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notfried | 3 months ago
The system is broken, but going without insurance is you basically toying with the odds of life.
notfried | 3 months ago
The system is broken, but going without insurance is you basically toying with the odds of life.
JohnFen|3 months ago
It drove her to bankruptcy anyway. In hindsight, she commented that had she known that the insurance wouldn't be all that helpful, she would have just saved up all the money she poured into premiums over the decades.
angmarsbane|3 months ago
fellowniusmonk|3 months ago
Destroyed my entire trajectory in life.
The prior system was mega fucked, our current system is still fucked.
If you had a congenital condition prior to the ACA you were a wage slave once you hit 18, no private insurance and couldn't get public. Literally founded a successful startup the minute I got ACA.
Over 40+ years I've seen nearly every profession go through a bubble and lean years, lawyers, mechanics, academics.
But never doctors, in retrospect I should have joined that protectionist racket, but my family couldn't afford to let me at the time.
mossTechnician|3 months ago
[0]: https://www.startribune.com/unitedhealthcare-part-of-95m-set...
[1]: https://www.propublica.org/article/unitedhealth-healthcare-i...
iso1631|3 months ago
tvchurch|3 months ago
I'd like to see health insurance act like insurance again though. Right now it covers absolutely everything, meaning it's more like pre-payment for routine care + insurance.
Insurance isn't for routine, predictable, or low-cost expenses. But we've mandated that our health insurance cover all of those things.
The comparison to car insurance is overused, but it's a good one. Catastrophic coverage + dedicated savings with lower premiums looks more attractive to a lot more people.
joquarky|3 months ago