To: Nachoman
$12,000 a year per person for a health plan? Believe it.
You're wrong it is not $12,000 per person. In North Carolina, $12,000 would be considered high even for a family health plan with little or no copay.
KL
To: o2bfree
You're wrong it is not $12,000 per person. In North Carolina, $12,000 would be considered high even for a family health plan with little or no copay.Exactly...and I know, I've paid it here in OK.
5,591 posted on
10/15/2008 8:03:32 PM PDT by
Osage Orange
(" I did not have radical relations with that man, William Ayers. " -Barack Hussein Obama)
To: o2bfree
Depends on the age. Don’t tell me I’m wrong. I was the one writing the premium checks.
5,605 posted on
10/15/2008 8:04:11 PM PDT by
Nachoman
(Think of life as an adventure you don't survive.)
To: o2bfree
Granting the $12,000 figure, isn’t a $5,000 tax credit still a lot more than a $12,000 pre-tax deduction from your check for most brackets? It’s nearly half the amount.
5,708 posted on
10/15/2008 8:09:14 PM PDT by
TenthAmendmentChampion
(Lord please bless our nation with John McCain as president and Sarah Palin as Vice President! Amen.)
To: o2bfree
I paid $12K per year for a few months because of many prior health issues. I had a guaranteed issue policy meaning the company could not underwrite me at all. Then along came a better policy for less than half the price. BTW, I am 60.
Obama was not clear about how many people the $12K would cover per year. NO WAY would one person in decent health pay that much, not even now.
To: o2bfree
"You're wrong it is not $12,000 per person."
You're right. I meant to write "per family," but wrote "per person" in error. When he said $12,000 per year, I almost fell over. I'd like to know what health care plan he's talking about that is that expensive.
5,820 posted on
10/15/2008 8:15:19 PM PDT by
mass55th
(Courage is being scared to death - but saddling up anyway...John Wayne)
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