Obamacare was an attempt?The country's first black president never pursued policies bold enough to close the racial wealth gap.
Conclusions. The ACA has reduced racial/ethnic disparities in coverage, although substantial disparities remain. Further increases in coverage will require Medicaid expansion by more states and improved program take-up in states that have already done so.LOL...you need help.
Conclusions. The ACA has reduced racial/ethnic disparities in coverage, although substantial disparities remain. Further increases in coverage will require Medicaid expansion by more states and improved program take-up in states that have already done so.
Large disparities in health insurance coverage related to race and ethnicity are a long-standing feature of the US health care system and a cause for concern among policymakers and health care professionals. Several studies have identified these differences in insurance coverage as an important determinant of disparities in access to care.1–5 In addition, a growing literature shows that by reducing exposure to large medical expenses, health insurance leads to better financial outcomes, such as improved credit scores and a reduced risk of bankruptcy.6–9 Thus, policies that reduce disparities in health insurance coverage are likely to have a broader effect on economic inequality.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has made new health insurance options available to uninsured individuals in low- and middle-income households, a group in which Blacks and Hispanics are overrepresented. A recent study by McMorrow et al.10 that used data from the National Health Interview Survey found that although the uninsured rate declined overall between 2013 and 2014, it decreased by a larger amount among Black and Hispanic adults than among White adults (8 percentage points vs 4 percentage points). The uninsured rate for Black and Hispanic adults decreased significantly in states that embraced the ACA’s Medicaid expansion and also in those that did not. For White adults, the percentage uninsured declined in both sets of states, although the estimated change was not statistically significant in nonexpansion states.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4940635/
You have lost what little credibility you had with your posts in this thread, OBooma. So, Obama signed Obamacare because he wanted to close the racial wealth gap? Link CNN or whatever other left-wing source that you have for this assertion. Your posting this bullsh!t would be like my posting that Trump isn't brash, arrogant or confrontational. Your hero Obama's policies didn't narrow the wage gap, and the numbers prove it. Look them up.It was a bold policy that ATTEMPTED to address the income gap. You said he made no attempt, I said he did. Whether the ACA worked or not, is another discussion.
I didn’t even vote for him in ‘12, so I think you’re way off. And I’ll say AGAIN it working is another discussion. The ACA was Obama’s big try, it was bold, it was designed to help close the income gap - the reasons why it could’ve POTENTIALLY closed the gap are well described in the article I linked.You have lost what little credibility you had with your posts in this thread, OBooma. So, Obama signed Obamacare because he wanted to close the racial wealth gap? Link CNN or whatever other left-wing source that you have for this assertion. Your posting this bullsh!t would be like my posting that Trump isn't brash, arrogant or confrontational. Your hero Obama's policies didn't narrow the wage gap, and the numbers prove it. Look them up.
Correct. Couldn’t have articulated the failures of the ACA any better and why it’s a bad idea."Obamacare failed because it allowed Americans to sign up after they got sick and needed help paying all those medical bills. Insurance should be structured so that, although you don't know if you'll need it, you pay for it anyway, just in case; your alternative is financial doom. But if you can game the system and, for example, buy auto coverage after you crash into your garage, then you have no incentive to buy insurance beforehand."
But the problem is that you have to have one of the following two:
1. Force people to buy insurance, which means the healthy people that don't need a lot of health care are subsidizing the sick people that do need a lot of health care. But if you do this, the people being forced to buy insurance will scream bloody murder.
2. Don't force people to buy insurance, in which case healthy people won't buy it and the sick people will buy it but be charged a fortune because it's not subsidized by healthy people.
The best laid plans of mice and men...I didn’t even vote for him in ‘12, so I think you’re way off. And I’ll say AGAIN it working is another discussion. The ACA was Obama’s big try, it was bold, it was designed to help close the income gap - the reasons why it could’ve POTENTIALLY closed the gap are well described in the article I linked.
Correct. Couldn’t have articulated the failures of the ACA any better and why it’s a bad idea.
