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-   -   Obamacare Repeal and Replace -- We will have that debate (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1272865)

AndyA 07-26-2017 09:23 PM

And this asshole picked a Supreme Court justice?

Rochard 07-26-2017 09:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 21913387)
@rochard -- I don't see McCain's vote as a vote to 'take away' anything -- just to debate the issues on the floor of the Senate -- rather clever actually as the vote on the Repeal and Replace lost 43 to 57.

I disagree. McCain's vote allowed the "debate" to go on so they can "debate" bills where they have no idea what is in the bill. Last night they had a "vote a rama" where they just voted on bills hoping to get one through.

This is bullshit.

They don't care what the bill is so long as they pass a vote. They just want to win.

Is this what our government has become? Doesn't matter what the vote is, so long as one party can claim a victory? "We'll just toss stuff up there until sooner or later something sticks". Fuck this already. Congress needs to do their jobs. If the Republicans want to beat Obamacare, they need to include the Democrats. It's just that simple. Create a bill for the people, not a bill for the Republican party.

onwebcam 07-26-2017 09:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 21915037)
I disagree. McCain's vote allowed the "debate" to go on so they can "debate" bills where they have no idea what is in the bill. Last night they had a "vote a rama" where they just voted on bills hoping to get one through.

This is bullshit.

They don't care what the bill is so long as they pass a vote. They just want to win.

Is this what our government has become? Doesn't matter what the vote is, so long as one party can claim a victory? "We'll just toss stuff up there until sooner or later something sticks". Fuck this already. Congress needs to do their jobs. If the Republicans want to beat Obamacare, they need to include the Democrats. It's just that simple. Create a bill for the people, not a bill for the Republican party.

You still don't get it do you?

Republicans are going to SAVE Obamacare. You can call it whatever you like in the end or put a R or a D beside it but it's going to be obamacare 2.0. The ONLY real change that will come from it is more money to the insurance companies.. And no that's not a Republican "rich people" conspiracy. It's Washington as usual. The Health care industry now has a noose around our neck and Democrats put it there. Republicans will pull it tighter.

AndyA 07-26-2017 10:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onwebcam (Post 21915043)
You still don't get it do you?

Republicans are going to SAVE Obamacare. You can call it whatever you like in the end or put a R or a D beside it but it's going to be obamacare 2.0. The ONLY real change that will come from it is more money to the insurance companies.. And no that's not a Republican "rich people" conspiracy. It's Washington as usual. The Health care industry now has a noose around our neck and Democrats put it there. Republicans will pull it tighter.

It's a tax break for the rich they aren't trying to save a 'dying' Obamacare
Richard your a dumb cunt

onwebcam 07-26-2017 10:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AndyA (Post 21915064)
It's a tax break for the rich they aren't trying to save a 'dying' Obamacare
Richard your a dumb cunt

Nope it will be nothing more than a modified version of obamacare. Congress never funded Obamacare. Instead they confiscated fannie and freddie's earnings to pay for it and are now being sued over it. They WILL lose this case. It's well documented. So they have to actually fund obamacare. The insurance companies pulled out because they aren't going to bankrupt themselves keeping it afloat. So the Republicans will change obamacare up a bit add the funding and we have obamacare 2.0.

Barry-xlovecam 07-26-2017 10:21 PM

I don't really *get* the mandate thing at all.

If you don't have cash or insurance to pay for expensive in-patient hospital care how are you going to pay for it?

Whether hospital charges are a fair value or not isn't really the point -- people have to get paid for work or services provided.

If you are uninsured and not covered by Medicaid who do you expect to pay when you can't.

Free curbside body bag pick ups for the uninsured

https://s4.postimg.org/b5p65j5tp/wm-865x452.jpg

onwebcam 07-26-2017 10:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 21915076)
I don't really *get* the mandate thing at all.

If you don't have cash or insurance to pay for expensive in-patient hospital care how are you going to pay for it?

Whether hospital charges are a fair value or not isn't really the point -- people have to get paid for work or services provided.

If you are uninsured and not covered by Medicaid who do you expect to pay when you can't.

