Obamacare Fails Me

This is not the first article we carried in which someone with a pre-existing conditions found herself without the care she had previously.

By Priya Abraham

The last day to sign up for health insurance on the Obamacare exchange loomed. Luckily I’ve already purchased an exchange plan. But barely one month into my new health care coverage, I’ve started running into serious roadblocks.

I battle fibromyalgia, a chronic pain condition that forces me to work from home many days. My need to see specialists and try expensive prescriptions makes affordable health insurance crucial to soften the financial sting. This longtime uninsured, sickly gal ought to be happy.

Plaster my picture on Healthcare.gov now, right?

But this victim—who knows intimately the pressures of no health coverage—can’t get over how damaging the Affordable Care Act is across the nation. Must we really destroy jobs, inflate others’ health costs, and enact countless new taxes and fees just to help people like me?

Worse yet, Obamacare isn’t even keeping its promise to provide quality health insurance to people with pre-existing conditions.  On top of higher premiums or deductibles, critical drugs may not be covered at all, and the costs patients incur by buying them with cash won’t count against out-of-pocket caps or deductibles.

As Pennsylvania moves to shift 6,960 people from its high-risk pool to Obamacare, more people will discover how limited their new coverage really is.

Information about covered drugs on Obamacare exchange plans is hard to find and in some cases doesn’t appear to be available at all. Restrictions on covered drugs are nothing new, but the limits are more widespread in exchange plans to keep premiums low.

Only one brand-name drug that works on the nervous system has helped me keep the pain at bay over the years. Getting it on my Obamacare plan has proven a challenge.

Without insurance or discounts, the drug costs $400 per month. But I couldn’t simply refill my regular prescription—my new insurance company required pre-authorization for the drug. Earlier this month, my exchange plan insurer told me they will not cover the drug. For now, I’m surviving by driving 50 miles to pick up free samples from my doctor’s office. This isn’t the affordable, quality care I was promised.

Many Americans sicker than me are doing much worse. Take Lupus patient Emilie Lamb. Her state-subsidized plan was cancelled because it didn’t provide enough coverage—a “junk” plan according to President Obama. Lamb’s premium jumped from $52 to $373 a month, forcing her to get a second job so she can still see her doctors and buy medicine.

Fifteen-year-old Michigan twins Austin and Micheala Davert, suffer from a bone disease called osteogenesis imperfecta. They lost their primary insurance due to Obamacare’s mandates. Their parents, after failing to resolve technical issues on healthcare.gov, purchased an exchange plan directly from an insurer with a similar premium plus a nearly $8,000 deductible increase.

Their mother noted, “The only other plan that had a lower out of pocket maximum was a plan that’s not accepted by their doctors.”

With my health conditions, the$176 per month premium for a silver exchange plan is almost inconceivable.  Before, all I could get in Pennsylvania after multiple denials was a $476 per month premium with a high deductible.

Don’t get me wrong, I know the country desperately needed health care reform—and still does. But millions of canceled plans, special exemptions, and countless extensions show that Obamacare is incapable of ensuring all Americans can access quality and affordable care.

However, real health care reform could reduce skyrocketing costs on everything from doctor visits to MRIs. It could promote visible pricing, which would allow people to plan and pay for much more of their own routine health care.

For people with pre-existing conditions, like me, who couldn’t get individual health insurance, expanding state high-risk pools would have been a better option. They give the “uninsurable” an affordable option by offering subsidized coverage comparable to private plans, rather than restructuring the entire insurance marketplace.

It’s the states, not Washington, that have the real solutions to our health care crisis. There was—there is—a better way than Obamacare.  Even on my most pain-filled days, I know that.

Priya Abraham is a senior policy analyst for the Commonwealth Foundation (CommonwealthFoundation.org), Pennsylvania’s free market think tank.

 

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April 21 2014 Omnibit by William Lawrence Sr

April 21 2014 Omnibit by William Lawrence Sr

The National Wildlife Federation’s bald eagle counters found 1,158 of the birds in the state of Washington in 1983 but none in West Virgina.

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Easter Liberty Message


These message regarding liberty for Easter 2014 comes from Len Ritchey of CitizenControlledTaxation.com and submitted courtesy of Carris Kocher.

Easter Symbolizes Liberty as much as any freedom movement ever promoted Liberty.  Liberty is attacked in Earth’s four corners, while billions of people strive to have it foremost in their lives.  People protest despotic authority; it responds with lawful force.

“We, the People . . . United States of America.”
U.S. Constitution

Liberty Connotes Choice.  Despotic authoritarians use force of law to narrow people’s choices, to constrain their options within ideological boundaries.  Easter’s message promises fruits from Liberty’s opportunities.  Oppressors fear Liberty’s power.