It was a bold policy that ATTEMPTED to address the income gap. You said he made no attempt, I said he did. Whether the ACA worked or not, is another discussion.
Obama was never impeached.
Thanks for the history lesson that we’re all well aware of, new guy. The individual mandate was repealed. My heartburn with it is over. It’ll succeed or it won’t. If it doesn’t, and let’s be honest, unless the left infuses massive amounts of change and money into it, it’s going to fail, it’ll be the death rattle for liberal policies as it was the most signature piece of legislation since LBJs ********. We have 60 years of failure tied to those and you all just keep on trying to dump money.Obamacare was promulgated to provide medical insurance coverage to millions of uninsured Americans. It included those previously not eligible for coverage, especially persons with pre-existing conditions. It also mandated that insurance companies include ten (10) essential benefits.The ACA’s primary goal was to mitigate the rising cost of health care. It allowed people to afford reasonable preventive care rather than wait for expensive emergency services to befall them. It also sought to help low-income earners by expanding Medicaid eligibility.Although Congress made major changes to Obamacare, the ACA still remains strongly in place. Trump has made repeated attempts to repeal it, though he has not yet presented any viable health care replacement nor has the Republican party. Recent polling regarding the ACA indicates that 49% of Americans remain strongly in favor of the Act, 47% oppose it.
Woulda, coulda, shoulda, but I understand the distinction between pie-in-the-sky hope and actually achieving a desired result. You and I apparently agree that Obamacare has been a failure. What we disagree about is the motivation for passing Obamacare. The Democrats argued that access to healthcare was a fundamental human right, and that providing such access was essential because people without insurance wouldn't receive medical care. Of course, this was a lie, with respect to emergency care, as most hospitals treat people regardless of whether they have insurance. In any event, the motivation for Obamacare was allegedly health care access for all. Saying that it was motivated by narrowing the "racial wealth gap" is incorrect. Raising the minimum wage would be a different story.I didn’t even vote for him in ‘12, so I think you’re way off. And I’ll say AGAIN it working is another discussion. The ACA was Obama’s big try, it was bold, it was designed to help close the income gap - the reasons why it could’ve POTENTIALLY closed the gap are well described in the article I linked.
Thanks for the history lesson that we’re all well aware of, new guy. The individual mandate was repealed. My heartburn with it is over. It’ll succeed or it won’t. If it doesn’t, and let’s be honest, unless the left infuses massive amounts of change and money into it, it’s going to fail, it’ll be the death rattle for liberal policies as it was the most signature piece of legislation since LBJs ********. We have 60 years of failure tied to those and you all just keep on trying to dump money.
10 more years boys, 10 more years. I’m heading out of the US, burning my passport when I land either in the Islands or central/South America and you all can have this fvcking lunatic asylum. You need me, I’ll be the gringo in flip flops with a nice tan telling the latest Marlin or Sailfish story coming off my boat and heading to my restaurant.
Your OP said he made no attempt - geniusYou said it was an attempt. I said it was failure. Get it right Mustafa.
Obamacare was promulgated to provide medical insurance coverage to millions of uninsured Americans. It included those previously not eligible for coverage, especially persons with pre-existing conditions. It also mandated that insurance companies include ten (10) essential benefits.The ACA’s primary goal was to mitigate the rising cost of health care. It allowed people to afford reasonable preventive care rather than wait for expensive emergency services to befall them. It also sought to help low-income earners by expanding Medicaid eligibility.Although Congress made major changes to Obamacare, the ACA still remains strongly in place. Trump has made repeated attempts to repeal it, though he has not yet presented any viable health care replacement nor has the Republican party. Recent polling regarding the ACA indicates that 49% of Americans remain strongly in favor of the Act, 47% oppose it.
