Please join us Saturday morning.
Please join us Saturday morning.
Brought to you by United Health Group and Aetna
Sore losers. For millions of Americans government being involved in healthcare is the only way they will get healthcare. I trust elected government officials more than private insurance executives.
Soonerqueen, this is not the political forum so i askyou the following question with respect and i would appreaciate it if you would answer me back.
Do you (or under your husbands policy) currently have healthcare that is paid for by the tax payer? By that I mean do you (or husband) work or have worked for the federal government, government contractor, state, state contractor, university, school, medicare, medicade, soonercare, etc,etc or any other tax payer paid system?
The second part of my question is how is the Affordable Care act going to directly effect you ?
It's certainly a lesser-of-two-evils situation but there isn't one single thing the government does better than private industry where competition rules. This entire situation could be handled by private industry but with significant government regulation - much like public utilities were once done.
USPS version 2.0
We have insurance through my husband's employer, and we have never been employed by any government agency or tax payer system. We work and pay for our own insurance.I don't think any of us truly know how we are going to be affected by the Obamacare plan. Some of the parts of it aren't bad, but others I'm not sure of. My fear is that after awhile most companies will go to the government insurance, and the quality of healthcare will be way below what we have now. America has always been a country of freedom and choices. When the government takes over,your choices disappear. Unless Romney is elected, we will have Obamacare. Guess everyone needs to decide for themselves what they want and then be sure and vote.
Romney gets the ACA repealed - then what will we have? The status quo? Is that a real option? I have very mixed feelings. This whole plan is not a "government takeover." If anything, the government handed over all-new now mandated taxpayers to shell out to private insurance companies. What do you mean when you say, "the government plan?" There is none. The 'public option' is not a part of the ACA. If you're talking about the 'exchanges', which will soon become part of the system, that's the one thing I have hopes for as being competitors to Big Insurance. With private competition from these co-op like exchanges (Walgreens, for example, is planning one) it will drive the premiums down. Remember, proposed premium caps were thrown out, so the exchanges will have to prove the free market can deal with health care in a way that's affordable. In fact, "ObamaCare" is almost the exact same thing as what the Republicans proposed in 1994 in reaction to "HillaryCare." Neither plan went anywhere. That GOP plan from '94, now in place (almost intact) as law is certainly no "government takeover." Like I said, I have mixed feelings, but the current Affordable Care Act is a centrist plan and far from the leftist government takeover that so many talk about.
Having a plan that roughly half the country is for and roughly half is against is likely setting up a problem in the long run, one major problem with this and a lot of the politics of at least the last twenty years is policies are increasingly unilateral where one side puts something in place when they have power only to be undone and redone as majorities change. Which is drastically more wasteful than coming up with a plan both sides can live with, with of course the exception where both sides choose to ignore our debt spiraling up for decades and only bring it up to give token reasons for why it was the other parties fault.
No option to purchase insurance across state lines and no tort reform. Undoubtedly those 2 add 25% to your health care costs. The reason is the Dems are in the pockets of the trail lawyers and the insurance lobby. Had they done what's good for the people of America rather than what enhances their reelection chances, the non partisan passed AHCA might not fail the smell test.
I don't really buy the importance of public opinion here. Most of the public doesn't even know what the Act does or what it's going to cost them. As far as this particular Act and saying there was no compromise, that's utter hogwash. This plan proposed by the Democrats was originally a Republican plan. It is as free-market as we can be in approaching this system and will place insurance companies in a position to reduce costs and look for efficient means to deliver care.
There was quite a bit of discussion and negotiation going into this Bill. The biggest problem is that Republicans had one way of responding to it--"no." They wouldn't even meaningfully come to the table. So this is what we get. No public option (dropped), no single payer (dropped).
+1
Plus, Im not sure, but isnt the new republican god (Romney) the one who created a state health care system while he was govenor? How can he create gov't healthcare in his state, then turn around and pander for votes by saying it is a terrible idea? People need to read more on their own. Stop listening to whatever 24 hr news cycle spits out.
People act like healthcare right now is amazing. Its horrible. Corrupt insurance companies and corrupt doctors (not all but there is a large amount) raping patients wallets with unnecessary test and cost just because they can. Unforunately, we either need more regulation, or we could just ship all the poor and sick people to another country. Take your pick. I do not really care either way, I would just like to stop hearing people bitch about everything honestly.
The healthier everyone can be, the cheaper the cost will be. If everyone can have the same access to medicine and treatments, the overall cost of healthcare will go down as people will become healthier all around. Everyone will save money by not having to pay extra to support thsoe without healthcare that cannot pay for their hospital cost.
And honestly, why hold a rally in Oklahoma? Our lawmakers already have screwed the state over by refusing to acklowledge the law. They are already on your side.
Why waste your energy when you could be creating tea party banners and hanging "Dont tread on my flags" on your houses?
The state now has the option of creating the exchange or not. There will be consequences if they don't, including thousands of Oklahomans enrolling in a federal exchange. If your goal is to get more people on federally-managed health care plans then this protest is a great idea.
Soonerqueen I think most of us support citizens being active in causes they support, regardless of the particulars of what those causes are. If you end up going, drop back by and let us know what you thought. And have a happy fourth of July!
if you don't understand the different point of view of what a state does for itself (and how is that workign out for mass) and what the federal govt does .. i'm not sure we can have a conversation ...
the AFA will raise costs across the board .. and with the medicaid expansion no 100% optional ... the AFA will NOT even provide insurance to everyone like was touted ...
It will not raise costs across the board. Did you read that in Superfrackonomics too?
If you don't give people healthcare, they simply show up in the Emergency Room for all their health care, including sore throats, sunburns and diaper rashes. You cannot be turned away from an Emergency Room if you show up, nor can that hospital ship you off to a "charity" hospital, so it makes it simple to start using the ER for all health care if you have no insurance. Or, if you're too proud, you suffer at home, no matter how bad your problem. Using the ER for basic health care slows ir down for everyone, and ultimately, we pay for the healthcare of the uninsured regardless. The hospitals simply raise what they charge to the rest of us to make up the difference. The only way to avoid paying for health care for those who cannot afford it is to make it legal to turn sick people without insurance away. If you've got the moral stomach for that.....and I'm one of those "corrupt(isn't that what someone in a post above called me and my colleagues?)" doctors....you've got a stronger stomach than I do.
There are currently 2 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 2 guests)
Bookmarks