New tag line. Seems appropriate for this thread.
I’m wondering if this is another method of weeding out Americans?
If people are picky about their soap imagine how "happy" people are going to be when they are forced to change their healthcare or their doctor.
This stuff just hasn't hit people yet. They don't understand the possible ramifications.
It will be really interesting when people finally wake up.
And I don't think I would want to be standing near anyone in Congress who currently has a (D) after their name.
Looks just like the systems the Dems have always touted and wanted to replicate. Why’s anyone complaining? THis what you wanted!!!!
People who are pointing out ways that Obamacare is dysfunctional are missing the picture. It is INTENDED to be dysfunctional.
Articles like this will clutter the landscape from both sides of the political spectrum. You will soon be dumbfounded to hear the MSM leveling all kinds of charges against the new system. That was the whole point!
The law was written so that, in case the original implementation wasn’t bad enough, the regulatory controls were in place to squeeze the profit margin out of insurers and providers guaranteeing wholesale migrations to the inadequate and expensive exchanges.
The differences in news coverage between the MSM and other outlets will be that the MSM will start the mantra that the way out of the morass is not defunding or repeal, but SINGLE PAYER!
Cuba’s two-tiered health system. While tourists and government officials are taken care of, there’s little left for general public
Byron (not his real name) is a 30-year-old doctor in Cuba, a former medical student from Africa who came to
Cuba on a Commonwealth country scholarship. Because he speaks fluent English and French, and understands
three other European languages, the government assigns him to treating tourists whom, he confirms, lack for
nothing in Cuba. The tourist hospitals are excellent, the quality of care delivered to a high standard, as high as
any you will find in any Western country, he says. The hospital pharmacies provide whatever drugs tourists
require.
Care for top government officials and those in the military is also excellent. “They also lack for nothing,” Byron
said. But after providing for the needs of tourists and the top government officials, the health system has little
left for the general public. I asked Byron about a man I had seen sitting on the pavement, wrapping raw lesions
on his foot with filthy rags. The care with which he was tending his gaping holes made an impression on me, and
made me wonder why he lacked proper care. Byron identified the man’s malady — a disease that slaves had
brought to Cuba from Africa 400 years ago — as one easily treated, but not with the medicines available in the
peso pharmacies.
“The government doesn’t give a shit about the poor,” he stated matter-of-factly. “The poor have no medicines,
no painkillers, no nothing.”
http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/cuba/cuban-medicine.htm
But it worked so well in the Soviet Union...
Mark
Bingo --
For those in the exchange market, the premiums, co-pays and deductibles will be a bitter pill to swallow coupled with the limited provider networks designed to prevent access to specialists. This will be a big rip off for the middle class individual and family under most circumstances.
If you get sick, take your money out of the bank and put it in cash. Sign up for the exchange and pay the first month and get your care fot the next two months (you will still have insurance coverage). If you still can’t work, you’ve got disability and Medicaid to fall back on. The point is that healthy people should not support this corrupt system by subsidizing the exchanges. It’s bad for the individual and advances and stabilizes 0-care.