A 6 year old child could figure out America's problem today, so what's the rest of America's excuse for allowing this free ride to continue while disabled people like myself pay 5-600 dollars a month for medical care and still work paying taxes to get what many illegals and non illegals get for free pretending to be poor?
I love how the MSM paints this every way they can without laying any blame at the actual doorstep of the well known problem, tip toeing around the truth so as to not confirm what America already knows but is afraid of the racism police to single them out as racists, the new weapon of the left.
The article below makes no mention of illegal aliens as an obvious source of America's health ills, not once, rendering it useless as a reliable piece of information. This is what the left will now use as the one problem fits all solution, everything will be blamed on the recession, everything they can get away with. It's a payment problem and it starts as soon as the doors of the emergency rooms open up to people without insurance, particularly illegals who have no business being there in the first place.
For every illegal were removed from the system, that's one or two more true poor American without insurance who could be offered free health care if it's needed, care that instead is wasted and sucked up by and on people "only here for the free beer" so to speak, and we know who they are, the illegals. Humanitarianism comes at a price and it's obviously one that even America cannot divvy out to whoever the hell wants it all the time.
There's no guarantee in the Constitution and Bill of Rights of health care for everyone nor should there be, we're not meant to live forever and that's not inhumane, it's a fact and just nature. It's too cost prohibitive to keep every single person in the world alive as long as medicinally possible, it's that simple, this stuff costs money, and lots of it.
Lots of it that we don't have.
Hospitals ill from more bad debt, credit troubles:
My Way News - "TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Gainesville's first community hospital has been on life support since the Shands Healthcare system in northern Florida bought it a dozen years ago.
Now, because of the recession, the plug is being pulled on 80-year-old, money-losing Shands AGH. Next fall, its eight-hospital not-for-profit parent company will shut the 220-bed hospital and shift staff and patients to a newer, bigger teaching hospital nearby as part of an effort to save $65 million over three years across the system.
Like many U.S. hospitals, Shands is being squeezed by tight credit, higher borrowing costs, investment losses and a jump in patients - many recently unemployed or otherwise underinsured - not paying their bills.
All that has begun to trigger more hospital closings - from impoverished Newark, N.J., to wealthy Beverly Hills, Calif. - as well as layoffs, other cost-cutting and scrapping or delaying building projects.
More closings and mergers are on the way, industry consultants predict.
'They'll get swallowed up by somebody else, if they need to exist, and if they don't, they'll just close,' said Tuck Crocker, vice president of the health care practice at management consultant BearingPoint." continued
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