kenberg, on 2013-November-04, 14:54, said:
Of course people with an agenda make their points. But blaming it al on Fox News really won't cut it....
I'm not blaming Fox News for everything -- they are just trying to make money, and they can't make money without a gullible audience. They are one of the main culprits, though, of the right-wing misinformation machine is very large, very scattered, and very lucrative. See Rush, Erickson... hell even the NY Post and WSJ nowadays. There are plenty of organizations making money by giving extremely biased perspectives on everything political -- some on the left, but an absolute ton on the right.
And by no means am I happy about how Obamacare has been handled thus far. I expected better on the website, I expected better on the overall management of the process, and I expected more favorable (or at least more balanced) press coverage.
The administration has made numerous flaws in this rollout, not least of which on the PR side, where it effectively lied about being able to keep the insurance you have if you like it. (It can be argued that Obama, when he said this repeatedly, was referring only to insurance that would REMAIN LEGAL after the ACA took effect -- but when you have to retroactively caveat bold statements like that, you've failed the PR quality test in my view.)
The problem here is that, it seems, all we are getting in terms of serious discussion of ACA comes in two flavors:
1. Criticism of the rollout/website/certain features of the ACA plan.
2. Anecdotal stories about individuals who are made worse off by the new system.
On (1.) -- there will be problems with the rollout, as ACA represents a massive change in a massive industry. There should have been fewer problems or less severe ones, but they ALL (or at least *mostly*) will be fixed. (It should be noted that if the GOP spent half as much time trying to constructively improve ACA as bashing it or trying to repeal it, for over 3 years now, it would be a better law. Thankfully, the Democrats are at least interested in governing rather than only obstructing and squabbling.)
On (2.) -- anecdotal evidence is interesting as it gives color to a situation, adds depth, names and faces, details. However, it's anecdotal. When a new system rolls out there will ALWAYS be winners and losers in that system. Anecdotes are a poor substitute for statistics.
What I'd like to hear more of is:
A. Unbiased information about how the plan is going so far -- people signed up, people calling/creating accounts, etc.
B. Unbiased analysis of how many people are made better off, and by how much, and how many people are made worse off, and by how much. In other words, are we as a country better off under ACA? My guess is (1) it's too early to tell for sure right now, and (2) eventually without question, yes.
But you don't hear much about A. and B. because it's hard to sell newspapers or get click-throughs with boring headlines like "An analysis of the costs and benefits of ACA."