Looking back... that was right, hmm, 7 out of 8 times. The miss was a very chill place that gave out Dells, but I lost my job because the funding round didn't come in.
BartyDeCanter
I live a five minute walk from a beach and less than an hour from some of the best cheese makers in the US. And have neighbors that keep chickens.
Most of the people in this thread:
Oh honey, I’m so sorry.
It’s frustrating, but you’re right.
Atole!?! In that case I’m definitely a victim and await my tamales.
Yup! This is what is leading to the slow ACA death spiral.
I hate to tell you, but it's worse than that. Pre-ACA mental health wasn't covered at all except in extremely expensive private coverage for the wealthy, so it wouldn't matter if it was preexisting or not.
Yeah, Obama was so fucking desperate to get bipartisan support that he and the congressional Democrats let the GOP sabotage it instead of fighting for the single-payer system that had been promised. And now here we are. I honestly believe that if he had both jailed the bakers in the aftermath of the housing crash and gone full single payer not only would we be in a much better place as a nation, but Trump would never have been elected.
This is the real answer. It can down to McCain's very dramatic Nay vote because they didn't have a replacement plan.. You can watch it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4TLz2uQEtGo
The ACA is a massive bill that affects basically every part of healthcare in the US. That being said, here are some of the major parts that affect people who get their coverage through their employer:
- Minimum coverage standards - The ACA sets minimums about what must be covered by employer insurance, including drugs, procedures, family planning and mental health care.
- No lifetime caps - Before the ACA insurers could set a lifetime cap on how much they would pay out for any individual. This meant that people who had long term chronic or very expensive medical needs would get kicked off their insurance eventually and have to figure something else out. Or, more likely, either go into massive medical debt or forego care, or both.
- Pre-existing coverage - Before the ACA insurers could choose not cover issues that you got before you signed up with that insurer. So, again, if you had a chronic condition and changed jobs, you could lose all coverage for those treatments.
There is probably a lot more, but those are the big ones for most people.
Ugh, is there just a written version or a transcript?