You mean the NRA doesn’t have a special solidarity fund for this? I’m shocked. Shocked.
Put it up on gofundme.
I read it as godfundme at first.
Ah, the canon of Osteen…
https://twitter.com/haircut_hippie/status/806727683195355136
(the following quote is from that Twitter thread)
(back to me)
To spell it out: health insurance with a deductible of more than a few hundred dollars is essentially null and void for most Americans. It provides zero benefit outside of extraordinary circumstances.
Forcing people to pay for functionally non-existent healthcare does not help them. It hurts them.
The pre-ACA situation was diabolical. The post-ACA situation is still diabolical.
If you’re going to socialise healthcare, as you should, you need to do it properly
I think obviously America should socialize healthcare and the fact that it’s not happening is absurd.
I don’t think the ACA did nothing. I’ve heard plenty of people say they credit the ACA with saving their lives. Those stories always seem to revolve around the rules about pre-existing conditions.
But also, it varies greatly from state to state. If the ACA did nothing to help Texas, that is at least in part because the Texas government intentionally sabotaged it to make sure it wouldn’t make anything better to score political points for their party.
So the whole insurance market part of the ACA is a failure, but I think some of the provisions like making sure insurance plans provided certain basic coverage, protecting people with pre-existing conditions and allowing children to be covered by parent’s plans up to 26 were good ideas. Those are the popular parts of the bill that made it hard for the republicans to repeal it.
I hope that the ACA sharpens the distinctions and shows what’s really wrong with the healthcare system. In a way the ACA created a new crisis but one in which it feels like moving to single payer is the only way out. So maybe it was a step in the right direction.
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