Free curbside body bag pick ups for the uninsured

The problem with your scenario is there are 2 sets of billing practices. The increased cost price if you have insurance and the cash price. If you have insurance the cost is marked up 5-10 fold. So either way for the most part you end up paying the same. Obamacare has made ALL insurance nothing but high priced catastrophic.

Paul Markham 07-26-2017 11:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 21913117)
McCain just walked out of the hospital and then voted to take away the healthcare of tens of millions of Americans.

Typical for a politician. In the UK all those who got free University, now want to charge students so much it puts them into debt for decades.

Paul Markham 07-26-2017 11:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 21913204)
That's not true Paul

Very true. I got it wrong. If your insurance policy covers you getting experimental treatment, you're covered. Can you afford it?

Paul Markham 07-26-2017 11:32 PM

How many US citizens would like to scrap the system they have in favour of the system the rest of the modern world use?

Most definitely well over 50%. It's cheaper, better and available to everyone who is a citizen of the country.

So why can't you have it, in a democracy you should be able. Big Pharma and their shareholders are stopping you.

Barry-xlovecam 07-27-2017 12:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onwebcam (Post 21915079)
The problem with your scenario is there are 2 sets of billing practices. The increased cost price if you have insurance and the cash price. If you have insurance the cost is marked up 5-10 fold. So either way for the most part you end up paying the same. Obamacare has made ALL insurance nothing but high priced catastrophic.

You are so wrong with that statement.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chargemaster

Dude, I (my tax money) don't want to pay for you. There is no free ride on this.

OBSTINATE look the word up.

Unless you are on public assistance, or on Medicaid provided at taxpayer expense by the Obamacare law, you have to pay one way or another -- or the federal government (my tax dollars) pays a settlement for your care as an indigent when the hospital cannot collect.

You know what indigent means? A have not, a bum -- is that you?


If you want to play healthcare roulette, put your money on the wood including all your assets. If you are lucky, an unpaid major medical expense may just ruin your credit for 10 years -- if its a real big expense you will have to file bankruptcy to avoid paying the debt.

Or you can die and take your money with you or leave it to your survivors forsaking any medical help when you are injured or sick.

Yeah, it's fucked up but that is the fucking way it is in the USA.

kane 07-27-2017 12:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 21915211)
You are so wrong with that statement.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chargemaster

Dude, I (my tax money) don't want to pay for you. There is no free ride on this.

OBSTINATE look the word up.

Unless you are on public assistance, or on Medicaid provided at taxpayer expense by the Obamacare law, you have to pay one way or another -- or the federal government (my tax dollars) pays a settlement for your care as an indigent when the hospital cannot collect.

You know what indigent means? A have not, a bum -- is that you?


If you want to play healthcare roulette, put your money on the wood including all your assets. If you are lucky, an unpaid major medical expense may just ruin your credit for 10 years -- if its a real big expense you will have to file bankruptcy to avoid paying the debt.

Or you can die and take your money with you or leave it to your survivors forsaking any medical help when you are injured or sick.

Yeah, it's fucked up but that is the fucking way it is in the USA.

I have some insight on this issues as I have been down this road. Several years ago I had a serious illness and ended up in the hospital for a few days. By the time everything was said and done (hospital, follow-up appointments, medicine, etc.) it came to right around $65,0000. Since I have a pre-existing condition I had no health insurance (this was pre-Obamacare) so I told them I was paying cash and needed the cash price. They lowered the bill to $61,000. When I told them I couldn't pay them in the time frame they wanted they threatened to send me to collections and sue me. I ended up having to hire an attorney and they were able to negotiate it down to around $15,000.

You can damn well bet someone paid that $50,000 that I didn't and I'm sure most of that money was recouped by overbilling insurance companies. The crazy thing is, after my initial evaluation and treatment most of the time I was in the hospital was just getting IV meds and being checked on. There were no big procedures so I bet the hospital still made a profit on that $15,000.

CoolMikey 07-27-2017 01:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 21915151)
How many US citizens would like to scrap the system they have in favour of the system the rest of the modern world use?

Most definitely well over 50%. It's cheaper, better and available to everyone who is a citizen of the country.

