Affordable Care Act (ACA) - Obamacare

Debt, Strike, Death by For-Profit Health Care (March 15, 2013). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2240364.

This Strike Debt report is part of an ongoing effort by a group of health care practitioners, lawyers, researchers, and activists to expose the disastrous impact of medical debt and for-profit health care on families and individuals in the United States.

Private health care enriches a few—insurance companies, private equity firms, pharmaceutical companies, debt collectors, and global investors—at the expense of everyone else. Medical debt is a weapon of the class war because when patients cannot afford medical care, they are forced into debt, often with far-ranging and catastrophic consequences.

As the rate of uninsured has grown, local governments have looked to state subsidies for private health insurance as a band-aid solution. Massachusetts has implemented such a program, and the Obama Administration’s Affordable Care Act has expanded this initiative on a national scale.

Unfortunately, the ACA will not solve the problem because its primary goal is to expand the market-based system that has already proved to be a miserable failure. Insurance companies profit by denying coverage. As costs rise and benefits shrink, patients will continue to pay the price.

We are in a major health care crisis, the consequences of which will be felt for decades to come. The only real solutions are: a grassroots social movement to demand universal health care, an end to the scourge of medical debt, and a national conversation on the meaning of health and wellness.
 
Debt, Strike, Death by For-Profit Health Care (March 15, 2013). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2240364.

This Strike Debt report is part of an ongoing effort by a group of health care practitioners, lawyers, researchers, and activists to expose the disastrous impact of medical debt and for-profit health care on families and individuals in the United States.

Private health care enriches a few—insurance companies, private equity firms, pharmaceutical companies, debt collectors, and global investors—at the expense of everyone else. Medical debt is a weapon of the class war because when patients cannot afford medical care, they are forced into debt, often with far-ranging and catastrophic consequences.

As the rate of uninsured has grown, local governments have looked to state subsidies for private health insurance as a band-aid solution. Massachusetts has implemented such a program, and the Obama Administration’s Affordable Care Act has expanded this initiative on a national scale.

Unfortunately, the ACA will not solve the problem because its primary goal is to expand the market-based system that has already proved to be a miserable failure. Insurance companies profit by denying coverage. As costs rise and benefits shrink, patients will continue to pay the price.

We are in a major health care crisis, the consequences of which will be felt for decades to come. The only real solutions are: a grassroots social movement to demand universal health care, an end to the scourge of medical debt, and a national conversation on the meaning of health and wellness.

Universal Health Care does not work. It is collapsing in Canada to the point where privitization is now a reality in some provinces. It is collapsing in England. It does not cover certain medications, leads to widespread abuse of patients (England is having a national scandal about this very subject) and in the end...dolts...it is not free. The cost in taxes is huge. So in the end, you lose money in both systems. Just had a guy move from Canada to here because Toronto is not privatizing and his taxes overall took over 60% of his net. So blow it out your arse you commie twit.
 
Yeah private insurance works great. Pay 700 dollars a month for health care and they will drop you as soon as they get the chance if your healthcare costs too much, unless your lucky enough to have a job that offers health insurance.
 
Yeah private insurance works great. Pay 700 dollars a month for health care and they will drop you as soon as they get the chance if your healthcare costs too much, unless your lucky enough to have a job that offers health insurance.

Did the above happen to you or someone close to you?
 
I got dropped a couple weeks ago, now I am scrambling. I did like my private insurance, I could see a specialist or pretty much any doctor, no referral needed. Medicaid sucks (you need to go through a bunch of shit to see a specialist), I hope this will not be a reflection of the ACA. Medicaid is by far not premium health insurance but I guess it keeps you alive. :cool: I could have stuck with same insurance still but it would come to 600-700 a month. Can't afford it.
 
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I got dropped a couple weeks ago, now I am scrambling. I did like my private insurance, I could see a specialist or pretty much any doctor, no referral needed. Medicaid sucks (you need to go through a bunch of shit to see a specialist), I hope this will not be a reflection of the ACA. Medicaid is by far not premium health insurance but I guess it keeps you alive. :cool: I could have stuck with same insurance still but it would come to 600-700 a month. Can't afford it.

Sorry to hear that man. Hopefully this shit will work itself out. Die and be reborn as something with less government/no government involvement. We let these fuks in DC (all of them) shit all over us. Funny how they are all looking out for us and shit keeps getting worse.
 
