interesting guy

THE KOD

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ABC 33/40 - Birmingham News, Weather, SportsMore solid proof that Obamacare is working

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Text SizeMore solid proof that Obamacare is working
Updated: May 25, 2011 09:19 AM EDT


The more healthy people available to pay for those in the pool who are ill, the better the system works and the lower our premium charges should go.

Small Businesses Offering Health Care To Employees Thanks To Obamacare

Small business projected to be big winner in healthcare reform

Health Care Reform More>>Medicare key to shocking Dem win in NY House raceMedicare overhaul proposal causing GOP stressAP-GfK Poll: Medicare doesn't have to be cutVets oppose bill that raises health care feesDespite differences, Obama, GOP eye Medicare limitHouse GOP won't push Medicare vouchersWhat's behind seniors' fears of GOP Medicare plan?Finances look worse for Medicare, Social SecurityReport: Up to 44M more uninsured under GOP budgetRomney to address health care in Michigan

Recent data provided by the nation's largest health insurance companies reveals that a provision of the Affordable Care Act -- or Obamacare -- is bringing big numbers of the uninsured into the health care insurance system.

And they are precisely the uninsured that we want -- the young people who tend not to get sick.

The provision of the law that permits young adults under 26, long the largest uninsured demographic in the country, to remain on their parents' health insurance program resulted in at least 600,000 newly insured Americans during the first quarter of 2011.

Wellpoint, the nation's largest publicly traded health insurer with some 34 million customers, reports adding 280,000 new members in the first three months of 2011.

Add in the results of some of the other large health insurers including Aetna, who added just short of 100,000 newly insured to their customer base, Kaiser Permanente's additional 90,000, and Highmark's 72,000 new customers, and we begin to sense our health insurance pools are filling up with some badly needed young blood.

The Health & Human Services Department had estimated that the changes in the law would result in about 1.2 million new enrollees in 2011. However, according to Aaron Smith, the executive director of a Washington based non-profit that advocates for the young, it now looks as if that number will be exceeded.

This is very good news -- particularly for those in the individual and small group markets that tend not to ?self-insure' as the larger corporations tend to do.

It is also very good news for those of us who write a large check every month for our health coverage.

For starters, every one of the young immortals we add to the rolls of the insured is one less young adult who will turn to the emergency room to fix a broken leg and then find themselves unable to pay the bill -- leaving it to the rest of us to pay the tab.

And it gets better.

Because the under 26 crowd tends not to get sick, adding them to the insurance pools helps bring the very balance that was intended by the new law. The more healthy people available to pay for those in the pool who are ill (translation -- the older people), the better the system works and the lower our premium charges should go.

One cannot help but notice that the health insurance companies turned in record profits for the first quarter of 2011 due, according the insurance companies, to fewer people seeking medical treatment.

When you add into their customer base a large number of people who are paying premiums but are less likely to get sick (the young adult demographic), this would be the expected result.

The question now is whether we allow the health insurance companies to hold onto the benefits of this reform by keeping the extra money they are pocketing or force them to hold the line on premiums as a result of their good fortune.

I'm betting that the policyholders, with the help of both state and federal governments, will win this battle.

Meanwhile, things continue to improve on the small business front where business owners are being heavily incentivized to offer health care benefits to employees.

As I wrote in January, there has been a significant uptick in small businesses taking advantage of the tax benefits offered by the ACA to provide health insurance to employees where they previously did not do so.

According to a Kaiser survey, there has been a 46% uptick in businesses with less than 10 employees offering health benefits as compared to last year.

That is a big number.

Further improving the outlook, the IRS has, in the past month, issued guidelines for small businesses which very much bolster the tax credits offered. Included in those guidelines are provisions that clarify that the tax credit will not be reduced by a state health care tax credit or subsidy (except in limited circumstances to prevent abuse of the credit); that small businesses can receive the credit not only for traditional health insurance coverage but also for add-on dental, vision, and other limited-scope coverage; and detailed guidance on how a small business can determine whether it is eligible and how large a credit it will receive.

Health care reform is working, folks -- and we have yet to get to the really big benefits which kick in come 2014.

Now that we are seeing some decidedly positive results, I am reminded of the GOP criticism that was leveled at the health care reform effort back when the issue was on the front burner of the national consciousness.

Once we get past the August 2009 era of the townhall meetings where the Republicans were pitching the false "death panel" narrative to great effect, we see that there are two primary challenges lodged against the law -- the cuts to Medicare and the health insurance mandates.

Today, the GOP is pursuing the Ryan budget plan that would destroy Medicare as we know it, turning it into a voucher program that has no chance of keeping up with the rising costs of medical care and leaving seniors to face a future of inadequate and unavailable health care.

