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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Friday, January 29, 2016

Top Democrat: 'We Had The Votes' For Single-Payer



Can we stop pretending?

A woman called NPR during a discussion about HEALTH CARE.
Her partner became seriously ill, required much lengthy medical care, they were both on Medicare.
The deductibles and co-pays on Medicare were so extreme, that when her partner died, she was forced to sell the home they had shared for many years to simply pay the remaining medical bills.

She was destitute.

Why should anyone be at risk of financial destruction or bankruptcy because of medical care?

This defines the Moral Bankruptcy of a nation that continues to WAGE ENDLESS WARS and shortchanges its citizens.


The Lock Step Democratic Party is destroying itself!
previous comment:
If Nancy Pelosi wants to distance herself from a 'tax plan' that would save 95% of Americans a thousand bucks a year or more (since they'd have no insurance premiums anymore), then I think it's time for the Democratic Party to distance itself from Nancy Pelosi.
If elected leaders aren't willing to at least stand up and say something is a good idea -- an idea Nancy Pelosi has supported for decades before Bernie ran for President, BTW -- then they shouldn't be our elected leaders anymore.
As a Democrat, I want a party that fights and has a backbone.

Pelosi distances Democrats from Sanders's plan to raise taxes



Greg Nash
Democrats are not on board with the tax hikes Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has proposed to pay for his single-payer healthcare proposal, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said Wednesday.
"We're not running on any platform of raising taxes," Pelosi said during a press briefing to launch the Democrats' yearly issues conference in Baltimore, Md. "We do want to have a fairer tax system, and … we hope that we can do that this year."
Sanders on Monday acknowledged that his "Medicare-for-all" healthcare plan would require tax hikes on the middle class.
“We will raise taxes, yes we will,” Sanders said during a Democratic town hall in Des Moines, Iowa.
The Vermont senator, who's running neck and neck with front-runner Hillary Clinton in Iowa just days ahead of the state's caucuses, emphasized that the individual savings achieved under his healthcare plan would offset the costs of the tax increase. He called critics of the strategy “disingenuous.”
Clinton supporters were quick to pounce, saying Sanders's plan differs from her vow not to raise taxes on middle income Americans.
Pelosi was quick to note that she's supported the single-payer strategy for decades. But the nation's healthcare system has evolved in a different direction, she said, and the political conditions are simply not ripe to scrap the existing infrastructure in favor of Medicare-for-all. 
"He's talking about a single-payer, and that's not going to happen. I mean, does anybody in this room think that we're going to be discussing a single-payer?" she asked. "I've been for single-payer for 30 years, and it is a very popular idea in our country. But we have made a decision about where we're going on healthcare." 
Pelosi, who was a crucial force in ushering the Affordable Care Act through Congress in 2009 and 2010, said she's "proud" of the achievement, citing the millions of uninsured Americans who have gained access to health coverage under the law.
"It has achieved the goal of affordable, quality, accessible healthcare for many millions more Americans. It is lowering the cost of healthcare in our country," she said.
Pelosi said the Democrats fought to ensure that the healthcare law included features that are "attractive about single-payer," including provisions barring insurance companies from excluding patients based on pre-existing conditions or establishing lifetime limits on coverage. She conceded imperfections in the law and vowed to work on improvements.
"We have a very realistic plan that's out there," she said. "Can it be improved upon? Everything can. But it's no use having a conversation about something that's not going to happen. 
"Right now we're proud of what we have," she said, "and want to build upon that."
Pelosi, who as Speaker of the House was the highest-ranking female elected official in the nation's history, has repeatedly hailed the notion of having a woman in the White House. But unlike many of her top lieutenants, she has not endorsed a primary candidate, choosing instead to highlight the "shared values" of the three Democratic contenders. 
On Wednesday she amplified that message, calling on Democrats of all persuasions to come to the polls in November — regardless of which name tops the ballot. 
"The fact is that Bernie Sanders is enlarging the universe of people who are paying attention to the election, and we hope that he will bring them to the polls in November to support the Democratic nominee," she said.
"There are differences of opinion in terms of approach, but every one of our candidates shares … concern about all Americans participating in the full prosperity of our country."
The Democrats' issues conference, running through Friday, adopts a theme of unity the leaders are hoping will draw stark contrasts with a Republican conference that's been sharply divided in recent years on major policy issues, particularly government spending.
Rep. Steny Hoyer (Md.), the Democratic whip, chastised the Republicans for focusing their legislative agenda on efforts to undo President Obama's achievements without offering alternatives of their own.
"Sixty-two times repealing the Affordable Care Act is not sufficient," Hoyer said Wednesday. "They need to show what they want to replace it with and let the American public understand the consequences of their proposals." 
Both President Obama and Vice President Biden are scheduled to address the Democrats in Baltimore.










Published on Dec 3, 2014
Retiring Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA), who helped oversee the drafting of the Affordable Care Act, lamented in a recent interview that the law had become compromised amid the political turmoil that surrounded its passage...

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Clip from the Wednesday, December 3rd 2014 edition of The Kyle Kulinski Show, which airs live on Blog Talk Radio and Secular Talk Radio monday - friday 4-6pm Eastern.

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