charlestudor2005: Just a suggestion, if I may.
Before stating that someone posted something that doesn't make him "look very good", why not actually try to understand the issue and the context in which the post was made? That way you can avoid embarrassing yourself. (Although I'm not sure that anyone who attacks other posters with Nazi epithets and swastika images is likely to be very concerned with whether or not he's embarrassing himself!)
The "sweeping" statement that seemed to bother you simply involved my observation that you deemed the decline in demand for the services of defense lawyers an "unintended consequence" of tort reform. When I suggested that that's a good thing, it somehow morphed into an attack on "all" lawyers and a "sweeping statement" that made me "look bad." Amazing.
I think all of us (well, most of us anyway!) would agree that if we are going to get a grip on health care costs, we must reduce the share that's going to lawyers' fees -- for both plaintiffs and defendants. Even many
lawyers agree with that! (My Dad, for one.)
I don't know how you can say one of the most regulated industries in the US is not in commerce.
Originally Posted by charlestudor2005
That's not what I said!
Something is
not commerce if there's no transaction. In other words, if I
do not buy insurance, there has been no commercial transaction of any kind. The question revolves not around whether the government can regulate interstate commerce (we all agree that it can), but whether it can
force you to engage in such commerce against your will.
I know, I know, you're probably going to say you are talking about the people as individuals. Well, maybe one of the best examples is liability insurance on your vehicles. Every state requires an owner to purchase such insurance from a private company.
Originally Posted by charlestudor2005
Sorry, that comparison doesn't work for many of us. Driving on public roads is a privilege, not a right. If I choose to ride in taxis or hire a chauffer, I don't have to buy insurance.
Living is a RIGHT, not a privilege.
See the difference?
I fully understand Obama situation. All I was saying was that things are lining up similarly.
Originally Posted by WTF
Similarly to what?
You suggested parallels to the Reagan presidency, suggesting that Obama will benefit from a cyclical recovery and cruise to re-election in 2012. That could happen, but things are likely to be very difficult for him if he continues on his present path. As I said earlier, he'd better hope for a 1994-style housecleaning of the sort that saved Bill Clinton's bacon.
As you recall, Clinton quickly moved back to the center and even signed onto what was a center-right agenda in many ways.
If Obama continues pressing a manifestly anti-growth agenda, and succeeds in cramming it through, I think he's cooked in 2012.
After the big (BFD!) health care bill, what's next on the hit parade? Another go at cap-and-trade? More pork-festooned "stimulus" packages?
That's why I submit that comparisons to Jimmy Carter are far more appropriate. Carter spent the first half of his term acting as though he had absolutely no idea what the nation's most critical problems were and how to address them. Obama, so far, is doing the same.
And nothing is being done to deal with the real problem -- the epidemic of malpractice that kills 100,000 Americans every year. That's right -- 100,000 deaths from preventable medical errors in the U.S. every year.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
What?!?
Where does that number come from? The AAJ?
Tens of thousands of deserving Plaintiffs can't get lawyers. And the costs don't go away.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
How can tens of thousands of "deserving" plaintiffs not find lawyers? If someone actually has a
justifiable claim, aren't there plenty of attorneys eager to take the case on a contingency basis?
And what about the issue of defensive medicine? How can costs possibly be controlled when doctors feel compelled to paper the files with records of just about every test and procedure known to man in an effort to keep the jackpot-by-jury system from bankrupting them?