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS:Woulda, coulda, shoulda, but I understand the distinction between pie-in-the-sky hope and actually achieving a desired result. You and I apparently agree that Obamacare has been a failure. What we disagree about is the motivation for passing Obamacare. The Democrats argued that access to healthcare was a fundamental human right, and that providing such access was essential because people without insurance wouldn't receive medical care. Of course, this was a lie, with respect to emergency care, as most hospitals treat people regardless of whether they have insurance. In any event, the motivation for Obamacare was allegedly health care access for all. Saying that it was motivated by narrowing the "racial wealth gap" is incorrect. Raising the minimum wage would be a different story.
As I said: that’s another discussion. I’m not debating it that it did not failAttempted failed
As I said: that’s another discussion. I’m not debating it that it did not fail
You changed the topic when accurately disputed your OP. Nothing about the ACA specifically in the above post is there? I brought up the ACA as the BOLD POLICY HE PURSUED TO CLOSE THE RACIAL INCOME GAP (a gap, btw, that Obama always stayed was based on demographics but not race).The country's first black president never pursued policies bold enough to close the racial wealth gap.
He believed it would help, and it was a bold policy that he pursued to do so.I concede your point, OBooma. Obama was far dumber than I realized, as he apparently had the illusion that Obamacare was a panacea for wage disparity, even as his cronies on the Left used much different propaganda to sell this pig in a poke.
You changed the topic when accurately disputed your OP. Nothing about the ACA specifically in the above post is there? I brought up the ACA as the BOLD POLICY HE PURSUED TO CLOSE THE RACIAL INCOME GAP (a gap, btw, that Obama always stayed was based on demographics but not race).
Correct. Couldn’t have articulated the failures of the ACA any better and why it’s a bad idea.
I don't know the details of the ACA. I thought there was part of it that forced people that opted out to pay a fee. But regardless, I don't think the root problem is that healthy people that don't have insurance are forced to buy it, rather it's that if you try to force healthy people that don't have insurance to buy it, they'll scream bloody murder because you're forcing them to buy something they don't want to buy. They, understandably, don't want to spend money on something on which they get no return.
But the problem is if they do eventually become sick it bankrupts them and/or society has to pay for their medical care, which means they de facto do have health insurance but they aren't paying for it.
And aside from that, another problem is that health care costs a lot.
Yeah, I could post your OP again again, if it helps with the struggle you’re having reading the words in the thread.You changed the the topic from failed to attempt
Ok. I never said it was successful or smart - I said it was his BOLD POLICY ATTEMPT to address the income gap. So....keep jackin each other off over O’s failures, I realize it’s the best white conservative porn there is, that jobs report probably helps too.Yeah, Obama was bold...and incredibly stupid, OBooma. Even dumber than I realized.
Can you post, in this thread, where I disputed that?Do you understand what "distinction without a difference" means, Boom? Obamacare has been a failure, regardless of anybody's true motivation for its enactment.
So says the orange man hater who pounds his peter every time Trump farts in public.Ok. I never said it was successful or smart - I said it was his BOLD POLICY ATTEMPT to address the income gap. So....keep jackin each other off over O’s failures, I realize it’s the best white conservative porn there is, that jobs report probably helps too.
You're missing my point. You've made yours...over and over again...but it makes no difference. It has been a failed policy, and the wage gap increased under Obama/Biden. Their administration was a one-trick pony, but the horse died. You want to give them a participation ribbon for "trying," so good for you. They shouldn't have hitched their wagon to Obamacare as a wage-gap solution, and the numbers prove it, sorry.Can you post, in this thread, where I disputed that?
Then you should’ve said that in the thread title (Oh that’s right, it wasn’t you- it was your teammate) - I wouldn’t have posted in it. And I do think big O should get credit for trying something bold, status quo ain’t changing without somethin bold, imo.You're missing my point. You've made yours...over and over again...but it makes no difference. It has been a failed policy, and the wage gap increased under Obama/Biden. Their administration was a one-trick pony, but the horse died. You want to give them a participation ribbon for "trying," so good for you. They shouldn't have hitched their wagon to Obamacare as a wage-gap solution, and the numbers prove it, sorry.
Anyone who is working pays for medicare even the person you say does not want the insurance. It's taken out in the form of Social Security.