dsheinem wrote: Just hope you don't get cancer or something else costly, I guess.
How kind of you, I guess.
dsheinem wrote: Just hope you don't get cancer or something else costly, I guess.
Luke wrote:dsheinem wrote: Just hope you don't get cancer or something else costly, I guess.![]()
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How kind of you, I guess.
I don't think that it's fair to blame the ACA for the high cost of health care (and the resultingly high cost of health insurance). That certainly existed well before the ACA's passage and implementation. That said, the requirement that all Americans purchase insurance or pay a penalty is - in essence - a wealth transfer from the youngest, healthiest (and generally poorest) members (i.e., you and most of the other members of this forum) of our society to the oldest, sickest (and generally wealthiest) members. (Social security has the same effect. The brunt of the tax burden is borne by young wage earners, and the benefits are transferred to the oldest - and often wealthiest - members of our society without regard for need.) I understand that the goal of the act is to keep medical costs from rising at a rate that is much higher than inflation, but with an aging population, I am not sure how we can sustain the model contemplated by the current version of the ACA. I wish that the act would have included a "public option" (or a "just buy medicaid or medicare" option), and I think that the inclusion of such a feature would have accomplished the act's goals far better. (Since the federal government and the various state governments can insure people very efficiently, however, such an option would have been terrible for private insurers, and I understand - pragmatically - why it was not included in the act.)Luke wrote:But the ACA is a debacle.
I knew exactly what you were getting at, but the "I guess" made me tear up with laughter. Jump inside my head, jump back out and say that isn't hilarious.dsheinem wrote:
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I meant that like "(I guess your plan is) just to hope you don't get cancer or something else costly." But yeah: the internet and inflection.
Yup. Great suggestion, but my internest isn't covered. The guy knows me inside and out (no jokes please) and he and his team is all I really want.the King wrote:Luke,
Have you looked into a HSA?
An HSA is simply an account where you can set aside money for future medical expenses on a pre-tax basis. Depending on your HSA, the money you set aside earns interest, and most HSAs provide you with a debit card that you can use to pay for health care costs. (It is a lot easier to use an HSA debit card to pay for your health care than it is to deduct health care costs on your tax return.) Finally, you do not necessarily have to be covered by health insurance to open an HSA.Luke wrote:Yup. Great suggestion, but my internest isn't covered. The guy knows me inside and out (no jokes please) and he and his team is all I really want.