Obama: 'Time To Deliver' On Health Care (VIDEO)

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Obama: 'Time To Deliver' On Health Care (VIDEO) stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

Huffingtion Post/AP
First Posted: 06- 6-09 08:55 AM   |   Updated: 06- 7-09 09:25 AM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It

AP: WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama pleaded for action on his health care agenda, using his weekly radio and Internet address to focus on his domestic priority even while traveling overseas.

"It's time to deliver," Obama said Saturday.

His remarks were timed to gatherings in living rooms and coffee shops around the country by tens of thousands of people to discuss health care. The weekend events, organized by his campaign, were intended to try to build a groundswell of support for congressional action.

"If we do nothing, everyone's health care will be put in jeopardy," Obama said.


"Fixing what's wrong with our health care system is no longer a luxury we hope to achieve _ it's a necessity we cannot postpone any longer," said the president, who attended D-Day ceremonies in France on Saturday.

The first bill containing language to put in place his health care goals has begun circulating on Capitol Hill. Draft legislation from the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee would require employers to cover their employees or pay a penalty, and would guarantee coverage for all.

That parallels Obama's goals of lowering costs, ensuring choice, and providing coverage to some 50 million uninsured Americans.

Obama articulated those goals again in his radio address and in a videotaped message prepared for supporters at the community meetings.

Story continues below
advertisement

"Any health care reform must be built around fundamental reforms that lower costs, improve quality and coverage and also protect consumer choice," Obama said in the radio address.

He said he supports a plan that would not add to the budget deficit, touching on a major issue that remains unresolved little more than a week away from the first scheduled votes in Senate committees.

Congress still hasn't figured out how to pay for a health overhaul that could cost $1.2 trillion to $1.5 trillion or even more over a decade. Obama has put forward some ideas, including cuts to Medicare and Medicaid. Others he's suggested, including limiting some tax deductions rich people can take, have already gotten shot down on Capitol Hill.

And despite Obama's stated preference for a bipartisan solution, that's looking hard to achieve.

Although he didn't mention the issue in his radio address, Obama supports a new public insurance plan that would give all Americans the opportunity of getting government-sponsored care.

Private insurers are adamantly opposed, fearing they'd be driven out of business, as are most Republicans. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell spoke in the Senate almost every day this past week against the concept and reiterated the point in an interview with radio reporters Friday.

"The key to a bipartisan bill is to not have a government plan in the bill, no matter what it's called," said McConnell, R-Ky. "When I say no government plan, I mean no government plan. Not something described some other way, not something that gets us to the same place by indirection. No government plan."

Obama barely mentioned such opposition in his address.

"When you bring together disparate groups with differing views, there will be lively debate. And that's a debate I welcome," the president said. "But what we can't welcome is reform that just invests more money in the status quo _ reform that throws good money after bad habits."

___

On the Net:

Video of address: http://www.whitehouse.gov/

AP: WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama pleaded for action on his health care agenda, using his weekly radio and Internet address to focus on his domestic priority even while traveling overseas.
AP: WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama pleaded for action on his health care agenda, using his weekly radio and Internet address to focus on his domestic priority even while traveling overseas.
 
Comments
1738
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Next › Last » (24 pages total)

We spend 16% of our GDP on healthcare , and whose BLOOD MONEY is it?Here is Health Insurance Company CEO Salaries from 2005 (can't seem to find 2008 figures yet) and the total from the previous 5 Years. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE to have true Universal Health CARE when CEOs like these are involved in this. Updated part below.

