Are You Aware That Some Big Organizations Support Health Insurance Reform?

Posted on 23. Oct, 2009 by in Health Reform

Thе American Diabetes Association hаѕ аn οn-line petition tο support shape reform. Thе American Cancer Society called mу home yesterday talking аbουt thеіr support οf Shape Insurance Reform.http://main.diabetes.org/site/PageServer… Thе ADA link.
Thеѕе groups work wіth sick people wіth аnd without insurance еνеrу day. Thе see thе effects οf thе insurance crisis іn thе lives οf everyday people.
Arе thеѕе groups evil, аrе thеу supporting thіѕ bесаυѕе THEY wіll benefit, οr dο уου suppose thеу really see thе need fοr reform?

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15 Responses to “Are You Aware That Some Big Organizations Support Health Insurance Reform?”

  1. PJ

    23. Oct, 2009

    So? Most of Iran desires to Nuke Israeel. I don’t support that.

  2. Nikki

    23. Oct, 2009

    Some people just don’t want to see evidence that shape care reform is wanted and needed.
    The fantastic majority of AARP membership support reform, as well.
    Drew Nannis, a spokesman for the organization in Washington, D.C., told the AP on Monday. Nannis said it wasn’t scarce for the powerful, 40 million-passionate senior citizens’ lobby to lose members when it’s advocating on a controversial issue.
    AARP loses about 300,000 members a month on average but also gains members, he said.

  3. oohhboth

    23. Oct, 2009

    The AMA and insurance companies fought it in 1994, but everyone (at least those with any intelligence) now admits that our present system needs to be reformed if it is not to end. So, being practical, each group now desires to cooperate in the hopes of steering the final plot a small in their direction, while some insurers are just trying to falter the inevitable a bit longer by adage the plot is not ready for prime-time.
    The government steps in when private companies cannot or will not provide air force needed by the broadcast. In 1970, Nixon made Amtrak, after the Penn Central Railroad collapsed, because (after a century of profitable operation) railroads said they simply could no longer offer reliable scheduled passenger rail service to all foremost cities without government help. Medicare was a response to the fact that insurers simply did not find it profitable to provide reasonably priced shape insurance to those over 65.
    If insurance companies reckon they can offer reasonably priced shape insurance to every American without exclusion and not just the ones they find profitable, I say we let them try. Obama desires a broadcast option in place now, just in case their Amtrak day comes sooner rather than later.

  4. brucec83

    23. Oct, 2009

    Organizations like the ones you list really care about people. The insurance industry only cares about profits. Take a look at this moment on “Morning Joe” when Congressman Anthony Weiner (D-NY)befuddles former congressman Joe Scarborough (R-FL)–it really makes the whole argument for you.
    I’d be curious if any of the right wingers can resolution the excellent congressman’s question.

  5. csunharl

    23. Oct, 2009

    Most everybody is in favor of insurance reform.
    Very few are in favor of a broadcast ‘option’ that will eventually be a broadcast mandate and make the frame work for socialism that it is very likely we will never restore from.
    Insurance reform MUST start with tort reform. If frivolous law suits continue, all the reform in the world won’t make a difference.
    Don’t fail to differentiate being against the plans in congress with being against reform because that is just not right.

  6. JimSock

    23. Oct, 2009

    I don’t know their motivation. Do you reckon there might be a difference between the opinions of people who professionally treat the sick and the sick themselves? I am not adage that what we have does not need work, but forever charitable away the possibility of hegemony or participation into some bureaucratic monolith should not be something we blindly stumble into. We should look at it under a microscope and ensure that it is seamless. What is being offered falls terribly shy of that mark or any other mark for that fact, a mountain of misnamings, fabrications, contradictions all laced together with incompetence. Would you get on an airplane sporting this much duct tape?

  7. paul s

    23. Oct, 2009

    Yeah and how much funding do they reckon Obama is charitable them ! Look how he paid back the UAW and ACORN for there small jobs !
    Jim Sock 51% of Americans are against this bill if you look at the polls !
    oohhoh AARP is a liberal group don’t kid yourself ! That is why my husband and I won’t join them, they are looking out for there own pockets not seniors ! The 70,000 they have lost have torn up the cards and are adage it is because of this bill !

  8. old_quil

    23. Oct, 2009

    Hospice is all over too. They are a respectable company that does the very same thing in some area’s. I worked for them and got paid hourly.
    I’m not sure where they get their cash to stay in business. Maybe from gov grants etc…
    The patients that have insurance they are billed. Yes everyone out their is not out to get you. I like to reckon there are still some excellent people left out there.

  9. MISSY

    23. Oct, 2009

    There is no direct monetary benefit to these organizations. The corporations spending millions on PR firms to convince the American people to go against their own interests, that is another tale.

  10. Yakov Smirnov

    23. Oct, 2009

    Yes. Are you aware that Obama’s right hand man will make millions from healthcare reform from pharmaceutical companies? I bet you aren’t.

  11. goodluck

    23. Oct, 2009

    All the medical associations support it because it will save lives and improve our current system.

  12. Bush Lied Millions Died

    23. Oct, 2009

    somehow they end up making cash off of it…
    AARP has lost about 70,000 people because of their supporting it…..

  13. everythi

    23. Oct, 2009

    Just had to question but who is Obama’s right hand man?

  14. Christop

    23. Oct, 2009

    No one is adage we don’t need reform. We just don’t want it to be government run!

  15. Hambone

    23. Oct, 2009

    well they can do it for free then if they really want to help those people

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