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Post by rmarks1 on Nov 7, 2013 21:18:18 GMT -5
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Post by debutante on Nov 8, 2013 15:20:58 GMT -5
Dear Bob:
The comments are to be expected -- I imagine most of them generate from the people who didn't vote for him in the first place. More intriguing would be the opinions of those who voted in a President whose qualification for the job was "community organizer". But then again, if they didn't consider experience level beforehand, one wonders if they will put the pieces together at this date. My first impression is: probably not.
I expect the entire system to crash rather quickly. There simply isn't enough business acumen.
--Debutante
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2013 19:43:49 GMT -5
I like that kind of post, Deb. It's something that will either happen or not. It's verifiable. No pussy footing around with general sour grape type opinions.
What would be interesting is if the system does crash, what the Republicans will do with what the ACA has already implemented. Will children born with birth defects or other health conditions still be able to get health insurance even with what insurers consider a pre-existing condition? Will their insurance run out because of a life-time limit like before the law? Will children up to 26 years old still be able to stay on their parents' insurance? What about people in general with pre-existing conditions? Or with those who cannot afford insurance because they make too much to qualify for Medicaid but not enough to purchase individual insurance policies and their employers do not offer insurance. Should be interesting.
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Post by rmarks1 on Nov 8, 2013 22:11:12 GMT -5
I like that kind of post, Deb. It's something that will either happen or not. It's verifiable. No pussy footing around with general sour grape type opinions. Right Lily. I agree with you here. No Lily, not Republicans. When the system does crash, it will be up to all of us, as Americans and as human beings, to come up with a system that does work. Hopefully, that will be a system that does not run for over 2,000 pages and is crammed with billions of dollars of giveaways to large corporations, like Obamacare is. Bob
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Post by debutante on Nov 8, 2013 22:15:37 GMT -5
Dear Lily:
But undoubtedly they'll try to "fix" this system before it goes down. Yet more bureaucracy will be created during the process. Personally, I expect a tremendous amount of cash hemorrhaging -- and I predict the system will still crash. Quite simply, the more government gets involved in something -- the worse it usually gets.
--Debutante
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2013 22:50:58 GMT -5
I like that kind of post, Deb. It's something that will either happen or not. It's verifiable. No pussy footing around with general sour grape type opinions. Right Lily. I agree with you here. No Lily, not Republicans. When the system does crash, it will be up to all of us, as Americans and as human beings, to come up with a system that does work. Hopefully, that will be a system that does not run for over 2,000 pages and is crammed with billions of dollars of giveaways to large corporations, like Obamacare is. Bob You're human? Now you tell me. I thought by your avatar that you just stepped off a spaceship. How's the weather up there?
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2013 22:53:58 GMT -5
Dear Lily: But undoubtedly they'll try to "fix" this system before it goes down. Yet more bureaucracy will be created during the process. Personally, I expect a tremendous amount of cash hemorrhaging -- and I predict the system will still crash. Quite simply, the more government gets involved in something -- the worse it usually gets. --Debutante Well, time will tell, won't it? But in spite of what Alien Bob just wrote, we will still have to see what the Republicans and "us humans and Americans" will let happen to the progress that the ACA has already made in American's lives.
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Post by rmarks1 on Nov 8, 2013 23:17:06 GMT -5
Right Lily. I agree with you here. No Lily, not Republicans. When the system does crash, it will be up to all of us, as Americans and as human beings, to come up with a system that does work. Hopefully, that will be a system that does not run for over 2,000 pages and is crammed with billions of dollars of giveaways to large corporations, like Obamacare is. Bob You're human? Now you tell me. I thought by your avatar that you just stepped off a spaceship. How's the weather up there? The weather is fine except there is no air. Bob
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2013 23:19:10 GMT -5
You're human? Now you tell me. I thought by your avatar that you just stepped off a spaceship. How's the weather up there? The weather is fine except there is no air. Bob Haven't I been warning you!!!
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Post by rmarks1 on Nov 8, 2013 23:20:30 GMT -5
Dear Lily: But undoubtedly they'll try to "fix" this system before it goes down. Yet more bureaucracy will be created during the process. Personally, I expect a tremendous amount of cash hemorrhaging -- and I predict the system will still crash. Quite simply, the more government gets involved in something -- the worse it usually gets. --Debutante Well, time will tell, won't it? But in spite of what Alien Bob just wrote, we will still have to see what the Republicans and "us humans and Americans" will let happen to the progress that the ACA has already made in American's lives. "Progress?" 300,000 people in Florida had their health insurance policies canceled. Another 800,000 in New Jersey. According to a 2010 study done by the Obama Administration, up to 93 million people could loose their insurance. And this is the law that was going to cover everybody. How is that "progress?" Bob
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Post by rmarks1 on Nov 8, 2013 23:21:36 GMT -5
The weather is fine except there is no air. Bob Haven't I been warning you!!! You warned me? Well I couldn't hear you. There's no air! Bob
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2013 23:25:30 GMT -5
Well, time will tell, won't it? But in spite of what Alien Bob just wrote, we will still have to see what the Republicans and "us humans and Americans" will let happen to the progress that the ACA has already made in American's lives. "Progress?" 300,000 people in Florida had their health insurance policies canceled. Another 800,000 in New Jersey. According to a 2010 study done by the Obama Administration, up to 93 million people could loose their insurance. And this is the law that was going to cover everybody. How is that "progress?" Bob Yeah, yeah. Same old, same old. Naturally you don't see any progress because it dosn't concern YOU!
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2013 23:26:05 GMT -5
Haven't I been warning you!!! You warned me? Well I couldn't hear you. There's no air! Bob You didn't hear me? So what else is new.
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Post by rmarks1 on Nov 8, 2013 23:47:01 GMT -5
"Progress?" 300,000 people in Florida had their health insurance policies canceled. Another 800,000 in New Jersey. According to a 2010 study done by the Obama Administration, up to 93 million people could loose their insurance. And this is the law that was going to cover everybody. How is that "progress?" Bob Yeah, yeah. Same old, same old. Naturally you don't see any progress because it dosn't concern YOU!Are you saying that millions of people are not going to loos their health insurance? Even Obama admits that this is happening. That's part of what he was apologizing for. So I ask again, how is that "progress?" The only thing Obamacare is progressing to is disaster. Bob Marks
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Post by rmarks1 on Nov 8, 2013 23:48:12 GMT -5
You warned me? Well I couldn't hear you. There's no air! Bob You didn't hear me? So what else is new. Sorry but I missed that. What did you say? Bob
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Post by Deleted on Nov 9, 2013 0:12:53 GMT -5
You didn't hear me? So what else is new. Sorry but I missed that. What did you say? Bob Stand back and read my lips.
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Post by debutante on Nov 9, 2013 20:59:19 GMT -5
I wonder -- are there any legal avenues these people could pursue? If this "mistake" by the president causes someone to lose their insurance and for whatever reason, it's necessary for them to have it now (for example a cancer patient) -- could they sue the government? I can't imagine someone won't try it if this goes on much longer.
--Debutante
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