I Hate Dialysis Message Board
Off-Topic => Off-Topic: Talk about anything you want. => Topic started by: talker on January 13, 2016, 01:12:16 PM
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I wonder how this will play out?
Those with a low level paying job, no health insurance and filing a tax return.
Those with a moderate level paying job, no health insurance and filing a tax return
But in 2016, the penalty for being uninsured will rise to the greater of either $695 or 2.5 percent of taxable income.
That’s for someone without coverage for a full 12 months.
This year the comparable numbers are $325 or 2 percent of income
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This is necessary since there is no way to "opt out" of the implied insurance everyone gets with the "ER must treat" laws.
If there was a way to opt out (as in "No health care facility is required to give care absent proof of payment in advance"), it would be a good substitute for the penalty.
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There is the DNR option (Do Not Reccesatate) (Spelling?).
Even though my Mother had insurance she chose this option as she felt that she had lived long enough. I didn't agree, but that was her decision.
The biggest problem with this option is it is only written. If it isn't tattooed ER Staff may not have any knowledge and will follow 'protocol' as they would for any patient that is wheeled in the door.Then again, even tattooed, there will be a percentage of people that once facing death, will recant, claiming they had taken the tattoo in error, and want treatment to continue living.
How, and where is the line drawn?
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I wonder how this will play out?
Those with a low level paying job, no health insurance and filing a tax return.
Those with a moderate level paying job, no health insurance and filing a tax return
But in 2016, the penalty for being uninsured will rise to the greater of either $695 or 2.5 percent of taxable income.
That’s for someone without coverage for a full 12 months.
This year the comparable numbers are $325 or 2 percent of income
I don't have much sympathy for people who choose to go without health insurance, except for those people in Republican lead states where they may get much less support affording insurance under the exchanges - i.e. Louisiana prior to this week. I don't know that poor leadership directly impacts costs or just people who might qualify for Medicare/Medicaid, but I expect that directly makes it harder to afford the mandatory insurance.
Mandatory insurance is good, and I'm happy the government tried to make it more affordable for lower income people. I'm happy to have my taxes go towards that. I'm sad that politics and nasty people try to block others from insurance. I'm not religious so I don't understand how so called religious people care so little about their fellow man/women/children...
Anyone who chooses to not have insurance is passing all the medical risk costs on to the public - that being either charities or the government. It is completely irresponsible to be living without insurance. Think of everyone you know, how many have not had some sort of medical issue that costs a lot of money. You need to pay into the system if you are going to use it. Very few people are going to go through life without needing serious medical care at some point. If you are not paying in the $1,000/year into insurance than you will just be a burden on the public.
I first became sick in high school to an uninsured family. I cost the public roughly $250,000. After that my mother got a job that provided coverage so my long-term care was covered.
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$1000.00 a year for two people would be outstanding. Howver, the quote my son got was $1400 per MONTH for his family.They cant afford it, so now they are stuck with the penalties as well.
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$1000.00 a year for two people would be outstanding. Howver, the quote my son got was $1400 per MONTH for his family.They cant afford it, so now they are stuck with the penalties as well.
But, even so, the amount of free care you son will received if he has a heart attack or major accident will FAR exceed the cost of the penalty he is paying.
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$1000.00 a year for two people would be outstanding. Howver, the quote my son got was $1400 per MONTH for his family.They cant afford it, so now they are stuck with the penalties as well.
Yes that was a random number. Really for me under my employer provided insurance it would be something about $3380 for family insurance for the year, under my wife's plan it would be more. An that doesn't include the co-pays of $3000-$5000 should the insurance be needed.
Personally I don't think my family worried about insurance coverage, but they were worried about accidents and had good medical supplies, but still when my brother and sister cut off the tips of their fingers they went to the hospital and my father went to the hospital for a concussion, and as a young adult my brother was medevaced for an appendix problem (the debt from that followed him for years).
In my family not having money for things like insurance was 100% a lifestyle/career choice, my parents wanted to move to Alaska and live in the wilds. They were not one for real jobs, instead did artisan wood work and commercial fished, living a subsistence lifestyle. As my mother proved when she wanted to she was able to get a job and get insurance coverage. But by that time we were by choice living closer to town. My father is an artisan and only has insurance through my mother, luckily when she passed the insurance remained with him, maybe because she had retired prior to death.