“We, the American People”
live under commonwealth, state, and federal Constitutions framed to extend Liberty to every American.  These Constitutions are interpreted by power-seeking people as license to supervise their fellow citizens’ behavior, not protect their Liberty – ability to choose.

“The federal government is acknowledged by all to be one of enumerated powers.”
Chief Justice John Marshall


Liberty, As Epitomized By Easter’s message, is self-determination.
  Constitutions, while expressing Liberty, can’t be expected to deliver Liberty.  No Constitution ever shouldered a weapon in Liberty’s defense.  Resolute, freedom-minded, proactive sovereign citizens deliver Liberty.

“The chance of his being wiser than all his neighbors together is still smaller.”
Thomas Macaulay

People Intending To Live In Liberty do not allow legislators – or other public officials within These United States of America, to enact, impose, or increase taxes without securing a majority vote approval in all jurisdictions affected.  They exercise sovereignty, not obedience.

 

http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock: Every American Citizen Now “Owes” “The (federal) State” $55,081.

 

April 20 2014 Omnibit by William Lawrence Sr

April 20 2014 Omnibit by William Lawrence Sr

The fine warm water bottom fish we call the giant grouper is a female in its youth and grows up to be a male.

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Happy Easter

Christos Voskrese 2014

Christos Voskrese 2014 — Father John Ciurpita doing the traditional Easter basket blessing after today’s 11 a.m. Mass at Saints Peter and Paul Easter Rite Catholic Church in Clifton Heights, Pa.

Christos voskrese, which means Christ has Risen, is the Easter
greeting in Church Slavonic which brings the response Voistinu voskrese
or Indeed, He has risen.

Easter, of course, celebrates the Resurrection of the Lord Jesus and the salvation of Man.
The date for Easter is the Sunday following the first full moon
after the spring equinox, which is always reckoned, regardless of
astronomical observations, to be March 31 as per the Western churches
that use the Gregorian calendar, so Easter always falls between March 22
and April 25.
The dating for Easter correlates with the means the Jews once used
to set the date for Passover, which correlates with Scripture since
Scripture indicates that the Crucifixion of the Lord occurred as the
lambs were being slaughtered for the celebration of that holiday.
In fact, in most Western languages the name for the day is a
cognate of the Pesach which is the Hebrew name for Passover. In Latin it
would be Pascha so Paschal lamb would be Passover lamb.
In English and German, the word comes from Eostre month, which was
basically April, and which the pagans who spoke Germanic languages had
named for the goddess Eostre much as our own March and April are named
for the Greek god and goddess Mars and Aphrodite, respectively.
In Slavic, the holiday is called “Great Night” (Velikonoce in Slovak) or “Great Day” (Velikden in Ukrainian).
There are some caveats regarding the date. The Eastern churches
that use the Julian calendar set the equinox  at April 3, and, of
course, the spring equinox is based on that of the Northern Hemisphere.
So, Christos Voskrese.

April 19 2014 Omnibit by William Lawrence Sr

April 19 2014 Omnibit by William Lawrence Sr

What do you suppose the total value of those cars shown at the first automobile show in 1900 would be today? Don’t know. Plenty.

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Social Justice Beautiful Scam

Social Justice Beautiful Scam Paul Krugman

Paul Krugman will get $25G per month to promote “social justice” and ponder income inequality.

Paul Krugman, the economist who writes about “social justice” for The New York Times, has been hired by the tax-funded  City University of New York (CUNY) to “contribute to the build-up” of a new “inequality initiative” at the school’s Luxembourg Income Study Center.

“You will not be expected to teach or supervise students,”CUNY said.

The Luxembourg Center is devoted to studying income patterns and their effect on inequality.

Krugman will be paid $25,000 per month. Promoting “social justice” is a great gig if you can get it.

In a completely related matter concerning “social justice” hypocrites, Media Matters for America is fighting an effort by the Service Employees International Union Local 500 to unionize its staff.

Media Matters is a progressive group dedicated to the cause of “social justice” that describes itself as “dedicated to comprehensively monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media”

Social Justice Beautiful Scam

 

April 18 2014 Omnibit by William Lawrence Sr

April 18 2014 Omnibit by William Lawrence Sr

What is the most ordered soup in the restaurants of America? Our survey team, after an intensive study, show it to be vegetable.

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Crony Capitalism Crushes America

By Chris Freind

“We actually save money by doing this … natural gas is the equivalent of about $1.50 per gallon. The last time I looked, gas was still over $3 per gallon. The payback period on these trucks is going to be three or four years and our trucks usually last 10 years.”

So stated Aqua America Chairman Nick DeBenedictis as he recently touted the company’s planned acquisition of compressed natural gas (CNG)-powered vehicles.

He’s right about saving money, for two reasons:

A. As the math shows, CNG is considerably cheaper than diesel ($4 per gallon) and gasoline ($3.70 per gallon), so switching to CNG vehicles is a sound business decision.