United Health Group
CEO: William W McGuire
2005: 124.8 mil
5-year: 342 mil
Aetna
CEO: John Rowe
2005: 22.1 mil
5-year:57.8 mil
Cigna
CEO: H. Edward Hanway
2005:13.3 mil
5-year:62.8 mil
McKesson
CEO: John Hammergen
2005: 13.4 mil
5-year:31.2 mil
WellPoint
CEO: Larry Glasscock
2005: 23 mil
5-year: 46.8 mil

http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/tmcpac/2009/03/why-health-insurance-companies-1.php

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

Those figures don't include the bonuses that are given to employees for denying the claims of its customers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 06/06/2009
- scooperss I'm a Fan of scooperss 74 fans permalink
photo

Thank you. People need to use names instead of saying insurance companies. As long as we depersonalize issues, we tend to forget that it's PEOPLE who are greedy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

Thank you. Everyone blames the uninsured. Ridiculous. Well the uninsured don't usually go to doctors and if they do they have to pay out of pocket. Even the insured are not getting the coverage they need because of the crooks at the top. This is the reason for high health care costs. Period.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 06/06/2009
- textynn I'm a Fan of textynn 129 fans permalink
photo

This is unconscionable. There is no defense. It is proof positive that the American people are be extorted. Obama we demand HR 676.

I voted for Obama because i saw this speech.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQoCf3_xsSo

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

What about Humana, HCA and the like. It is all the sam!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

oops....the same.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 06/06/2009

And let's not forget the shame of the respectable white collar drug pushers in the Pharm Industry.
1. Miles White - Abbott - $33.4M

2. Fred Hassan - Schering-Plough - $30.1M

3. Bill Weldon - Johnson & Johnson - $25.1M

4. Bob Essner - Wyeth - $24.1M

5. Robert Parkinson - Baxter - $17.6M

6. Daniel Vasella - Novartis - $15.5M

7. Richard Clark - Merck - $14.5M

8. Frank Baldino - Cephalon - $13.5M

9. Sidney Taurel - Eli Lilly - $13M

10. Jeff Kindler - Pfizer - $12.6M

11. Jim Cornelius - Bristol-Myers Squibb - $11.3

12. Franz Humer - Roche - $11.1M

13. Robert Coury - Mylan - $8.5M

14. Jean-Pierre Garnier - GlaxoSmithKline - $6M

15. Werner Wenning - Bayer - $4.77M
http://www.fiercepharma.com/special-reports/top-17-paychecks-big-pharma

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

The insurance companies dictate to the doctors and hospitals what to charge. I found this out in 1984.
Insurance companies, health corporations, pharmaceutical, chemical companies and even big food companies and often are the same companies, and are all in bed together.
The long term affair must end before we can change and create decent, ETHICAL and affordable health care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

There's a reason that most health care providers (doctors are in this group) support single payer universal health care. While CEOs make billions annually in bonuses, and insurance company employees get bonuses for denying claims of its customers, most of the people actually providing the medical care to insurance company customers haven't gotten raises in years. In some cases, decades.

The actual providers are also required to PAY the insurance companies for the privilege of being on the list of approved providers. It's kickbacks. And if you're in private practice, that means you're paying insurance companies that cover the patients living in your area, and that can mean thousands of dollars each year just to remain "referrable". The insurance companies are making out like bandits.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

I know it. Thanks for telling me more. I always thought it was a conflict of interest, but it seems our leaders do not think so. I guess they have their own portfolios to consider!!!!!
It is just another big scam the American people have fallen for and continue to fall for.
we have to stop being afraid, take control of our own health and stop going to the doctor for every little ailment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

How long do you wait at your doctor's office?

How long did your doctor spend with you?

Doctors overbook because that's the amount of time dictated by the insurance companies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 06/06/2009

Indivuals and Businesses FORCED to Buy Health Insurance
U.S. lawmakers plan far-reaching insurance market reforms, which WOULD REQUIRE THAT BUSINESSES AND INDIVIDUALS PURCHASE MEDICAL COVERAGE as they seek to overhaul the U.S. healthcare system, an early draft of Senate legislation said on Saturday. http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE55514G20090606

This is totalitarian and unacceptable. Our government ought not be in the business of telling me what I MUST buy to protect myself.