In my family with four siblings we have had lupus and the corresponding kidney failure, and brain cancer. Both huge expenses which luckily affect those of us with stable jobs that provide insurance (after my initial issues in high school which were paid for with small town collections, state support and likely some hospital write-offs).
On a side note my family if I had grown up today probably would have received coverage at VERY low cost due to living under the poverty line.
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I have to conceed the INTENT of a mandatory insurance law is good. However, the effect is terrible. The majority of Insurance Companies are FOR PROFIT organizations. Even with massive salaries for upper management they are still reporting record earnings.
This is all well and good for the stock holder. The bad part is most people cannot afford those insurance policies.
Even the few Not-for-Profit Insurance Companies have very well paid administration, outstanding salaries and benefit packages. Insurance rates are better than the for-profit companies but still would be lower yet if salaries and benefit were more in-line with the rest of 'Middle-America'.
How to get this to come about? I haven't a clue as there are very few individuals on this planet that would be willing to take a voluntary salary cut.
If middle America ever managed to get a substantial salary increase the business world would simply counter with an price increase for all goods and services. The net result would be even worse on those families that did not get any salary increase.
Inflation.
Vicious cycle.
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Obviously a single payer system would have made things much easier, but that would never have passed congress... If its not for war we don't like to increase spending...
The bad part is most people cannot afford those insurance policies.
I find that hard to believe, except in the states that refuse to use federal money to help their residents pay for healthcare or receive Medicare. I personally believe that people make choices and those choices affect what people can afford. If people can not "afford" health coverage then they are making choices that result in that problem. (People in extreme poverty or no job should have subsidies or access to Medicare.) Those choices might be to specialize in a job that doesn't provide insurance, spend money on one thing over another, move to areas where you can not afford your life on your salary.
If someone allows themselves to not afford insurance it means they are passing off that expense to the public - the rest of us.
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I know you mean well.
Single male here in MO on SSD since late teens. Father of one that is living with the Mother.
SS pays low $700 something. Works part-time making roughly $400/mo.
NOT eligible for SSI, nor Food Stamps.Rent, utilities, car insurance, he's broke immediately after paying monthly bills. Not even enough to buy groceries for the month.
Recently received a letter from the State that since his Son is now 9 Dad is required to carry medical insurance on the child.
No way.
How many younger males on Dialysis are in a very similar situation? Not enough money to make it through the month, yet have Fathered a child and soon expected to provide medical coverage for the child?
Some of these people HAD jobs prior to their medical issue and losing their employable. Now UN-employable or under-employed because of infirmity, no fault of their own, will be further suffering from yet another responsibility they are unable to fulfill.
The 'System' is flawed. And no true relief is in sight.
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How do people who are averse to mandatory insurance think their medical costs *should* be paid?
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I am not adverse to mandatory medical insurance.
I am adverse to insurance companies taking advantage of the 'mandatory insurance' laws and charge such outragous insurance policy rates far in excess of the rates of only a few years prior to the law.
What drove up the rates?
Corporate greed. Not claims. Pure greediness that the consumers are now MANDATED to pay.
Actually very simple. We saw this same effect when auto insurance became mandatory. And prior to that law being passed the auto insurance industry advertised how the 'mandatory insurance law' would actually reduce insurance rates. All Lies.
They have simply increased their greed now requiring insurance not just on every auto, but now on every person.
What and see what scam they pull next to again line their pockets with our money. Or from those that can afford it.
Look what they have done with homeowners. Because foul weather in one area raised claims they increased rates NATIONWIDE. What chance of tidal storm damage is there in Denver? None, yet their rates increased along with everyone else damaged by coastal weather. Local seasonal problems and costs should not be spread about Nationally. I moved away from such areas to avoid the possible costs, now I have those same expenses. It isn't right.
Insurance is a game of risks. The insurance companies are constantly reducing their risks and increasing their profits, not only limiting pay-outs but increasing premiums so as to ensure their increasing profits. We have no recourse other than to go without coverage at tremendous risk, and now a tax penalty also.
There will be a great number of healthy people that will find it far cheaper, or more affordable, to pay the tax penalty that to pay the insurance rates.
I can only hope they stay healthy.
