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Edited on Fri Mar-12-10 11:24 AM by Political Heretic
There's nothing wrong with, after careful investigation, reaching a point where you can say given the facts at hand, I'm resolute in my opinion.
This is especially true with value judgments.
For example(and laying all this out in detail is important to the point,) public policy analysis is a huge part of my professional life, as well as a personal passion, especially as it is intertwined with political economy.
Having put in quite literally ten or more hours a week of my personal time studying health care policy throughout the last year - meaning reading briefs and analysis from the CBO, Keiser Foundation, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Economic Policy Institute and so on (many of which are favorable toward this current bill. Meaning reading economists, listening to town hall meetings, participating in conference calls with health care briefings, etc. Meaning reading the bills. Meaning listening to the feedback of organizations whose opinion I consider important, such as Nurses Unions and Labor (and of course, big-labor unions support passing the bill)
There comes a point however, after having done all this, when you quite literally have enough facts and understand enough concrete specifics about what the bill does and does not do to form a concrete opinion, based on your values.
A question like "should this bill be passed" is a value question.
You can say yes after having clear and accurate information about the bill and what it will do, based on your beliefs and values about what is most important (example: its more important to do anything now because something is better than what we currently have and some help is better than no help - this bill provides some help. Pass it.)
You can say no after having clear and accurate information about the bill and what it will do, based on your beliefs and values about what is most important (example: its most important to first do no harm with new legislation on this issue and then to leave the door open for future improvement by creating a strong foundation of ongoing reform. This bill contains no cost containment measures against out of control rising premium costs, no control over the deceitful ways in which insurance avoids payment by erroneously denying claims or cancelling policies, this bill does nothing about the actual cost of care for the 46 million Americans it dumps into the hands of private insurance, thus making it certain that millions of families will go to be each night praying the exact same prayer they prayed before this bill: God, please help our family never to get really sick, because if we do it will bankrupt us. It does nothing to regulate or break up insurance monopolies and continues to leave the insurance industry exempt from anti-trust laws. Thus this bill does not even lay a solid foundation for future reform. It creates long term harm, not help. Kill it.)
See since I believe its more important to focus on long term impact over short term benefits (a value) I look at the facts, correctly identified and understood and conclude something completely different from someone else with a different focus and set of values.
My positions is "hardened" in the sense that the only thing that will move me is new facts. Opinions given by others who share different values that I do are not moving, nor should they be, in my opinion.
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