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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, April 4, 2014

Bravo KY Guv Steve Beshear! Daily Kos: Kentucky isn't done enrolling people

ALL Americans should have health care!

It defines the Moral Bankruptcy and Racism of the GOP, the Dirty Energy Koch Brothers, FAUX News and others who OPPOSE providing Health Care.

Please VOTE! And remember who fought for Americans.

Daily Kos Recommended

MUST READ:

Gov. Beshear participates in the Lexington kick-off of kynect, Kentucky's health benefit exchange. October 2, 2013.
Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear is not finished yet.
Terrible news for Mitch McConnell.
Following a surge in last-minute applications, Gov. Steve Beshear announced Tuesday that the state will extend its deadline. People will be able to file for health insurance from April 4 to April 11.

The official deadline had been midnight March 31. Gwenda Bond, spokeswoman for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, said 21,000 people signed up over the weekend, including 12,000 people who signed up Monday. The deadline affected only those signing up for private health insurance, because those eligible for Medicaid can apply at any time.
Wait, they can do that? Other states should follow suit!

Prior to the ACA, there were about 640,000 uninsured in Kentucky. Thanks to the law, 370,000 have now enrolled, 293,000 signed up for Medicaid, the other 77,000 for private insurance. That's 370,000 people who McConnell wants to strip of their newfound insurance.

In the last off-year Senate election in Kentucky, there were 1.35 million voters. Rand Paul won that race with 775,000 votes, to 600,000 votes for Democratic Attorney General Jack Conway.
We don't know how many of these newly insured 370,000 Kentuckians voted in 2010, but in raw numbers, ACA beneficiaries are now about 27 percent of that 2010 electorate, and they (and their families, friends, and co-workers) have extra motivation to protect the program.

With this extension, Democratic governor Steve Beshear is looking to grow that pool even more.

There is certainly altruism involved—there is still a need to insure hundreds of thousands of people in the state. But if it comes with a side-serving of good politics as well? Why, no problem with that!

Republicans didn't need to stand against this. They could've been good negotiating partners along the entire way. Heck, Democrats adopted a Heritage Foundation-designed plan as a good-will gesture to bring them aboard. And still they refused.

So if helping people means hurting Republican electoral chances, so be it. They made their bed.
Excerpt: Yep, if we take action to prevent pay discrimination against women, men might risk facing a small dose of what women face every day. The poor dears. Except, of course, that won't happen, as a Chamber of Commerce (!) representative assured Alexander.
This sort of fear seems to underlie so much of Republican politics—the fear that if things are a little bit more fair for a group that's faced discrimination and inequality for generations, the old straight white guys who've benefited from that discrimination and inequality will lose a little bit of their edge. And if they lose that edge, if they aren't on the winning side of discrimination, that's like being discriminated against themselves, by their way of thinking.
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