Im excited about my $2500.00 savings on insurance next year with the aca.
I cant decide what I am going to do with the money. Maybe Ill put it back every year until my kid starts college. That will be a good start for university cost.
Who knows, maybe do a bit more traveling. I haven't been to Europe in years.
Ive been thinking about some cardio equipment for the house.
Maybe Ill give it to charity. That would be a good idea.
Just cant make up my mind. But its going to be nice whatever I do with the $2500.00
Im happy just dreaming about it. How about you guys?
We have the greatest president ever.
James2012, dont want to get too personal. But what are you going to spend your windfall on?:)
 
Im excited about my $2500.00 savings on insurance next year with the aca.
I cant decide what I am going to do with the money. Maybe Ill put it back every year until my kid starts college. That will be a good start for university cost.
Who knows, maybe do a bit more traveling. I haven't been to Europe in years.
Ive been thinking about some cardio equipment for the house.
Maybe Ill give it to charity. That would be a good idea.
Just cant make up my mind. But its going to be nice whatever I do with the $2500.00
Im happy just dreaming about it. How about you guys?
We have the greatest president ever.
James2012, dont want to get too personal. But what are you going to spend your windfall on?:)

I'm going to Disneyland!
 
Washington Post is describing this ad as one that should scare the shit out of any Democrats running next year. Not that I don't think the establishment RINO GOP has a knack of acting and looking like idiots, but 2014 should make 2012 look very, very mild. Prepare for Dems across the country, at the local, state, and federal level, to get shellacked.

Like Your Senator - YouTube
 
Supposedly. Supposedly the unemployment picture improved as of todays numbers. If true. Why?
Could it be that business has finally seen the (soon to come) funeral of the aca?
 
Supposedly. Supposedly the unemployment picture improved as of todays numbers. If true. Why?
Could it be that business has finally seen the (soon to come) funeral of the aca?

Not sure about the economic numbers - real unemployment is up and house buying is down, but you may be on to something:

Obama Repeals ObamaCare - WSJ.com

Obamacare Is Falling Apart Before Our Eyes | The Weekly Standard

The day is nigh. With the sheer number of EOs from Obambi it is clear they are reacting on a daily basis to the news and are unable to take over the news cycle. Plus with idiot commercials like the onsie boy in his 30s talking to his parents and the bromercials, Ovomit has all but lost the millennials. Now it's just a matter of time. I say 1 year max, probably six months before insurance companies start to fail.

Got some extra cash? Invest in United Health - they refused to join any exchanges and are reaping the benefits. At least one company had some intelligence and foresight.
 
Can Vermont's Single-Payer System Fix What Ails American Healthcare?
As Obamacare struggles, progressives hope a bold experiment could offer a better model. But first, it has to work.
Can Vermont's Single-Payer System Fix What Ails American Healthcare? - Sean McElwee - The Atlantic

The Affordable Care Act's turbulent implementation has ruled the news cycle, but across the country states like Vermont are experimenting with their own plans.

Governor Peter Shumlin signed a revolutionary single-payer plan, Green Mountain Healthcare—the culmination of decades of work by progressive politicians in the state—into law in May 2011. The new system aims to guarantee universal insurance coverage, improve benefits for those who are currently underinsured, include universal dental care and vision care, and increase the Medicaid reimbursement rate to doctors in order to avoid cost-shifting.

In some ways, the system resembles the ACA, but the the most consequential difference is that Vermont’s law will end employer-provided insurance. "God didn’t create the fact that employers are responsible for healthcare for their employees," says Bernie Sanders, the state’s stalwart socialist senator.

Yet that change has resulted in an echo of the problems Obamacare has faced in remaking the individual insurance market: Plenty of people aren’t happy about giving up existing insurance that they like.

Meanwhile, there are still major question marks about how Vermont will pay for the plan, whether it can achieve the projected savings, and what might happen when an American state tries to import a European-style insurance program. If the ambitious Green Mountain Healthcare is a success, its backers say it will serve as a model for the rest of the nation—especially if the ACA doesn’t achieve full coverage and help bring costs down. Then, they say, statehouses around the nation will look to Montpelier for guidance. But first Vermont has to figure out how the plan is going to work.
 