Email your senators and congressman! http://www.webslingerz.com/jhoffman/congress-email.html Bitching about it in this forum won't affect anything but your blood pressure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 06/06/2009
- Lavafalls I'm a Fan of Lavafalls 243 fans permalink
photo

forcing businesses to provide healthcare is only going to put them at a disadvantage in the world market. We need government run universal healthcare in order to stay competitive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 06/06/2009

I truly believe the Republican or Lobby Blood Money Politicians' motto should be IGNORANCE IS BLISS,

U.S. Trails Canada, Britain in Healthcare Ratings by Coleen McMurray “United States, the only country of the three that does not have a publicly funded healthcare system, less than a third of residents (27%) are satisfied with the availability of affordable healthcare.” http://www.gallup.com/poll/11899/US-Trails-Canada-Britain-Healthcare-Ratings.aspx

Many claim that the United States has the greatest health care system in the world. That claim is hard to support, when America spends over 16% of GNP on health care, while more than 46 million Americans have no health insurance and millions are under-insured. Japan, Australia, Canada , and rich European nations spend between 8 to 11% of GNP in health care and enjoy superior service and universal coverage. Americans have a lower life expectancy rate, higher rates of heart disease and cancer, and an infant mortality rate that is twice as high as other rich industrialized nations. Even Cuba has a lower infant mortality rate than the United States according to CIA Fact Book .

America spends much more and gets much less than Western nations . … It is expected that the United States health care spending would reach nearly 20% of GNP within next 10 years, which is unsustainable. http://www.eyeuniversal.com/eyeuniversal/HealthcareSolutions/summary.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 06/06/2009
- KQuark I'm a Fan of KQuark 267 fans permalink
photo

But when you go to the ER the rest of us have to pay for it we all pay NOW. That is socializing medical expenses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

I am uninsured. I went to the ER. I paid full price darling. They will not give you care, unless you have the bucks in hand up front. Even then I didn't get the care I should have gotten. But it's too late for me. The insurance companies. big pharma, and HC corporations are to blame. They want you to believe otherwise and you are falling for their scam. They are making billions.
WAKE UP!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 06/06/2009
- textynn I'm a Fan of textynn 129 fans permalink
photo

My best friend died Monday from cancer that she was unaware of. She had lived with a variety of symptoms because she had such a high deductible on her health care. She was 48 years old and got her very first health care policy through her new job. It was too expensive to use and much too late. Cancer of the gall bladder and upper intestines.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:16 PM on 06/06/2009
- D-V-H I'm a Fan of D-V-H 430 fans permalink
photo

So sorry to hear that.

Another victim of the profit based insurance system. Another person who could have been a productive contributor to our nation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 06/06/2009
- textynn I'm a Fan of textynn 129 fans permalink
photo

She was a single mother of three and also took care of her elderly mother. They will all need services now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:32 PM on 06/06/2009
- textynn I'm a Fan of textynn 129 fans permalink
photo

Angela, single mother of 3 and only child of her elderly mother, a stroke victim, died June 01, 2008 at 48.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 06/06/2009

They do not want us to live; we will not let them live either.
We have a choice; please support: http://www.hr676.org/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 PM on 06/06/2009
- Tiggy I'm a Fan of Tiggy 28 fans permalink

My deepest sympathies. It is absolutely absurd that in a country such as ours that these deaths occur. Yes, this happens all over the world especially in third world countries, but we are not such a country.

My husband has a tumor on his spine and the insurance company put him through three surgical biopsies to rule out cancer when there was a single non invasive machine available that could have ruled out cancer with one test. Of course, had he had cancer, he could have had access to that machine! We send millions, billions and trillions in aide to help other countries when we have citizens here in need of help. Have we become the United States of the World?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

Sorry Tiggy. Your story is why I'm so anti-medical industry. I've had my own bad experiences and no longer trust any doctors or hospitals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 06/06/2009
- textynn I'm a Fan of textynn 129 fans permalink
photo

It's so easy for people for people who don't suffer and get all the help when they need it not to care about the ones who hurt and suffer. It's monstrous and we are taught to accept it. We live among monsters.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 06/06/2009
- MMJones I'm a Fan of MMJones 51 fans permalink

I am so sorry. But this is a story we hear time and time again. As health care providers, we must work with the patients and insurance, and the insurance companies are in the win-win situation because they have put the health care providers in the position of having to be dictated to by some insurance clerk.

