^ I'm guessing, then, that the info and news items we're getting posted in here aren't really 'common knowledge'. I suppose it would take something like Watergate to get the information out to the public.
I hear people say, "Senator so-and-so is a physician, so he knows about healthcare". The sad truth is that even the people in healthcare don't understand the American healthcare system. It's so complex that only a minority of consultants, healthcare executives, economists and legislators really have a handle on a complex, illogical and counter-intuitive system.
For anyone who is interested, I can recommend a few good books by journalists who have spent years investigating and trying to understand the system. When you read their writing, you'll spend most of your time saying, "WTF?".
The vote on the AHCA will probably be delayed until after the Senate recess.
The AHCA has passed. What the Senate is voting on is a different bill- the BCRA. If the BCRA passes, they will have to put together a committee of members from both the House and the Senate to negotiate a compromise bill that merges the two bills.
The negotiations will be tackling questions like, "Should 20 million people lose their insurance coverage or should 24 million people lose their coverage?".
I don't watch Fox, but I would almost be willing to bet my *LIFE* that they will never, ever truthfully talk about that aspect on that [STRIKE]news[/STRIKE] propaganda network.
Honestly, you should watch both. Just be careful what you watch on both networks.
Some of the shows like Fox & Friends or Lawrence O'Donnell's show are largely opinion and propaganda, although F&F has largely become the QVC for the Republican Party.
On the other hand, there are shows on both networks that present facts along with a particular viewpoint. For example, Steve Rattner's charts in the morning on Morning Joe are very helpful in understanding complicated subjects. Or better yet, watch PBS, listen to NPR and try to catch the good shows that take the deep dive on CSPAN (don't watch anything on CSPAN that has a call-in number, though).
But to answer your question, the overall tone at Fox has been to distort what the ACA is doing (which is why a lot of Fox viewers say things like they love Medicare and the ACA but hate Obamacare because it's socialized medicine).
...The irony here is the fact that U.S. R&D is so expensive proves that what Ben is supporting is NOT a free market...
There's a lot that is wrong with "R&D" in the US. Some of what is being charged off as "R&D" is just normal cost of operating a business. Many of the drugs that come to market are drugs developed by universities or the NIH using taxpayer funds or private grants. Many of the drugs that come to market are just analogs to drugs developed in other countries.
There's a good analysis
here.
Basically, what the writers concluded was that the excess pricing in the US market far exceeded the entire R&D
global budget for the pharmaceutical companies. In other words, US consumers finance not only the R&D budget for the US market,
they're covering the R&D budget for the rest of the world and the pharmaceutical companies are still making 100% to 250% of their R&D budget in profit.