Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Andrew
Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:

 Either it will have a higher premium to cover pre-existing
 conditions, or it only covers things not caused by the pre-existing
 condition.

That is not how health status insurance works. It is insurance against
an increase in health insurance premiums.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 6:46 PM, Trent Shipleytship...@deru.com wrote:

 The people outside the boundary are not my responsibility.  They are not
 my people.  Furthermore, they don't participate in my moral economy.
 The status of the poor in my country has an immediate effect on me.  I
 may be among the poor, and if I am not I may have feelings for my fellow
 countrymen, and even if I don't there is a real cost to tripping over
 the hungry and homeless in the streets, and the crime associated with
 extreme poverty. Poverty is a society wide expense.

Then why isn't the relevant boundary much smaller -- city-sized?
Certainly your interaction with most of 300 million people in the US
is relatively small.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 4:42 PM, Trent Shipleytship...@deru.com wrote:

 So insurance could charge someone with type II diabetes more, but not
 someone with type I diabetes.  You could charge more to people who,
 smoke, are over weight, who don't exercise, or who practice un-safe sex.

 You couldn't charge more because of sex, age, or a prior cancer--except
 to the extent it was caused by a lifestyle choice.

Insurance is a way of pooling risk, but in virtually all types of
insurance, the premiums charged are proportional to the estimated
level of risk for each participant. If that is not the case, then
people who are low risk will avoid insurance pools that contain higher
risk people, since their premiums will be lower that way. Then you end
up with lower risk pools with lower premiums and higher risk pools
with higher premiums. Which is what you would have had anyway, if the
premiums were not artificially restricted.

If the government is going to interfere in the insurance market, it
seems to me that it would be simpler just to directly subsidize those
who cannot afford to pay health insurance premiums, and leave the
insurance market to function rationally.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 4:34 PM, Lance A. Brownla...@bearcircle.net wrote:

 The analogy between auto and health insurance fails in one regard:  Most
 of the time, a 5x increase in auto insurance premiums is a direct result
 of decisions by the covered person.  Many of causes for increases in
 health insurance premiums are outside the control of the covered person.

Another good reason for heath status insurance that does not hold for
auto status insurance.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 8:52 PM,
dsummersmi...@comcast.netdsummersmi...@comcast.net wrote:

 OK, I fear this won't work, but I'm going to try.

Work? How does it work?

 So, you can decide that everyone else is crazy or you can decide that there
 are areas that you can learn more about.

I choose the third one.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Martin Lewis
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 8:02 PM, John Williamsjwilliams4...@gmail.com wrote:

 So, you consider his post to me thoughtful, constructive, and worthy of 
 respect?

 Yes.

 Martin

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Alberto Monteiro
Doug Pensinger wrote (in html, and it's a hell to reformat):

 I do occasionally blow up. Once when I was accused of racism,
 once when a private discussion I'd had with someone was forwarded
 to the list, and ISTR Nick and I talking completely at
 cross-purposes. I was really annoyed on Friday night,
 partly 'cause I'd got home after drinking with a couple
 of friends in the pub, and an acquaintance of one of them
 was spouting anti-vaccination lunacy. And when I asked a
 couple of simple questions, I received the reply Oh, so
 you're science. That figures. 
 
 There's no arguing with simpletons like that.  And we seem to
 have more nut cases than ever before.  Birthers???  Ay Yi Yi. 

If you think things can't get worse...

On another list, when those Muhammad cartoons appeared, all the
list was mocking Islam and preaching freedom of speech, and
that was the opportunity for one listmember to get out of the
closet and confess being a Holocaust denier.

I still don't know if he was sincere, or if we was just testing
how free speech rulez we were.

Alberto Monteiro

PS: just because we believe in free speech doesn't mean we have to
feed the trolls...


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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread dsummersmi...@comcast.net



Original Message:
-
From: John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.com
Date: Sun, 16 Aug 2009 23:21:45 -0700
To: brin-l@mccmedia.com
Subject: Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care



Another good reason for heath status insurance 

John, you realize what you are arguing, don't you.  If the number a is too
big, then do a bit of algebra and obtain a =b*(1+c).  Pay b and c.  Guess
what, with this type of algebra, nothing is gained.

Now, there will always be niche markets for things like health status
insuranceespecially when health insurance tends to be year by year. So,
someone in their 20s could pay extra to be in a big pool when they are 50. 
But, the only reason that young folks can pay  health insurance costs is
that they don't have families and are in the low risk pool.  So, they
postpone the inevitable.

There is a reason why there isn't affordable long term insurance.  It's in
the algebra.  

What you are searching for is akin to trying to find an even prime number.

Dan M. 


mail2web.com – What can On Demand Business Solutions do for you?
http://link.mail2web.com/Business/SharePoint



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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Charlie Bell


On 18/08/2009, at 12:11 AM, dsummersmi...@comcast.net wrote:
What you are searching for is akin to trying to find an even prime  
number.


It's really easy to find one...

...but then you go looking for another...

Charlie.
But There's One, So There Must Be Another Eventually Maru

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Andrew Crystall
On 16 Aug 2009 at 23:18, John Williams wrote:

 If the government is going to interfere in the insurance market, it
 seems to me that it would be simpler just to directly subsidize those
 who cannot afford to pay health insurance premiums, and leave the
 insurance market to function rationally.

That is extremely expensive, for all it's simpler.

Again, paying from a pool on risk assessment encourages insurance 
companies to invest heavily in preventative care rather than the more 
expensive critical care for many conditions, which the government 
simply paying out vast sums in insurance for sick people doesn't 
provide.

(More, the government has to set limits somewhere if it is directly 
subsidising insurance...)

AndrewC

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Andrew Crystall
On 16 Aug 2009 at 23:03, John Williams wrote:

 On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Andrew
 Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
 
  Either it will have a higher premium to cover pre-existing
  conditions, or it only covers things not caused by the pre-existing
  condition.
 
 That is not how health status insurance works. It is insurance against
 an increase in health insurance premiums.

