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Patrick,
Private insurance companies are going to get a windfall from individuals like my 22 yr. old daughter, who must now pay her own way in the realm of health insurance. She is no longer a student, and automatically left my policy on May 31st following her college graduation. She has a job on Madison Ave. with a company that offers health insurance to its employees; she must now either purchase coverage or pay a tax to cover her share of the costs; she has opted to purchase coverage.
Very few of your statements are true.
1. Your daughter can remain on your coverage as an eligible dependent until she's 26.
If you have other children on your plan who are students or under 19, there is NO additional cost for her coverage.
2. There is NO TAX if your daughter opts NOT to take coverage under her employer's current plan
That's a blatant lie
There are millions like her; that has been the situation of the vast majority of the uninsured in this country, and it is why health care stocks have prospered since the passage of the legislation.
If by millions, you're refering to those people who made the choice, who ELECTED NOT to be covered, you're correct, but, that was their choice, they weren't prevented from obtaining coverage, they just didn't want to pay for it.
Like it or not, it is NOT anti-business legislation.
Really, then why did the mandates exempt unions for eight years until 2016.
It's going to bankrupt companies, especially small companies who can ill afford coverage
As to GM, I curious as to how that is anti-business either. Had GM gone under, so would hundreds of companies in their supply chain for steel, plastic, carpet, paint, electronics, and so on. The domino effect of that would have been unacceptable, and would even have extended to the foreign car companies who have factories in this country and would have been unable to get needed parts as well. Of course GM stock and bond holders were clobbered, but NOT by Washington! They were clobbered by decades of mismanagement by the company.
First and foremost, the Bondholders got F--K-D.
Second, the Unions, which were at the core of the problem got paid off by the White House, in the form of ownership.
Third, how can you conveniently forget union costs, legacy costs, costs that made it impossible for American manufacturers to compete with foreign manufactgurers.
Surely you saw the New York Times comparison
You say that unemployment is at a record high, which of course is not the case. As recently as 1982 and 1983 we had higher averages than in 2009, and we averaged close to 8% for most of the 80's under President Reagan. You are completely correct that unemployment is recovering much more slowly than other indicators in the economy. That is standard for recoveries, and the deeper the recession the more unemployment lags during the recovery as companies move toward full production with the employees they have left before hiring or rehiring. There is nothing surprising in that, though it is always dismaying.
What you don't want to see is the anti-business environment in Washington, that wasn't there in 1982 and the 90's.
An anti-business environment that will remain with us for some time.
There's a reason we're not coming out of this recession sooner.
We wasted a trillion dollars on welfare programs that were labeled a "stimulus" bill for business and jobs.
Whether or not business is still "lousy" depends on which economist(s) and which set of statistics you choose to pay attention to.
No it doesn't.
I don't need an economist to tell me that business is lousy, I see it for myself every day.
My clients see it, my friends see it, people I meet on planes and on golf courses see it, even the talking heads on TV which are pro-Obama see it.
It's impossible to ignore.
You'd have to be politically blind NOT to see it
But if it IS, it is NOT because of any policies in Washington that you have listed here.
Gee, I guess it's just bad luck that got us into this mess.
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