The cost of being a health care provider is high. Day to day expenses are a large percentage of the overhead. There's a real sadness at not being able to provide for the person who may have health care, but it covers so little and so the patient goes without...

You've no idea how many times a patient has had to opt for no care. Or filed for bankruptcy because, though insured, their own patient expenses are exorbitant.

We have come full cycle. Single Payer, Government Insurance, or stick with what you've got. These are the only rational options for this broken health care system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

What I fear is that the government will be for healthcare what Kaiser Permanente is now, a system that promises to deliver everything, but actually delivers what any knowledgeable person would consider a bare minimum of competent medical care. Those who can afford private plans will continue to get the best of medical care, while the rest will get by with mediocre care.

In other words it won't be too much different from now except many more of us will be in the mediocre care group. If your healthcare system fails to diagnose and treat your illness, how much better off are you than if you had no healthcare at all?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:14 PM on 06/06/2009
- D-V-H I'm a Fan of D-V-H 430 fans permalink
photo

That is why many see a results based system as a positive. Hospitals and doctors will get paid based on the end result instead of how many tests & procedures they perform.
It will be an incentive for them to KEEP us healthy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 06/06/2009
- MMJones I'm a Fan of MMJones 51 fans permalink

You know what? Mediocre care is better than NO care, which is the choice by necessity of millions of Americans now.

Of course there'll be those who, like wealthy Canadians, will jet on down here and plunk down cash for procedures that in Canada they may have to wait a couple of months for. But at least there's the option there of being seen and, with a short wait, being cared for. Here in the U.S., there's not that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

Mediocre care can be deadlier than no care. If you go to the doctor with an unknown ailment, which many people do, and are mis-diagnosed (intentionally or unintentionally), you could end up dead or in worse condition than when you went in. I recently went to a doc for a check up.(out of pocket payment). We chatted about my concerns, he never really examined me or made a diagnosis, but gave me a shopping bag full of samples of drugs. Inhalers, nexium and others. I'm not asthmatic and I don't have acid reflux. I never went back. needless to say. I think they just want to get you on as many drugs as possible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

Kaisers was treating my mother for hypertension, and she was seen on a regular basis there. So, even though she showed some Parkinson-like symptoms, we put it off to old age. She complained of a bad hemorrhoid problem, but the doctor said she was too old for an operation to correct it.

When she had to finally move in with us, my wife took her to a private physician, because we were outside the Kaiser coverage area. The first thing he did was order the simple test for Parkinson's, and afterwards started treatment for her symptoms. He then arranged an operation for her hemorrhoid problem.

The difference between Kaiser care and real care was like night and day. My mother died peacefully in her own room at our house, surrounded by her familiar things and her family, not in a Kaiser warehouse style hospice with strangers coming and going and people screaming down the hall.

Quality of care is everything.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 06/06/2009
- regellner I'm a Fan of regellner 458 fans permalink
photo

We need a single payer health care system and one that does not have a trigger to engage.

