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Political Threads This section is for Political Threads - Enter at your own risk. If you say you don't want to see what someone posts - don't read it :hihi:

 
 
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Old 09-21-2010, 02:52 PM   #1
Fly Rod
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Obama Care

With Obamacare making it mandatory to cover children already covered by private insurance, within a few weeks, insurance companies are starting to drop child-only plans due to cost and Obamacare regulation compliance issues. As other Obamacare benefits come on line additional premium hikes will be coming from your healthcare provider. If you have private insurance being offered by your employer it may be coming to an end with the higher premiums the employer or you may have to pay.

Obama did promise change and he has not gone back on his word.
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Old 09-21-2010, 02:55 PM   #2
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With Obamacare making it mandatory to cover children already covered by private insurance, within a few weeks, insurance companies are starting to drop child-only plans due to cost and Obamacare regulation compliance issues. As other Obamacare benefits come on line additional premium hikes will be coming from your healthcare provider. If you have private insurance being offered by your employer it may be coming to an end with the higher premiums the employer or you may have to pay.

Obama did promise change and he has not gone back on his word.
CHANGE = childhood now ends at age 26
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Old 09-21-2010, 03:33 PM   #3
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I've briefly dodged the bullet. Insurance companies have to get approval from the state in order to increase rates. Tufts wanted to increase our rates something like 18%. Massachusetts rejected the request stating that the 18% increase was not justified.

At least that's a letter we received from Tufts last month.

In the end though, the health care bill with serious F over the middle class.
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Old 10-21-2010, 11:26 AM   #4
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New HC flow plan.
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Old 10-21-2010, 04:55 PM   #5
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New HC flow plan.
Powerpoint says it will work, right? Powerpoint never lies.

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Old 10-21-2010, 06:00 PM   #6
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Powerpoint says it will work, right? Powerpoint never lies.
LOL, powerpoint the be all to end all.

I like how at the very top of the flow is the President, IRS, and Congress.
At the very bottom are the Phyisician and Patient.

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Old 10-22-2010, 03:40 AM   #7
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ya can see my grump in the gop forum.

VOTE THIS @%$@#$SUCKER OUT

Should be friggin IMPEACHED but the American public is too much in love with him and his DB wife.

Looks like I'm going to have to bite the bullet and go on Mass Health. All you guys will be paying my health insurance from now on. State says I can afford $232/month based on what I made last year.

HOWS THAT FEEL TO YA!

Food Stamps and subsidized oil next. If ya can't beat em, JOIN EM.
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Old 10-22-2010, 03:41 AM   #8
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Instead of fixing the problem he %$%$%$%$ed it up even more.
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Old 10-22-2010, 09:45 AM   #9
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Obama had no involvement with commonwealth care which you qualified.
Thank republican governor Romney.
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Old 10-25-2010, 04:06 AM   #10
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Health care law's price

Not sure if you can read this or not, I'm a subscriber. Good read.

I see the rates doubling within 2 years.
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Old 10-25-2010, 04:07 AM   #11
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Health care law’s price
Job-related benefits to go?

By R. Alonso-Zaldivar THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The new health care law wasn’t supposed to undercut employer plans that have provided most people in the U.S. with coverage for generations.

But last week a leading manufacturer told workers their costs will jump partly because of the law. Also, a Democratic governor laid out a scheme for employers to get out of health care by shifting workers into taxpayer-subsidized insurance markets that open in 2014.

While it’s too early to proclaim the demise of job-based coverage, corporate number crunchers are looking at options that could lead to major changes. Gov. Phil Bredesen, D-Tenn., said the economics of dropping coverage are “about to become very attractive to many employers, both public and private.”

That’s just not going to happen, White House officials say.

“The absolute certainty about the Affordable Care Act is that for many, many employers who cover millions of people, it increases the incentives for them to offer coverage,” said Jason Furman, an economic adviser to President Barack Obama.

Yet at least one major employer has shifted a greater share of plan costs to workers, and others are weighing the pros and cons of eventually forcing employees to strike out on their own.

“I don’t think you are going to hear anybody publicly say ‘We’ve made a decision to drop insurance,’ ” said Paul Keckley, executive director of the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions. “What we are hearing in our meetings is, ‘We don’t want to be the first one to drop benefits, but we would be the fast second.’ We are hearing that a lot.” Deloitte is a major accounting and consulting firm.

“My conclusion on all of this is that it is a huge roll of the dice,” said James Klein, president of the American Benefits Council, which represents big company benefits administrators. “It could work out well and build on the employer-based system, or it could begin to dismantle the employer-based system.”

Employer health benefits have been a middle-class mainstay since World War II, when companies were encouraged to offer health insurance instead of pay raises. About 150 million workers and family members are now covered.

When lawmakers debated the legislation, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projected it would only have minimal impact on employer plans. About 3 million fewer people would be covered through the job, but they’d be able to get insurance elsewhere.

Two provisions in the new law are leading companies to look at their plans in a different light.

