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#177 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Much-ballyhooed "squillionaire to donate almost all his ill-gotten gains to world peace and warm puppies!" story the past 24 hours:
Facebook CEO, wife pledge to donate nearly all of their company shares to charity | Ars Technica But wait, there's more in the fine print! Quote:
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2015-12-02 at 23:13 |
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#178 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
o Been a while since I postd anything on the ever-growing mess that is Obamacare - here a pair of recent Mish pieces:
Obamacare "Observations" and the Elusive Search for Improvements; Seniors Beware! Obamacare in Action: 74% Say Insurance Costs Went Up, Record 36% Say "By a Lot"; Plan for Still More Hikes And my sister recently e-mailed me this: Quote:
(I told sis to look into a basic $10-at-the-local-pharmacy self-care thumb splint for the next several weeks, as it’s most likely a bad sprain, and a ligament tear, while likely needing surgery, wouldn’t be made significantly worse by self-treating via a splint for that time. Same kind of injury that has many NFL players walking around with heavily taped hands at this point in the season.) But it feels good to know that as long as our exceptionally broken for-profit medical-industrial system keeps getting more fraud-riddled and wealth-extractive, the terrorists don't win, or something. o Excellent essay by Barbara Ehrenreich on one particular strain of the toxic effects of the hollowing-out of the US economy, which for at least a full generation post-WW2, promised a broad sharing of wealth, as captured in the quoted snip by the NYT Paul Krugman - for once on the money here, sounding more like Robert Reich than his usual self: "I grew up in an America where a man with a strong back — and better yet, a strong union — could reasonably expect to support a family on his own without a college degree." As the piece notes, those kinds of jobs are long gone in 2015 America: America to Working Class Whites: Drop Dead! | Barbara Ehrenreich, originally published at TomDispatch, reprinted here at NC. Think you are immune due to a college degree in a 'desirable field'? Ehrenreich's closing summation provides a sobering cold-water treatment for that kind of complacency: Quote:
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#179 | |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
72×197 Posts |
Quote:
![]() (now we will see a little cat running from some biscuits... )
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2015-12-05 at 03:03 |
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#180 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Quote:
I feel a great disturbance in the debt-spewing force that is the US government: Over the course of a full year, from 9/01/2014 to 9/01/2015, total US debt rose by a mere (in recent-historical terms) $402 Bln. In the 3 ensuing months, it jumped an additional $647 Bln, including a step-function move of +$340 Bln in just a single fiscal day, from Friday 10/30 to Monday 11/02. That was quite a naughty trick to play on Halloween! So who got the resulting monetary candy? Or better, since $340 Bln is around $1000 for each USian, where's my stack of 10 Halloween Bennies? Last fiddled with by Xyzzy on 2016-02-23 at 03:30 |
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#181 | |
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷𒀭"
May 2003
Down not across
2A1C16 Posts |
Quote:
Back in 94 I attended a conference in Boston (Mass, not Lincs) and chatted with Gene Spafford, universally known as Spaf in the security field. He was complaining to the group in general and me in particular about the US medical system, how he was paying $x per annum for health cover and that the National Health Service removed that obligation from me. I did a quick calculation based on how much tax I paid and on the then current exchange rate and announced: "So do I, to within 10% or so". The US people expressed surprise and asked me to explain my calculation, which I did. My personal situation has changed in the last 20 years, in that I have paid essentially no income tax for the last three years. How the situation has changed for a typical employed citizen I don't know. |
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#182 |
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(loop (#_fork))
Feb 2006
Cambridge, England
3×2,141 Posts |
I happen to have my Annual Tax Summary 2014-2015 lying on the kitchen table: I contributed £2868 to the health service, so about $4300, $350/month. According to https://www.gov.uk/government/statis...-and-after-tax I'm about a 91st-percentile earner.
(dollars. dollars are odd. if I edit the message to put backslashes before the dollar signs then the message appears with backslashes before the dollar signs and I have to reload the page to get it to look right again) Last fiddled with by fivemack on 2015-12-05 at 10:25 |
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#183 | |
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Dec 2012
The Netherlands
170810 Posts |
Quote:
http://spaf.cerias.purdue.edu/tech-reps/933.pdf |
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#184 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
101101011111112 Posts |
Quote:
Brits, please answer me this: Are there any scenarios in which you face financial ruin and impoverishment as a result of medical expenses? If so, how common are such scenarios? Because they are a leading source of personal bankruptcies and suicides here in the U.S. |
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#185 | |
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Sep 2006
Brussels, Belgium
35×7 Posts |
Quote:
Health coverage is almost complete : there are just some experimental procedures to cure rare diseases that would not be covered or would go before a board to decide. But almost everything is covered including some doubtful procedures like leg lengthening... This is not to say everything is perfect : people on welfare could have some problems covering their bills or having to think twice before going to the dentist. There is a maximum that one pays in a year for health bills, but that supposes that one has taxes to pay. Tax-exemptions do not benefit the poorest. Jacob |
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#186 | |
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(loop (#_fork))
Feb 2006
Cambridge, England
191716 Posts |
Quote:
That $350 per month gets me treatment with no deductibles (except that prescriptions cost $12 for anything, unless you're ill enough to need more than 12 a year, in which case they cost $150 for any number). I have turned up with the same condition to ERs in Boston and in Cambridge, UK; in Boston they dealt with it under local anaesthetic and charged $2500 which I eventually managed to recover through travel insurance, in Cambridge they dealt with it under general anaesthetic, kept me in overnight (doing the operation at 4am), and charged nothing. Last fiddled with by fivemack on 2015-12-06 at 14:02 |
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#187 | |
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷𒀭"
May 2003
Down not across
22·5·72·11 Posts |
Quote:
It's the chronic conditions which generally tend to cause impoverishment in the UK. |
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