Hi, I’m Congresswoman Sue Myrick from North Carolina’s Ninth District.
Nine years ago, I was diagnosed with breast cancer. I knew something was wrong with my body – but it took six doctors, three mammograms and one ultrasound before they finally they found my cancer. This process took only a few weeks.
These so-called healthcare reform bills have different names: a public option, a co-op, a trigger. Make no mistake, these are all gateways to government-run healthcare.
For small business owners, these proposals mean higher taxes at a time when unemployment is nearing 10% and analysts are predicting that any kind of recovery will be a jobless one.
As a former small-business owner, I can tell you from experience, that this is the worst possible time to be imposing new, job-killing taxes. In fact, the nation’s largest small business association found the health care tax increases being proposed would lead to the elimination of more than 1.6 million jobs.
And for seniors, expect massive cuts to Medicare; which is unacceptable under any circumstances. Doing this now, without implementing significant reforms to make the program more efficient, would leave seniors susceptible to the rationing of care.
All of this comes at a price tag of roughly $1 trillion in the midst of a year in which the government continues to set new records for red ink.
It’s time we heed the American people’s frustrations with the increased spending and big government growth going on in Washington. There is another way to reform healthcare – and options we can agree on to move forward. Please go to healthcare.gop.gov to learn more. I’m Congresswoman Sue Myrick. Thank you for listening. ###
1 comment:
sorry mam, but you lie.
Or maybe you are not propperly educated on HC in the rest of the world.
Sadly I am afraid that it is a combination of them both.
Not that you can't find sad stories of failures in HC everywhere, but those are failures in HC not the system.
The unique HC system in the U.S. is organized and run in such a way that no other country in the world finds it to be a sensible solution, neither financially nor qualitatively.
The unique HC system in the U.S. costs 50 - 100% more, depending on whether you measure the total expenditure on Health per capita (Intl $) or Total expenditure on Health as% of GDP, than all other HC systems in industrialized countries around the world.
The unique HC system in the U.S. is the undisputed champion of spending. Sadly, all studies that are accepted worldwide to be objective and thorough .ranks the U.S. only between number 30 and 40 in the world when measuring quality of HC services.
The cost and the total quality of the HC-services that is provided to and received by each and every one of a country's legal citizens, all the way from conception to the grave, is what is relevant when talking of HC-system
"a single swallow makes no summer"
like
"a single exceptional doctor makes no HC system"
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