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Edited on Sat Oct-05-13 11:30 AM by No Elephants
after the 2012 Presidential election (or, as it turned out, the Presidential re-election).
If you notice, the best parts of Obamacare went effective before the election. Kids on their parents' insurance and insurance for those with pre-existing conditions.
The worst part of Obamacare is the individual mandate and the worst impact of the mandate is on the young and healthy, who voted for Obama in 2008. So, those subject to the mandate--especially those too young to be grateful for insurance--may not be thrilled about the mandate or Obamacare in general. And the youth vote was important to Obama's victory in 2008.
Rather than risk finding out for sure in November 2012, kick it over to the start of the next fiscal year.
Also, maybe the waivers don't look that good to either Party.
On a different, but related, topic, the Supremes put an obstacle in one of the best parts of Obamacare, namely expansion of Medicaid. (I am not sure, but the coverage may be as good or even better than Medicare.) States that refused to expand Medicaid were supposed to lose all Medicaid funds. For reasons I still don't understand, the Supremes said that was not okay. So, now, thanks to the Supremes, states can refuse to expand Medicaid without penalty.
I should read the case again. When the case was first put online, I read it, but stopped after Roberts said that the government is within its power to require us to buy stuff from private vendors or pay a new "tax."
The reasoning was not limited to health insurance, either. It's a horrifying precedent, the exact opposite of liberal, which is what fools were calling Roberts' decision.
Anyway, I literally got nauseous thinking about the slippery slope that the SCOTUS had created in order to uphold the mandate and I could not bear to read further. Have not gone back to the opinion since.
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