Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the ignition domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php:6131) in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-content/plugins/nitropack/functions.php on line 2811

Deprecated: Return type of Printaura_Updater_Config::offsetExists($offset) should either be compatible with ArrayAccess::offsetExists(mixed $offset): bool, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-content/plugins/printaura-woocommerce-api/classes/class-pa-updater-config.php on line 80

Deprecated: Return type of Printaura_Updater_Config::offsetGet($offset) should either be compatible with ArrayAccess::offsetGet(mixed $offset): mixed, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-content/plugins/printaura-woocommerce-api/classes/class-pa-updater-config.php on line 93

Deprecated: Return type of Printaura_Updater_Config::offsetSet($offset, $value) should either be compatible with ArrayAccess::offsetSet(mixed $offset, mixed $value): void, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-content/plugins/printaura-woocommerce-api/classes/class-pa-updater-config.php on line 53

Deprecated: Return type of Printaura_Updater_Config::offsetUnset($offset) should either be compatible with ArrayAccess::offsetUnset(mixed $offset): void, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-content/plugins/printaura-woocommerce-api/classes/class-pa-updater-config.php on line 67

Warning: Constant WP_CRON_LOCK_TIMEOUT already defined in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-config.php on line 93

Warning: Constant AUTOSAVE_INTERVAL already defined in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-config.php on line 94

Warning: Constant WP_POST_REVISIONS already defined in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-config.php on line 95

Warning: Constant EMPTY_TRASH_DAYS already defined in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-config.php on line 96

Warning: Constant WP_MEMORY_LIMIT already defined in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-config.php on line 98

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php:6131) in /home4/midwevb1/public_html/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8
Democrat Archives - The Midwest Guy https://midwestguy.com/tag/democrat/ Life - Cars - Technology - Art - Community Mon, 16 Feb 2026 13:49:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://i0.wp.com/midwestguy.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/cropped-TMG-Favicon-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Democrat Archives - The Midwest Guy https://midwestguy.com/tag/democrat/ 32 32 145320754 The Sunday Editorial: The Existentialism of Medicare https://midwestguy.com/2011/06/12/the-sunday-editorial-the-existentialism-of-medicare/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-sunday-editorial-the-existentialism-of-medicare https://midwestguy.com/2011/06/12/the-sunday-editorial-the-existentialism-of-medicare/#comments Sun, 12 Jun 2011 10:41:34 +0000 http://themidwestjournal.wordpress.com/?p=78 best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy anafranil online with the lowest prices today in the USA best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy buspar online with the lowest prices today in the USA (The…

The post The Sunday Editorial: The Existentialism of Medicare appeared first on The Midwest Guy.

]]>

best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy anafranil online with the lowest prices today in the USA

best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy buspar online with the lowest prices today in the USA

(The MPJ) — Here’s a question

best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy lisinopril with the lowest prices today in the USA

you.  What, exactly, is Medicare?

That’s a question that seems to be befuddling many in the media, including in reporting, fact-checking, and editorial circles.  Is Medicare simply medical insurance for American seniors, regardless of its form?  Or does its form dictate its function?

Of course, this all revolves around the proposal by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisconsin) to completely overhaul Medicare.  Under Ryan’s proposal, the current single-payer system of government provided and underwritten insurance would disappear, to be replaced by a voucher system provided to seniors in order to help them purchase a plan on the private health care insurance market.  One of the key sticking points here is that, while health care costs are rising at a rate far above inflation, the amount that the vouchers would increase year by year would be pegged to inflation.  This means these vouchers would, until health care costs come under control, be valued less and less by the year.

Nobel prize-winning economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman is adamant that what Ryan proposes is, inherently, NOT “Medicare.”  On the other side of the coin, you have highly respected news organizations, like the St. Petersburg Times‘ PolitiFact.com saying, though it may be drastically different, it’s still Medicare.

So…two serious heavyweights with impeccable credentials weighing in on opposite ends of this debate.  Who’s right?

FROM THE LEFT:  (by: J. Metzger)

I have nothing but the utmost respect in the St. Petersburg Times.  As a journalist, I find they do fine work, especially in their PolitiFact.com project, which has since been extended to several other state newspapers, including some in the Midwest (including the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and The Columbus Dispatch).  However, I think they’re almost being too stuck in the mud on this one.  Let me explain myself.

Medicare was established by the Johnson Administration in the late 1960s in order to address a massive market failure in senior healthcare.  In the first half of the 20th century, the single greatest cause of economic dependency among senior citizens was the cost of healthcare.  It’s understandable, considering that’s the period in life when a person is going to rack up most of their medical expenditures.  Simply put, from a medical point of view, getting old is expensive.