So why can't you have it, in a democracy you should be able. Big Pharma and their shareholders are stopping you.

You are mistaken, the old, pre-Obamacare system didn't work for perhaps only 10% of the population. The remaining 90% were perhaps not thrilled with it, but were content with it. Obamacare did nothing to improve the situation, only made it worse, by helping the 10% while fucking 50% of the population.

CoolMikey 07-27-2017 01:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onwebcam (Post 21915073)
Nope it will be nothing more than a modified version of obamacare. Congress never funded Obamacare. Instead they confiscated fannie and freddie's earnings to pay for it and are now being sued over it. They WILL lose this case. It's well documented. So they have to actually fund obamacare. The insurance companies pulled out because they aren't going to bankrupt themselves keeping it afloat. So the Republicans will change obamacare up a bit add the funding and we have obamacare 2.0.

No idea how you reached that conclusion. It's probably just wishful thinking. If "individual mandate" ends up staying as is, most of the republican politicians, including Trump, won't get re-elected, as removal of "individual mandate" was one of their few main selling points appealing to their voter base. And since they are not stupid, there is close to zero chance of "individual mandate" staying as is.

onwebcam 07-27-2017 08:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 21915211)
You are so wrong with that statement.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chargemaster

Dude, I (my tax money) don't want to pay for you. There is no free ride on this.

OBSTINATE look the word up.

Unless you are on public assistance, or on Medicaid provided at taxpayer expense by the Obamacare law, you have to pay one way or another -- or the federal government (my tax dollars) pays a settlement for your care as an indigent when the hospital cannot collect.

You know what indigent means? A have not, a bum -- is that you?


If you want to play healthcare roulette, put your money on the wood including all your assets. If you are lucky, an unpaid major medical expense may just ruin your credit for 10 years -- if its a real big expense you will have to file bankruptcy to avoid paying the debt.

Or you can die and take your money with you or leave it to your survivors forsaking any medical help when you are injured or sick.

Yeah, it's fucked up but that is the fucking way it is in the USA.


I'm so right. Do you actually think the insurance company is paying the remainder of your bill? Hell fucking no. If you enter an emergency room and get services as you leave you enter an office. They will ask "Do you have insurance?" If you say yes you supply it and your billing is based on that insurance. If you say no, you get billed a cash price which is generally 5-10x lower. I mean really? Do you really fucking think a aspirin costs a hospital $10 or that they greatly inflated the price for a fucking reason?

I've told this story here before. My son had a motorcycle accident last year. He thought he had insurance so that's what he told them and what they went with. Within a week the billing started arriving to the tune of $30k+. And then they figured out his insurance was cancelled. Like magic his billing was reduced to around $5-6k. The hospital themselves called it the "cash price" This isn't the only instance I'm fully aware of. Just one instance. The hospital doesn't actually lose money unless that person doesn't pay. And if that person doesn't they come after them debt collection wise. Hence the many health care bankruptcies. (And many of those people actually had insurance)

onwebcam 07-27-2017 08:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CoolMikey (Post 21915328)
No idea how you reached that conclusion. It's probably just wishful thinking. If "individual mandate" ends up staying as is, most of the republican politicians, including Trump, won't get re-elected, as removal of "individual mandate" was one of their few main selling points appealing to their voter base. And since they are not stupid, there is close to zero chance of "individual mandate" staying as is.

Repeal was also one of those selling points and we see how that turned out.

The individual mandate is now law. The insurance companies aren't going to allow it's removal. In their own statement made just yesterday any bill must contain “strong incentives for people to obtain health insurance and keep it year-round,”

What do you think "incentive" means in that statement? And how do you propose this "incentive" is achieved?

Paul Markham 07-27-2017 08:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 21915211)
You are so wrong with that statement.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chargemaster

Dude, I (my tax money) don't want to pay for you. There is no free ride on this.

What if there was a way to save money and provide free medical care for all and not have an opt in opt out system?

Quote:

Yeah, it's fucked up but that is the fucking way it is in the USA.
No, it's the corporate way. Nothing to do with the USA.