With Health Law Cemented, G.O.P. Debates Next Move
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/27/u...ents-its-place-gop-ponders-how-to-attack.html

WASHINGTON — With the first enrollment deadline now passed, Republicans who have made the repeal of President Obama’s health care law their central aim are confronting a new reality: More than two million Americans are expected to be getting their health insurance through the Affordable Care Act come Jan. 1.

The enrollment figures may be well short of what the Obama administration had hoped for. But the fact that a significant number of Americans are now benefiting from the program is resulting in a subtle shift among Republicans.

“It’s no longer just a piece of paper that you can repeal and it goes away,” said Senator Ron Johnson, Republican of Wisconsin and a Tea Party favorite. “There’s something there. We have to recognize that reality. We have to deal with the people that are currently covered under Obamacare.”

And that underscores a central fact of American politics since Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act during the Depression: Once a benefit has been bestowed, it is nearly impossible to take it away.
 
Not sure about the economic numbers - real unemployment is up and house buying is down, but you may be on to something:

Obama Repeals ObamaCare - WSJ.com

Obamacare Is Falling Apart Before Our Eyes | The Weekly Standard

The day is nigh. With the sheer number of EOs from Obambi it is clear they are reacting on a daily basis to the news and are unable to take over the news cycle. Plus with idiot commercials like the onsie boy in his 30s talking to his parents and the bromercials, Ovomit has all but lost the millennials. Now it's just a matter of time. I say 1 year max, probably six months before insurance companies start to fail.

Got some extra cash? Invest in United Health - they refused to join any exchanges and are reaping the benefits. At least one company had some intelligence and foresight.

unemployment rates/stability sees more fluctuation than rain in portland
 
Beneath health law’s botched rollout is basic benefit for millions of uninsured Americans
Beneath health law’s botched rollout is basic benefit for millions of uninsured Americans - The Washington Post

Peterson is among the millions of uninsured Americans who are benefiting from the Affordable Care Act, the 2010 law that launched far-reaching changes to the U.S. health-care system and is President Obama’s premier domestic achievement.

These beneficiaries have not been oblivious to the problems of the new insurance exchanges, including a rollout so botched that Obama called it his biggest mistake of the year. Many, including Peterson, had firsthand encounters with the error-prone federal Web site, HealthCare.gov, that tested their patience and resolve. Some called help lines that couldn’t help them. Others drove long distances to meet with trained enrollment workers who couldn’t get them enrolled. Yet they persisted.

And as New Year’s Day approaches, and with it, health insurance, their frustration is trumped by gratitude. “I get these messages from acquaintances on Facebook saying, ‘Let me keep my doctor,’?’’ Peterson said. “Well, what about those of us who didn’t have health insurance before? .?.?. I have been walking a tightrope and have had some twists and falls off of it. To not have to worry about this anymore is a tremendous relief.”

Getting Americans health insurance is at the heart of the health law, the most significant change in health-care policy since the 1965 creation of Medicare, the federal program for the elderly, and Medicaid, the federal-state program for the poor and disabled. Such a dramatic expansion in coverage had eluded presidents, including Republican Richard Nixon and Democrat Bill Clinton, for decades.

This core mission has sometimes been obscured by the political and legal disputes that have dogged and, in important ways, altered the law. Strong research links having health insurance and being healthy. Having a health plan does not guarantee that a good doctor is within reach when a patient needs one. But insurance matters.
 
5 Million Uninsured Because They Live in GOP States
5 Million Uninsured Because They Live in GOP States

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — About 5 million people will be without health care next year that they would have gotten simply if they lived somewhere else in America.

They make up a coverage gap in President Barack Obama's signature health care law created by the domino effects of last year's Supreme Court ruling and states' subsequent policy decisions.

The court effectively left it up to states to decide whether to open Medicaid, the federal-state program for the poor and disabled, to more people, primarily poor working adults without children.

Twenty-five states declined. That leaves 4.8 million people in those states without the health care coverage that their peers elsewhere are getting through the expansion of Medicaid, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation estimate. More than one-fifth of them live in Texas alone, Kaiser's analysis found.
 
5 Million Uninsured Because They Live in GOP States
5 Million Uninsured Because They Live in GOP States

300 million soon to have something equal to uninsured-because there are Democrates[:o)]

How simple is life in a world of white hats and black hats? As a child I saw things the same way. Experience has taught me different. There comes a time
to open the eyes to the construct of WWE politics. Try this on for size.

dunce cap.jpg
 
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