Following is an article related to our need for health care reform

http://www.examiner.com/x-11326-Charlotte-Liberal-Examiner~y2009m5d29-Healthcare-reform-is-critical-part-of-national-survival


Raymond Gellner – Charlotte Liberal Examiner at Examiner.com
http://www.examiner.com/x-11326-Charlotte-Liberal-Examiner
______________________________________________________

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:14 PM on 06/06/2009
- Tiggy I'm a Fan of Tiggy 28 fans permalink

Health care reform can't work by forcing people to have it and here's why. A person making min. wage..or living on unemployment can't pay for the insurance, then copays for docs and meds. Our state recently allowed our insurance company to double all of our copays in exchange for not imposing a premium increase. So our out of pocket trip to a general practitioner is $30.00 and $50.00 for a specialist. As most know, it takes numerous visits to determine a problem. Then comes the meds, yes my husband was prescribed a med that with insurance was $200.00 for a 10 day supply and he needed 84 days on this med. Most of the meds that use to be $5.00 are now $40.00. So, you can force people to have coverage but you can't force them to use it which sets us back to square one only now, our politicians can promote that everyone has coverage. Even if that coverage can't be used. So that person making min. wage is actually worse off because they are paying for something they can't use. It's like making payments on a car while having no tags or gas money. That car may pretty up your drive, but serves no purpose for the owner. Until we tackle medical costs all the coverage in the world is useless.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

You've made many great points. It seems many are so eager to jump on the president's bandwagon. I voted for him, but I think he is rushing this and many of us, who have a different view of health, are going to be left out. It's really too bad. I don't like the old system, but the new proposals are just the same care in a different package.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 06/06/2009
- KQuark I'm a Fan of KQuark 267 fans permalink
photo

Government will subsidize premiums up to 4 times the poverty level.

People who are unemployed already qualify for Medicaid.

All this is scare tactics. You also leave out that one of the reason premiums are so high is because when the people you mentioned get healthcare in our current system we all pay anyway.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

Something to think about. Where your premiums go!

Read about how insurance companies invest in big tobacco.

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2009-06/pfan-hli052909.php

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 06/06/2009
- MMJones I'm a Fan of MMJones 51 fans permalink

I said this early on and I will repeat it.

As health care providers, I could tell you tales about being wined, dined and housed at fine luxury weekend retreats -- on insurance company and pharmaceutical's dime -- that would make your toes curl. That is also where your insurance and exorbitant drug prices are going.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 06/06/2009
- D-V-H I'm a Fan of D-V-H 430 fans permalink
photo

JohnConservative I'm a Fan of JohnConservative I'm a fan of this user permalink

No, it would be a free market, just like home and auto insurance. Competition fuels lower prices.
*****

Health care is a virtual monopoly. And if you believe the idea that we can choose our insurance company you are quite beyond the realm of reason. Any reason to deny coverage and benefits are taken by private insurance companies all the time, usually when the insured needs it most.

The only people who can get whatever coverage they want are those who don't care about cost. If John McCain weren't in Congress, he would NOT be able to pay any price for insurance. No one would cover him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:10 PM on 06/06/2009
- quiviran I'm a Fan of quiviran 26 fans permalink

Right. Big difference. With home and auto insurance, the remedies are very simple and you can shop around for equivalent coverage. Health insurance is very complex, you don't know ahead of time how your health care needs will develop (cancer, heart disease, ED, Alzheimer's) and you sure can't pick a different policy after you're sick. As far as contesting a decision, all the insurance company has to do is wait. With hold treatment long enough and you'll stop complaining.

Everybody needs health care, nobody needs health insurance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:45 PM on 06/06/2009
- Mosby12 I'm a Fan of Mosby12 11 fans permalink

WE ARE GOING BROKE. WE CAN'T PAY FOR IT. WE ARE GOING BROKE. CHINA WON'T EVEN BUY OUR DEBT ANYMORE.

WE ARE GOING BROKE - UNDERSTAND... NO MONEY...

THIS SCHEME WILL PUT THE FINAL NAILS IN OUR DEBTOR'S COFFIN.

TWO THINGS COMING IF THIS PASSES... HUGE INCREASE IN TAXES AND CRAZY INFLATION

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 06/06/2009
- Lavafalls I'm a Fan of Lavafalls 243 fans permalink
photo

With most national healthcare programs, mental health and paranoia are covered. But your going to have to hit that caploc key on your own

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 06/06/2009
- KQuark I'm a Fan of KQuark 267 fans permalink
photo

We are going broke because we have the highest healthcare costs per capita in the world.

