Senate Passes Health Care Bill: Funds Abortions, Mandates Insurance Coverage 
Washington, DC -- The Senate today passed the government-run 
health care bill that includes massive taxpayer funding of 
abortion and opens the door for the Obama administration to force 
insurance companies to pay for abortions. With passage, the two 
chambers of Congress has approved very different legislation. 
http://www.lifenews.com/nat5818.html 
  



This is a preface to the NYT article link below 
  
Effectively, the govt is taking over the management decision making process of 
the insurance health companies. With no investment and no penalty for poor 
decision making, it doesn’t bode well for the public. 
  
  
This is the $500 Bil that Obama referred to in is speech as “waste & fraud” in 
the MediCare program. 
The measure would squeeze nearly a half-trillion dollars from Medicare over the 
next 10 years, mainly by reducing the growth of payments to hospitals, nursing 
homes, private Medicare Advantage plans and other health care providers. 
  
  
They claim that it will cover 31 million people, leaving 23 million still 
uninsured ten years from now! There must be 54 million people without insurance 
today, hmm? 
  
Of course, the liberal stenographers had to include a human side of the 
victors, saying Reid voted against his bill before he voted for the “bill he 
had worked so tirelessly.” 
  
In an obvious pan-calling-the-pot-black attack, a Calif senator said the 
private sector insurance industry “lacks a moral compass.” Another progressive 
senator chimed in, “the business model of the insurance industry deserved to 
die.” Then got nasty. 
  
Under the plan, insurance companies could not deny coverage due to “a person’s 
medical condition” or charge more because of the person’s “health status”. This 
govt-management decision will drive up everyone's premium in the private 
sector. 
  
AARP sells medicare “supplementary” insurance which they earn 5% profit, about 
double the average of the industry. They are shedding 10’s of thousands of 
magazine subscribers. The real impact will be that with fewer subscribers more 
people will choose to by supplementary from other companies. 
  
 AMA has been bleeding members (now down to 17% of the docs) will make billions 
under the govt system because they own the patent on the medical code that must 
be used on every medical procedure. 
  
  
The last paragraph in the link is an Alinsky classic. First they refer to the 
existing system as “fragmented fee-for-service system and then conclude the 
govt system “would coordinate care,,,with payments based more on the quality of 
the the care…” 
  
Here’s the very informative, but lefty vision of the progressive organ of the 
Democrat majority. 
  
http://us.mc553.mail.yahoo.com/mc/welcome?.gx=1&.tm=1261720761&.rand=72nb6jctlum02#_pg=showMessage&sMid=101&&filterBy=&.rand=1623057923&midIndex=1&mid=1_53507365_ALg6vs4AANAASzOs5AI3ZVAsnfo&m=1_53508262_ALY6vs4AARA6SzOtHAkAxn6Brk8,1_53507365_ALg6vs4AANAASzOs5AI3ZVAsnfo,1_53506428_ALU6vs4AAVGkSzOs4QJxORpT1OE,1_53487925_ALs6vs4AATglSzOoIggaK1wKs8M,1_53453612_ALY6vs4AAKUrSzOfpQFFFwEVNCM,1_53420856_ALs6vs4AAK7eSzOZig7YHFZvs9U,1_53415582_ALY6vs4AAG0rSzOZAQZCAT%2F%2FmVE,&hash=bb7fd2a54e5fcb406ad2a9ef9fa015ed&.jsrand=4543934
 
  
If the above link fails… 
  
  
 [WETHEPEOPLE_UNITED] Senate Members Are United Over The Health Bill---But Many 
Dem Voters Are Not 
Thursday, December 24, 2009 12:01 PM 
  
>From "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
  
  
PLEASE FORWARD 
  
  
THIS IS THE BEST HEALTH BILL IN THE PRESENT FORMAT THAT THE CORPORATE HEALTH 
AND PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATIONS CAN BUY!!   MANY OF OUR U.S. SENATOR'S 
APPRECIATE THEIR BUSINESS VERY MUCH.  IT ALSO PROVES THAT  BACK ROOM DEALS 
ACTUALLY WORK.    OK TO FORWARD       
  
