Unless you are just a hardcore obama supporter or unaware of the damage this will cause to our Country, our economy and our health care system, you can't support this obamacare disaster. The price tag keeps going up and up and with all of the exemptions obama is passing out, the people paying for it are becoming less and less.
We have already discovered that we were lied to about almost everything. If you are like me, you have been told at work that your premiums will be going up. Mine was a little over 20% but some people will be forced to pay 40 even 50% more for the same or worse coverage than they had a year ago.
As it turns out, Sarah Palin was right all along about the death panels. They may have assigned it a fancy name to disguise the purpose, but the purpose is to limit the amount of money the government is willing to pay to keep people healthy. If that isn't a death panel, then what is it?
Every week or so we find out some other hidden little rotten easter egg that was buried in the hundreds of pages. The pages that nancy pelosi said had to be passed to figure out what was in it. We are finding out, and more than half of us don't like it anymore than we did before. More than half of us are still appalled that the people we elected to represent us didn't even take the time to read the bill before they signed it. Each and every one of them should have been fired immediatley.
Do you think it matters whether we like obamacare or not? It doesn't. Those lawmakers who were elected in November on the premise that they would fight to repeal obamacare had better do what they signed up for. The majority of us, Americans, are not in the mood for more misleading rhetoric out of our government. We want results, and we want them now...
From ABCNews
Coinciding with a federal judge’s ruling invalidating a key element of the health care reform law, an ABC News/Washington Post poll finds support for the landmark legislation at a new low – but division on what to do about it.
The law’s never been popular, with support peaking at just 48 percent in November 2009. Today it’s slipped to 43 percent, numerically its lowest in ABC/Post polling. (It was about the same, 44 percent, a year ago.) Fifty-two percent are opposed, and that 9-point gap in favor of opposition is its largest on record since the latest debate over health care reform began in earnest in summer 2009.
More also continue to “strongly” oppose the law than to strongly support it, 37 percent to 22 percent.
What to do about it is another question: People who don’t support the law fragment on how to proceed, with a plurality in this group, 38 percent, saying they’d rather wait and see before deciding on a direction. Among the rest, 30 percent would repeal parts of the law, while about as many, 29 percent, favor repealing all of it.
Health care reform has lacked broad support – as also was the case when it last was debated in 1994 – given the public’s conflicting priorities and concerns. While many aspects of the reform law win broad backing, its rules, funding mechanisms and the issue of government involvement raise doubts. And while many Americans are concerned about their future costs and coverage, most are satisfied with their current coverage, care and even costs – raising fears that a new system could do more harm than good.
The law’s individual mandate, requiring that nearly all adults must buy health insurance or face a fine, has been particularly unpopular; in a poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation last month, 68 percent of adults said that element should be repealed.
Views on reform are marked by sharp partisanship. Eighty-six percent of Republicans in the new ABC/Post poll, produced for ABC News by Langer Research Associates, oppose the health care law; that subsides to 47 percent of independents and 27 percent of Democrats. But support among Democrats (67 percent) is far exceeded by opposition across the aisle. And intensity of sentiment is far higher among Republicans – 69 percent “strongly” oppose the law, while just 41 percent of Democrats strongly favor it.
The trends are similar along ideological lines, with opposition, including strong opposition, higher among conservatives than the corresponding levels of support among liberals.
There also are partisan differences among critics of the law in how to proceed. Among Democrats who don’t support the law, 54 percent prefer to wait and see how it unfolds. Republicans and conservatives are more apt to favor repeal. At the same time, these groups divide between repealing all of the law, or just parts of it.
U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson, in Richmond, Virginia, ruled today that Congress exceeded its authority by imposing the individual mandate, but he declined to freeze the rollout of the law while court cases proceed. Two other judges, in Detroit and Lynchburg, Va., have upheld the law, and it’s expected ultimately to reach the Supreme Court.