Posted on 11/29/2013 6:36:58 AM PST by SeekAndFind
probably because it didn’t include maternity coverage
Yup, all men need maternity coverage included in their insurance. < /sarc>
Would the fair tax help those who are low income?
Did you just wake up from a six year long sleep, or do you just enjoy being a contrarian?
Your statement is a naked defense of the most heinous regime this country has ever seen. I can hardly believe that a Freeper wrote it.
For several months now, I have abstained from going to doctors or taking prescription drugs. I have been as happy and as healthy as ever before. I think most people will be surprised to find that they will live longer, healthier and happier lives without doctors.
If enough people boycott, this system can be stopped! But, if you participate, you tacitly support the system.
“Im criticizing specifically the absence of actual evidence, of the type you describe, in the article.”
How about the third sentence in the article?
“The Affordable Care Act, Obamacare, deemed Elliot’s fine insurance policy unacceptable...”
“To disprove my point, one would have to demonstrate that nobody had ever lost their coverage prior to this year.”
No, one would not have to do that. One need only show that policies are being dropped because they do not comply with Obamamcare. No statistics from previous years are needed to show that, because that’s NEVER happened before.
Why does covering all these additional items add to the insurance costs of those who won’t use them? That’s a good question. The answer is simple. It’s called shared expense, aka wealth redistribution. The 60 year old male who doesn’t need an abortion, for example, has his premium jacked up so that a 20 year old female who likes hooking up can have “free” abortions. In the interest of “fairness,” Obamacare makes everyone share the burden of paying for all sorts of stuff most of them will never likely need. The people who do need them will obviously pay much less than those things would have otherwise cost. It’s called socialism.
Not every IRS letter is an audit. Most are just notices of a correction of math errors, or the result of Form 1099 matching. If your bank reported to the IRS that they paid you $500 in interest, but your tax return only reported $400 the IRS pointing that out to you is not an audit. An audit is when the IRS calls you into their office, or come to yours, and require you to provide receipts for deductions, or make inquiries about the details of a reduction to determine if the current law allows it to be deductible. Their are insufficient facts about these particular “audits” to know if they are really being audited.
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