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Started By
Message
We should all be pissed off about the Affordable Care Act. Obamacare
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:02 am
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:02 am
How did they pull this bullcrap over on the tax payers, no one with a brain would have approved this if the truth would have been known.
Ross Perot and Hillary both tried it and got shot down but Obama hid the truth and lied to America to get it passed.
The entire thing was subsidized by tax dollars (pyramid scheme) and a hoax.
Hussain Obama's Legacy
Ross Perot and Hillary both tried it and got shot down but Obama hid the truth and lied to America to get it passed.
The entire thing was subsidized by tax dollars (pyramid scheme) and a hoax.
Hussain Obama's Legacy
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:04 am to The Torch
Pre 2010 only 20% of doctors worked for corporations.
It’s now 70%.
Regulations have driven up costs and people can’t go at it alone.
So now you get to visit your doctor at a large hospital chain. Shits great.
It’s now 70%.
Regulations have driven up costs and people can’t go at it alone.
So now you get to visit your doctor at a large hospital chain. Shits great.
This post was edited on 10/23/25 at 8:05 am
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:08 am to The Torch
You forget that it was suppose to turn out this way, destruction of if was needed to add to structural damage to the existing systems. Education, insurance, food prices, integrity in media & governance shaken, influxes of illegals and the mayhem created by housing and crime is what they wanted and got.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:09 am to The Torch
On the bright side, Obamacare is saving typical families of four $2500 per year on their insurance premiums.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:09 am to The Torch
quote:
Hussain Obama's Legacy
Thank dipshit McCain for approving that - and super dipshit Chief Justice Roberts for allowing it to stand.
We are suffering the effects brought by years of RINOs siding with the democommies to sabotage the American constitution.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:11 am to The Torch
The first mistake was actually believing Barry when he said you have to pass it then read it
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:23 am to The Torch
My $2500 deductible plan went from $300/month to a $7500 deductible plan for $750/month overnight……and my payment was federally mandated. Hwy robbery
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:25 am to The Torch
Yes, we should. I recall some commentators saying that it's true purpose was to break our entire health care system so that the People would demand Universal Health Care paid for by FedGov.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:27 am to The Torch
quote:
How did they pull this bullcrap over on the tax payers
So you think the tax payers had a say in it? Over half the shite that gets past in Washington would fail if tax payers got to vote on it.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:28 am to The Torch
The ACA and some of the measures implemented during the Global Financial Crisis (TARP, etc) were a wake up call for me. It was the first time since I really started paying attention that I saw Congress ram something through that polls consistently showed voters did not want. Then I saw there were essentially no consequences for the principals who rammed that garbage through and I knew we were likely approaching the point of no return.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:31 am to The Torch
I worked in healthcare for 42 years, with a large hospital system, managing a physician organization and several payers.
I tell you what pisses me off still. In a country of our size, wealth, education, compared to other progressive countries, that a substantial share of people, families, remains underinsured or face gaps in coverage, cost-related care avoidance, and medical debt, so insurance gains have not eliminated problems with affordability and bill-related harm. No one should have to face financial ruin because of unforeseen health consequences beyond their control, yet here we still are.
I get the frustration people have with ACA.
As originally intended, ACA was to include the expansion of Medicaid eligibility, the establishment of health insurance exchanges, the requirement for individuals to obtain health insurance coverage, and the prohibition of coverage denial based on preexisting conditions.
The health-care system faces ongoing issues, with debate over whether premiums, coverage choices, or implementation have done the most harm. ACA increased coverage and protections but rising costs remain a concern. The ACA changes annually due to legislation and political shifts, and opinions about it often depend on views regarding government involvement in health insurance.
In 2017, Republican leaders and the Trump Administration tried to repeal and replace key parts of the Affordable Care Act to cut federal spending, give states more control, and change subsidy delivery. The effort fell short due to concerns over lost coverage, Medicaid cuts, and higher premiums for vulnerable groups, resulting in insufficient support in Congress before the reconciliation deadline.
About 24.2 million people selected Marketplace (ACA) plans for 2025 during open enrollment, an all-time high. I know some. Faced with unreasonable premium increases, carriers dropping out of the Exchanges, they face real concerns. I know some that are very worried right now. You might too. If you don't have access to employer sponsored care, Medicare, Medicaid even, what are you supposed to do?
I guess I'm still pissed there has still been nothing done to improve, replace or anything to offer options for those that need it. That's on our politicians.
Background
I tell you what pisses me off still. In a country of our size, wealth, education, compared to other progressive countries, that a substantial share of people, families, remains underinsured or face gaps in coverage, cost-related care avoidance, and medical debt, so insurance gains have not eliminated problems with affordability and bill-related harm. No one should have to face financial ruin because of unforeseen health consequences beyond their control, yet here we still are.
I get the frustration people have with ACA.
As originally intended, ACA was to include the expansion of Medicaid eligibility, the establishment of health insurance exchanges, the requirement for individuals to obtain health insurance coverage, and the prohibition of coverage denial based on preexisting conditions.
The health-care system faces ongoing issues, with debate over whether premiums, coverage choices, or implementation have done the most harm. ACA increased coverage and protections but rising costs remain a concern. The ACA changes annually due to legislation and political shifts, and opinions about it often depend on views regarding government involvement in health insurance.
In 2017, Republican leaders and the Trump Administration tried to repeal and replace key parts of the Affordable Care Act to cut federal spending, give states more control, and change subsidy delivery. The effort fell short due to concerns over lost coverage, Medicaid cuts, and higher premiums for vulnerable groups, resulting in insufficient support in Congress before the reconciliation deadline.