Of course that's how it works. It's in the interest of insurance 
companies not to pay out. Your shilling for corperations is amusing, 
but not based in reality: insurance allways takes into account risks.

AndrewC

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Dave Land

On 16 Aug 2009 at 23:18, John Williams wrote:


If the government is going to interfere in the insurance market,


You call it interference, I call it participation.

Well, at least you don't try to hide your bias.

Dave


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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
It is interesting what some people find rude which does not seem rude
to others. I suspect that a neutral observer would look at my posts
during the last few weeks and judge that they are not at all rude. I
have been asking some uncomfortable questions, but not making any
obviously rude remarks.

The interesting thing is that the data do not support the claim that
my posts make people less likely to communicate here. Rather, just the
opposite. If you look at the volume of non-JW posts as a function of
JW-posts to this list, there is a remarkably large positive
correlation.

Anyone listen to Bill Maher? I disagree with a lot of what he says,
but he is entertaining. He speaks his mind, and is not afraid to
discuss uncomfortable issues. I have never found him rude, but I
suspect others may have a different opinion. To each his own. Here's
an example of an uncomfortable issue that he discusses:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bill-maher/new-rule-smart-president_b_253996.html

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:11 AM,
dsummersmi...@comcast.netdsummersmi...@comcast.net wrote:

 There is a reason why there isn't affordable long term insurance.

Yes, government interference and people who would rather spend other
people's money for their own insurance.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:19 AM, Andrew
Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:

 Of course that's how it works. It's in the interest of insurance
 companies not to pay out. Your shilling for corperations is amusing,
 but not based in reality: insurance allways takes into account risks.

No, considering pre-existing conditions is not how health status
insurance works. It takes into account the risks of health insurance
premiums rising drastically in the future.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:33 AM, Dave Landdml...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 16 Aug 2009 at 23:18, John Williams wrote:

 If the government is going to interfere in the insurance market,

 You call it interference, I call it participation.

I'd agree with forced participation.

Here's an example of government forced participation:

http://www.wbir.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=96009catid=2

| But this trip has been frustrating. There just aren't enough volunteers
| to help all the people who need it, because of California state law.

| We tried to get a waiver to bring in good ol' East Tennessee boys and
| girls to fix teeth, do eyes, but unfortunately, except in Tennessee, the
| rest of the country won't allow practitoners of medicine from one state
| to cross over and help in another state, said Brock.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:19 AM, Andrew
Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
 On 16 Aug 2009 at 23:18, John Williams wrote:

 If the government is going to interfere in the insurance market, it
 seems to me that it would be simpler just to directly subsidize those
 who cannot afford to pay health insurance premiums, and leave the
 insurance market to function rationally.

 That is extremely expensive, for all it's simpler.

Actually, studies have shown that consumer driven health care reduces
costs, and does not decrease preventative care.

http://www.actuary.org/pdf/health/cdhp_may09.pdf

| With regard to first-year cost savings, all studies showed a favorable
| effect on cost in the first year of a CDH plan.  CDH plan trends ranged
| from -4 percent to -15 percent. Coupled with a control population on
| traditional plans that experienced trends of +8 percent to +9 percent,
| the total savings generated could be as much as 12 percent to 20 percent
| in the first year. All studies used some variation of normalization or
| control groups to account for selection bias.

| For savings after the first year, at least two of the studies indicate
| trend rates lower than traditional PPO plans by approximately 3 percent
| to 5 percent. If these lower trends can be further validated, it will
| represent a substantial cost-reduction strategy for employers and
| employees.

| Generally, all of the studies indicated that cost savings did not
| result from avoidance of appropriate care and that necessary care
| was received in equal or greater degrees relative to traditional
| plans. All of the studies reviewed reported a significant increase in
| preventive services for CDH participants. Three of the studies found
| that CDH plan participants received recommended care for chronic
| conditions at the same or higher level than traditional (non-CDH) plan
| participants. Two studies reported a higher incidence of physicians
| following evidence-based care protocols.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:11 AM,
dsummersmi...@comcast.netdsummersmi...@comcast.net wrote:



 Original Message:
 -
 From: John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, 16 Aug 2009 23:21:45 -0700
 To: brin-l@mccmedia.com
 Subject: Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care



Another good reason for heath status insurance

By the way, you lost the context of the discussion with your snipping
there. That is not a complete sentence, and even if you included the
complete sentence, you need to read a couple previous posts to realize
that the matter being discussed there was why there might be a demand
for health status insurance but not auto status insurance.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Andrew Crystall
On 17 Aug 2009 at 12:51, John Williams wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:19 AM, Andrew
 Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
 
  Of course that's how it works. It's in the interest of insurance
  companies not to pay out. Your shilling for corperations is amusing,
  but not based in reality: insurance allways takes into account risks.
 
 No, considering pre-existing conditions is not how health status
 insurance works. It takes into account the risks of health insurance
 premiums rising drastically in the future.

Which are based on your pre-existing conditions, right.

Either insurance companies are idiots, or they're out there to make 
money. Hmm.

AndrewC

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Andrew Crystall
On 17 Aug 2009 at 12:57, John Williams wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:19 AM, Andrew
 Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
  On 16 Aug 2009 at 23:18, John Williams wrote:
 
  If the government is going to interfere in the insurance market, it
  seems to me that it would be simpler just to directly subsidize those
  who cannot afford to pay health insurance premiums, and leave the
  insurance market to function rationally.
 
  That is extremely expensive, for all it's simpler.
 
 Actually, studies have shown that consumer driven health care reduces
 costs, and does not decrease preventative care.

Except you're not proposing consumer driven health care, you 
propising that the government pick up an lot of expensive healthcare 
costs. More, it doesn't create incentives to increase prevenative 
care either.

 | For savings after the first year, at least two of the studies indicate
 | trend rates lower than traditional PPO plans by approximately 3 percent
 | to 5 percent. If these lower trends can be further validated, it will
 | represent a substantial cost-reduction strategy for employers and
 | employees.

