The vast majority of people are also required to have home insurance. The bank wouldn't even think about giving anyone a mortgage without it.
I know it was just part of my mortgage process. It wasn't even optional or anything.
Is he trying to equate health insurance to car and home?
Car insurance is cheap because it is MANDATED to have it if you drive. Safe deivers also cause this to be cheap.
Home insurance is gotten just incase something happens to the house.. in my case it's a hurricane.
I can't believe people eat this up
Sean Spicer on healthcare: "I think if you're an older man you can generally say that you're not going to need maternity care."
Hell, I wouldn't have been able to rent my current apartment without at least $100,000 of liability insurance. Hard stop. Not optional.
On the flip, every renter in Atlanta getting insurance means that coverage is only $25/mo.
Spicer: We're focused on getting it done and winning.
Don't they they understand what winning is.
Pre-existing conditions was like the entire point of health care reform, beyond even lifetime limits or nonsurance policies. The whole twisted structure of the ACA was to answer "how do we deal with people too sick to insure if a public solution is off the table?"
Otherwise we are indeed back to 2009, just with expanded HSAs and a Medicaid work requirement.
Pre-existing conditions was like the entire point of health care reform, beyond even lifetime limits or nonsurance policies. The whole twisted structure of the ACA was to answer "how do we deal with people too sick to insure if a public solution is off the table?"
Otherwise we are indeed back to 2009, just with expanded HSAs and a Medicaid work requirement.
They won the White House by losing the popular vote, so they figure it all works that way. Trump's won by losing his whole life, more or less.
From the #1 bestselling author - the story of an award-winning comedian who decided to run for office and then discovered why award-winning comedians tend not to do that.
AL FRANKEN, GIANT OF THE SENATE is a book about an unlikely campaign that had an even more improbable ending: the closest outcome in history and an unprecedented eight-month recount saga, which is pretty funny in retrospect. It's a book about what happens when the nation's foremost progressive satirist gets a chance to serve in the United States Senate and, defying the low expectations of the pundit class, actually turns out to be good at it. It's a book about our deeply polarized, frequently depressing, occasionally inspiring political culture, written from inside the belly of the beast. In this candid personal memoir, the honorable gentleman from Minnesota takes his army of loyal fans along with him from Saturday Night Live to the campaign trail, inside the halls of Congress, and behind the scenes of some of the most dramatic and/or hilarious moments of his new career in politics.
How does Spicer sleep at night knowing he's probably one of the most hated people in America? I'd be afraid to go out in public once he's no longer press secretary.
How does Spicer sleep at night knowing he's probably one of the most hated people in America? I'd be afraid to go out in public once he's no longer press secretary if I were him.
Can't wait to try and get health insurance in a Republican era. I'm 23 now and will be 26 in 2019. Sure is going to be fun getting screwed or going broke due to lack of insurance.
How does Spicer sleep at night knowing he's probably one of the most hated people in America? I'd be afraid to go out in public once he's no longer press secretary if I were him.
How does Spicer sleep at night knowing he's probably one of the most hated people in America? I'd be afraid to go out in public once he's no longer press secretary if I were him.
BREAKING: Federal landlord rules Trump's Washington hotel doesn't violate lease terms forbidding benefits to elected officials.
https://twitter.com/AP/status/844985966112772096
...we have federal landlords?
I doubt most people know who Spicer is. Press Secretary is one of those government positions where your average American will see the name of the person over and over, but can't name what they do when asked. To most people he's just another guy in the Trump admin
I can't find any numbers because googling just brings up Trump's numbers, but I remember an episode of Pod Save America mentioning how crazy well known Spicer is for just being a press secretary. I want to say it was something like 60% of people knew who he was?
Who better to beat Trump than an SNL alum.Big Al will defeat lil' Donnie
Some of this feels like the freedom caucus flexing it's nuts to show how powerful it is before eventually voting for the bill.
Too soon to dream of a Harris/Franken ticket in 2020?
Too soon to dream of a Harris/Franken ticket in 2020?
Pre-existing conditions was like the entire point of health care reform, beyond even lifetime limits or nonsurance policies. The whole twisted structure of the ACA was to answer "how do we deal with people too sick to insure if a public solution is off the table?"
.
I'm sure he cries into his piles of money.How does Spicer sleep at night knowing he's probably one of the most hated people in America? I'd be afraid to go out in public once he's no longer press secretary if I were him.
Too soon to dream of a Harris/Franken ticket in 2020?
You got those names backwards. Franken/Harris would win in 2020. Harris/Kander in 2028.
Reverse, please.
https://twitter.com/reuters/status/844992397201281024MORE: Republican senators told by McConnell that House not likely to vote on healthcare bill until Monday - aide.
@StevenTDennis
"Wow!" Susan Collins at the 17% approval for AHCA in Q-poll. But says she's not surprised most Americans share her concerns about the bill.