
Most critiques of free markets can be better phrased as business plans.
- Devin Finbarr of Intellectual Detox
Game-time, forward-looking thoughts on business, politics, technology, economics, and humanity ... from my personal viewpoint ... with no apologies.
Most critiques of free markets can be better phrased as business plans.
- Devin Finbarr of Intellectual Detox
"The Internet doesn't have the fact checking."
"The Internet dumbs people down because it's so targeted." "You'll never get that out-of-the-corner-of-your-eye story about haircuts in Cambodia."
"We're losing the group sensibility that creates stories."
"We'll just never have those good ole days of newsroom collaboration. Blogging is very solitary."
"Everyone loses when a newspaper shuts down."
"There's just something special about freezing your butt off going outside in the morning to get the paper in your jammies."
What is your favorite example where reputation doesn't make voluntaryAs moths drawn to fire, many responders couldn't help but focus on the pirates and sex. Others have thought up niche examples such as the "fall forward" effect of bad bosses with good employees. They needn't. His question can be answered with common real-world examples. My contribution to the debate is as follows:
interaction work well? Is the problem demand, supply, or what?
• Equalize the tax laws so that employer-provided health insurance and individually owned health insurance have the same tax benefits. Now employer health insurance benefits are fully tax deductible, but individual health insurance is not. This is unfair.Yup.
• Repeal all state laws which prevent insurance companies from competing across state lines. We should all have the legal right to purchase health insurance from any insurance company in any state and we should be able use that insurance wherever we live. Health insurance should be portable.
• Repeal government mandates regarding what insurance companies must cover. These mandates have increased the cost of health insurance by billions of dollars. What is insured and what is not insured should be determined by individual customer preferences and not through special-interest lobbying.
• Enact tort reform to end the ruinous lawsuits that force doctors to pay insurance costs of hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. These costs are passed back to us through much higher prices for health care.
• Make costs transparent so that consumers understand what health-care treatments cost. How many people know the total cost of their last doctor's visit and how that total breaks down? What other goods or services do we buy without knowing how much they will cost us?
• Enact Medicare reform. We need to face up to the actuarial fact that Medicare is heading towards bankruptcy and enact reforms that create greater patient empowerment, choice and responsibility.
• Finally, revise tax forms to make it easier for individuals to make a voluntary, tax-deductible donation to help the millions of people who have no insurance and aren't covered by Medicare, Medicaid or the State Children's Health Insurance Program.
I am pro death penalty, pro abortion, pro assisted suicide, pro regular suicide. I'm for anything that gets the traffic moving.
- Bill Maher.
Or this one:The reason ... is the profusion of mandatory minimum coverages state
governments require to be included in health insurance policies sold within
their states’ borders. This results in residents being forced into uniformly
high-priced, coverage-heavy “Cadillac” insurance policies as a result of state
law, not their own choice.While there is no doubt these coverages are both useful to and desired by some consumers, all insured residents of the Ocean State are forced to pay for asthma ed and IVF insurance, even if they aren’t potential consumers of either. Rhode Islanders’ premiums are is also higher than they otherwise would be because every policy sold there is required by law to cover the cost of smoking cessation, hair prosthesis, and acupuncture – along with 65 other treatments, procedures, and conditions.
Or this one I totally didn't expect from him:the drug Avastin is widely used in America to treat advanced colon cancer.
But it costs $50,000 a year -- so Canada's national-health system doesn't permit
its use. As a result, 41 percent of colon-cancer patients in Canada die each
year, as opposed to 32 percent in the United States. (Canada's average
eight-month wait for colonoscopies, another result of national-health rationing,
also contributes to the problem.)
The Post Office Factor. Americans are deeply cynical about government's ability to do anything right. Putting a man on the moon, building an interstate-highway
system, fielding history's most lethal army -- nothing has changed that. Even
Mr. Obama makes jokes about how standing in line at the post office has
convinced him he doesn't want the government running private firms.