3-5%, when the total health cost overrun compared to other countries 
systems is an order of magnitude higher. Hmm.

AndrewC

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 4:47 PM, Andrew
Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
 On 17 Aug 2009 at 12:51, John Williams wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:19 AM, Andrew
 Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:

 No, considering pre-existing conditions is not how health status
 insurance works. It takes into account the risks of health insurance
 premiums rising drastically in the future.

 Which are based on your pre-existing conditions, right.

Yes, health insurance premiums are based on pre-existing conditions.
But  health STATUS insurance premiums are not (they are based on
likelihood of future chronic costly conditions).

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 4:47 PM, Andrew
Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
 On 17 Aug 2009 at 12:57, John Williams wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:19 AM, Andrew
 Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
  On 16 Aug 2009 at 23:18, John Williams wrote:
 
  If the government is going to interfere in the insurance market, it
  seems to me that it would be simpler just to directly subsidize those
  who cannot afford to pay health insurance premiums, and leave the
  insurance market to function rationally.
 
  That is extremely expensive, for all it's simpler.

 Actually, studies have shown that consumer driven health care reduces
 costs, and does not decrease preventative care.

 Except you're not proposing consumer driven health care, you
 propising that the government pick up an lot of expensive healthcare
 costs. More, it doesn't create incentives to increase prevenative
 care either.

Actually, a health insurance market without government interference
would be a lot more consumer-driven than the current system, which is
why I mentioned it. In nearly all cases, if there is to be a
government-redistribution of wealth program, people are better served
if the government does not prevent them from making agreements with
each other, but rather simply subsidizes those who need it (or manage
to persuade politicians that they need it).


 | For savings after the first year, at least two of the studies indicate
 | trend rates lower than traditional PPO plans by approximately 3 percent
 | to 5 percent. If these lower trends can be further validated, it will
 | represent a substantial cost-reduction strategy for employers and
 | employees.

 3-5%, when the total health cost overrun compared to other countries
 systems is an order of magnitude higher. Hmm.

3 to 5% PER YEAR. It adds up.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Jo Anne
Hello all --

I didn't mean to drop out of this, ummm, 'discussion', but I lost the email
I intended to respond to over the w/e.  What can I say?  I turned 61 and had
to put a 9 year old cat down due to cancer -- not a good day until Charlie
reminded me 61 is a prime number!  Cheered me right up.  The Engineer (my
husband, companion and love of my life for almost 38 years) is working in
BFE Utah and staying in Cortez, CO, and only makes it home every third w/e.
I try to go there for a week or 10 days every month or six weeks.  My life
is a little topsy turvey right now.  I also don't seem to have copious
amounts of free time to respond ad nauseum.

Did someone say John's been on this list for 10 years?  Did I misread that??
I don't remember being this prodded to respond for many years -- probably
since JDG was here =+)).

Anyway, John, you said health care was an emotional issue for me.  I prefer
passionate.  I'm passionate about people having equal access to good care
for treatment of disease, equal access to disease prevention and equal
access to health promotion.  Not just the best care money can buy.

And comparing health insurance to car insurance is an apples and oranges
thing for me.  If your car insurance goes up 5x due to bad choices (DUII,
speeding, etc.), you can take a bus, taxi, ride a bike, etc. and no one
dies.  If your health insurance goes up (or you are unable to even get it)
due to a drunk crashing into you at age 18, your life gets very complicated,
very quickly.

And Charlie is an old and respected member of this list.  As is Dan,
Alberto, Andy, Julia (where is Julia?), Doug and many, many more.  Respect
is earned here, as it is in most communities.  I don't agree with some of
the people that I consider our sages -- frex, I think Dan and I disagree
greatly about the value of religion in raising children -- but I still
respect his opinions.  I guess it comes down to not so much what is said,
but how it is said, and I find your tone often arrogant, John.

Amities, all.

Jo Anne
evens...@hevanet.com




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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread David Hobby

John Williams wrote:

It is interesting what some people find rude which does not seem rude
to others. I suspect that a neutral observer would look at my posts
during the last few weeks and judge that they are not at all rude. I
have been asking some uncomfortable questions, but not making any
obviously rude remarks.


John--

This time around, you've been much better.  When you
started here (late last Fall?) you were much worse.


The interesting thing is that the data do not support the claim that
my posts make people less likely to communicate here. Rather, just the
opposite. If you look at the volume of non-JW posts as a function of
JW-posts to this list, there is a remarkably large positive
correlation.


That doesn't really prove anything.  For instance,
a flame war would produce a large number of posts,
but one could hardly call that communication.

---David

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Andrew Crystall
On 17 Aug 2009 at 17:06, John Williams wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 4:47 PM, Andrew
 Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
  On 17 Aug 2009 at 12:51, John Williams wrote:
 
  On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:19 AM, Andrew
  Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:
 
  No, considering pre-existing conditions is not how health status
  insurance works. It takes into account the risks of health insurance
  premiums rising drastically in the future.
 
  Which are based on your pre-existing conditions, right.
 
 Yes, health insurance premiums are based on pre-existing conditions.
 But  health STATUS insurance premiums are not (they are based on
 likelihood of future chronic costly conditions).

And in most cases, the likelyhood of you developing those conditions 
is dependent on pre-existing conditions!

  | For savings after the first year, at least two of the studies indicate  
   | trend rates lower than traditional PPO plans by approximately 3 
  percent  | to 5 percent. If these lower trends can be further 
  validated, it will   | represent a substantial cost-reduction strategy 
  for employers and   | employees.

 3-5%, when the total health cost overrun compared to other 
countries systems is an order of magnitude higher. Hmm.
 
 3 to 5% PER YEAR. It adds up.

So it magically constantly decreases costs? No, read it again - the 
trend is that it will be 3-5% cheaper than a PPO plan.