Take Care,
Charlie B53
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I have never understood why corporate America and all business owners stand for being required to carry the burden of their employees' health insurance.
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Some time ago Japanese Big Business's set a shining example for the world. Although they did not pay the employee that will, the benefits more than made up for the salary. The Company not only supplied housing for the employee AND family, but medical, hospital, education, AND future employment for the children of that employee. An new hire didn't just get a job, they gained a lifetime housing, for the entire family at no cost to them but their honest work and loyalty to the Company.
Company built cities, hospitals, schools. A whole community.
Here in the U.S. it seems the companies only care about profit. Never considering the workforce anything but disposable.
China today has complete cities built and mothballed, waiting to business or industry to move in. Ready to take advantage of any large Corporation ready and willing to make use of the Chinese workforce and their ready-made spaces.
EDITED - Added statement - CharlieB53
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I have never understood why corporate America and all business owners stand for being required to carry the burden of their employees' health insurance.
WWII wage controls made it impossible for companies to compete for employees by offering better salaries, so companies started adding benefits like health insurance that were outside the scope of the regulations.
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In New Jersey the uninsured are covered by a plan that has hospitals raising the rates of other uninsured people, big insurance does not pay the additional costs, just the people with money, then they declare bankruptcy and the medical provider gets a tax deduction that nets them the same amount the insurance pays,
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Tax breaks, some of the allowable deductions set me off big.
I see so many empty business properties. Whole malls, a lot of the strip malls, down-town business buildings to numerous to count. And this is most everywhere across the nation. Check into the space rent on these places and be ready for a huge sticker shock. Utilities NOT included. And many owners want a lease, fine, I', O.K. with that, but when it is laid on the renter to maintain and repair the building including plumbing and electrical. I'm out.
I see a number of start-ups that fail within the first year because they simply do not have enough business to afford the place.
Yet these property owners are continuing to receive huge tax credits for 'loss of income' for the empty properties. Granted this is a burden for relatively new properties the owner may still be making payments for. But those older, paid for properties are pure gravy and off-setting taxes on other income.
Lower those rates and give new business an opportunity to become established. This should stimulate the local economy a small amount, growing more as the new business grows, hopefully employing a few more people. Adding to the local tax revenue.
The owner even makes a small return but reduces the former tax credit.
Death taxes are another sore point. A person pays taxes his whole life yet manages to save and accrue a property. Once dead the State and Fed Governments want 'their' share. What share, they got their taxes all along! But no, they claim a % of everything. But it doesn't end there. They also tax inheritances. The inheritor must also pay inheritance tax, more like an income tax. Any way you look at it the money is taxed TWICE. Governmental Greed. It's real. Attorneys and accountants are constantly studying the tax laws to come up with ways to transfer or invest moneys so as to minimize the taxes in these situations, But the Government is also constantly re-writing tax code to stop or severely limit those loop-holes. It's a race that the Government most always wins, as they want ALL the money.
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Even though I live in Ca, the "golden" state where everything is "free", it is not. Had my Son and or any member of his family had a severe illness or an accident, there would be no free medical care and the bills would haunt them for years to come. It is a hard fact that there are many people in this country who have incomes so small, they are living borderline poverty. Most times it is more urgent to have food in your house than pay for medical insurance. Doesnt mean that people should be negligent, just means they don't have the money to pay for it, so then, yes, the rest of us carry them.
;D ;D Peace Out!!
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dupe removed (mod, please delete this post)
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Check into the space rent on these places and be ready for a huge sticker shock. Utilities NOT included.
It's worse than that - google what "triple net lease" means :o
But those older, paid for properties are pure gravy and off-setting taxes on other income.
Not really. Assume your "paid off" building has a fair market value of $10M. You need to get a return on your $10M, just as you would if you invested in the bank, T bills, or the market. Opportunity cost is as real as an expense you pay in cash.
What share, they got their taxes all along! But no, they claim a % of everything. But it doesn't end there. They also tax inheritances. The inheritor must also pay inheritance tax, more like an income tax.
Inheritance taxes can be reduced with judicious use of trusts, or in extreme cases, relocation to a state with a higher exemption or threshold.