About 24.2 million people selected Marketplace (ACA) plans for 2025 during open enrollment, an all-time high. I know some. Faced with unreasonable premium increases, carriers dropping out of the Exchanges, they face real concerns. I know some that are very worried right now. You might too. If you don't have access to employer sponsored care, Medicare, Medicaid even, what are you supposed to do?
I guess I'm still pissed there has still been nothing done to improve, replace or anything to offer options for those that need it. That's on our politicians.
Background
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:31 am to The Torch
I worked in healthcare for 42 years, with a large hospital system, managing a physician organization and several payers.
I tell you what pisses me off still. In a country of our size, wealth, education, compared to other progressive countries, that a substantial share of people, families, remains underinsured or face gaps in coverage, cost-related care avoidance, and medical debt, so insurance gains have not eliminated problems with affordability and bill-related harm. No one should have to face financial ruin because of unforeseen health consequences beyond their control, yet here we still are.
I get the frustration people have with ACA.
As originally intended, ACA was to include the expansion of Medicaid eligibility, the establishment of health insurance exchanges, the requirement for individuals to obtain health insurance coverage, and the prohibition of coverage denial based on preexisting conditions.
The health-care system faces ongoing issues, with debate over whether premiums, coverage choices, or implementation have done the most harm. ACA increased coverage and protections but rising costs remain a concern. The ACA changes annually due to legislation and political shifts, and opinions about it often depend on views regarding government involvement in health insurance.
In 2017, Republican leaders and the Trump Administration tried to repeal and replace key parts of the Affordable Care Act to cut federal spending, give states more control, and change subsidy delivery. The effort fell short due to concerns over lost coverage, Medicaid cuts, and higher premiums for vulnerable groups, resulting in insufficient support in Congress before the reconciliation deadline.
About 24.2 million people selected Marketplace (ACA) plans for 2025 during open enrollment, an all-time high. I know some. Faced with unreasonable premium increases, carriers dropping out of the Exchanges, they face real concerns. I know some that are very worried right now. You might too. If you don't have access to employer sponsored care, Medicare, Medicaid even, what are you supposed to do?
I guess I'm still pissed there has still been nothing done to improve, replace or anything to offer options for those that need it. That's on our politicians.
Background
I tell you what pisses me off still. In a country of our size, wealth, education, compared to other progressive countries, that a substantial share of people, families, remains underinsured or face gaps in coverage, cost-related care avoidance, and medical debt, so insurance gains have not eliminated problems with affordability and bill-related harm. No one should have to face financial ruin because of unforeseen health consequences beyond their control, yet here we still are.
I get the frustration people have with ACA.
As originally intended, ACA was to include the expansion of Medicaid eligibility, the establishment of health insurance exchanges, the requirement for individuals to obtain health insurance coverage, and the prohibition of coverage denial based on preexisting conditions.
The health-care system faces ongoing issues, with debate over whether premiums, coverage choices, or implementation have done the most harm. ACA increased coverage and protections but rising costs remain a concern. The ACA changes annually due to legislation and political shifts, and opinions about it often depend on views regarding government involvement in health insurance.
In 2017, Republican leaders and the Trump Administration tried to repeal and replace key parts of the Affordable Care Act to cut federal spending, give states more control, and change subsidy delivery. The effort fell short due to concerns over lost coverage, Medicaid cuts, and higher premiums for vulnerable groups, resulting in insufficient support in Congress before the reconciliation deadline.
About 24.2 million people selected Marketplace (ACA) plans for 2025 during open enrollment, an all-time high. I know some. Faced with unreasonable premium increases, carriers dropping out of the Exchanges, they face real concerns. I know some that are very worried right now. You might too. If you don't have access to employer sponsored care, Medicare, Medicaid even, what are you supposed to do?
I guess I'm still pissed there has still been nothing done to improve, replace or anything to offer options for those that need it. That's on our politicians.
Background
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:32 am to idlewatcher
quote:
The first mistake was actually believing Barry when he said you have to pass it then read it
That was Pelosi, IIRC. Spit on her.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:33 am to HonoraryCoonass
Actually costing at least an extra $2500 a year.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:37 am to The Torch
I'm not pissed at all. Why?
I exercise and eat right and only go to the doctor once a year (for annual physical) like any normal person. I am on no prescription medications because I am not an obese diabetic slob. Its not normal to be on a shite ton of prescriptions or obese. Its abnormal. I also have a job and insurance through my company. So in closing:
Get a job that provides employer covered insurance
Don't be obese
Don't be a diabetic
and you won't have to worry about rising costs for the most part.
I exercise and eat right and only go to the doctor once a year (for annual physical) like any normal person. I am on no prescription medications because I am not an obese diabetic slob. Its not normal to be on a shite ton of prescriptions or obese. Its abnormal. I also have a job and insurance through my company. So in closing:
Get a job that provides employer covered insurance
Don't be obese
Don't be a diabetic
and you won't have to worry about rising costs for the most part.
This post was edited on 10/23/25 at 8:52 am
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:38 am to The Torch
Thats what changed me from a Democrat to a Republican.
"We need to pass the bill to see what's in it."
"We need to pass the bill to see what's in it."
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:46 am to The Torch
Unfortunately, SCOTUS went full-retard on this shitty arse program.
Posted on 10/23/25 at 8:48 am to The Torch
I've been pissed since Sebelius and Roberts' treachery.
The fact that my long time PCP, with whom I regularly argued with about Ocare (he was a big proponent) switched to a cash-only boutique practice within months of the Sebelius decision chaps me to this day.
The fact that my long time PCP, with whom I regularly argued with about Ocare (he was a big proponent) switched to a cash-only boutique practice within months of the Sebelius decision chaps me to this day.
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