6 Reasons Why States Should Continue to Oppose Obamacare
States can block many of the law's worst provisions and most troubling consequences.
States can block many of the law's worst provisions and most troubling consequences.
The law raises labor costs
Higher costs and tighter regulations
Calls the program a "bullet to the temple" in an overregulated economy
The program pays too little for physicians to bother
Staying small and using temps, among them
Insurers will be forbidden to charge smokers higher rates
Preventing them from self-insuring forces them into the pool
Mandated coverage is much more expensive than the fine
Cut themselves in for a piece of the action
Even as the health scheme falters, it poisons the policy well
Judges and bureaucrats are not pharmacists or doctors
Red tape and declining compensation push them out
Healthy youngsters and live-for-the-day types just aren't interested
The law requires more coverage, and expense, than current plans provide
America needs an exit strategy from Obama's health care law.
Don't yet take into account federal subsidies
The Supreme Court said it's a tax, but tax bills must come from the House
Deal with patients on-on-one, and screw Obamacare
Popeye's and Wendy's say they'll face lower costs as a result
Obamacare isn't popular today, and there's no reason to believe its appeal will grow.
Tax credits are based on the cost of individual policies, even as the cost of family polices soars
Thanks to ObamaCare