The only way for the nation to not go broke is to offer public single payer to regulate costs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 06/06/2009

And why are we going broke?

2006-2007:

• Ronald A. Williams, Chair/ CEO, Aetna Inc., $23,045,834
• H. Edward Hanway, Chair/ CEO, Cigna Corp, $30.16 million
• David B. Snow, Jr, Chair/ CEO, Medco Health, $21.76 million
• Michael B. MCallister, CEO, Humana Inc, $20.06 million
• Stephen J. Hemsley, CEO, UnitedHealth Group, $13,164,529
• Angela F. Braly, President/ CEO, Wellpoint, $9,094,771
• Dale B. Wolf, CEO, Coventry Health Care, $20.86 million
• Jay M. Gellert, President/ CEO, Health Net, $16.65 million
• William C. Van Faasen, Chairman, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, $3 million plus $16.4 million in retirement benefits
• Charlie Baker, President/ CEO, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, $1.5 million
• James Roosevelt, Jr., CEO, Tufts Associated Health Plans, $1.3 million
• Cleve L. Killingsworth, President/CEO Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, $3.6 million
• Raymond McCaskey, CEO, Health Care Service Corp (Blue Cross Blue Shield), $10.3 million
• Daniel P. McCartney, CEO, Healthcare Services Group, Inc, $ 1,061,513
• Daniel Loepp, CEO, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, $1,657,555
• Todd S. Farha, CEO, WellCare Health Plans, $5,270,825
• Michael F. Neidorff, CEO, Centene Corp, $8,750,751
• Daniel Loepp, CEO, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, $1,657,555
• Todd S. Farha, CEO, WellCare Health Plans, $5,270,825
• Michael F. Neidorff, CEO, Centene Corp, $8,750,751

stock options?

http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/tmcpac/2009/03/why-health-insurance-companies-1.php

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:47 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

The!ves!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 06/06/2009
- TonyOnly I'm a Fan of TonyOnly 11 fans permalink

Two out of every three, or 66% of all personal bankruptcies in the U.S. is a result of people not being able to cover their medical bills. That's one thing you won't see mentioned in the conservative ads attacking Canada's universal healthcare program. Canada doesn't have any bankruptcies due to healthcare costs. Canada isn't as rich as the U.S. and the average Canadian lives as long as the average American. The truth is, the average American can't afford not to have universal healthcare.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

Try paying 732.00 per month for c r a p insurance for 3 people in our family. If we don't do something and something in the very near future to lower health insurance premiums even upper middle class families such as ourselves are not going to continue to carry insurance. Instead of 40 million people without health insurance that number will continue to skyrocket. Not to mention the d a m n insurance companies won't cover anyone with any sort of pre existing condition. Who do you think is paying for those folks who are ill and have to have medical care? We all are already anyway.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 PM on 06/06/2009
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 06/06/2009
- sej100 I'm a Fan of sej100 28 fans permalink

Sadly, we do NOT have legislators who truly represent their communities. We have politicians taking campaign donations from the very insurance companies that do NOT want universal health care.
This is the reason we have NO one truly fighting for single payer health care in this country.

We have greed in Washington that prevails over what is right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

Yes, I am not represented. I choose preventive and alternative health care for myself. I choose to be uninsured and pay out of pocket so that I can get the type of care I want. I'm now told I will be forced to purchase health insurance to pay for a type of health care that I don't believe in, so that I can join the mainstream health care (not) industry against my will.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 06/06/2009
- HeartTlc I'm a Fan of HeartTlc 2 fans permalink

good speech Mr. President, but on this, I am not willing to compromise. We need single payer health care. Use your popularity and our grassroot efforts to negotiate for the American people. Single payer health care now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

Exactly.

