33. State
Healthcare Exchanges 1
So Obamacare claims it will
insure “everyone”. Well, we’ve already shown
that that’s not true. This law plans to
expand Medicaid and other government-run insurance programs in order to insure
another 30 million or so Americans, but how?
Well, through the establishment of State Healthcare Exchanges. Each state is supposed to set up yet another
government bureaucracy that will act essentially like an insurance brokerage,
helping folks to find an insurance plan that works for them. Sounds good, right? What could be wrong with that? Lots of things!
First of all, we don’t need
them! We have thousands of private
insurance agents who make their living providing advice and guidance on
insurance products that individuals or businesses can access for their
healthcare. There are problems with the
system, granted, but the agents themselves, and their role, is not one of those
problems.
The REAL purpose of the
Obamacare exchanges is to distribute our taxpayer dollars to people who go thru
the exchange for their health insurance.
Unless a patient goes thru the exchange, they won’t be eligible for what
is called a “premium subsidy”: money to help them pay for the very expensive
policies that everyone will be required to buy under the law. According to Obamacare, a family making up to
$89,000 a year can qualify for money to help them pay for their insurance
policy—a policy that the government forces them to purchase or face a penalty
of thousands of dollars a year. And with
an expected premium price of $13-20,000 per year, it’s not a wonder that
they’ll need help paying for it!
If an insurance exchange is
such a great idea, and so necessary, let the insurance companies, or some other
private entity, do it. Oh wait, they
already have done it!
Ehealthinsurance.com is an online business that already does that! In fact, the state of Louisianna already uses
ehealthinsurance.com for their state insurance exchange—they’ve had it running
for years. It cost about $1.5 million to
set up and about $1 million per year to run.
Contrast that to the $45 million that Colorado is already set to spend
setting up their exchange—taxpayer dollars mind you. And Colorado doesn’t even know how much it’ll
cost in taxpayer dollars to continue to run it every year after that. Do you hear a giant sucking sound? That’s the money being sucked out of your
child’s college fund, or your retirement account.
So the government will be
spending billions of dollars of our hard-earned money to pay for a bureaucracy
we don’t need, to force us to buy insurance we don’t want, at a price that we
can’t afford. Are you kidding me??
34. State Health Exchanges 2
The implementation of
Obamacare hinges on the establishment of healthcare exchanges in every
state. Without the exchanges, Obamacare
would be unenforceable, impotent. These exchanges will be either government or
non-profit private entities. The
policies they will offer will be required to meet the criteria of what they are
calling a “qualified health plan”—that is, a plan that includes a set list of
mandates or coverages. We already talked
about the fact that the more coverages that are included in an insurance
policy, the more expensive the premiums are.
The final official list of mandates hasn’t been released yet, but when
the law was passed, the list included things like emergency care,
hospitalization, mental health services, maternity and newborn care, pediatric
services and vaccinations, preventive services, things like that. I don’t know about you, but I don’t need
maternity care or pediatric services.
But anyone getting a policy thru the exchange will have to pay for
it. With a few minor exceptions, all
policies offered thru an exchange will be the same—there’s almost no
flexibility. No policies sold thru the
exchange can offer fewer coverages—which would make them more affordable of
course—nope, can’t have that.
So, how are all the states
doing with setting up these exchanges?
The deadline to submit a plan to the Secretary of HHS is November 13,
2012, so they don’t have much time. As
of Sept 12, 2012, 18 states and the District of Columbia have agreed to set up
exchanges. So 32 states are either
refusing to set up an exchange, or they’re waiting to see what happens with
this election. But get this—not one
state has a completed plan for an exchange that has been approved by the
government yet! Not one.
Now, if a state doesn’t set up an Exchange
that’s acceptable to Secretary Sebelius, the Federal government will supposedly
come in and set one up. So much for states’ rights, the 10th
Amendment. Funny thing is
tho’—according to the Obamacare law,
if an exchange is set up by the Fed, there can’t be any premium subsidies or
penalties on employers. Well now, that
just negates the whole purpose for the exchanges, doesn’t it! So now, President Obama has decided that he
can ignore what the law says and just give the right to distribute subsidies
and penalize employers to the IRS—which is apparently not supposed to be
allowed under our laws. Does this
administration think that they can just make
up the laws? Force sovereign states to set up bureaucracies that they’ll have to pay for? Force American citizens to purchase a product
just because the Democrats think they should? That’s exactly what they think. And that’s exactly why they need to be voted
out of office.
(Note: This commentary is by Dr. Jill Vecchio.)