Jay Sykes
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On the Blog Post Obamacare: An Affront to Our Freedoms And Wrong For Business and Families
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On the Blog Post Obamacare: An Affront to Our Freedoms And Wrong For Business and Families

Jay Sykes
9:05 pm on Sunday, May 19, 2013
@Randy... The proposed plan would have allowed certain catastrophic health conditions to immediately join Medicaid or Medicare(prior to age 65), upon proper diagnosis, prior to exhausting all ones financial resources(before financial ruin).
We would be looking at about 2% of the total, non-medicare age eligible or non-medicare financial (welfare) eligible US population that would join the current medicare/medicaid plans if we followed this type system.
Why would anyone think that it would be the financially responsible(remember premiums are up $3000 in the timeline they were promised to go down $2500), let alone intelligent at any level, to think congress could/should re-write all of the current medical insurance programs to serve about 2% of the population?
Medicare/medicaid could have easily absorbed this 2% of the population without disruptions that we are feeling with the Obama-care plan, or any other type of national healthcare scheme.
We should be more than happy to cover individuals, that have a medical catastrophe not of their own contributory negligence, with the current medicare/medicaid plans.
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On the Blog Post Obamacare: An Affront to Our Freedoms And Wrong For Business and Families

Jay Sykes
10:23 am on Sunday, May 19, 2013
Where have you been, Frances?
Right out of the gate is was suggested that anyone suffering from a 'catastrophic medical condition' should be covered by one of our existing programs of Medicare or Medicaid, rather than private insurance.
We didnt need to reinvent the whole medical payment scheme.
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On the article How Much Soda is Too Much?

Jay Sykes
9:39 pm on Saturday, May 11, 2013
@Randy... I don't object to requiring those that subject themselves to an excessive glycemic index, or excessive alcohol consumption, to contribute more for their health insurance, if it is a reliably measurable cost factor.
I don't know how one measures a glycemic index exposure or excessive alcohol consumption across time. It's probably just a little late to raise their premiums if they are in need of a Liver or Kidney transplant.
We do know how to reliably measure a BMI. The medical world knows through numerous studies that a BMI of 25+ is correlated to higher healthcare costs;about half of all of healthcare costs is attributable to excessive weight.
Do we expect a control measure on the size of our soft-drinks to be any more effective at eliminating obesity than Prohibition was at 'whatever it was' that it was supposed to fix!
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On the article How Much Soda is Too Much?

Jay Sykes
4:40 pm on Saturday, May 11, 2013
Healthcare economics tells us we should not particularly care, with any precision, how the adult population gets their total calorie intake. We should only care about the Body Mass Index (BMI).
A nearly perfect +1 correlation, and known provable cause effect relationship exists between calorie consumption and a BMI over 25 with increased healthcare costs. Thus, it is only rational to assess taxes based on a BM levelI.
First, we need to put an IRS approved loading dock type scale at every cash register to assess BMI. All the high calorie to gram weight foods items will be assessed and a tax collected based as a function of your BMI.
Every fruit,vegetable,meat, etc..., that is purchased in a 'raw' or unprepared form will be -exempt- from the BMI tax. As, unprepared foods (even fruits) have relatively low calorie to gram weight ratios vs most every prepared food.
The BMI tax is a direct address and treatment of the problem: just too many calories consumed. It is not some crazed scheme that attacks, as 'evil', certain name brand products.
The EU countries have their VAT tax, we can have our FAT tax.
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On the article How Much Soda is Too Much?
Jay Sykes
9:17 am on Saturday, May 11, 2013
ReplyOnly in America can 'those' (read: elected officials) that almost single handedly created the Overweight problem, through third-party payer and by legally preventing health insurance carriers from charging the calculated correct rate for knowable 'self-inflicted' health risks (read:overweight), now claim to 'come to our rescue'<sarc> to fix a problem of their very creation;not by fixing the insurance market with premiums that reflect personal choice, but through a product ban.
This ban as a solution just screams, 'I don't understand the concepts of insurance and statistics'. And that, 'I don't understand the concepts of insurance and statistics' goes for those that would cast a vote for someone proposing a soda product ban.
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On the Blog Post Our School Focus Is All Wrong — Believe It Or Not, It’s Not the Teachers
Jay Sykes
7:54 am on Friday, May 10, 2013
ReplyWe need to take our focus off the teachers and school districts and focus on the family and family intervention programs. Why isn't home economics and parenting not required to be taught in middle and high schools? Why are we expecting our teachers to be social workers, for which they've never been trained?
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@Lyle.... Do you think one can just teach 'parenting' in the middle/high school classroom?My siblings and I, as well as my wife and her siblings all had 20++ years of 'understudy' work before we took on that parenting role.
Teaching parenting sounds like teaching morality;it's learned not taught.
You might need to define 'teaching parenting and home economics'.
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On the Blog Post Our School Focus Is All Wrong — Believe It Or Not, It’s Not the Teachers
Jay Sykes
8:16 pm on Thursday, May 9, 2013
Reply@Lyle Ruble... Any correlation between single parent household and educational success reported in this study?
Interesting to note that in the time-frame of this study, children spending 'some time' in a single parent household went from approximately 10% to more than 50%
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On the Blog Post Eliminate Vouchers, Says Former Private School Teacher

Jay Sykes
8:46 am on Thursday, May 9, 2013
Wisconsin did not need to pass a budget by June 30,2011. State law allows us to go on 'forever' with all the previous budget levels;no changes allowed until a new budget passes.
Since about half of the State budget is 'pass-thru' to schools/local government, not passing a budget by the end of the first quarter adds a myriad of complications for local units of government. In most cases local/schools ability to budget, plan and compensate for any funding shortages would have been impeded by the tax rate freeze, implemented by Doyle(read:reduced services/layoffs)
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On the Blog Post Gun Control and All That Digresses

Jay Sykes
4:46 pm on Wednesday, May 8, 2013
@B&W... I'm in general agreement on the 'Background Check' being a reasonable administrative process to reduce the flow of guns, to those that society has deemed ineligible for gun ownership. The computer can make the 'Background Check' a nearly instantaneous administrative process;this was not practical 20 years ago at a dealer or a 'gun show'.
I'm not so sure that the 5 day waiting period('cooling off'),per the Brady Bill, meets the same "reasonable administrative standard". Wisconsin has had a 2-day waiting period that existed prior to, and then concurrently to, the 20 year old Brady 5 day wait period. Other states have waiting period that are lower that the Brady 5 day wait, some states have longer wait periods.
Can anyone cite data that proves,in the last 20 years, the Brady 5 day wait is more effective in keeping guns out of the wrong hands, or reducing gun violence, or gun death than the Wisconsin 2 day wait?
Jay Sykes
10:41 am on Monday, May 20, 2013
Keith... How are you accounting for us being assessed at 37th? When you look strictly at medical outcomes, adjusting the statistics for country specific factors(ie. BMI, Automobile accidents,Shootings) the USA is near the top in medical outcomes.
Advances in Pharmacology and medical devices happen because we are willing to pay for them, the rest of the world is riding on our financial coat-tails. So, lets pass a federal law that will not permit any drug or device in the USA for more than the world average price;the rest of the globe needs to start paying its fair share.
@ Randy... When it comes to Obama-care, I'm reminded of the phrase 'Cutting off the nose to spite the face'.