Actually, a health insurance market without government interference
would be a lot more consumer-driven than the current system, which 
is why I mentioned it. In nearly all cases, if there is to be a

Howso? You've just empowered the insurance companies to do a lot more 
cherrypicking of good customers and to jack rates up for everyone 
else.

AndrewC

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 5:38 PM, David Hobbyhob...@newpaltz.edu wrote:

 That doesn't really prove anything.  For instance,
 a flame war would produce a large number of posts,
 but one could hardly call that communication.

Of course it does not prove anything, but it is highly suggestive.
While you no doubt have a different idea of flame war than I do, it
is obvious that most of the posts in question are communication of
some sort.

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 5:45 PM, Andrew
Crystalldawnfal...@upliftwar.com wrote:

 And in most cases, the likelyhood of you developing those conditions
 is dependent on pre-existing conditions!

I have not seen any evidence that suggests this. There are a large
number of conditions that can result in a large increase in cost of
health care, and many of them are not correlated. Having a heart
condition is not likely to lead to prostate cancer, for example.

 So it magically constantly decreases costs? No, read it again - the
 trend is that it will be 3-5% cheaper than a PPO plan.

Interesting that you would say that I should read it again. I have
read the entire article carefully before I posted it. For example, I
read these passages, twice now:

| Beyond the first year cost savings with CDH designs, is there
| is a continuing favorable effect on cost over a multiple year
| timeframe? Traditional actuarial models assume that cost savings from
| plan design changes are persistent over time (i.e., the differential
| cost of a given benefit remains lower by a similar amount), but the
| utilization difference for changes in cost sharing is not assumed to
| compound or result in lower trends over time.  It has been suggested
| that the favorable utilization changes associated with CDH designs
| may also create reduced demand for health care services over a
| multi-year period and further reduce the ongoing trend when compared
| with traditional plan trends. This reduced trend may not be unique
| to CDH designs and may be a component of all higher cost-share
| designs. However, unlike the first-year result, reduced multi-year
| trends have not been established previously as a core actuarial
| principle that is applied consistently to all plan designs.



| Results for continuing cost-savings experience with CDH designs are
| often difficult to interpret, but the studies do seem to indicate that
| there may be a favorable effect on ongoing cost trends as well. Some
| studies have combined multiple years of results together and indicated
| that the overall trend over a two-year period has been less than the
| corresponding traditional product trend over the same time period. The
| Cigna study specifically identified the trend for the second year of CDH
| plan experience and compared it to the corresponding traditional plan
| trend. It found that the second-year trend in the CDH plan was nearly
| 5 percent lower than the traditional plan trend. The Uniprise study
| measured trend savings over a four-year period and suggests that the
| trend for the CDH plan is about 3 percent lower per year on average over
| the four-year period.

| If this favorable trend effect can be further established as significant
| (e.g., 3 percent to 4 percent or more per year) and persistent over
| a multiyear period, this would be a strong argument for the further
| adoption of these plans.  There are few other alternatives available
| to employers that demonstrate this degree of ongoing savings and trend
| reduction. It is possible that the favorable trend effects currently
| being observed are merely due to residual riskselection effects or other
| factors that may cause this apparent trend to erode or disappear over
| time as larger data sets become available. It is also possible that
| this apparent trend-dampening feature of higher cost-sharing plans is a
| consistent element of all plans (similar to the first-year effect which
| has been well-measured), but one that has not been measured historically
| because the differences in cost-sharing levels for traditional plans is
| relatively small.


Also, you seem to have ignored the substantial first-year savings:

| the total savings generated could be as much as 12 percent to 20 percent
| in the first year.


Actually, a health insurance market without government interference
would be a lot more consumer-driven than the current system, which
is why I mentioned it. In nearly all cases, if there is to be a

 Howso?

Competition for consumer business.

 You've just empowered the insurance companies to do a lot more
 cherrypicking of good customers and to jack rates up for everyone
 else.

No, I have not empowered anyone. I do not control other people.
Other people are free to do as they wish without my interference in
their lives.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Rceeberger

On 8/17/2009 8:04:00 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 5:38 PM, David Hobbyhob...@newpaltz.edu wrote:
 
  That doesn't really prove anything. For instance,
  a flame war would produce a large number of posts,
  but one could hardly call that communication.
 
 Of course it does not prove anything, but it is highly suggestive.
 While you no doubt have a different idea of flame war than I do, it
 is obvious that most of the posts in question are communication of
 some sort.

LOL!!
You have no idea what this list has been through over the years.
Your statement reads quite humorously.G


xponent
Yrkoon Maru
rob

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 6:38 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net wrote:

 Your statement reads quite humorously.G

That's great! Apparently there is a fine line between humorous and
rude and sincere. Feel free to give my posts the benefit of the
doubt...

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Rceeberger

On 8/17/2009 8:48:30 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 6:38 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net
 wrote:
 
  Your statement reads quite humorously.G
 
 That's great! Apparently there is a fine line between humorous and
 rude and sincere. Feel free to give my posts the benefit of the
 doubt...

Oh, you have received that particular benefit in spades.
Still here, right?


xponent
Vegas G Maru
rob

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
 Do you think you're fooling anyone with this schtick?

I hope not. It is certainly not my intention to fool anyone.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:01 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net wrote:

 On 8/17/2009 8:48:30 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 6:38 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net
 wrote:

  Your statement reads quite humorously.G

 That's great! Apparently there is a fine line between humorous and
 rude and sincere. Feel free to give my posts the benefit of the
 doubt...

 Oh, you have received that particular benefit in spades.
 Still here, right?

Are you implying that you would kill file me if you did not give my
posts the benefit of the doubt?

I apologize in advance if I have jumped to any unwarranted conclusions.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Nick Arnett
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 12:02 PM, John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.comwrote:

 On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 8:15 AM, David Hobbyhob...@newpaltz.edu wrote:

  Hi.  Seriously, are you trolling, or just
  dense?  : )  We rank respect the way most communities
  do--completely informally.

