Healthcare Repeal and Private Health Insurance Policies

by Repeal the Health Care Reform Bill Editor on November 29, 2011
in In My Opinion

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I can’t say how many other people feel the same way I do about the healthcare law and its repeal. I know an article about a recent Gallup Poll says 47% of American’s agree the healthcare law should be repealed.

Here’s where I stand as an individual.

I just bought a private health insurance policy. I have a $7500 deductible, because insurance is a hedge against the risk of facing a situation that would destroy my wealth and leave me bankrupt. I work a part-time job which doesn’t supply me with healthcare insurance. I’m quite happy not to be emotionally tied to a job because I’m worried I’ll lose my health insurance coverage. But my coverage costs less than $100 a month, and that leaves me with money I can save to use for medical expenses. Most cell phone plans with talk and texting cost more than this these days! Yes, you can save money and have health insurance on a salary or wage of $24,000 a year. I do it.

The very fact that we’ve become so scared of life’s risks has put us in the situation we’re in, where insurance is thought of as a wealth building tool, instead of a protection, and it says a lot about why most people freak out when I tell them my deductible.

"Aren’t you afraid you’ll have to be put in the hospital?"

Well, yes. But only because that means I’ll be very, very sick and who wouldn’t be a little afraid of that?

As for the money, that’s what emergency funds and savings are for. And if you’re not paying for coverage you don’t need, you can usually afford to accumulate a bit of that! I visit the doctor about 3 times a year. Rarely more often. I’ve had two surgeries in 25 years. With the money I save from paying lower premiums for just the protection I need, I can accumulate enough to cover a variety of life-altering health care needs. A $7500 deductible isn’t something I’ll want to meet every year, but it’s unlikely that will ever be the case. And if it is, it’s going to be tough, but not impossible and my INSURANCE against something financially devastating will have fulfilled its purpose.

But if I wanted to risk it all and have no health insurance because I felt like it, then that’s my own damn business, not the business of the federal government. That’s how I feel about the individual mandate to purchase health insurance. I don’t like it when people take advantage of the system and not keep health insurance when they have the means to buy it and still expect everyone else to pay. I’ve never said I didn’t have a problem with that. And I do believe it is morally wrong to deny urgent care for life threatening or serious injuries or illness. But I believe it is even more morally wrong to take away our right to choose how we meet life’s risks and what we do with our own lives. And I believe it is wrong to force a doctor to care for someone without compensation for his or her time, because we sure wouldn’t expect a plumber or a car repairman to work for free.

Forcing someone to pay for the majority of their care forces that person to learn to be more realistic about what constitutes an emergency and what illnesses a doctor should have a hand in healing. Prevention also becomes more important. Why worry about staying healthy if you can just get a prescription?

A lot of what’s wrong with healthcare in America is the problem of everyone being told to see their doctor for every little thing and few people taking responsibility for their own health. It’s behavioral and character issues. Those that need care have had the cost of care driven up by the many who waste healthcare services with frivolous doctor visits.

Anyway, I just thought I would give readers an idea of where I’m coming from when it comes to healthcare and insurance. If you want more information about the healthcare law and what it really means, check out this book, The Truth about Obamacare. I voted for Obama, but that was before I woke up to a bucket of cold water in my face with the passage of the healthcare reform bill. I won’t make that mistake again.

The Truth About Obamacare: Sally C. Pipes Reveals Just How Bad it Could Get

by Repeal the Health Care Reform Bill Editor on May 12, 2011
in Further Reading

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The Truth About ObamaCare - Sally C Pipes If you’re concerned about the coming problems resulting from the passage of the The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, then this book is a great place to start reading and learning about the law.

Buy The Truth About Obamacare at Amazon

Available formats include paperback, Kindle ebook, audio CD, and MP3 audio book.

The Truth About Obamacare outlines what you need to know about the impact of this law, how it will affect you and your family, your doctor, and your cost for healthcare. It also explains how the health care law will affect the health care industry and America’s economy.

If you’ve been wondering what the big deal is about the current health care reform, The Truth about Obamacare is a book about the new health care law that will open your eyes.

Product Description

The Truth About Obamacare

In her new book, The Truth About Obamacare, Sally C. Pipes—president of the Pacific Research Institute and an acknowledged expert on health care reform—reveals what Democrats in Congress and President Obama don’t want you to know: Obamacare is even worse than most critics suspect. Debunking the myths that the current administration has touted, Pipes shows exactly what the new health care law will mean for you, your family, your doctor, and your wallet. She also reveals how, contrary to its promises, Obamacare will make health care more expensive, limit your options, lead to deteriorating medical care, and weaken America’s already frail economy.

From the Bookcover’s Inside Flap

This is going to hurt.

On March 23, 2010, President Barack Obama signed into law a bill that will lead to the largest expansion of government in the history of the United States. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was more than 2,400 pages long and will reportedly cost a cool $1 trillion over ten years, give or take a few hundred billion.

But sticker shock is just the beginning. In The Truth about Obamacare, Sally Pipes shows how Obama’s health care “reform” will crash into our economy and culture with a tidal wave of regulations that, taken together, will fundamentally alter the way we live, work, and see our doctors. How will all those changes affect you, your family, and your fellow Americans? Pipes goes over the bill with a fine-tooth comb, laying out the specifics of how and why Obamacare:

  • will drive the country’s health care bill ever higher, according to the government’s own economists 
  • empowers bureaucrats to deny coverage of cutting-edge medicines in order to save the government money 
  • will exacerbate our nation’s shortage of doctors—and in fact, is already causing many to close up shop 
  • will make health care less affordable by forbidding insurers from offering inexpensive, bare-bones policies 
  • ratchets up Medicare payroll taxes—and adds brand new taxes on income—interest, capital gains, and dividends 
  • achieves every penny of its supposed “savings” through a series of legislative and accounting gimmicks 
  • creates a huge new enforcement bureaucracy—including 16,000 new IRS agents and an astounding 159 new boards and commissions—to hound taxpayers, businesses, hospitals, doctors, and insurers into compliance 
  • will still leave 23 million Americans uninsured by 2019, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Is it too late to stop Obamacare? By no means, argues Pipes—who shows how Americans can, and must, force its repeal. Then, she offers ten principles for real reform that would make health care accessible and affordable for all without destroying individual freedom, quality treatment, medical innovation, and the economy.

Sally C. Pipes doesn’t stop with giving us a breakdown of what’s wrong with Obamacare. She discusses how we can fix the system we currently have that will not lead us down the path toward government run health care.

Click here to read the reviews of The Truth About Obamacare