It is no secret that polling reveals that Americans are very much not in favor of Ryan's plan.

So much is this the case, the health care issue that played such a large role in handing the House of Representatives over to the GOP last November, is now the very same issue that has become the focal point of the special election in New York's 26th Congressional District where polling shows Democrat Kathy Hochul is leading Republican Jane Corwin in what has long been a safe GOP seat.

The reason Hochul may emerge victorious?

The GOP's anti-Medicare plan.

The irony is exquisite.

As for the health insurance mandates, reviewing the field of the major GOP presidential contenders, some interesting data begins to emerge.

Newt Gingrich -- for mandated health insurance before he was against it (although he may have already switched positions again this morning.)

Jon Huntsman -- for mandated health insurance before he was against it. Indeed, mandates were a vital part of the health care reform Huntsman pushed as Governor of Utah before the GOP majority in the state legislature put the brakes on the idea.

Mitt Romney -- as the true father of Obamacare, clearly he was for mandates before he was against them.

Only Tim Pawlenty appears to be in the clear on the topic.

The time has arrived for even the most critical to take another look at health care reform. Facts and figures don't lie -- if accurately presented.

And while the full jury won't be in for a few more years, maybe the time has come for average Americans more interested in what is best for their country rather than grinding a political axe, to reconsider their views.

I think you'll like what you see.

............................................................

wow Obamacare is working

imagine that:00hour

so maybe we aint going down the tubes because of Obamacare after all. The GOP was convinced of it. What they were really afraid of is what will happen when it works. :scared

Get health going in the right direction.

Get gas down to 3 bucks a gallon in mid 2012

Bring troops home in bigger numbers in Jan

Kill a few more high level terrorists in Pakistan

Get a billion dollars in the campaign coffers before the election.

can you say second term.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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..................................................................


DTBlackgumby is the one that said gumby was a muslim. At least I think it was him.

You know Rusty , I guess I need to have patience with you but damn sometimes I got to wonder what is rattling around in your brain up there.

as DTBlackgumby would say

damn your a dumb ass at times :)

If you think someone says something Scott we have quotes and tags here --rather than speculation-- on O/Religion

You should be able to find some I have on him referring to the GD America -ole whitey- race baiting rev wright as his Uncle/mentor.

The was before Rev retired and moved to all white gated community--you think he didn't ride the ole race baiting rant for all it was worth :SIB

http://www.google.com/search?source...ress&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&rlz=1I7ACAW_en___US335
 

THE KOD

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I see no problem with Rev Wright moving into any house he can swing a free and clear mortgage on.

whats the problem with that ?

Isnt that the American way ?

PS - I am surprised you didnt comment on
Obamacare working like it is.


go figure
 

Trench

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PS - I am surprised you didnt comment on
Obamacare working like it is.

go figure
Mags should be along any time now to explain why a country that cares for and heals its citizens is socialism because there's no profit in it.

Perhaps he'll even wax poetically on why the upper 1% of the population that control as much wealth as the lower 95%, need a tax cut so they can create jobs... :mj07:
 

THE KOD

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Twice in the last two weeks has Time magazine devoted a page to Mark Halperin's oddsmaking on who will be the Republican nominee -- the May 23 issue and the June issue .

Twice, there's been no mention of Herman Cain.

The GOP cast of contenders is lily-white.

This seems odd, since Cain participated in the first presidential debate on May 5 to high praise and formally announced on May 21.

They can't say that Cain is too much of a long shot. In the first set of odds, Halperin put Michele Bachmann at 1,000-to-1. (The best odds in order were to Romney, Huckabee, Daniels, Pawlenty, Huntsman, Gingrich, and Palin, second to last at 60 to 1.)

In the second set, Huckabee and Daniels were removed from the list, and Santorum (at 500 to 1) and Ron Paul (at 2,000 to 1) were added. Bachmann was still at 1,000 to 1. Halperin also added "Mystery Candidate" -- but named those (Rick Perry, Chris Christie, Paul Ryan, and Jeb Bush.)

Time magazine should really have to explain this remarkable (double) oversight of a black Republican.

..............................................................

When you put the clowns in charge, don't be surprised when a circus breaks out.

Perhaps they thought assigning long odds to Cain would be racist? Or that Republicans were so remarkably racist that it's not even worth listing Cain?

I suggest that it's not racism; rather, it's bigotry.

Intolerance of a group, a class, a race, a sex, even if based on a common political leaning is indeed the definition a bigot.

I will go with racist.They can't help it though.They are from the party of the KKK.

When asked about what he thought about Hermain Cain being left off the polling list
DTBlackgumby said this :

I find Herman Cain interesting

as long as he is left off the ballot



:142smilie :142smilie
 
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