One way to get back at the feds on inheritance taxes is to not sell highly appreciated stock. When your heirs inherit it, the cost basis is re-set to that at the time of your death. Those discontinuing dialysis can do a bit of market timing by discontinuing in an up market (had to get back on topic).
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Simon as usual points out perfectly logical points that should be obvious if I went blinded so much by my anti-government and big business attitude.
I attempt to reconcile both sides.....
If the businessman/land/building owner could still take advantage of the tax breaks of 'lost revenue' but off-set by reducing the rent and leasing the space at a more market friendly cost, this could conceivable stimulate new business and still allow the owner the total value of rent and tax allowance.
If this is NOT allowable under current law, then the Law MUST change.
Actually, the law ideally should benefit the owner with some small reward, minimal percentage perhaps as by helping to generate new business is positively stimulating the economy. So the owner's total rent + tax credits + stimulation credits would be greater than tax credits alone.
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I share B53's general attitude towards government, but I also have to remember that my dialysis is paid for by nature of the government's threat of overwhelming force against my fellow subjects who try to avoid paying for my treatment.
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I feel VERY fortunate that I'm able to have a major chronic illness and I'll be able to afford treatment even if I stop working.
I travel a lot and I'm constantly happy for the level of services my taxes pay for. I personally am happy that there is a huge safety net for people, I don't envy other countries with higher levels of poverty, crime, petty theft, and begging... Everyone in the US has a very high standard of living, and I fully support my huge tax bill making that possible. At the local level we have no children and don't use the local schools or sports centers but that is offset by things we use like Bike share and the library.
I'm not supportive of huge tax breaks for any business, but understand some are beneficial, such as tax rebates for hiring handicapped people who otherwise would be passed over. In general I feel businesses both large and small should be self supportive and not need my taxes in order to survive - if they can not they should go away and a better operated company will take its place.
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Here is another thing that I'm happy my taxes pay for, NIA and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services:
New Procedure Allows Kidney Transplants From Any Donor
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/10/health/kidney-transplant-desensitization-immune-system.html?_r=0
Supported by grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (R01DK098431 and K24DK10182801) @ http://www.niddk.nih.gov/Pages/default.aspx - a US government website.
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I'm not happy that we pay more and more in taxes and left with less and less in our bank account while it is taking more and more dollars to buy food and necessities. I thought my days of eating PBJ's and chicken pot pies were over, seems we are going backwards and having to live like we did when we were kids first starting out. (not all of us lived with mom and dad til our 20's and not all of us have government jobs).
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But I like PBJ's and Chicken Pot Pies. Both are still a regular part of my diet.
Of my local grocery stores the Kroger house brand Strawberry Preserves has far more fruit than Smucker's.
And I haven''t found Banquet Pot Pie, Marie Calender are alright, but I grew up liking Banquet that Mom used to get.
We tend to like what we grew up eating.
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Well Charlie we like to make our own jam, if you put as much sugar in as fruit it stays good for Months, but to get back to the taxes, it looks possible (not likely) that VAT will be reduced for sanitary towels and tampons here in jolly England. How's that in US of A?
We don't pay VAT on meds.
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Sorry, not familiar with the term VAT.
At this point I spin-off topic and rambled on. Once pointed out what I had done I came back and cut that all out and created a new thread where it belonged in the Food section.
Take Care
EDITED - Cut out off topic and created a new thread in Food section "Freezer Jam" - Charlie B53 - Moderator - 3/20/2016
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Sorry, not familiar with the term VAT.
VAT is sales tax in US
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OOops! I easily get carried away and my attention diverts. I ramble when I should spin-off and start a new thread.
I apologise and will try not to repeat this error.
Taxes.
My home state of Washington dropped sales tax on 'foodstuffs'. People attempted to extend that to ALL foods but the State refused such that most all 'prepared' foods remained taxed so all fast food remains taxed. There is an on going argument over the ready-to-eat items in the grocery stores.
Here in Missouri I honesty haven't paid any attention. MO has a personal Income Tax. WA did not, having higher tax rates on most everything else.
MO has a Personal Property Tax on all Vehicles, boats, motors, trailers, trucks, tractors, farm equip, etc..
Wa has an Excise Tax only on those vehicles that require a license plate, and tires.
Both states have differing taxes of fuels.
It keeps the accountants busy sorting out the numbers, especially around Income Tax time.