Where is his leadership now? His job is not Negotiator-in-Chief; he's the g-d President. He's the leader of the PEOPLE, not the insurance and pharmaceutical companies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 06/06/2009
- Garybot I'm a Fan of Garybot 52 fans permalink
photo

It's funny Marco, that what the president always says. He doesn't want to run the car companies either.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 06/06/2009
- cheforacle I'm a Fan of cheforacle 41 fans permalink
photo

As a lot of people just on this thread disagree, how too reconcile.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 06/06/2009
- Budokan I'm a Fan of Budokan 217 fans permalink
photo

We do need to deliver on health care. We know the RepubliKans will be against it. They're against everything and by their own statement want this country to fail. The only real impediment is getting the weak-kneed gutless Democrats in congress to back up our president...and us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 06/06/2009
- KQuark I'm a Fan of KQuark 267 fans permalink
photo

Exactly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 06/06/2009
- oakley9 I'm a Fan of oakley9 20 fans permalink

Mandatory health care is unconstitutional. It will invade our privacy. It will force people who cannot afford it to add more financial burdens to their existing ones. It will not provide for preventive and alternative health care and testing methods and will only prove to continue the corrupt for-profit, sickness promoting
medical /pharmaceutical/insurance conglomerate. The insurance companies are huge investors in the tobacco companies. I think that says it all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

Contrary to what Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and conservatives would us believe, "The Government" isn't some Death Star floating body over the continental US; It's us, the people.

We determine what our money goes for and how our government is to work.

Those conservatives who spit whenever they say "government" are actually spitting on themselves - They created government led by incompetents and criminals, they gave us Bush and Cheney and fiscal policies that let the rich get richer and destroyed the middle class. They deregulated industries, spent us into bankruptcy on wars and bailouts to the rich, while cutting safety nets for the poor and middle classes.

There is nothing unconstitutional about mandatory health care. The provide for the health of the people is covered under Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress the power to impose taxes to "provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

We used to have not-for-profit healthcare, and it worked great. As a matter of fact, our tax dollars paid for miracle medicines, R&D for pharmaceutical corporations that was to come back to us by way of miracle drugs at affordable prices. Thank liberals for that. What happened next you can lay blame directly at the feet of Republicans and DINOs.

We gave those affordable prices to other nations so that they could buy these pharmaceuticals while the American consumer subsidized those foreign customers' lowered prices by paying HIGHER prices. For medications that our tax dollars went to create.

Single payer, universal health care. Now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

A popular misconception about single-payer universal health care is that you wouldn't be able to choose your physician or health care practitioner.

NOT TRUE.

There would be more treatment shifted to non-physician practitioners (nurse practitioners, physicians' assistants, and other allied health professionals). Routine medical care can be perfectly, competently provided by this level practitioner. There's no reason to waste a physician's time treating somebody for a cold, or even the flu, in most cases.

It's true that if universal health coverage were to become an official reality, we would need to expand training programs for both MDs and non-MD providers to insure there were enough to go around, but in the long run it would probably mean cheaper and more effective service, along with creating jobs in this country.

These are all good things.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

WHEN did we "USED" to have not-for-profit health care? When did anything ever done not-for-profit work well for the consumer? It is the profit motive that tends to improve service!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 06/06/2009
photo

Contrary to what conservatives would have us believe, "The Government" isn't some Death Star floating body over the continental US; It's us, the people.

We determine what our money goes for and how our government is to work.

Those conservatives who spit whenever they say "government" are actually spitting on themselves - They created government led by incompetents and criminals, they gave us Bush and Cheney and fiscal policies that let the rich get richer and destroyed the middle class. They deregulated industries, spent us into bankruptcy on wars and bailouts to the rich, while cutting safety nets for the poor and middle classes.

There is nothing unconstitutional about mandatory health care. The provide for the health of the people is covered under Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress the power to impose taxes to "provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 06/06/2009
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Next › Last » (24 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect