I had an early morning appointment with a massage thereapist yesterday and on my way I heard Senator Dave Camp badgering
the woman who is in charge of the Medicare website about why she cannot
tell him how many people are signed up for Affordable Health Care. She
kept telling him the figures would be available mid-November. What
hypocrisy. The Republicans, YES, THE REPUBLICANS,
have done everything in their power to make sure Obamacare wouldn't
work. They shut down the government and backlogged thousands of programs
so, now it is okay to badger this employee?
Ted
Cruz brags that he will do everything he can to stop Obamacare while he
also boasts shutting down the government was a great idea and he will
do it again?
No leeway for the fact that
when the government asked for bids on a company to provide a website
they had to include every possible eventuality in the specifications
before it could be bid.
Last spring, when
the senate finance committee asked for outreach funds to implement the
Affordable care Act, the outreach, to educate and pay the Department of
Health and Human Services to assist people to enroll and for the
technology experts to navigate the complicated needs of the system for
privacy, medical records on-line, etc. Funds allotted? NONE. ZERO.
(Information from CNN)
The Public
Relations part of the bill was required. When HHS director, Kathryn
Sebillious asked the insurance companies who would benefit from this and
non-profit organizations to donate to this, a very controversial move,
Republicans were outraged. She got ZIP. No money. All of her requests for funds to implement the act was refused and blocked by Republicans.
When Sebelius tried to shift money from other areas to help do what needed to be done, she was attacked by Senate Republicans. At every step, Republicans fought measures to get money to put towards implementation.
Let's
remember that original versions of the bill called for one big national
exchange. This would have been much easier to implement. But
conservatives declared that insurance should be left to the states and
kept out of the hands of the federal government. So as a compromise
exchanges were made state-based instead of national.
As
a precaution, the law stipulated that if states failed to do their duty
and enact exchanges, the federal government would step in and pick up
the slack. This was to prevent obstructionism from killing the law.
Surprisingly, it was many of the same conservative states that demanded
local control that refused to implement state-based exchanges, leaving
the federal government to do it for them
.
There
have been books, webinars and meetings explaining how to sabotage the
implementation of Obamacare. There have been campaigns trying to
persuade young people from signing up for Obamacare. It is, therefore,
somewhat ironic that many of the same people who have been part of all
of this obstructionism seem so "upset" by the fact that people can't
easily use the exchanges.
(Information from Aaron
E. Carroll, a professor of pediatrics at the Indiana University
School of Medicine and the director of its Center for Health Policy and
Professionalism Research. He has supported a single-payer health system
during the reform debate.)
But, wait, we do have a Republican
who stated sincerely: "Now it is time to move forward again in a
critical area. Health Care. Without adequate health care, no one can
make full use of his or her talents and opportunities. It is thus just
as important that economic, racial, and social barriers not stand in the
way of good health care."
That was
President Nixon, who got impeached and resigned before he had a chance
to follow through. Or, who knows, maybe he didn't really mean it.
1 comment:
Come on Mary,
You know darn well the scariest words are:
I'm from the Government and I'm here to Help !!
When we all get the same medical, same retirement & same social security benefits as all the government employees - then & only then will the system work and be fair for everybody.
http://overthetopcargotrailer.blogspot.com/
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