                                                     
 http://www.nytimes. com/2009/ 12/25/health/ policy/25health. html?_r=1&hp 
Senate Passes Health Care Overhaul Bill   
By ROBERT PEAR 
Published: December 24, 2009 
WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Thursday to reinvent the nation’s health care 
system, passing a bill to guarantee access to health insurance for tens of 
millions of Americans and to rein in health costs as proposed by President 
Obama. 
The 60-to-39 party-line vote, on the 25th straight day of debate on the 
legislation, brings Democrats a step closer to a goal they have pursued for 
decades. It clears the way for negotiations with the House, which passed a 
broadly similar bill last month by a vote of 220 to 215. 
If the two chambers can strike a deal, as seems likely, the resulting product 
would vastly expand the role and responsibilities of the federal government. It 
would, as lawmakers said repeatedly in the debate, touch the lives of nearly 
all Americans. 
The bill would require most Americans to have health insurance, would add 15 
million people to the Medicaid rolls and would subsidize private coverage for 
low- and middle-income people, at a cost to the government of $871 billion over 
10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. 
President Obama said after the vote that the health care bill was “the most 
important piece of social legislation since the Social Security Act passed in 
the 1930s” and that together with the House bill, represented “the toughest 
measures ever taken to hold the insurance industry accountable.” 
The budget office estimates that the bill would provide coverage to 31 million 
uninsured people, but still leave 23 million uninsured in 2019. One-third of 
those remaining uninsured would be illegal immigrants. 
If the bill becomes law, it would be a milestone in social policy, comparable 
with the creation of Social Security in 1935 and Medicare in 1965. But unlike 
those programs, the new initiative lacks bipartisan support. Only one 
Republican voted for the House bill last month, and no Republicans voted for 
the Senate version. 
Senator Olympia J. Snowe of Maine, a moderate Republican who has spent years 
working with Democrats on health care and other issues, expressed despair. 
“I was extremely disappointed,” Ms. Snowe said. After Senate Democrats locked 
up 60 votes within their caucus, she said, “there was zero opportunity to amend 
the bill or modify it, and Democrats had no incentive to reach across the 
aisle.” 
Like many Republicans, Ms. Snowe was troubled by new taxes and fees in the 
bill, which she said could have “a dampening effect on job creation and job 
preservation.” The bill would increase the Medicare payroll tax on high-income 
people and levy a new excise tax on high-premium insurance policies, as one way 
to control costs. 
When the roll was called at 7:05 a.m. on Thursday, it was a solemn moment. 
Senators called out “aye” or “no.” Senator Robert C. Byrd, the 92-year-old 
Democrat from West Virginia , deviated slightly from the protocol. 
“This is for my friend Ted Kennedy,” Mr. Byrd said. “Aye!” 
Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, at first appeared to vote 
“nay“ instead of “aye.“ He caught himself in time to vote in favor of the bill, 
as his colleagues laughed at his almost voting against a bill he had worked for 
so tirelessly. 
The fight on Capitol Hill prefigures a larger political battle likely to play 
out in the elections of 2010 and 2012, as Democrats try to persuade a skeptical 
public of the bill’s merits, while Republicans warn that it will drive up costs 
for those who already have insurance. 
After struggling for years to expand health insurance in modest, incremental 
ways, Democrats decided this year that they could not let another opportunity 
slip away. 
As usual, lawmakers were deluged with appeals from lobbyists for health care 
interests who have stymied similar ambitious efforts in the past. But this year 
was different. 
Lawmakers listened to countless stories of hardship told by constituents who 
had been denied insurance, lost coverage when they got sick or seen their 
premiums soar. Hostility to the health insurance industry was a theme running 
through the Senate debate. 
Senator Sherrod Brown, Democrat of Ohio, said insurance companies were often 
“just one step ahead of the sheriff.” 
Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, said the industry “lacks a 
moral compass.” 
“Premiums are out of hand,” Mrs. Feinstein said. “Chief executive salaries are 
out of hand. Administrative costs are out of hand. My bottom-line belief is 
that the health insurance industry should be nonprofit.” 
And Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, Democrat of Rhode Island , said the business 
model of the health insurance industry deserved to die. 
“It deserves a stake through its cold and greedy heart,” Mr. Whitehouse said. 
The bill would establish stringent federal standards for an industry that, 
since its inception, has been regulated mainly by the states. 
Under the bill, insurers could not deny coverage because of a person’s medical 
condition; could not charge higher premiums because of a person’s sex or health 
status; and could not rescind coverage when a person becomes sick or disabled. 
The government would, in effect, limit the profits of insurers by requiring 
them to spend at least 80 to 85 cents of every premium dollar on medical care. 
The specificity of federal standards is illustrated by one section of the bill, 
which requires insurers to issue a summary of benefits that “does not exceed 
four pages in length and does not include print smaller than 12-point font.” 
Another force propelling health legislation through the Senate was the 
Democrats’ view that it was a moral imperative and an economic necessity. 
“The health insurance policies of America, what we have right now is a moral 
disgrace,” said Senator Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, who noted that medical 
expenses had driven many people into bankruptcy. “We are called upon to right a 
great injustice, a great wrong that has been put upon the American people.” 
Costs of the bill would, according to the Congressional Budget Office, be more 
than offset by new taxes and fees and by savings in Medicare. The measure would 
squeeze nearly a half-trillion dollars from Medicare over the next 10 years, 
mainly by reducing the growth of payments to hospitals, nursing homes, private 
Medicare Advantage plans and other health care providers. 
Republicans asserted that the cuts would degrade services to Medicare 
beneficiaries. But AARP, the influential lobby for older Americans, and the 
American Medical Association ran an advertisement urging senators to pass the 
bill, under which Medicare would cover more of the cost for prescription drugs, 
screenings and other preventive health services. 
Karen M. Ignagni, president of America’s Health Insurance Plans, said the bill 
appeared to be unstoppable. But she added: “We are not sure it will be 
workable. It could disrupt existing coverage for families, seniors and small 
businesses, particularly between now and when the legislation is fully 
implemented in 2014.” 
The bill would set up insurance exchanges where people could compare health 
plans and buy insurance with tax credits to help cover the cost. 
Whether such plans should be allowed to cover abortion is perhaps the most 
difficult issue that will face Senate and House negotiators. 
Architects of the legislation said they wanted to move away from the fragmented 
fee-for-service health care system, toward one in which doctors and hospitals 
would coordinate care and take collective responsibility for patients, with 
payments based more on the quality of care and less on the volume of services. 
                                                                               
--- 

.

 
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