Why did supply of health care insurance dry out in Massachusetts? Is it what awaits the entire nation?

This week it became impossible in Massachusetts for small businesses and individuals to buy any health-care coverage.

I predicated dozens of times here on YA that ObamaCare will cause 100 million Americans to lose health care insurance,Liberals always laughed. Soon we’ll see libs, and do not whine then nobody wants to sell you a policy. You were warned, you laughed, now face the consequences.

I can’t believe you are still physically well – mental disease always causes physical illness.

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8 Responses to Why did supply of health care insurance dry out in Massachusetts? Is it what awaits the entire nation?

  1. middleclassman says:

    That is the problem with Reagan state ran health care, the pool is not big enough to bring price down.
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  2. Whig Party says:

    Yes, it will.

    The war in Iraq was only supposed to cost $200 billion, but it wound up costing $1 trillion a year.

    The estimates will be messed up again, and again, but people still buy into it.
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  3. Pluto C. Rat says:

    I can’t believe you are still physically well – mental disease always causes physical illness.
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  4. Drew Blood says:

    I’d be less concerned about health care in Massachussettes,, and a LOT more concerned about what liberalism has done the world’s 8th largest economy out here in Kalifornia! And by the way…. one of the people responsible for the MESS out here in Kalifornia just so happens to be the Speaker Of The House!
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  5. David says:

    Massachusetts could not afford the plan after the economy went to hell. the u.s. government will just raise taxes to pay for any overruns in the future.
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  6. ? ? ? says:

    This is your prediction huh? Here’s mine. My butt will no longer hurt!

    I am sick of being screwed by my insurance company. $1300/month for our family. $2000 deductible. (Have met this only once in more than 10 years – which means that BCBS has actually only had to pony up some of the dough that they have collected from me all these years!!!!!) All the while my little sister and her family cannot get coverage because she has petty mal seizures.

    Again, I look forward to the day that my butt starts to feel better!
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    just out of curiosity…. what do you have for insurance?? I have an idea.

  7. Instant Karma says:

    Really?? I googled it!! found nothing to support your claim.

    What I did find was this.

    On Tuesday, the state’s individual insurance market effectively shut down as insurers refused to comply with the state’s rejection of 235 of 274 proposed health insurance rate increases.

    The dispute has already put the two sides in court. Insurance companies are now claiming that the rejected rate increases mean they won’t be able to operate at a profit, and arguing that no actuary would approve the sort of rates that state insurance regulators say they expect. Actuary sign-off is not only important for fiscal stability—it’s a legal requirement in the state.

    Is this just insurance company posturing? It’s entirely possible. Industries, entirely understandably, are bound to put up a fight when told they can’t set their own prices. That means making the toughest claims they think they can get away with. But it’s not unbelievable that the combination of rate caps and increased regulatory burdens is imposing what amounts to an impossible strain on private insurers.

    Do you read Articles befrore you post a question?
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  8. ithacanian07 says:

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: All real liberals would know that the "Obama" bill that just passed is nearly identical to the proposal the GOP made as a counter to "HillaryCare". The Massachusetts health insurance system was passed under Republican Mitt Romney’s governorship. Real healthcare reform requires two main price control mechanisms: 1) A comprehensive public higher education system that allows healthcare providers to avoid massive debt at the beginning of their careers and reducing the wages they need to live the lifestyle deemed appropriate by society. 2) Publicly administered health insurance plans that compete with private providers.
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