ObamaCare Is Here to stay

More details about Obama Care.
Its not that they, ObamlMob, couldn't give us a real reform, or a good health care reform without sucking us dry. They could have, but they did not. Why? because they did not want to:
here is a proposition by the Chamber Of commerce for a Health Care Reform that would not have sucked us dry, but the ObamaMob would not want to give us anything that was good for America. Why would a man who sat around for 20 years and listened to reverend wright curse out America, want to do what is good for America. If you care at all about the United States, could you have sat around for 20 years and listened to someone trash the United States, No way: unless you agreed with him. Now ObamaMob has the chance to destroy what he hates, and he is doing a good job.

here is the proposition by the Chamber Of Commerce:
If ObamaMob would have given us this reform he would have actually helped us Americans without putting the last nail in the coffin of the economy. But instead he gave us a bunch of crap.

here is what he should have done, simple, cheap and it helpful.


Health Reform We Support: from the Chamber of Commerce

by James Gelfand

Health reform is critical to the business community – businesses voluntarily pay over $500 billion every year for employees’ health insurance, and cannot afford the cost increases. We support reforming the health system with a simple three-pronged approach:

1) Get costs under control. Use an all-of-the-above strategy.

• Medical liability reform

• FDA pathway for biosimilars

• Health information technology

• Comparative effectiveness research

• Wellness and prevention

• Coordination of care and medical homes

• Pay-for-Performance reform

• Combating fraud and abuse

• Living wills and end-of-life issues

• Reinsurance

• Consumer-driven health options

• Small business pooling

• Administrative simplification

• Long-term care reform

• Tax parity: Let individuals/small business deduct the full cost of insurance expenses

Without spending a trillion dollars or raising taxes, we could implement these and many other reforms that would help us start to bend the cost curve.

2) Reform the insurance system.

• Eliminating the use of pre-existing conditions or health status

• Guaranteeing that any individual or entity will be issued a policy

• Guaranteeing that policies will not be revoked

• Place reasonable limits on rating differences

• Subsidies for those who cannot afford coverage

• An individual obligation to obtain coverage

For negligible costs to the taxpayers, we could make the insurance system work. Insurance companies support it. An individual obligation is necessary to the equation, and would raise billions for the government that could be spent toward subsidies for the poor. New rating rules would make the system fair for small business and the selfemployed.

3) Create a vibrant market place.

• Create a national all-inclusive connector/exchange that removes fragmentation

• Should allow individuals and businesses from anywhere in the country to enroll

• Should facilitate improved pooling mechanisms, choice, and competition

These three simple steps, at low cost to taxpayers, could make the insurance system work for everyone (thereby increasing access for the uninsured), improve our health care delivery system, and make serious progress toward controlling costs. They have support from a vast array of stakeholders. We don’t need a $1-2 trillion dollar possible government takeover of health care – we need simple, pragmatic reforms