Medicare is brilliant in that it bypasses the perpetual market failure of healthcare.  That is, demand always outstrips supply.  Always.  It has in the past.  It does at present.  And it always will.  Why?  Because people have an instinctual desire to survive.

Economists have been trying to overcome that biological instinct for decades to their complete and utter failure.  Chicago-school economists are world-renowned for their inability to factor in the innate irrationalities of humans (if they were right, we’d all be living in Tennessee, Florida and Alaska simply for their lack of income taxes).  But they haven’t succeeded, and until they do, it’s best we ignore this market-approach to healthcare, since we’ve already seen what it gets us.

Don’t tell that to Paul Ryan, though.  The Ryan Medicare overhaul program would completely recreate the market-created problems that the current iteration of Medicare solved.  Insurance companies would be saddled with millions of seniors who are exceptionally expensive to cover, they would have to charge much higher premiums (both to seniors and non-seniors) in order to keep their balance sheets in the black, and seniors would only be provided vouchers, paid directly to the insurance companies, that are wholly inadequate to cover the current cost of coverage, and become increasingly inadequate as time goes by.  Once again, those vouchers would only increase in value at the rate of inflation, while the cost of medical care is increasing at a rate FAR beyond that of inflation.

And while Ryan continues to insist that seniors covered in his plan would not be turned down by the private insurance companies for their pre-existing conditions, and other, expensive medical maladies, he’s only telling half the story.  No, insurance companies cannot turn you down, necessarily, but they can price your plan beyond your reach.  And if you cannot afford the plan that covers the issues you experience, voucher or no voucher, what good is it?

So the writers at PolitiFact completely miss the point when they lay an egg on us like this:

“The Republican plan would be a huge change to the current program, and future seniors would have to pay more for their health plans if it becomes law. But to say it would end Medicare, as the DCCC email does, is a major exaggeration. All seniors — current and future — would continue to be offered coverage under the proposal, and the program’s budget would increase every year.”

Yes, there would still be a government-funded “insurance program” for seniors, if you want to call it that.  Yes, it would make coverage more affordable than the complete ending of Medicare and tossing seniors to the pits of the insurance market.  But is it “Medicare”?  Does it even resemble the system that seniors today currently enjoy?

No.  Categorically, it does not.

It actually brings to mind a conundrum that Ford Motor Company experienced back in the 1980s.  They were exploring a new design concept with Ghia of Italy for a new line of two-door sport coupes.  At one point, they floated the idea of naming the new car “Mustang.”

Mustang enthusiasts (though not having much to be enthused about back in the 80s) were incensed, and began a letter-writing campaign to Ford, saying, in a sense, “this is not a Mustang.”

And it wasn’t.  But Ford still made the car.  They just had the good sense not to call it Mustang.  Instead, a new name was glued on  the back.  “Probe.”  And I think that the analogy works here.

The Probe was still an interesting looking, two-door, four-seat, sporty coupe wasn’t necessarily a bad car, and had many of the same qualities as the Mustang.  It was cheap.  It was sporty.  It was fun to drive.  But it was far enough away from the original concept to be rejected by the users of the original.  And it wasn’t rejected for the mere fact that it was different.  It was rejected soundly because it was significantly “worse.”

And that’s where we are with Ryancare.  Ryancare is the Ford Probe to Medicare’s Mustang.

And people wouldn’t call the Probe a Mustang.  Just like they don’t call the Sears Tower “Willis Tower.”  And they don’t call the corpse flower a “rose.”  Those re-namings don’t work.

Neither does Ryan’s Medicare plan, regardless of what it’s called.

FROM THE RIGHT (by: Nick Otto)

The definition of Medicare is that program which we call Medicare.  I don’t care what we call the program we use to give old people health care, so I’ll leave that to the spinmeisters to fight over.

The heart of the problem is that demand outstrips supply by a massive amount once old age is reached.  Medicare as it exists now has not magically solved that problem.   Medicare tries to meet supply by writing a blank check (with thousands of pages of regulations and limitations concerning that check), and that cannot work for much longer.

As noted by many, healthcare costs are rising no matter how it is paid for.  Our aging population will also cause costs as a percent of GDP to greatly increase as well.  Basically, the number of people who will consume medical procedures is rising faster than the number of people who will pay for it, while at the same time those procedures are also rising in cost and our seniors are living longer.  Too bad you liberals are so aghast at smoking, or the elderly would be dying off much faster and cheaper.

There is debate about exactly which year we run out of money to fund it, with some estimates ranging from 2024 to 2029.  Ryan’s plan will control the inevitable cost increases using market forces and means testing.  Without a major overhaul, Medicare will control the inevitable cost increases by decreasing funding and service, as Obamacare did to the tune of $500 billion.

