What has been described as a nightmare and a train wreak continues to develop before our eyes. The latest furor broke out this week concerning the millions of Americans who
currently have health coverage under individual or small group plans, many started
getting notices from insurance companies that the new Obamacare regulations mean
that their current plans are being dropped. The focus appears to be on easing the impact for a specific group:
people whose policies have been canceled and who don't qualify for tax
credits to offset higher premiums. Seeking damage control the administration has countered with spin, and babble. Adding to the roll-out woes a Federal US appeals court last week ruled that the Obamacare birth control mandate is unconstitutional.
A president can't just pick up the phone and
order the
Treasury to cut checks for people suffering from insurance premium
sticker shock. Adjustments to subsidies would have to be authorized by law and no easy
fix is in sight that would not be "budget busting" and halt Obamacare in
its tracks. President Barack Obama says he'll do everything he can to help people
coping with health insurance cancellations, but legally and practically
his options appear limited. That means the latest political problem engulfing Obama's health care
overhaul will not be resolved quickly, cleanly or completely. White House deputy spokesman Josh Earnest said Friday that
the president has asked his team to look at administrative fixes to help
people whose plans are being canceled as a result of new federal
coverage rules. Many people see this as a fig leaf and more babble to soften calm the anger over what they see as a flat out lie from the mouth of the President.
As this unwinds several things are becoming crystal clear, last week hundreds of thousands of
cancellation letters went out to people who had been assured over a dozen
times by the president that "If you like your health care plan, you'll
be able to keep your health care plan. Period." The cancellations lay bare the reality of Obamacare and are irrefutable evidence that President Obama
's
repeated you-keep-your-coverage claim was false. Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler gave the president's claim four Pinocchios. Noses don't come any longer. Obama, in an NBC interview Thursday, said "I am sorry"
to people who are losing coverage and had relied on his assurances that
if they liked their plan, they could keep it. This doesn't help if you are one of the many now forced to pay hundreds more each month for coverage.
The new White House spin is
that the canceled plans were substandard and the new mandatory, often
costlier, plans will be better once the exchange website works, that
is. Secretary Sebelius apologized for the faulty website, but not for
mass cancellations. A recent speech in Boston by the President drew comparisons between the Massachusetts law and the
problem-plagued Affordable Care Act. During his speech, Obama acknowledged the problems with Obamacare and apologized for his clunky rollout. “There’s no denying it, right now the website is too slow, too many
people have gotten stuck and I’m not happy about it,” Obama said. Talking about the troubled launch of Obamacare he cited the
slow start of Massachusetts healthcare law that Mitt Romney as governor, signed in 2006.
Romney, who as the GOP's 2012 presidential nominee ran in part on
repealing ObamaCare, emerged from his post-election private life to
counter the White House message and distance himself from the Obamacare feasco. “In the years since the Massachusetts health care law went into
effect nothing has changed my view that a plan crafted to fit the unique
circumstances of a single state should not be grafted onto the entire
country,” he tweeted. “Health reform is best crafted by states with bipartisan support and
input from its employers, as we did, without raising taxes, and by
carefully phasing it in to avoid the type of disruptions we are seeing
nationally.”
The White House needs 7 million healthy young people to join the health care exchanges within the first year of the law to
keep premiums low for everyone under the Affordable Care Act. Many people see this botched roll-out of the Affordable Care Act or
‘Obamacare’ as an opening for Republicans to win over Hispanic
“millennials” that make up 20 percent of those age18-to-29. They are this generation’s largest
minority and as a whole their families are the most uninsured in the
United States. In fact, one-third of the nation’s 48 million uninsured
are Latinos. After more than a month of inoperable exchange websites, hundreds
of thousands of people getting booted off their current health
insurance plans and a congressional grilling of Health and Human
Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, many are starting to see this goal as unreachable.
Currently this law designed to cover the uninsured is throwing far
more people off their insurance than it can possibly be signing up on
the nonfunctioning insurance exchanges. Indeed, most of the 19 million
people with individual insurance will have to find new and likely more
expensive coverage. And that doesn't even include the additional
millions who are sure to lose their employer-provided coverage. That's a
lot of people. Perhaps Obama didn't know. maybe he was as surprised by this as he claims to have been by the IRS
scandal, The Associated Press and James Rosen phone logs, the failure
of the Obamacare website, the premeditation of the Benghazi attacks, and the
tapping of the German Chancellor
's phone.
"We canceled your
plan because it was substandard" followed by "we have a better idea" can be translated into: Sure, you liked your policy, but you don't know
what you need. What you really need is what our experts have determined must
be in every plan. So a couple in their 60s must buy maternity care, a teetotaler substance abuse
treatment, and a healthy 28-year-old with perfectly appropriate
catastrophic insurance must pay for coverage for which he has
no use. Fact is these required bells and
whistles aren't there as voter-pleasing freebies.
The planners knew all along that by forcing insurance buyers to overpay for stuff they don't need, that money
can subsidize other people. The light of day is showing Obamacare is not about healthcare, it is a massive transfer of wealth through hidden taxes, penalties, mandates and coverage
requirements that yield a surplus of overpayments.
Footnote; This post dovetails with many of my recent writings, for more I
might suggest reading the articles below. Other related articles may be
found in my blog archive, thanks for reading, your comments are
encouraged,
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/11/flaws-in-big-government-concept.html
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/06/obamacare-means-partime-work.html