 Not trolling. Possibly dense. There is that reference to we again,
 which is what led me to believe that there was some pooled resource
 that was being referenced.


We have a sense of community here, along with the usual collaterals of
explicit and implicit standards of behavior and discourse.  We do, indeed.
We don't like straw men or trolls (which I can't help observing are at two
rather opposite ends of the materials spectrum, whatever that might
signify).



Even when we lose our tempers, that doesn't mean we don't still believe in
those standards.  We are human, after all.

Nick
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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Nick Arnett
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:25 PM, John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.comwrote:

 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:18 PM, Nick Arnettnick.arn...@gmail.com wrote:

  We have a sense of community here, along with the usual collaterals of
  explicit and implicit standards of behavior and discourse.  We do,
 indeed.
  We don't like straw men or trolls (which I can't help observing are at
 two
  rather opposite ends of the materials spectrum, whatever that might
  signify).

 There's that we several more times. How many people subscribe to this
 email list, and how many of them do you speak for when you say we? How
 did you determine that these people have that view?


I'm a highly evolved mammal with a brain the size of a dog's breakfast.
That's how I know.

Nick
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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:18 PM, Nick Arnettnick.arn...@gmail.com wrote:

 We have a sense of community here, along with the usual collaterals of
 explicit and implicit standards of behavior and discourse.  We do, indeed.
 We don't like straw men or trolls (which I can't help observing are at two
 rather opposite ends of the materials spectrum, whatever that might
 signify).

There's that we several more times. How many people subscribe to this
email list, and how many of them do you speak for when you say we? How
did you determine that these people have that view?

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread Nick Arnett
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 6:32 PM, John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.comwrote:



 Actually, a health insurance market without government interference
 would be a lot more consumer-driven than the current system, which
 is why I mentioned it. In nearly all cases, if there is to be a
 
  Howso?

 Competition for consumer business.


Is there some way in which consumer-driven means something other than
unregulated?

Is health care so unimportant that it deserves no regulation?

Is health care so unimportant that people should have to compete with each
other (that's the other side of the equation when the companies are
competing) for basic care?  If we take it as a given that a consumer-driven
market for health care is better, then why not do the same with roads,
police, water, oxygen, etc.?  How do you draw the line there?

Nick
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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:29 PM, Nick Arnettnick.arn...@gmail.com wrote:

 Is health care so unimportant that it deserves no regulation?

We are starting from different worldviews, I think. I believe in
freedom for people to make agreements with each other as they choose
-- that is my starting point. You appear to believe that freedom is
something that is to be permitted by government, when it concerns
something unimportant, otherwise, if something is important, than the
government should restrict the freedom of people to make consensual
agreements.

So I would say that health care is important, and therefore people
deserve to have free choice in the matter.

 Is health care so unimportant that people should have to compete with each
 other (that's the other side of the equation when the companies are
 competing) for basic care?

I cannot answer the should, I can only answer that the fact is that
people do have to contend for limited resources in the world. There is
not enough health care to give everyone in the world unlimited care.
And several people that have posted here do not seem to believe that
Americans should allocate their health care resources equally among
all Americans AND non-Americans. So there is definitely competition
among people in the world for health care. Just as there is
competition for food and shelter.

 If we take it as a given that a consumer-driven
 market for health care is better, then why not do the same with roads,
 police, water, oxygen, etc.?

I'm not sure I follow the oxygen part. For the others, I would like to
see more privately run roads and less government interference in water
companies. I've stated here recently that I think police are best
handled through government, since I think it is less likely to be
suborned than private police.

Another related question is why are the markets for essentials like
food and shelter largely free of government interference, while health
care markets have such extensive government interference?

I think it has to do with people being afraid and emotional about
health care, and not being good at rational analysis on the subject.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:30 PM, Nick Arnettnick.arn...@gmail.com wrote:


 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:25 PM, John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:18 PM, Nick Arnettnick.arn...@gmail.com wrote:

  We have a sense of community here, along with the usual collaterals of
  explicit and implicit standards of behavior and discourse.  We do,
  indeed.
  We don't like straw men or trolls (which I can't help observing are at
  two
  rather opposite ends of the materials spectrum, whatever that might
  signify).

 There's that we several more times. How many people subscribe to this
 email list, and how many of them do you speak for when you say we? How
 did you determine that these people have that view?

 I'm a highly evolved mammal with a brain the size of a dog's breakfast.
 That's how I know.

Which does not answer the first question.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread David Hobby

John Williams wrote:

On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:18 PM, Nick Arnettnick.arn...@gmail.com wrote:


We have a sense of community here, along with the usual collaterals of
explicit and implicit standards of behavior and discourse.  We do, indeed.
We don't like straw men or trolls (which I can't help observing are at two
rather opposite ends of the materials spectrum, whatever that might
signify).


There's that we several more times. How many people subscribe to this
email list, and how many of them do you speak for when you say we? How
did you determine that these people have that view?


John--

You're not going to claim that all the lurkers are
the silent majority are you?  : )  This is a silly
discussion, because every statement Nick made above
would get broad agreement on most established lists.

What do you want, that we should all sign a petition?

---David

FYI, there ARE etiquette guidelines for the list.
(In fact, googling finds several slightly different
versions.  Here's an old one from the archives, at
a previous host:
http://www.mail-archive.com/bri...@cornell.edu/msg13842.html

Julia Thompson, posting in 2002.)



Etiquette Guidelines

The Brin-L Mailing List exists for the discussion of matters pertaining to
the writings of Drs. Brin and Benford and topics of interest to list
members.