I do not think it is fair to say that vouchers only increase at the rate of inflation.  In every government health care plan spending will increase at the exact same rate: whatever Congress decides it will.

Ryan’s plan has vouchers increasing at inflation because that is what he decided to put in it; whatever the final plan has will be whatever compromise Congress decides upon, same as any plan including the current one.

The real difference between Ryan’s plan and the current system is a philosophical difference that touches upon the heart of what it means to be a liberal or a conservative; do you believe that government regulation and control are efficient, or do you believe that market forces are efficient?  Unfortunately statistics can be brought up to bolster either side, with most of those statistics being suspicious either due to the source (see smoking source above) or misinterpretation (see almost every usage of statistics).

For example, government healthcare costs have risen slower than private insurance costs.  But private insurance has risen in quality faster than government healthcare.  What does this say about a government program that uses private insurance?

Whatever you want it to.

The post The Sunday Editorial: The Existentialism of Medicare appeared first on The Midwest Guy.

]]>
https://midwestguy.com/2011/06/12/the-sunday-editorial-the-existentialism-of-medicare/feed/ 2 78
The Sunday Editorial: Illinois Democrats Pick Party Over Voters https://midwestguy.com/2011/06/05/the-sunday-editorial-illinois-democrats-pick-party-over-voters/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-sunday-editorial-illinois-democrats-pick-party-over-voters https://midwestguy.com/2011/06/05/the-sunday-editorial-illinois-democrats-pick-party-over-voters/#respond Sun, 05 Jun 2011 07:00:55 +0000 http://themidwestjournal.wordpress.com/?p=20 SPRINGFIELD, IL (The MPJ) — The Illinois General Assembly has produced its maps for the upcoming best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy iverheal with the lowest prices today in the USA redistricting.  And, once…

The post The Sunday Editorial: Illinois Democrats Pick Party Over Voters appeared first on The Midwest Guy.

]]>
SPRINGFIELD, IL (The MPJ) — The Illinois General Assembly has produced its maps for the upcoming

best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy iverheal with the lowest prices today in the USA

redistricting.  And, once again, it’s a gerrymandered mess.  However, there’s a difference between this gerrymandered mess and other messes in

best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy clindamycin with the lowest prices today in the USA
best online pharmacy with fast delivery buy cialis super active with the lowest prices today in the USA

redistricting past:  Only one party is to blame for it this time.

In the past, the General Assembly in Springfield was divided.  For example, in the 2000 redistricting, the Illinois House was controlled by Democrats, the Senate by Republicans, and the Governor’s Mansion by Republican Governor George Ryan.  And that effort resulted in two districts for U.S. Congress being listed by Slate.com as amongst the 20 “Most Gerrymandered.”

Those two districts in Illinois listed in that article are the Democratic 4th, and the Republican 17th.  Luis Gutierrez’s (D) 4th could be seen as a sideways pair of earmuffs.  The over-head band of which follows mostly roadways (including the exact width of the I-290 Eisenhower Expressway in Chicago), and connects two largely Hispanic areas of the city.  Robert Schilling’s (R) 17th is similarly unusual, though on a physically larger scale.  It connects the relatively Democratic areas of the Quad Cities and sections of Central Illinois’ Decatur and northern Metro-East with heavily Republican areas such as Macomb, Quincy, Carlinville and Pana.

So, here’s the districts Illinois has now.  Here’s the statewide proposal.  And here’s a Chicagoland detail map.  And here’s a really cumbersome, and slightly useless Google Earth map of the whole thing.

Do Illinois voters look like they will have a more fair and proper representation to Washington now?

FROM THE LEFT:  (by: J. Metzger)

No.  Not in the least.  Though some of the districts are, indeed, more contiguous in appearance, they still put most Illinois Republicans up against either each other, or against exceptionally well-dug-in Democrats.

The highlights of the map are relatively non-controversial.  Macon County (Decatur) is back to being in one district, where it was in three before (18th and 19th, with the 17th splitting both the county and the city down the middle).  Many downstate districts appear more generally contiguous (a lot fewer dog-legs, highway-followers, and city splitters), although the Chicagoland districts appear largely the same.

However, a lot of once-contiguous cities and counties are now split, and some split areas remain so.  Bloomington-Normal remains split down the middle east-west.  The only difference this time is that, instead of being split between heavily-Republican 15 in the east, and the west being part of an 11th district dog-leg otherwise dominated by Kankakee, its west is put into an incumbent-less 13th (13 was in the southwest suburbs of Chicago, represented by Republican Judy Biggert) and its east into Republican Aaron Schock’s 18th, which is dominated by a (relevant but newly-divided) Peoria.

