Sunday, November 24, 2013

Letters From The Dark Side

Subject: A hacker's wet dream?
To: 



so says John Mcafee, who ought to know.  He escaped from Belize by subterfuge and is now ensconced, if that's the word, in Portland Oregon, making occasional forays into the media to make his eminently quotable comments.

Here he is on Cavuto for a few minutes, depositing the above quote.
http://www.whoismcafee.com/obamacare-a-hackers-wet-dream/

And here he is on Alex Jones at somewhat of a disadvantage, but allowed to go on at great length, also a disadvantage. 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3o-Flb5CBOo#t=358

Alex Jones interviews John McAfee on programming, security, Obamacare, and life and love...  "They knew, or should have known, that it wasn't going to work before they brought it out."  "They didn't do alpha testing, they didn't do beta testing, they just put it out."  CGI, a Canadian company, has "10,000 programmers in India."  Not that there's anything wrong with that.

Here's his home page:
http://www.whoismcafee.com/  Mcafee's home blog page

The "Obamacare Shock" - One California Employer's True Story
It's interesting that obamacare, like aspirin, no longer needs to be capitalized.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-11-20/obamacare-shock-one-california-employers-terrifying-true-story
From a Zero Hedge reader:

My company, based in California, employs 600. We used to insure about 250 of our employees. The rest opted out. The company paid 50% of their premiums for about $750,000/yr.

Under obamacare, none can opt out without penalty, and the rates are double or triple, depending upon the plan. Our 750k for 250 employees is going to $2 million per year for 600 employees.

By mandate, we have to pay 91.5% of the premium or more up from the 50% we used to pay.

Our employees share of the premium goes from $7/week for the cheapest plan to $30/week. 95% of my employees were on that plan.  Remember, we used to pay 50% now we pay 91.5% and the premiums still go up that much!!

The  cheapest plan now has a deductible of $6350! Before it was $150. Employees making $9 to $10/hr, have to pay $30/wk and have a $6350 deductible!!! What!!!!

They can't afford that to be sure. Obamacare will kill their propensity to seek medical care. More money for less care? How does that help them?

Here is the craziest part. Employees who qualify for mediCAL (the California version of Medicare), which is most of my employees, will automatically be enrolled in the Federal SNAP (food stamp) program. They cannot opt out. They cannot decline. They will be automatically enrolled in the Federal food stamp program based upon their level of Obamacare qualification. Remember, these people work full time, living in a small town in California. They are not seeking assistance. It all seems like a joke. How can this be the new system?

Pelosi, "pass the bill to find out what's in it"? Surprise! You've annihilated the working class.
Q.E.D.

Here's one from Washington State:
My Obamacare Cancellation
"Seething at a President I helped elect."
By Bruce Barcott 11/18 9:00am
http://observer.com/2013/11/my-obamacare-cancellation/

We received the letter in the mail a couple months ago. The good people at Regence Bluecross Blueshield were pleased to inform us that due to Obamacare our current low-monthly premium, comically-high deductible medical policy would no longer exist come January 1, 2014. Pleased, because a new and better plan would be offered in its place. Old monthly premium: $578 for a family of four (non-smoking, helmet-wearing, and paternally snipped). New premium: $1,123. A 94% increase.
Once the sound of boiling blood dissipated, in my head I heard my Republican friends chuckling at the sight of a liberal Democrat hoisted ten stories high on his own petard. How's the view up there, Obamacare Ollie?
For the past 15 years my wife and I have made our living as freelance writers. (To young readers, I say: Do not do this. Your bliss is marvelous, but its following will need to be supported by a banker, plumber, union machinist or tenured faculty member.) As such, our health insurance is our own concern. Over the years we've held on to our coverage by letting our co-pay and deductible rise and our covered procedures fall. You may be aware that the three-tiered state exchange policies are labeled Gold, Silver, and Bronze, reflecting their price and level of coverage. If our policy still existed it would fall into the column of Wood.

But Wood we had—and Wood we liked.

No more. O.K., into the state exchange we go. I voted for it. Fair enough.
It is our good fortune to live in Washington State, where our Democratic governor embraced the Affordable Care Act and set up a state exchange that is, according to those who've studied such things, the best in the nation.

The website allowed me to find a plan that looked reasonable. Premera Blue Cross had a Preferred Bronze 5500 for $889 a month. Okay. Not so bad. Downside: $3,600 more in annual premiums. Upside: Free eyeglasses for the boy!
The state exchange number put me on hold. I hung up and called Premera. "You can sign up with us directly," a very helpful rep told me, "but if there's a chance your income could qualify you for a subsidy, it's best to go through the state exchange."
So: Back to the exchange website. Enter birth dates, zip code, tobacco use, yadda yadda, monthly income. Stop. Ponder.

Income... Which month, brother? For that matter, which year? Do you want gross, net, before SE (self-employment tax, a k a Social Security payments) or after? AGI (adjusted gross income) from last year's 1040?