As members of a civilization, these are the guidelines we agree to live
under:

- We post as if every message we write as if we were going to read it
  aloud in front of the whole group.
- We sign our messages with our name and e-mail address.
- We are tolerant of subject threads that bore us to death.
- We keep subject lines appropriate to the contents of the message.
- We do NOT include the entire message to which we are replying.
- We DO include a few lines if our reply can't stand on its own.
- We DO keep attributions correctly assigned to the original poster.
- We do NOT send terse, one line replies.
- We use emphasis to make our comments clear. (Stars, smilies, etc.)
- We use white space and keep our paragraphs short.
- We keep our line length below 80 characters.
- If our reply is more appropriately directed only at the original poster,
  we don't send it to the entire list.
- If our message is funny, frivolous, humourous, or is generally silly in
  nature, we add a Silly/Humor flag to the subject line so others can
  identify it easily.
- We flag long messages with GLL, ELL or L3 in the subject line. (In
  deference to our Grand Past Alpha Mails this stands for Gord like
  length, Eythain like length or Lazh like length)

We agree that:
- Questions are welcome.
- Extensive discussions that get into the nitty-gritty of the subject are
  welcome.
- Funny, silly, frivolous, amusing, playful, joking, cheerful postings are
  welcome. Original humor, especially if it pertains to an existing
  thread, is quite welcome. Forwarding blanket humor from other sources is
  discouraged, but not forbidden.
- We are a multilingual group, and as such we tolerate mistakes and
  idiosyncracies when they show up on the list in English (American
  English). We remember that some folks may not be the best typists
  around, and tolerate those mistakes as well. We all will kindly answer
  any questions others have about our native language in a friendly
  manner.
- Brin and Benford ROCK. =+))  Trevor Sands is the best screen
  writer ever. Most of the time we think Iain Banks is pretty cool, too.

We will further endeavor to remember, as David Brin says, to Remind
yourself, now and then, to say the following phrase: 'I am a member of a
civilization.' (IAAMOAC). Our society has its flaws, but if you
ponder history, and cantankerous human nature, it's astonishing how far
we've come. We just don't say IAAMOAC often enough. ... 

We further agree that:

- Personal attacks, whether direct or indirect are not welcome. These
  should be handled off list, and if you disagree with some controversial
  point, direct the attack at the argument, not the person.
- Abusive or inflammatory language is not welcome.
- Profanity is not welcome.
- Chain letters are not welcome.
- Mail bombs to each other are not welcome.
- The Listowners have the right to remove someone who does not wish to
  comport themselves in a manner concordant with our civilization.


Thank you,

Jo Anne
Lady of the List, Bearer of the High Standards, Owner of the 7th Chalice
of Betazed etc.  ( I still like these titles! Maybe I should get a
business card for introductions with these titles on it? ;+))

Note: This list was written using another set of guidelines originally
composed by Donna Hrynkiw of Vancouver, British Columbia -- and is used
with her permission.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



Besides these guidelines, please keep in mind that posting attachments is
a no-no, for reasons of bandwidth (some people *do* have to pay per
minute, others have finitely-sized inboxes and I'm tired of error 

Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread dsummersmi...@comcast.net

Did someone say John's been on this list for 10 years?  Did I misread
that??

I told John many of us had been.  Maybe that got mangled.  Maybe by me. :-)

Dan M. 





myhosting.com - Premium Microsoft® Windows® and Linux web and application
hosting - http://link.myhosting.com/myhosting



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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:53 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net wrote:

 On 8/17/2009 9:12:11 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:01 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net
 wrote:
 
  On 8/17/2009 8:48:30 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
  On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 6:38 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net
  wrote:
 
   Your statement reads quite humorously.G
 
  That's great! Apparently there is a fine line between humorous and
  rude and sincere. Feel free to give my posts the benefit of the
  doubt...
 
  Oh, you have received that particular benefit in spades.
  Still here, right?

 Are you implying that you would kill file me if you did not give my
 posts the benefit of the doubt?

 No.
 If certainty was high that you were just a troll you would be kicked from 
 the list.

Perhaps there was a misunderstanding. I meant that you might give my
posts the benefit of the doubt -- singular you. Rceeberger, that is.
Or did you mean that you have access to the subscriber list and you,
personally, would have removed my name if you did not give me the
benefit of the doubt?

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:54 PM, David Hobbyhob...@newpaltz.edu wrote:
 John Williams wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:18 PM, Nick Arnettnick.arn...@gmail.com wrote:

 We have a sense of community here, along with the usual collaterals of
 explicit and implicit standards of behavior and discourse.  We do,
 indeed.
 We don't like straw men or trolls (which I can't help observing are at
 two
 rather opposite ends of the materials spectrum, whatever that might
 signify).

 There's that we several more times. How many people subscribe to this
 email list, and how many of them do you speak for when you say we? How
 did you determine that these people have that view?

 You're not going to claim that all the lurkers are
 the silent majority are you?  : )

No. I don't really follow you.

 This is a silly
 discussion, because every statement Nick made above
 would get broad agreement on most established lists.

Have you done that experiment, or are you speculating? Perhaps your
contention is true, but I think that the term community and also
straw man are ambiguous, so the broad agreement would not
necessarily be meaningful, since people would be thinking they were
agreeing to different things. I notice, for example, that straw man
gets used by several people here in a way that I have trouble
following.

 What do you want, that we should all sign a petition?

I do not want anything in particular with regards to what list
subscribers believe.  We gets thrown around by several posters, and
it was unclear to me in several cases who was being referred to. I was
just asking questions.

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Brin-:L the 2nd decade

2009-08-17 Thread dsummersmi...@comcast.net


Original Message:
-
From: John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 17 Aug 2009 20:08:44 -0700
To: brin-l@mccmedia.com
Subject: Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market


I was just asking questions.

Actually, the same question has been asked and answered N times.  Nomominal
social behavior is for the asker to either help the various responders
understand why he doesn't get the answer or to acknowledge that his
question has been answered.

BTW, like an old married couple, we're sorta exhausted lines of discussion
on this list because hundreds to thousands of posts have been written by
the long standing members of the list.  We know each other and know each
other's positions.  For this, and other reasons that Rob alluded to,
traffic on this list has dropped down. 