In all, there’s a much greater number of Republican congressmen are either facing each other, facing entrenched Democrats in Democratically-favored districts, or in grossly unfamiliar territory than their Democratic counterparts.  What’s more, more of the Chicago suburbs are going to be represented by Chicago-city Representatives (largely due to the decreasing population of the City of Chicago), meaning a lot of suburban issues could get either no representation or mal-representation by Congressmen focused on the city sections of their districts.

In the Chicagoland area, Luis Gutierrez keeps his earmuff 4th.  Chicago South-sider Bobby Rush (D) will see his 1st District extend all the way south toward Kankakee.  What he doesn’t get, Jesse Jackson Jr.’s (D) 2nd District will grab.  The already silly IL-7 of Rep. Danny Davis (D) becomes downright ridiculous.  The formerly reasonable IL-6 of Peter Roskam (R) becomes a Pac Man…that refuses to consume Roskam’s home.  Roskam will now have to contend with Chicago Northsider (and popular Democratic incumbent) Mike Quigley.  The bloody 10th districts trades its bunny tail in Palatine for a pair of bunny ears absorbing Zion and Round Lake Beach, along with the rest of Grayslake.

Now, I know a lot of you are looking at this, and saying, “well, what else is new?”  That’s true.  And, to be fair, looking at the statewide map, it looks a little more contiguous than the last one.  That’s not saying much.  Illinois’ current map would even make Elbridge Gerry himself blush with embarrassment.  But the new map, behind its slightly more contiguous lines, hides a far more sinister approach.  Power party incumbent protection.  The ratio of Democrats protected to Republicans co-districted, or drawn into heavily Democratic territories is unacceptable.

And so is this redistricting plan.  As much as I favor liberal politics, and in turn favor the Democrats in elections, I abhor corruption, and safe districts.  When representatives to the US House can maintain their jobs for nigh on twenty and more years, facing reelection every two, without having to really “run” for the seat, that’s unacceptable, and it leads to a lower quality legislature in Washington.

Voters should pick their representatives.  Not the other way around.

FROM THE RIGHT: (by: Nick Otto)

I agree with just about everything Justin has written.

Hopefully this trend will not continue, as I prefer to disagree with as many people as possible, especially liberals.  That said, it is heartening to see someone take a side on an issue based upon a higher ideology than Republican vs. Democrat.  If the situation were reversed I too would decry this egregious abuse of…  OK, you got me.  My initial response was, “SUCKER!  I’ll agree now but when the tables are turned I’ll laud the Republican gerrymandering as ‘statesmanship,’ or defend it by claiming Democrats started it.”

But then I thought about the issue for awhile, and realized I was looking at it from the perspective of Democrat vs. Republican, rather than Conservative vs. Liberal.  When looked at like this, it is clear that conservatives should always oppose gerrymandering, even when Republicans benefit;  ESPECIALLY when Republicans benefit.

There are about twice as many conservatives as liberals in this country, yet Republicans struggle to get elected.  The reason?  Conservative principles almost all hinge upon limiting the power of government; when you ARE the government those principles limit your self-interest.  And so the safer Republicans feel, the more likely they are to indulge in Big Government and the corruption that necessarily follows.  1,000 pages of environmental regulation might look bad to a conservative citizen, but to a politician, conservative or otherwise, that is 1,000 pages that can each be auctioned off to the highest bidder.

People strongly tend to do what is in their best interest; it is in a politician’s best interest to ignore conservative principles.  The only exception is when ignoring those principles will lead to them losing an election; gerrymandering leads to politicians not having to worry about losing elections.  Therefore gerrymandering is bad for conservative principles, even when Republicans benefit.

Gerrymandering is such an obviously un-democratic tactic that I am surprised it has survived this long.  Even though eliminating it would require the party in charge to choose to eliminate something that benefits the party in charge, it doesn’t seem like it would be that difficult to get a legislature to ban gerrymandering right after that same legislature engaged in it.

It would not be against that parties’ best interest to switch to a non-partisan system since no one can know who will be in control 10 years later, and in the short term that party reaps the benefits of both the recent gerrymandering and the voter goodwill from ending it.  But perhaps it is not really about 1 party short-sightedly sticking it to the other party, but rather 2 parties taking the long view and sticking it to us…

The post The Sunday Editorial: Illinois Democrats Pick Party Over Voters appeared first on The Midwest Guy.

]]>
https://midwestguy.com/2011/06/05/the-sunday-editorial-illinois-democrats-pick-party-over-voters/feed/ 0 20