B. More significantly, taxpayers helped foot the bill, to the tune of $225,000. Yep, those Aqua vehicles, as well as 14 vans purchased last year ($86,000 in taxpayer funds), were partially paid for by Other People’s Money. Namely, ours.

Saving money by having a capital investment pay off is one thing, but achieving that “feat” because of an outright gift from taxpayers is quite another. There are many innocuous-sounding terms for this type of government largesse: Grants, economic development, opportunity zones. But let’s call it what it really is: Corporate welfare.

Aqua America is by no means alone. Numerous corporations throughout the state are receiving funds to convert their vehicles. Twenty million dollars are being allocated through the Natural Gas Energy Development Program (funded by the impact fee imposed on natural gas companies), and another $8 million via the Alternative Fuels Incentive Grant Program.

But why? Why are Pennsylvanians forking over millions to profitable, free-market companies?

Consider:

1. This is nothing new. Presidents, governors and legislators, both Republican and Democrat, are complicit in handing massive amounts of money to private businesses. Often, their political coffers swell after doing so — and their post-political careers seem to become instantly brighter. Quid pro quo or not, the appearance of impropriety leaves an indelibly negative impression upon the pubic.

2. The money doled out to corporations, political friends and special interests could, by definition, be used for more productive purposes. We all complain about potholes and deplorable roads, but the government answer is, “There just isn’t enough money to fix all the roads.” Wrong. There is. And plenty would be left over for other projects. But when tax revenue is wasted on propping up businesses, everything else suffers.

Take the transportation bill passed last year. Despite Pennsylvania already spending $71,000 per road mile (11th highest), and exceeding $660 per person (more than 26 other states), Gov. Corbett and the state Legislature walloped Pennsylvanians with the highest gas taxes in the country to pay for new roads because they chose to keep spending money where it had no place being spent.

Maybe if the government hadn’t bailed out a shipyard to build ships with no buyers, spent taxpayer money to build a baseball stadium for the Yankees’ AAA affiliate, wasted millions on legal fees to stop the NCAA sanctions against Penn State (after the governor had agreed to those sanctions), and dished out huge consulting fees trying to outsource the lottery to a foreign firm, to name a few, there would be enough money to actually fix our roads and bridges without bending citizens over a barrel.

3. Before doling out cash to private sector companies to buy natural gas vehicles, it would have made more sense to put that money toward the massive state fleet, from police cars to dump trucks. But that hasn’t happened at anywhere close to the pace it should have, with Corbett saying it will take seven to 10 years.

4. We have come to expect reckless spending from our elected officials. All talk “fiscal responsibility” on the campaign trail, but the vast majority fall in line once they arrive at the capital. They play the go-along, get-along game and bring home the bacon as a way of ensuring re-election.

But far and away the biggest hypocrites are business leaders. For the most part, they are politically active Republicans, often deriding government interference in the marketplace. “Get government off our backs,” is their constant refrain to the pols. Yet, they seldom practice what they preach.

When there is a bill that could benefit them or their industry, they lobby hard for passage (such as the car dealers’ successful effort getting Chris Christie to derail Tesla Motors). When there is a regulation that would give them a competitive advantage, they advocate for it. And yes, when there is government handout, they are the first in line at the trough.

If a company, or entire industry, cannot make it on its own, that’s life. The strong shall survive and the free market will rid itself of outdated and mismanaged entities unable to do what it takes to be profitable. But government should not be Santa Claus, and has no place interfering in a company’s fortunes — or misfortunes.

Conversely, if a business is well-managed, it has no need for corporate welfare. Sure, business leaders can make justifications about how well the money will be spent or how many jobs it will help create. But as we all know — business leaders included — it’s still just a handout, nothing more.

Where does it end? That’s the problem; it doesn’t, and we are all paying dearly for the “let me get mine” mentality. From the $1.2 trillion annual giveaway to Wall Street firms (“quantitative easing,” whatever that means) that simply help the rich become wealthy (funded by imaginary funny money, to boot) to freely giving taxpayer money to companies buying new trucks, government has become the go-to source for cash.

It’s no coincidence that federal, state and municipal debt levels are at all-time highs, and that basic government services, from trash collection to education, are being curtailed or eliminated. Yet, the connected still have their hand out, always wanting more — and getting it.

The Piper is calling, but business and government keep turning a blind eye and a deaf ear. And when it finally dawns on them that the problem needs to be fixed, it will be akin to rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

As Thomas Jefferson stated, “We have the greatest opportunity the world has ever seen, as long as we remain honest, (but) if (the people) becomes inattentive to public affairs, you and I, and Congress and Assemblies, judges and governors would all become wolves.”

Wrong tense, Mr. Jefferson.

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