will have to be a huge amount of "subsidization" on top of the already huge amount. I guess that just isn't a "bigger" issue. Certainly won't impact things like the Social Security bubble in the future if the demographic and government dependence trends continue. Just a teeny one that the proper "policy" can take care of.

I think we'd all like to see bi-partisan reform but until the tea partay phenomenon fades I doubt there's much chance...
What . . . you mean like the previous bi-partisan reform that did nothing to "fix" the problem? Bi-partisan=good? Bi-partisan can be, and usually is, more chitty than gridlock. Gridlock is good. When the parties get together, they just seem to conspire to keep taking us down the road to some cliff or other. Gridlock, as the Founders meant, prevents a lot of crap.

On the other hand, if it were a bi-partisan reform agreed to by truly opposing parties, such as the Democrats and the Tea Party, there might actually be some reform that got to some actual "middle" ground. There might actually be a halt to the constant drift to total government control. Maybe even a reversal if the Tea Party gained the political power that the Democrats and the Democrat lite Republicans have.

Last edited by detbuch; 02-13-2015 at 07:25 PM..
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