I'll give you points for being a novelty.  It's easy to respond to your
posts, many of them are hanging curves, belt high over the middle of the
plate for those who differ with you.  But, I think most people, and not
just me, would like actual dialoglike we use to have.  BTW, I still am
having IM discussions with a former list member who's become a very good
friendand I've learned a lot.  IIRC, he's publishing in four different
types of professional journals virtually simultaneously as we write.

Dan M. 


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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread David Hobby

John Williams wrote:
...
We don't like straw men or trolls 

...

There's that we several more times. How many people subscribe to this
email list, and how many of them do you speak for when you say we? How
did you determine that these people have that view?

You're not going to claim that all the lurkers are
the silent majority are you?  : )


No. I don't really follow you.


John--

I don't have current figures, but I'd guess the list
has around 200 subscribers, but only 50 regular posters.
(Welcome back, Jo Anne!)  We call the other 150 lurkers.

It looked like you were setting up to argue that the
we was only 50/200 of the list, or whatever.  Which
would not have been a particularly valid argument.

...

I do not want anything in particular with regards to what list
subscribers believe.  

...

I note you snipped the etiquette guidelines.  : )

---David

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Re: Brin-:L the 2nd decade

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 8:22 PM,
dsummersmi...@comcast.netdsummersmi...@comcast.net wrote:
 Actually, the same question has been asked and answered N times.

N=1, David just answered the question, mostly. we apparently refers
to an unnamed group of about 50 people.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 8:24 PM, David Hobbyhob...@newpaltz.edu wrote:

 I note you snipped the etiquette guidelines.  : )

I did snip it. I did read it.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread xponentrob
- Original Message - 
From: John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.com
To: Killer Bs (David Brin et al) Discussion brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Monday, August 17, 2009 10:02 PM
Subject: Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market


 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:53 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net wrote:

 On 8/17/2009 9:12:11 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 7:01 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net
 wrote:
 
  On 8/17/2009 8:48:30 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
  On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 6:38 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net
  wrote:
 
   Your statement reads quite humorously.G
 
  That's great! Apparently there is a fine line between humorous and
  rude and sincere. Feel free to give my posts the benefit of the
  doubt...
 
  Oh, you have received that particular benefit in spades.
  Still here, right?

 Are you implying that you would kill file me if you did not give my
 posts the benefit of the doubt?

 No.
 If certainty was high that you were just a troll you would be kicked from 
 the list.
 
 Perhaps there was a misunderstanding. I meant that you might give my
 posts the benefit of the doubt -- singular you. Rceeberger, that is.

For clarity: Robert Seeberger 
But no, I do not give you the benefit of the doubt. I think I have you pegged 
as exactly the kind of intentionally obtuse person you appear to be.


 Or did you mean that you have access to the subscriber list and you,
 personally, would have removed my name if you did not give me the
 benefit of the doubt?

No, when I say we in this context, I mean that we have in the past booted 
people from the list as a group in most cases. There being no one person in 
particular one can suck up to in order to avoid consequences, it behooves 
everyone to be generally inoffensive. A few people have been removed, a 
couple of them long term listees and one was a moderator here. We definitely 
are not queasy when it comes to pulling the pin.

xponent
Wide Borders Maru
rob

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Re: Brin-:L the 2nd decade

2009-08-17 Thread Trent Shipley
  We know each other and know each
 other's positions.  

What about those of us who try not to have positions?


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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Trent Shipley

 No, when I say we in this context, I mean that we have in the past booted 
 people from the list as a group in most cases. There being no one person in 
 particular one can suck up to in order to avoid consequences, it behooves 
 everyone to be generally inoffensive. A few people have been removed, a 
 couple of them long term listees and one was a moderator here. We definitely 
 are not queasy when it comes to pulling the pin.
 
 xponent
 Wide Borders Maru
 rob

Who was the moderator who got booted?

Are you suggesting J.W. is near that limit?  I'm not nearly that ready
to take offense yet.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 8:48 PM, xponentrobxponent...@comcast.net wrote:

 But no, I do not give you the benefit of the doubt. I think I have you pegged 
 as exactly the kind of intentionally obtuse person you appear to be.

My apologies for not being as perceptive as you are.

 No, when I say we in this context, I mean that we have in the past booted 
 people from the list as a group in most cases.

So, is there is a vote of the 50 unnamed we people David referred to?

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread xponentrob
- Original Message - 
From: John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.com
To: Killer Bs (David Brin et al) Discussion brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Monday, August 17, 2009 10:19 PM
Subject: Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market


 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 8:05 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net wrote:
 
 We are friends who have been with each other for many years.
 We can finish each others sentences.
 We are practically fucking married for crissakes.
 Brin-L and the Culture list are bicameral lobes of a humongous hive mind.
 We are gay telepaths whose thought balloons are filled with big pink fluffy 
 gothic fonts and we are all laughing at your sloppy desk.

 Do you see people objecting to the We?
 
 No. I do not see myself objecting to we either. Just asking questions.
 
 Anyway, that did not answer my question about how many list
 subscribers there are, and how many are covered by the we. 

No one particular cares how many lurkers there are. Officially, they are our 
readers since that is what they do on this list. Occasionally one perks up and 
adds something to the discussion and on rare occasions someone will contact 
someone else offlist. But for the most part We are the entertainment and they 
are our beloved audience even though the star of the show appears only 
infrequently.


Since no
 one is answering, I will  jump to a conclusion. Apologies if it is
 unwarranted. 

It is.

It seems to me that it is important to you to demonstrate
 to me that there are a number of people on this list who are like you
 and agree with you on most subjects and philosophies of life, and that
 I am not among that number. 

No, that is not important at all, because it is irrelevant to the subject at 
hand.
When it comes to the life of this list, most of the longtimers can easily speak 
for the group because we share a great deal of common history. It is 
pretty much the same as using we when speaking for Americans even though 
Americans are very diverse there is still considerable commonality. Happens all 
the time on this list in both situations.
As for you not being included in the we when any of us are responding to you, 
you are still quite new here, disagreeable, and prone to pushing buttons. We 
are trying to gently guide you away from culture shock and toward assimilation 
into the group in some way.


