Amibguous Cad
Member
It's not even up to 22 million dead. You don't need to quantify the number of deaths to get the taking point access. How about just using "many" or "significant"?
Pretty easily, actually.
I mean, they're not hard and fast, but obamacare was a wonderful natural experiment, in that some states took the Medicaid expansion and some didn't. You can compare how far the fatality rate fell in states that took Medicaid expansion to the states that didn't, weighted for number of additional people covered by insurance. Crunching the numbers you're at a little over 1,000 deaths for every million uninsured. Vox ran the numbers here:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.vo...17/3/14/14921962/ahca-mortality-gun-homicides
I wouldn't trust any specific number, but every estimate is on the same order of magnitude. We're talking about tens of thousands of people a year.
If Vox's estimate is correct, the federal government would save lives by dropping a nuclear bomb on Santa Fe instead of passing the bill.
In its first year it would kill more Americans than the war in Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, and every terrorist attack since the founding of the Republic.
By it's third year it will have killed more Americans than the Vietnam War.
If it's not stopped, the death toll by its twentieth anniversary will outstrip American casualties in World War II.