As if hiding calling me an "ASS" in the word ASSuming is acceptable? Cute. Not very bold, but cute.
As for facts, try these on for size:
One of many polls showing that Americans do favor single payer:
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http://www.healthcare-now.org/another-poll-shows-majority-support-for-single-payer/Now, as to putting words in someone's mouth, let's discuss that for a minute. I never advocated for single payer in any of my posts. Why do you assume that single payer is onthe only alternative to the Senate's spectacularly bad bill?
My point and my words stated that this particular bill sucks. Which is does. It has no public option -- clearly favored by 70% of Americans -- while it has craptastic pay-fors that will turn off rank-and-file democratic voters (especially union voters), ill-thought out employer responsibility provisions, and non-existent price or anti-trust regulation fixes.
Not to mention that you may or may not get the benefit of a larger purchasing pool. Read the Senate bill carefully. First, it sets up 50 different state exchanges, and there is no guarantee that each state will pass the enabling legislation. Second, the Senate version does not put all purchasers in the same pool. After dividing them by state, it then further allows the insurance companies to keep separate pools for individual buyers and small group buyers, one of the key causes of the problems of today.
Plus, just so we are clear, a larger pool in a health insurance exchange doesn't address the supply/demand problem, it addresses the risk-pool problem. More people = the risk of the very sick is diffused by the large number of healthy people.
The supply and demand problem actually gets worse with an individual mandate because you have much greater demand, (because it is mandated by law), but the same supply (only a few key insurance companies controlling each market). By not addressing the supply side (either by adding a public option, subjecting the insurance companies to strict price regulation (as they do in Switzerland), or some other mechanism, the upward pressures of high demand/low supply are likely to offset the downward pressure of a slightly larger risk pool.
Feel free to disagree. But to call me names or question my knowledge of this bill is not productive and won't score you any points.