Paul Markham 07-27-2017 08:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kane (Post 21915244)
I have some insight on this issues as I have been down this road. Several years ago I had a serious illness and ended up in the hospital for a few days. By the time everything was said and done (hospital, follow-up appointments, medicine, etc.) it came to right around $65,0000. Since I have a pre-existing condition I had no health insurance (this was pre-Obamacare) so I told them I was paying cash and needed the cash price. They lowered the bill to $61,000. When I told them I couldn't pay them in the time frame they wanted they threatened to send me to collections and sue me. I ended up having to hire an attorney and they were able to negotiate it down to around $15,000.

You can damn well bet someone paid that $50,000 that I didn't and I'm sure most of that money was recouped by overbilling insurance companies. The crazy thing is, after my initial evaluation and treatment most of the time I was in the hospital was just getting IV meds and being checked on. There were no big procedures so I bet the hospital still made a profit on that $15,000.

Barry and people like him paid for you. This is a case that happens time after time and someone ends up paying.

Rochard 07-27-2017 09:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CoolMikey (Post 21915319)
You are mistaken, the old, pre-Obamacare system didn't work for perhaps only 10% of the population. The remaining 90% were perhaps not thrilled with it, but were content with it. Obamacare did nothing to improve the situation, only made it worse, by helping the 10% while fucking 50% of the population.

What "pre-obamacare" system?

Before Obamacare, you either got healthcare through your employer, paid out of the ass for it, or went without.

The problem was the people who "went without" having healthcare. Suddenly they collapse one day, it's a $3k ride to the airport, ER, and then three or four days in the hospital. The total bill comes out to $30k, they cannot afford to pay it, forcing the hospital to cover the costs of treatment, which in turn jacks up the costs for everyone paying for insurance.

The "pre-obmacare" system only worked for those who had healthcare through their employer.

onwebcam 07-27-2017 09:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 21916156)
What "pre-obamacare" system?

Before Obamacare, you either got healthcare through your employer, paid out of the ass for it, or went without.

And now you either get healthcare through your employer, pay out of the ass for it, or get fined.

onwebcam 07-27-2017 09:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 21916018)
Barry and people like him paid for you. This is a case that happens time after time and someone ends up paying.

Nope. no one paid. The hospital likely wrote off the largely inflated cost as a "loss" on it's taxes though. What do you think they will do when those losses are guaranteed by tax dollars? Not only will everyone be forced by law to pay what ever premium they demand but said persons will pay again via increased taxes. No one is talking about restructuring medical billing practices/costs. Not even the issues biggest proponent or opponent depending on how you look at it Rand Paul. Why? Because he's a doctor.

onwebcam 07-27-2017 09:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kane (Post 21915244)
most of the time I was in the hospital was just getting IV meds and being checked on. There were no big procedures so I bet the hospital still made a profit on that $15,000.

Of course they did and a big one at that. You got what amounted to a hotel room with a few educated hospitality workers and some shitty room service. Would you pay $5000 a day for the service you received in Vegas? How about $20k?

Barry-xlovecam 07-27-2017 10:38 AM

Casualty insurance is underwritten by pooling risks and negotiating a precontracted mitigation price for healthcare services.

Private healthcare is a premium paid for services, an assignment of risk that most employers/people pay through the nose for, to private health insurance corporations, to assign high financial risk to the third-party payor -- Big Insurance Corporation.

I have no problem with you being relieved of the cost of buying insurance.

But I do think you should be denied service if you cannot pay cash in advance and left to die on the street.

That is how a free-market health system *should* work -- Is that really what you want?
Next time you go to a hospital ER room bring a credit card with thousands available -- or duct-tape the damage at home and take some aspirin.

You can only have your cake and eat it too in Unicornland ...

onwebcam 07-27-2017 10:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 21916321)
But I do think you should be denied service if you cannot pay cash in advance and left to die on the street.

.

How do you suggest that occurs when the prices for care aren't fixed (within a range)? Are they suppose to say, hmm, I'm not really sure what your problem is so just give me ALL your money and then some... If your mechanic said that to you what would you do?