For every business futurist who hails the coming of the independent contracting economy, the future that is The Brand of You, there are thousands of us out here actually building The Brand of You. It ain't an easy hustle. If you want to get an idea of our monthly and yearly incomes, imagine a sine wave drawn by a drunken sailor. Last year, my wife and I, we made out all right. This year's kinda lean. Which year did the exchange want? Unclear.

I went to a friend and colleague—let's call him Peter—for advice. He also had his individual medical policy cancelled because of Obamacare. "I'm stuck on the same question — income," he told me. Peter does a little writing, a little farming, a little this and that to keep the ship afloat. "I got through to the exchange, and the woman there told me to just estimate what my income would be this year." In other words: Make it up. If he overestimated, he'd be screwing himself out of a subsidy, Peter said. If he underestimated, he'd be hit with a big fat bill. He wasn't sure he wouldn't also be accused of fraud. So he called his accountant, who's also a lawyer.  That only got him so far. At a certain point in the conversation, the accountant/lawyer had to get off the phone. "I have to stop answering your questions," he told Peter. "I can't ethically advise you, because honestly I don't know the right thing to do. Nobody does. There are no answers. Right now it's a complete clusterfuck."

Last week the frustration of people like Peter and me — Obamacare supporters who lost their current plans—was heard by the White House, which promptly panicked. On Thursday, President Obama announced a policy change that would allow insurance companies like Regence to keep customers like me on the old Wood plan for one more year. To that I say: Fagh! Thanks for nothing.

The idea that an insurer like Regence can, or will, spin on a dime and revive our ol' $587 Woody within the next six weeks is absurd. It skews the market and undermines the entire premise of the Affordable Care Act – which is that by balancing the halt (allowing pre-existing conditions) and the hale (forcing robust young adults to get in the pool), the exchanges will over time produce a system that offers quality health care at a price my family can afford.

Even Mike Kreidler, the deep-blue Democrat who serves as my state's insurance commissioner, can't support it. Hours after getting off a conference call with the White House on Thursday, Kreidler announced that the State of Washington would tell President Obama to stuff it. "In the interest of keeping the consumer protections we have enacted and ensuring that we keep health insurance costs down for all consumers, we are staying the course," Kreidler said. "We will NOT be allowing insurance companies to extend their policies."

Which is how I found myself applauding Mike Kreidler and seething at a President I helped elect. Out here in the Land of the Brand of You, we don't want cheap twelve-month extensions. We're willing to suck it up and pay our fair share for health insurance. We want the exchanges to work. We're not demanding a last-minute reprieve that threatens the stability of the entire system. What we're asking for is clarity and competence. 

Bruce Barcott is a former Guggenheim Fellow in nonfiction. His work appears often in National Geographic, The New York Times Magazine, Outside, and On Earth.
Follow Bruce Barcott via RSS.
 http://observer.com/2013/11/my-obamacare-cancellation/#ixzz2lGtW1ZS9

Here's Slate magazine, that boiling cauldron of right-wing fascist froth:
http://www.slate.com/articles/business/moneybox/2013/11/cgi_group_stock_price_theontractor_behind_obamacare_s_bum_website_is_doing.html
CGI is doing just fine, thank you.

    The ongoing struggles of healthcare.gov are creating an understandable sense of anxiety and unease among Democrats in Washington. The site is a key element of the party’s central recent policy initiative. Abject failure will be devastating to the reputation of Democrats nationwide, including huge swaths of people who had no crucial role in the design of the Affordable Care Act and certainly nothing to do with the information technology architecture of the federal insurance exchange.
    One place where people aren’t panicking is in the actual belly of the beast—the offices of CGI Federal, the U.S. division of the global IT services company whose slow and steady rise to power David Auerbach profiled earlier this month in Slate.
    CGI personnel continue to work on fixing the problem in advance of the president’s Nov. 30 quasi-deadline, but they are doing so in a not-especially-panicked manner.  Officially the White House is trying to avoid spats with its partners, but government employees working on the site’s implementation tell me contractors have plenty of time to spend quibbling with the Department of Health and Human Services over which changes are really remedying defects and which are billable as new work. [Was that predictable, or what?]
    And the really crazy thing is their complacency seems justified. While the failures we’ve already seen are imperiling elected officials’ careers, they’ve left CGI Group’s stock unscathed. It’s not just that the company’s share price hasn’t collapsed: After a brief swoon in late October, CGI shares are trading higher than they were over the summer and indeed are at an all-time high as of this writing.
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It couldn't be, could it, that this unfolding disaster is in fact not a mistake?  That it is part of a carefully executed plan to bring the American economy to its knees?  Hmmm.  How come all 2400 pages of the bill were ready to go 6 months after Obama's election?  It should have taken three years to write that.  And then another 8,000 or so pages of implementing regulations. 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/post/how-many-pages-of-regulations-for-obamacare/2013/05/14/61eec914-bcf9-11e2-9b09-1638acc3942e_blog.html


https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/111/hr3590/text

Harry Reid's [well, Nevada's, really] Las Vegas Review has a modest editorial on the subject:
http://www.reviewjournal.com/opinion/editorial-obamacare-meltdown-means-reid-must-consider-gop-ideas

Jim

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