Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News

Drudge Retort

Menu

Subscriptions

Drudge Retort RSS feed RSS Feed

Links

Recent Comments

Recent comments from all news stories on this site. Users must follow the site's moderation policy. Personal attacks, profanity, abusive conduct and expressions of prejudice are not allowed. If you want to retrieve a comment of yours that was recently deleted, visit your user page and click the Moderation link.

(continued from above)

When the ACA was written, it said subsidies were for exchanges "established by the State." That made sense when everyone thought states would cooperate but many didn't. So opponents sued, complaining that people who bought insurance through the federal exchange weren't allowed to get those tax credits. The case, King v. Burwell (2015), went all the way to the Supreme Court.

The Court ruled that Congress meant for subsidies to apply nationwide, whether a state or the federal government ran the exchange. That ruling saved the ACA, but it exposed how fragile it really was. One poorly worded sentence, "established by the State.", nearly destroyed the entire law. Another wrench in the grand plan.

Then came yet another one. The individual mandate penalty for not buying insurance was repealed, thus depriving the grand plan of much needed revenue.

Things haven't worked out the way the architects promised. Yes...some lower income Americans gained coverage, but employer group plans have continued climbing. Self-insured have been squeezed. A huge problem was that cost controls were largely ignored. Furthermore, Congress never allowed cross-state competition, which could have lowered costs by putting pressure on insurance providers. ACA would have never passed if they had.

That brick wall for businesses is still there. Employees covered by employer plans are generally ineligible for subsidized exchange coverage, as are their spouses if the employer's plan meets ACA affordability rules.

Something is still broken in the system. Hospitals, pharmaceuticals, administration, and government regulation continue driving up costs and no one has the backbone to fix them.

Democrats won't touch their signature program, and Republicans still haven't offered a serious, workable alternative.
So here we are, decades later, staring at the same brick wall I saw coming forty years ago.

Then came Trump.

Dan,
"I knew. Forty years ago."

As did I.

My accounting career, I talked with many owners and accounting managers, and something I saw was alarming. Over and over again, every company I worked with had one thing in common. When their annual group health insurance renewal arrived, the premium had typically increased five to ten percent, in that ballpark.

Year after year, those rate hikes outpaced inflation and consumed a bigger share (percent) of sales revenue than nearly every other expense on their books.

That spelled trouble for companies that had, for years, just absorbed the increases while still offering free health insurance for employees. I even knew one company that provided free family coverage until the late 80s.

At that rate, a brick wall was inevitable. It was just a matter of time. Something was wrong then, and it's still wrong now.

The government eventually stepped in with a grand plan called the Affordable Care Act (ACA) or Obamacare which was supposed to fix the system by spreading out risk and making insurance affordable for everyone. It offered federal premium tax credits (subsidies) for people who bought coverage on new state-run insurance exchanges, along with a mandate requiring everyone to have and pay for health insurance.

The idea was simple. Healthy young people who often skipped insurance would now pay in, spreading and balancing costs for everyone else.
But there was a problem. Many states refused to create their own exchanges or expand Medicaid. That forced Washington to step in and build a massive federal exchange what we now know as Healthcare.gov (as a backup).

It was never supposed to be the main system, but suddenly it was. That was the first wrench in the grand plan.
Then came another one, even bigger.

(continued)

US airlines cancel over 1,000 flights for a second straight day largely due to Trumpstein shutdown

www.yahoo.com

Putin has to be thrilled that his orange bitch is destroying the United States.

antichrist45.com

For anyone who may not have seen or read it.

If he's not the AC, he's his twin brother.

1492 is remembered in the West for Christopher Columbus landing in the New World and claiming it for the Spanish Empire. In the Middle East, 1492 is remembered for the Turkish Ottoman Empire taking in 150,000 Sephardic Jews being persecuted by the Spanish Inquisition. In the Ottoman Empire and then Turkiye, they spoke "Ladino" at home and in the synagogues.

In the post-WII era, the Turkish and Israeli intelligence agencies cooperated at unparalleled levels along with the US.

After the rise of the Likud Party, Benjamin Netanyahu's blatant rubbishing of the Two-state solution, and the ethnic cleansing in Gaza and the West Bank, this core intelligence relationship has been Humpty-Dumptied.

In the US, headlines would report an Israeli hostage was freed (Yippee!); in Europe or the Middle East the headlines would report "another 20 Palestinians killed by the IDF."

Therefore European, Middle Eastern, and African animosity for Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli brutality is much stronger there than in the US, as witnessed by the massive labor actions in Italy and Greece, the food flotillas for Gaza, and the efforts to ban Israel from FIFA and Eurovision.

The despicable Benjamin Netanyahu has turned Israel into a Pariah nation and Rogue state, increased antisemitism globally, while inexplicably being applauded by sections of the American population.

Netanyahu Humpty-Dumptied Turco-Israeli relations possibly forever.

Historically, the Turks had assigned special guards to protect the Chief Rabbi of Istanbul.




Drudge Retort

Home | Breaking News | Comments | User Blogs | Stats | Back Page | RSS Feed | RSS Spec | DMCA Compliance | Privacy