A shot was fired back at a comment I made. Sorry... this opening was too sweet not to take.
Warning - POLITICS!!! Go hide the kids.

- Bill
Moderator: Available
Gene DeMambro wrote:Why does this always come up, and why must I always have to set Bill straight on this? SighBill Glasheen wrote:
As I recall, Teddy Kennedy preferred leaving the medical Mecca and social Eden of Boston to be treated down there to extend his life. Go figure... (The irony of that is rich, but a non sequitur.)
Ted went to Duke to have his surgery because there is ONE surgeon in the entire country who performs this particular procedure. And that surgeon just happens to practice at Duke University. Bill, with his vast expanse of knowledge in medicine, can probably come up with more than one or two earth shattering medical advances that my forebearers here in the medical Mecca that even the good folks in the Cavalier and Tar Heel States also enjoy, including a most recent Nobel Prize. But then again, when Ted Jr. had cancer and needed treatment after his leg was amputated, he went to Children's Hospital in Boston. When Ted's daughter had lung cancer, they were able to find ONE surgeon with the expertise to perform the surgery. Where, exactly, was this surgeron located, you may ask? Right here in the medical Mecca that is Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, as it turns out.
Not to be outdone the medicos, the social Edenists (is that even a word?) can proudly lay claim to the Massachusetts Health Care Reform law. Enacted by a Democratic state legislature and signed in to law by a Republican Governer Mitt Romney, it now serves as the foundation and the progenitor of the recently passed federal health care reform bill. This, once again, further cements Boston's status as the Hub of the Universe.
Maybe a non sequitor, Bill, but you brought it up.
Enjoying the holiday weekend,
Gene
You stuck yourself way out on that limb, Gene.Gene DeMambro wrote:
Not to be outdone the medicos, the social Edenists (is that even a word?) can proudly lay claim to the Massachusetts Health Care Reform law. Enacted by a Democratic state legislature and signed in to law by a Republican Governer Mitt Romney, it now serves as the foundation and the progenitor of the recently passed federal health care reform bill. This, once again, further cements Boston's status as the Hub of the Universe.
You are of course assuming that they were not already planning such a move, or that they were not just acting on an opportunity. Companies converting employees to contractor status (a form of outsourcing) has been occurring for decades and is a major cost-cutting strategy regardless of any Massachusetts insurance legislation. An equally valid assumption is that your company timed the change to divert the blame to the legislation.Bill Glasheen wrote: First... I work for a Boston-based company that is now a Waltham-based company after a merger. So I know a little something about the Massachusetts universal health care experiment. Let me tell you how it works, Gene, since they USED to provide insurance as a benefit.
There's a very easy way to get around this stupid legislation, and my company did it to me. Don't want to have to pay either the health insurance or the fines? Then change the status of as many workers as you can from employee to subcontractor. Now they don't have to worry about my health insurance premiums, and I have to pay for health insurance out of my pocket from AFTER TAX dollars
Correct, just as high wages and other benefits also do not apply in Nepal. Likely this move had nothing to do with Mass. insurance legislation, if that is all there was to it then by your own argument the company could have made them contractors like they did you, rather than offshoring to Nepal. No, this was just part of the process ongoing for the past decade of companies offshoring IT to any country that can do it cheaper.Oh and virtually all of IT got exported overseas to Nepal. Health care isn't considered a right over there.
The current version of conservative capitalist free market suks too, Bill, and I am the poster child casualty. And really it sounds like you have been as well, with your previous layoffs and your current insurance issue.Your Massachusettes health insurance experiment suks, Gene, and I am the poster child casualty.
Who screwed you?After being screwed by your wonderful socialist hero
Bill Glasheen wrote: my company did it to me
Very true, but that is like blaming gun deaths on the availability of guns and not on the people pulling the triggers. Responsibility for offshoring is squarely on the corporate leaders who make those decisions.Valkenar wrote: If you want to look at it negatively, you could argue that the health care legislation in MA gives companies a PR excuse to convert employees to subcontractors. While "we just don't want to pay American wages" won't go over too well, there are people who will swallow "it's just these darn gubmint fees." From that perspective, it is possible to blame local government policies for allowing those companies to do the inconsiderate things they want to do anyway.
Oh reeeaaalllyyy????Glenn wrote:Very true, but that is like blaming gun deaths on the availability of guns and not on the people pulling the triggers. Responsibility for offshoring is squarely on the corporate leaders who make those decisions.Valkenar wrote:
If you want to look at it negatively, you could argue that the health care legislation in MA gives companies a PR excuse to convert employees to subcontractors. While "we just don't want to pay American wages" won't go over too well, there are people who will swallow "it's just these darn gubmint fees." From that perspective, it is possible to blame local government policies for allowing those companies to do the inconsiderate things they want to do anyway.
Absolutely. It is a reason why I have professional colleagues in the Boston academic scene. It's a reason why my best friend did medical school up there. And I am soooo ashamed that my student and friend Ian did his internship up there. That traitor!!!!!Valkenar wrote:
Are you maybe just a little bitter that we have such a great (but not the only!) medical community?
Whoah there. Government mandates aren't even mostly the reason it's profitable to offshore jobs. Offshoring is profitable because America has a higher standard, and cost, of living. No matter how you slice it, paying chinese sweatshop children six cents an hour is going to beat paying Americans a wage they can live on. In other cases, with technology, it's just a matter of standards. In America, a person who can program and cares about money won't bother programming for $30,000/year. Because in America that is not what a highly-skilled laborer makes.Bill Glasheen wrote: So government mandates make it unprofitable to employ Americans to compete in a global economy to do certain things, and then we're going to blame it on big, bad corporate America for engaging in a logical response, right?
Not MY specific situation. That is very real.Valkenar wrote:
think it's disingenuous of you to imply that it's the government that creates a situation that wouldn't otherwise exist.
In this we agree.Valkenar wrote:
Certainly, government mandates might make it more profitable to offshore jobs.
Are you a bitter person, Justin?Valkenar wrote:
Re: Bitterness. You can be bitter and still interact with people in Boston's medical community.