Posted on 06/22/2005 4:47:29 PM PDT by inquest
Massachusetts residents who choose not to obtain health insurance would face tax penalties and even the garnishing of their wages under a proposal Governor Mitt Romney unveiled yesterday.
-snip-
Under Romney's proposal, uninsured Massachusetts residents would be asked to enroll in a plan when they seek care.
If they refuse, the state could recoup the medical costs in several ways, Romney said yesterday: The state might cancel the personal tax exemption on their state income taxes, which is worth about $175. It could withhold some or all of their state income tax refund and deposit it in what Romney called a ''personal healthcare spending account." Or, it might take money out of the person's paycheck, as it does now to collect child support.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
I just clicked your profile page, and see that you live in NH. I figured you must be from Mass or nearby. What do you personally think of Romney, regarding his conservative philosophy and practice? It's hard to imagine a real conservative winning in Mass.
I don't have anything against him, I'm just used to some real RINOS on the west coast and loathe them. For instance, Gordon Smith.
Of course, no matter what kind of R Romney is, he's lightyears better than Hillary. My cat would be better than Hillary.
Healthy uninsured people are often making a rational decision in not buying insurance--because of regulation of the insurance policies the healthy and low risk policyholders are forced to subsidize the unheatlhy, and policies are often larded with mandated coverages that the consumer would at the price forgo.
Then the rest of us are harmed by having to pay for what the uninsured individual cannot.
This logic is why the Nanny State is out of control. There is no limit to the degree of government intervention in people's lives that cannot be approved based on cost to society argument; including mandatory medical exams, mandated diet and exercise, prohibition of tobacco and alcohol.
If the uninsured were willing to sign irrevocable statements assuring that they will not request medical treatment that they cannot pay for in advance of treatment, even under pain of lingering, exruciating, painful death, then you'd be right, there would be no harm to us.
Why not respect the private property rights of hospitals and repeal the "emergency" (which has been expanded to include just about anything) mandate to treat without regard to payment. If you can't pay, you might just have to go to a cheap charity hospital.
he just lost my vote for Prez
Dear MRMEAN,
"Why not respect the private property rights of hospitals and repeal the "emergency" (which has been expanded to include just about anything) mandate to treat without regard to payment."
I have already suggested that the law could be written that those who refuse to insure themselves could alternatively sign express waivers to any medical treatment for which they are unable to pay upfront, no matter how painful, deadly, or lingering their health condition.
That would seem a reasonable solution for those who want to avoid an individual mandate.
sitetest
As Rush would point out:
"First, they recommend. Then they force employers. Then they force you!"
Exactly as I predicted: you just repeated the arguments that others have made, and that I've dealt with. That's why I asked you to read the replies to #19, and my replies to them. The answer to your objection lies there.
My argument is sound, in NH where people by and large, are responsible, government has not had to step in, but with respect to the health payment crisis in the USA, that is not the case. Large groups of people seek free care believing it is their right to get it. They are irresponsible and it is time for government to cause them to either be responsible or pay in advance.
You're talking about collective punishment. Whatever that is, it's not conservative.
What is your solution to the health care payment crisis in the USA? Is it Hillary care, aka, nationalized medical care? No care for the poor?
We're not talking about the poor, that is, people who can't afford insurance at all. We're talking about those who can pay for it, but don't, and then get medical bills they can't pay off. It's a simple matter of making them face consequences for incurring expenses they can't pay off, just as is done with other types of expenses. Just as I explained at #80.
WRT 93, it seems but I might be wrong that the problem you have with Mitt's plan is that if one reads very closely it will eventually cause criminal aliens to actually pay for all of the free care they have gotten over the years.
If you think this will affect illegal aliens, you're dreaming. It would be the only upside of the proposal if it will, but it's not going to happen.
What do you mean, can afford insurance but can't afford the bill? If they had insurance the bill may be inconsequential.
Being able to afford insurance is not the same as actually having it. Did you read the article?
I still think you like the status quo because so many get over on the financially responsible and then send their cash back south over the border.
Get help.
Thanks for the info. If Romney is going to be running for Pres, I certainly want to know more about him.
I wonder if his religious beliefs will be a handicap. I don't believe a lot of the LDS theology/history, but their moral standards, when followed, are of the highest. And it sounds as though he's definitely a practitioner. I have LDS neighbors and they are honorable, kind people.
I'll check out the mag.
In your dreams. This proposal is going to apply to people who have over a certain level of income (those who don't qualify for Medicaid). Officially, many illegals have no income, because they get paid under the table. Almost all the rest have very little, and would qualify for Medicaid. They don't pay much in the way of income taxes to begin with, so there isn't going to be much of anything to withhold from them. The state's still going to keep playing the cutesy little "don't ask/don't tell" game with them.
So you agree those who have income should pay.
They should be required to pay for the care they actually receive, yes. Doesn't mean they should be preemptively required by law to pay for the care they might receive. It'd be smart for them to do so, so as to avoid the consequences of receiving a bill that's over their head financially and having all their assets taken away in order to pay for it, but that's their choice.
It wouldn't make a difference if he does show it. "Don't ask/don't tell". If Romney's afraid to take a public stand on illegal immigration, then he'll also be afraid to implement a proposal that would significantly inconvenience illegals. Otherwise, how is it that illegals constantly qualify for Medicaid and other welfare benefits?
The indulgency that this country, and especially liberal states like Massachusetts, show towards illegals is very deeply entrenched in the political culture. A proposal like this isn't going to turn around and change all that through the back door.
Don't ask/don't tell will be a thing of the past after the next election cycle. Mitt's plan is to incrementalize the movement towards turning back the impact of the criminal alien element. Americans are sick of the inaction by GWB and congress up to now.
I'm curious how you know this. And if he plans to do it incrementally (i.e., unnoticeably), then how is he going to get any political mileage out of it?
I do know that, from the article, Ted Kennedy, co-sponsor of the latest amnesty proposal in Congress, considers Romney's proposal a "healthy step forward". How likely is it going to be, then, that it'll impinge on Kennedy's values?
The problem isn't that people can not afford health insurance then rack up hundreds of thousands in health care bills...
The problem is that it's even POSSIBLE to rack up hundreds of thousands in health care bills. It's easy, and the type of care doesn't even have to be all that extraordinary.
We need to reform the system that makes a bandage $100 or an injection $250, or a day in a hospital bed $1500. If the prices were what they should be, insurace would be cheap.
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