"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
That insurance companies are no longer able to deny coverage based on pre-existing conditions is an effing stellar thingin my opinion. Why on effing earth would you want to repeal that? Who does that benefit?
You guys aren't actually arguing that this version of health care is the best we can do are you? We get it some good things are there with Obama Care and I'd agree with that. But its far from even remotely good and for many people becoming too expensive.
Specifically it benefits people that take care of themselves. Don't act like every single person with a pre-existing illness was denied coverage. If you were part of a group plan it didn't matter in most cases.It was just the people getting self insured, the same ones getting the shaft now.
For everyone here that thinks they know what Canada's health care is like and do not even live in their country you should read the link below. Keep in mind it is almost identical to what ACA was supposed to be and accomplish.http://www.pnhp.org/news/2008/february/10_myths_about_canad.php
Quote from: bulldog on November 11, 2016, 01:24:18 PMSpecifically it benefits people that take care of themselves. Don't act like every single person with a pre-existing illness was denied coverage. If you were part of a group plan it didn't matter in most cases.It was just the people getting self insured, the same ones getting the shaft now.My point being that Joe Bill the roofer in Kentucky who's wife was uninsured and just got diagnosed with cancer is likelyto be screwed and yet's he's wholesale voted for it. I seriously don't get it.
You have a sacrifice the village to save one person kind of mentality.
Of course not, but wholesale repealing the ACA will not improve healthcare for anyone. Premiums will not go down, benefits will not go up, and 10's of millions of people will lose coverage who need it and much of those costs will be covered by our taxes collectively anyway. Keeping the good parts of the ACA without the mandate aren't realistic either, because that is the one thing insurance companies have absolutely refused to do. Fixing healthcare is about offering a baseline of care that is collectively paid for and can negotiate costs and control benefits on a massive scale, aka a public option.I just don't understand why people want to keep health insurance profits at record highs instead of just fixing the freaking system in a way that benefits everyone because it MIGHT mean they pay a little more in "taxes" instead of "premiums". It's asinine...