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Obamacare and ABC

dapoes

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There has been much bruha about the ABC special and how the media should or should not take on a one sided special to pump up the Obamacare healthcare agenda.

The latest is member from Congress putting there stamp of "un approval" on the whole idea. Letter from congress to ABC.

The only idea I think makes sense is the coop approach where people can pick and choose from group polices, without restrictions. Should also be without any government involvement.
 
What would be most interesting would be the reply from CBS.

As recently as the 1960s, low-cost health insurance was available to virtually everyone in America - including people with existing medical problems. Doctors made house calls. A hospital stay cost only a few days' pay. Charity hospitals were available to take care of families who could not afford to pay for healthcare.

Since then the federal government has increasingly intervened through Medicare, Medicaid, the HMO Act and tens of thousands of regulations on doctors, hospitals and health-insurance companies.

Today, more than 50 percent of all healthcare dollars are spent by the government.
Health insurance costs are skyrocketing. Government health programs are heading for bankruptcy. Politicians continue to pile on the regulations.

The only healthcare reforms that will make a real difference are those that draw on the strength of the free market.

1. Establish Medical Saving Accounts.
Under this program, you could deposit tax-free money into a Medical Savings Account (MSA). Whenever you need the money to pay medical bills, you will be able to withdraw it. For individuals without an MSA, all healthcare expenditures should be 100 percent tax deductible.

2. Deregulate the healthcare industry.
We should repeal all government policies that increase health costs and decrease the availability of medical services. For example, every state has laws that mandate coverage of specific disabilities and diseases. These laws reduce consumer choice and increase the cost of health insurance. By making insurance more expensive, mandated benefits increase the number of uninsured American workers.

3. Remove barriers to safe, affordable medicines.
We should replace harmful government agencies like the Food & Drug Administration (FDA) with more agile, free-market alternatives. The mission of the FDA is to protect us from unsafe medicines. In fact, the FDA has driven up healthcare costs and deprived millions of Americans of much-needed treatments. For example, during a 10-year delay in approving Propanolol Propranolol (a heart medication for treating angina and hypertension), approximately 100,000 people died who could have been treated with this lifesaving drug. Bureaucratic roadblocks kill sick Americans.


I have noted this before, and I note it again here due to relevance. I agree with most of what you noted and, in particular, the use of MSAs to some extent. But to add one thing... I believe there also needs to be an incentive for people to not go to the doctor everytime they have a slight cough or something of similar nature(i.e. something a little OJ will cure). If employers contributed to an MSA, and if, at the end of the year, unused employer contributions to the MSA were allowed tax-free into a 401k or other investment vehicle, I think health care costs would decrease.
 
Clearly, the most important takeaway from ABC's low-rated White House forum on health care was President Barack Obama's (hypocrisy) admission that he would go outside the constraints of a nationalized system to get the "very best care" if necessary for his own family.

So when he's asked if he would violate his own policies when it came to his family....he spends a full minute giving tedious details about his grandmother's hip replacement (off topic much?) and then quickly glosses over the fact that he has no intention of limiting his own family. IE; The best for me, scraps for thee.

Video Link: Obamacare For Thee, But Not For Me

Further outrage he condones not treating the elderly to save costs. Naturally the media falls silent.

Another interesting read is Who’s funding the Obamacare Astroturf campaign?

No big surprise, when you connect the dots, the usual cast of characters are involved: Soros, Sandlers, SEIU, ACORN, etc.
 
More Obamacare phoney-ness

President Obama offered a wonkish defense of his embattled health-care reform effort during an hour-long town hall meeting in Northern Virginia yesterday that featured seven questions, including one sent via Twitter and several from a handpicked audience of supporters.

In the stage-managed event, questions for Obama came from a live audience selected by the White House and the college, and from Internet questions chosen by the administration’s new-media team. Of the seven questions the president answered, four were selected by his staff from videos submitted to the White House Web site or from those responding to a request for “tweets.â€￾

The president called randomly on three audience members. All turned out to be members of groups with close ties to his administration: the Service Employees International Union, Health Care for America Now, and Organizing for America, which is a part of the Democratic National Committee. White House officials said that was a coincidence.

Still the best take away from the event is the fumbling goon Gibbs getting his bum handed to him at the daily press conference. :up:
 
More Obamacare phoney-ness



Still the best take away from the event is the fumbling goon Gibbs getting his bum handed to him at the daily press conference. :up:


Atleast some (but not enough) opposition made its way through: A Texas physician -- later proudly identified by the White House as Rep. Michael C. Burgess [R] -- challenged Obama to support caps on medical malpractice awards, something the president has refused to do.

How long before Gibbs goes the way of Ari -- to spend more time with family of course?
 
More Obamacare predictions:
Hard-up hospital orders staff: Don't wash sheets - turn them over

Cleaners at an NHS (UK's Nationalized Health System) hospital with a poor record on superbugs have been told to turn over dirty sheets instead of using fresh ones between patients to save money.

Housekeeping staff at Good Hope Hospital in Sutton Coldfield, have been asked to re-use sheets and pillowcases wherever possible to cut a £500,000 laundry bill.

Posters in the hospital's linen cupboards and on doors into the A&E department remind workers that each item costs 0.275 pence to wash.
 
By the Numbers

Excerpt
0: The number of unrehearsed, unscripted questions asked of President Obama during his “Town Hallâ€￾ on health care reform.

13: The number of teeth that British veteran Ian Boynton pulled out himself with pliers “because he couldn’t find an NHS (National Health Service) dentist… [he] could not afford to go private for treatment so instead took the drastic action to remove 13 of his teeth that were giving him severe pain.â€￾
 

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