Now another topic of non-discussion. What do those paying a penalty actually receive? If they have to pay 1% of income what do they get in return? They're not getting the free health care that is provided to others obviously... So what? Satisfaction that others are being provided tax payer (by their fines) health care?

kane 07-27-2017 12:12 PM

A timely video

thommy 07-27-2017 01:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onwebcam (Post 21915955)
I've told this story here before. My son had a motorcycle accident last year. He thought he had insurance so that's what he told them and what they went with. Within a week the billing started arriving to the tune of $30k+. And then they figured out his insurance was cancelled. Like magic his billing was reduced to around $5-6k. The hospital themselves called it the "cash price" This isn't the only instance I'm fully aware of. Just one instance. The hospital doesn't actually lose money unless that person doesn't pay. And if that person doesn't they come after them debt collection wise. Hence the many health care bankruptcies. (And many of those people actually had insurance)

i can imagine that things like that happen in USA every day and they even happen in europe (maybe not that much but they happen too) the reason for that is because of you so called "free market".
even when i love free markets there is a natural red line what should not be in private hands.

this what happend to you happens because the hospitals PAY BACK to the insurance companies. insurance companies even can recommend hospitals or health service or
they can EXCLUDE hospitals or health services.
an now you can guess WHY they recommend them or exclude them - just because they get cash back.

same thing with prescriptions - the biggest cars are financed from the pharma industry because doctors prescribe the most expensive medicine even when there is a much cheaper alternative.

that goes even further - the same pharma companies pay back on insurances who send their patients to a hospital what is just working with such overpriced medicine.

THIS is where you can rid of all your healthcare cost problems if you stop this ugly corruption what have to be paid from the weakest and poorest people in the system - the ones who are sick!
THIS is not a free market - this is LEGALIZATION OF THE MAFIA !!!!

Paul Markham 07-27-2017 01:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onwebcam (Post 21916207)
Nope. no one paid. The hospital likely wrote off the largely inflated cost as a "loss" on it's taxes though. What do you think they will do when those losses are guaranteed by tax dollars? Not only will everyone be forced by law to pay what ever premium they demand but said persons will pay again via increased taxes. No one is talking about restructuring medical billing practices/costs. Not even the issues biggest proponent or opponent depending on how you look at it Rand Paul. Why? Because he's a doctor.

Do you seriously think they write it off in their taxes? :1orglaugh

It goes onto other peoples bills.

Paul Markham 07-27-2017 01:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kane (Post 21916621)
A timely video

She keeps saying it's OK I'm covered. But the cover she pays is not alright.

onwebcam 07-27-2017 02:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 21916744)
Do you seriously think they write it off in their taxes? :1orglaugh

It goes onto other peoples bills.

Yes, I'm sure they write down massive inflated losses for tax reasons. Even more so once it's guaranteed.

hottoddy 07-27-2017 02:08 PM

The Congressional Budget Office says at least 15 million people would immediately drop Obamacare if they could. They would likely go the route of buying less expensive/comprehensive insurance (like before).

https://ballotpedia.org/Scott_Rasmus...ber_of_the_Day

kane 07-27-2017 02:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 21916768)
She keeps saying it's OK I'm covered. But the cover she pays is not alright.

Which is the point of the video.

When people have insurance many of them don't care how much stuff costs because they are only paying their deductible or a small co-pay.

onwebcam 07-27-2017 02:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by hottoddy (Post 21916822)
The Congressional Budget Office says at least 15 million people would immediately drop Obamacare if they could. They would likely go the route of buying less expensive/comprehensive insurance (like before).

https://ballotpedia.org/Scott_Rasmus...ber_of_the_Day

The insurance companies will have none of that...

"It is currently illegal for insurance companies to offer less expensive plans offering less comprehensive coverage."

They wrote the law....

