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At best, Potter believes Obamacare will move millions of uninsured to underinsured, making them vulnerable to serious illness costs, the main cause of personal bankruptcies. When it happens, no Obamacare provision protects them from losing their homes.
As for prohibiting pre-existing conditions, the Senate bill especially gives insurers "all the flexibility they need" to prevent people from accessing coverage. Health history and age will determine premiums, so the chronically ill and aged will pay far more than the already unaffordable high rates.
The so-called medical-loss ratio is another problem. It determines what percent of premiums cover medical costs. The less restricted, the more profits (in the billions of dollars), and less care for policyholders.
Nader points out that even with more people covered, prices aren't regulated, "junk insurance policies" will be offered, and there's nothing to stop insurers "from taking this papier-mache bill and lighting a fire to it and making a mockery of it." They're unhindered by controls, and no facility will "create a national consumer health organization" to give people "their own non-profit consumer lobby (in) Washington. This is really a disaster."
Obamacare forces coverage on consumers, assesses penalties for noncompliance, empowers the IRS to collect them, protects corporate profits, rations care, and dumps millions of Americans (insured and millions left uninsured) in the scrap heap to fend for themselves. It's not a step forward. It's a full-scale retreat.
Obama is like Bush. He froze out dissenters, single-payer advocates, and surrounded himself with corporate hacks and warmongers. It's the same old, same old, the people getting scammed and harmed because no one in Washington represents them. Unless they act on their own, they'll get no help from politicians delivering the best reform money can buy, with no restrictions on spending amounts for it.
In June 2009 on a visit to Gaza, Jimmy Carter said "the citizens of Palestine are treated more like animals than like human beings." So will millions of Americans under Obamacare, a sellout scheme to provide less than they now have and charge more for it.
Kucinich said his constituents urged him to do something, rather than nothing even if it meant passing a bad bill. Unfortunately, most people don't know the tawdry fine print, that insurance giant Wellpoint wrote the Baucus bill, that corporations write virtually all legislation, that Obamacare gives America's healthcare system to predatory insurers and Big PhRMA, something Kucinich, Bernie Sanders, other progressive Democrats understand, but capitulated anyway. Why so?
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