Perhaps it will simplify future
 discussions for me to assure you that yes, I am aware of that, and I
 am not trying to join your clique, start my own clique, or compete
 with your clique in any way. I am just asking questions.
 
We have no cliques.
But we do have Jedi Mind Tricks:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yu_moia-oVI

xponent
Your Source For Pure Evil Maru
rob


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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Trent Shipley
John Williams wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 8:48 PM, xponentrobxponent...@comcast.net wrote:
 
 But no, I do not give you the benefit of the doubt. I think I have you 
 pegged as exactly the kind of intentionally obtuse person you appear to be.
 
 My apologies for not being as perceptive as you are.
 
 No, when I say we in this context, I mean that we have in the past 
 booted people from the list as a group in most cases.
 
 So, is there is a vote of the 50 unnamed we people David referred to?
 

No. There is discussion about the excommunication and then the list
moderators perform the ceremony.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Rceeberger

On 8/17/2009 11:03:58 PM, Trent Shipley (tship...@deru.com) wrote:
  No, when I say we in this context, I mean that we have in the past
 booted people from the list as a group in most cases. There being no one
 person in particular one can suck up to in order to avoid consequences, it
 behooves everyone to be generally inoffensive. A few people have been
 removed, a couple of them long term listees and one was a moderator here.
 We definitely are not queasy when it comes to pulling the pin.
 
  xponent
  Wide Borders Maru
  rob
 
 Who was the moderator who got booted?
 
Remember JVB?


 Are you suggesting J.W. is near that limit?  I'm not nearly that ready
 to take offense yet.
 
No, but anyone who is in a spat on this list should be aware of the potential. 
It keeps all of us on better behavior.
Personally, I'd rather leave a list of my own accord than be forcibly removed 
from one.


xponent
In Disgrace Maru
rob


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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Rceeberger

On 8/17/2009 11:04:59 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 8:48 PM, xponentrobxponent...@comcast.net
 wrote:
 
  But no, I do not give you the benefit of the doubt. I think I have you
 pegged as exactly the kind of intentionally obtuse person you appear to be.
 
 
 My apologies for not being as perceptive as you are.
 
  No, when I say we in this context, I mean that we have in the past
 booted people from the list as a group in most cases.
 
 So, is there is a vote of the 50 unnamed we people David referred to?
 

In such cases, yes.


xponent
Democracy Maru
rob

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Re: A Real Free Market in Health Care

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:25 PM, Rceebergerrceeber...@comcast.net wrote:

 On 8/17/2009 11:09:15 PM, John Williams (jwilliams4...@gmail.com) wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 8:58 PM, Jo Anneevens...@hevanet.com wrote:

  And there I rest my case on the tone thing.

 I wrote that as clearly and as sincerely as I could. I assure you
 there were no undertones intended.

  Well, first I'd have a good laugh and then I'd ask Charlie what we could
 do
  to keep speaking to each other, and could I help him get his panties
 all
  un-bunched up because that could be pretty uncomfortable. Unfortunately,
 my
  panties are riding up after trying to talk to you about health care,
 like
  his did about pollution regulation.

 He did not try to discuss pollution regulation with me at all -- I
 would have been happy to discuss it with him, and to clear up the
 apparent question that he had about me allegedly changing my mind. But
 he just wrote FUCK YOU and then said that he kill filed me.


 That is what I mean by intentionally obtuse.
 Add intentionally selective memory to the list.

What is what you mean? I assure you, I am not being intentially
obtuse. I find your posts very difficult to understand. When I do
read between the lines, you tell me I am jumping to conclusions, and
when I do not, you tell me I am intentionally obtuse. You tell me
there is a group of we that all know what everyone else thinks, and
then you and another of the wes answer one of my questions
oppositely. Perhaps I am obtuse, but it is not intentional. I am
definitely confused.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 9:15 PM, xponentrobxponent...@comcast.net wrote:

 No one particular cares how many lurkers there are.

I care, that is why I asked.

 It is pretty much the same as using we when speaking for Americans even 
 though Americans are very diverse there is still considerable commonality.

Usually when I hear someone say something like that, I ask for
clarification, since the meaning is ambiguous.

We are trying to gently guide you away from culture shock and toward 
assimilation into the group in some way.

You are of course free to try, but as I said, I have no interest in
joining your mysterious we clique.

 We have no cliques.

We (not we) will just have to disagree about that, then.

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Re: The Role of Government in a Libertarian Free Market

2009-08-17 Thread Doug Pensinger
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 11:36 AM, John Williams jwilliams4...@gmail.comwrote:

 It is interesting what some people find rude which does not seem rude
 to others. I suspect that a neutral observer would look at my posts
 during the last few weeks and judge that they are not at all rude. I
 have been asking some uncomfortable questions, but not making any
 obviously rude remarks.

 The interesting thing is that the data do not support the claim that
 my posts make people less likely to communicate here. Rather, just the
 opposite. If you look at the volume of non-JW posts as a function of
 JW-posts to this list, there is a remarkably large positive
 correlation.

 Anyone listen to Bill Maher? I disagree with a lot of what he says,
 but he is entertaining. He speaks his mind, and is not afraid to
 discuss uncomfortable issues. I have never found him rude, but I
 suspect others may have a different opinion. To each his own. Here's
 an example of an uncomfortable issue that he discusses:


 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bill-maher/new-rule-smart-president_b_253996.html


He can be a little rude at times, but I watch him every week and probably
agree with him more often than you.

On the Americans are stupid issue, I would agree somewhat, but I would use
the terms ignorant and/or intellectualy lazy rather than stupid.

Have you seen Religulous?

Doug
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Re: Brin-:L the 2nd decade

2009-08-17 Thread Doug Pensinger
Trent Shipley  wrote:

  We know each other and know each
  other's positions.

 What about those of us who try not to have positions?


Don't worry Trent, you are as ambiguous as ever. 8^)

Doug
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