Quote from: Nikko on February 10, 2014, 07:59:14 PM
You're clearly not stupid, but whether one is informed depends on their sources of information and willingness to think beyond their belief system.
You seem more ideological driven, but I suspect your sources are limited on some level. Just my take.
Obama delayed obamacare, AGAIN, for the mid-size companies. Dang, I think Ted Cruz has it right... "Mr. President, if you like your healthcare law so much, why don't you implement it?".
Problem with ideology. People like this don't try and fix things, they force things.
I am guilty to being ideologically driven on some level, I doubt anyone who actually follows things intently doesn't have at least some ideology. As far as sources, well I get most of my actual news from the BBC, NPR, and Deutsche Welle. MSNBC and Fox are full of commentary which turns into sycophants cheering for their team. I have read Friedman, Hayek, etc as well as Keynes, Marx, Pribićević, etc so economically I am well familiar with arguments from both sides.
The thing is, in American politics, it doesn't matter where you stand or what you believe. You have two basic choices, except for rare occasions (Jesse Ventura) or when money can trump all (Bloomberg). This means no matter how well informed you are, or how well you understand things you only get to choose between two things. Right now that choice is between a healthcare law that stands the potential of insuring more people and is a massive transfer of wealth to private insurance companies from our tax dollars, which makes me unhappy; or the other choice let people fend for themselves as before or
maybe institute some sort of healthcare voucher system (though IDK exactly how much support government funded vouchers would have, but some in the house like that).
When reduced to those two poor choices, it seems hard to even be ideological about it, for me I just consider what I feel will do the most harm and go against it. So more people insured even if it were to reduce the quality of healthcare for others and increase premiums is still less harmful to society as a whole than people dropping dead because they waited until they had to go to the ER to get healthcare.
Sorry for the verbose post, I just wanted to make clear my thought process supporting the healthcare law isn't exactly a ringing endorsement of it (or democratic politics) but I spent many years in a third party and I realized that in all practicality we don't have but the two choices the major parties want.