Barry-xlovecam 07-27-2017 04:43 PM

So what are you going to do about it? Fuck all ...
Videos like that are foolish --

Baxter 0.9% Sodium Chloride IV Solution Bags - ViafloŽ | Emergency Medical Products

$9.00 each iv bag wholesale plus shipping.
Then you have to stock them and RN's at $40/hr have to hook them up and change them. Maybe, a LPN in a hospital can do this. So maybe the actual cost incurred is $30? Ever seen an IV stand in a hospital here is one at sale at Amazon https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...d_i=8297370011

Quote:

Mercy Hospital in Merced, California has 185 beds and cost $166 million when it was built five years ago. At less than $1 million per bed, it was considered quite economical, especially for California.
https://www.quora.com/How-much-does-...ild-a-hospital
This is gotten out of hand but we are not dealing with reality here and neither is the government. :2 cents:

There are a lot of ways to reduce costs -- subsidizing publicly traded insurance companies is not one of them. We really have to cut the fat out of the system and concentrate more on preventative care -- it is not as profitable as trauma or chronic care -- but can prevent some of that in the first palace. Stop using the ER for a physicians office, establish walk-in public health clinics, etc ... If you look at countries that have comparable wage standards to the USA we are paying too much for too little.

onwebcam 07-27-2017 04:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 21917083)
So what are you going to do about it? Fuck all ...
Videos like that are foolish --

Baxter 0.9% Sodium Chloride IV Solution Bags - ViafloŽ | Emergency Medical Products

$9.00 each iv bag wholesale plus shipping.
Then you have to stock them and RN's at $40/hr have to hook them up and change them. Maybe, a LPN in a hospital can do this. So maybe the actual cost incurred is $30? Ever seen an IV stand in a hospital here is one at sale at Amazon https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...d_i=8297370011



This is gotten out of hand but we are not dealing with reality here and neither is the government. :2 cents:

There are a lot of ways to reduce costs -- subsidizing publicly traded insurance companies is not one of them. We really have to cut the fat out of the system and concentrate more on preventative care -- it is not as profitable as trauma or chronic care -- but can prevent some of that in the first palace. Stop using the ER for a physicians office, establish walk-in public health clinics, etc ... If you look at countries that have comparable wage standards to the USA we are paying too much for too little.

Pretty sure hospitals aren't buying off a retail site and buy in bulk. That might be wholesale to someone who would be charged boatloads more via a home health service or whatever. Actual wholesale is what they pay for it. Which is probably more than a hospital buying in massive bulk.

The ONLY thing that will work is nationalization and that won't happen.

onwebcam 07-27-2017 08:21 PM

Senate pulling a late night session

"It appears that the Republican leader has a last-ditch plan waiting in the wings," Murray said on the floor. "As soon as they have an official score from the CBO, which could be hours from now, in the dead of night, Sen. McConnell will bring forward legislation that Democrats, patients and families, and even many Senate Republicans, have not seen and try to pass it before anyone can so much as blink."
Health care debate: Turmoil in Senate over 'skinny bill' - CNNPolitics.com

oppoten 07-27-2017 08:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 21915211)
Location: Global

Ya don'tz say.

Pls don't start threads about America. It's insulting to the patriotic posters, even if they won't say it.

Bladewire 07-27-2017 08:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by oppoten (Post 21917518)
Ya don'tz say.

Pls don't start threads about America. It's insulting to the patriotic posters, even if they won't say it.

He's in Michigan ant brain 🐜🐜🐜🐜

onwebcam 07-27-2017 09:01 PM

Pence arrives at the Capitol. It's going down tonight it seems.

Looks like they plan to pass this skinny repeal and full bill next. Dem Senators talking about working with them on "fixing" Obamacare admitting on floor it failed.

oppoten 07-27-2017 09:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 21917527)
He's in Michigan ant brain 🐜🐜🐜🐜


Barry-xlovecam 07-27-2017 09:14 PM

Sorry, I have been billed about $130K in the past 6 years. I was able to get insurance because of Obamacare. I had 3 minor strokes in 2007. I have PAD in my legs from arteriosclerosis. I have paid near $30K($36K?) now in insurance premiums and the insurance paid about $45K in benefits. The balance was the amount between the chargemaster pricing billed and insurance precontracted costs.

That is just for one insured person -- myself.

Ya know, money ain't worth shit if you are a vegetable or dead.

So go fuck yourself...


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