Quote:
Originally Posted by kane
I can actually speak to this with some authority. I used to have a catastrophic only policy. I work for myself and I have asthma so I was never able to buy regular health insurance and had to pay for most things out of pocket.
With Obamacare that changed. . . mostly. I am paying more for my coverage, but I get a whole lot more and in the long run I will end up saving money each year (not a lot, but I will save some and I have much better coverage).
There are many different medications for asthma. When I got my insurance they sent me a list of "approved" medications. These are medicines that I can get with a small co-pay (after the annual deductible is met). They had a separate list of medicines that I would have to pay more for. Typically my co pay would be around 30% of the cost of the medicine. There were still other medications that they would only cover if I had tried other (read cheaper) types of medication and my doctor wasn't happy with how they worked.
Luckily for me, the medicine I use was on the approved list otherwise I would have pay more for it or jump through a bunch of hoops in order to get a medicine covered.
So if you are like me it works great. If you are someone who needs a medication that is not on the approved list you may end up paying a lot more for it.
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You shouldn't have to be lucky for a law to work for you, should you?
For many people they are not going to be so lucky, that's why Obama keeps postponing things in the law, because he wants democrats to get elected, when people find out how the law effects them directly, they will only have the democrats to blame
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Carbon is not the problem, it makes up 0.041% of our atmosphere , 95% of that is from Volcanos and decomposing plants and stuff. So people in the US are responsible for 13% of the carbon in the atmosphere which 95% is not from Humans, like cars and trucks and stuff and they want to spend trillions to fix it while Solar Panel plants are powered by coal plants
think about that