One is a hefty tax on high-cost health insurance aimed at the most generous coverage. Although the “Cadillac tax” doesn’t hit until 2018, companies may have to disclose their exposure to investors well before that. Karen Forte, a Boeing spokeswoman, said concerns about the tax were partly behind a 50 percent increase in insurance deductibles the company just announced.

The tax is 40 percent of the value of a plan above $10,200 for individual coverage and $27,500 for a family plan. Family coverage now averages about $13,800.

White House adviser Furman said blaming a cost increase next year on a tax that won’t take effect for eight years “stretches credibility very far past the breaking point.”

Bigger questions loom over the new insurance markets that will be set up under the law.

They’re called exchanges, and every state will have one in a few years. Consumers will be able to shop for coverage among a range of plans in the exchange, with a guarantee they can’t be turned down because of an existing medical problem. To help make premiums affordable, the law provides tax credits for households making up to four times the federal poverty level, about $88,000 for a family of four.

Bredesen said last week that employers could save big money by dropping their health plans and sending workers to buy coverage in the exchange. They’d face a fine of $2,000 per worker, but that’s still way less than the cost of providing health insurance. Employers could even afford to give workers a raise and still come out ahead, Bredesen wrote in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece.

Employers are actively looking at that. “I don’t know if the intent was to find an exit strategy for providing benefits, but the bill as written provides the mechanism,” said Deloitte’s Keckley, the consultant.

Erin Shields, a spokeswoman for the senators who wrote that part of the law, says she’s confident that when companies do the math, they’ll decide to keep offering coverage.

That’s because employers get to deduct the cost of workers’ health care from the company’s taxes. Take away the health plan and two things happen: Employers lose the deduction and they’ll probably have to pay workers more to get them to accept the benefit cut. Not only will the company’s income taxes go up, but the employer will also face a bigger bill for Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes. So it’s not as simple as paying $2,000 and walking away.

“It is clearly cheaper for employers to continue providing coverage,” Shields said.

Another wrinkle: the health insurance tax credits available through the law are keyed to relatively Spartan insurance plans, not as generous as most big employers provide. Send your workers into the insurance exchange, and valuable employees might jump to a competitor that still offers health care.

MIT economist Jon Gruber says it’s impossible to create new government benefits without some unintended consequences, but he doesn’t see a big drop in employer coverage.
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Old 10-25-2010, 10:42 AM   #12
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Obama care has crushed big hospitals, led to major HMO contract renegotiations, and major medicare cuts. Less reimbursement at my work caused no merit increases for a couple years, and 2% merit increases for 2011.

I need to go back to business as usual. At least with Bush I had more money coming into the house and I was 10x more apt to spend.
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Old 10-25-2010, 12:23 PM   #13
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And so the HC Debacle continues.

3M has dropped their drug plan for their retirees. They will have no choice
but to go to Part D of Medicare to cover them and guess where the $$ comes
to pay for that? Right out of all our pockets.

Honeywell will no longer offer Group HC to retirees so guess who will be
picking up the tab for that.

This is just the beginning as companies drop their plans and turn them
over to Obama-care.

What happened to Obama's promise that you can keep your own plan
if you choose?
WHAT own plan, as companies bail out in a domino effect?

" Choose Life "
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Old 10-25-2010, 12:33 PM   #14
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Companies have been cutting benefits for retirees for years. This is nothing new. I think my father had his drug benefits eliminated at least five years ago and he's a retired exec at a large company.

For all the talk of rising costs due to obama, how much of this was happening anyway? Seems like increases of 10-25 percent were becoming pretty common over the last decade.
Quote:
Originally Posted by justplugit View Post
And so the HC Debacle continues.

3M has dropped their drug plan for their retirees. They will have no choice
but to go to Part D of Medicare to cover them and guess where the $$ comes
to pay for that? Right out of all our pockets.

Honeywell will no longer offer Group HC to retirees so guess who will be
picking up the tab for that.

This is just the beginning as companies drop their plans and turn them
over to Obama-care.

What happened to Obama's promise that you can keep your own plan
if you choose?
WHAT own plan, as companies bail out in a domino effect?
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Old 10-25-2010, 12:41 PM   #15
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Companies have been cutting benefits for retirees for years. This is nothing new. I think my father had his drug benefits eliminated at least five years ago and he's a retired exec at a large company.

For all the talk of rising costs due to obama, how much of this was happening anyway? Seems like increases of 10-25 percent were becoming pretty common over the last decade.
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so what Spence is trying to say is despite the countless hours spent by our congress and the president and the additonal debt and tax burden, this healthcare bill will do nothing to change YOUR expenses. Things are going down hill and will continue to. So lets make sure we dont return to "the failed policies of the GOP"

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Old 10-25-2010, 07:15 PM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spence View Post
Companies have been cutting benefits for retirees for years. This is nothing new. I think my father had his drug benefits eliminated at least five years ago and he's a retired exec at a large company.

For all the talk of rising costs due to obama, how much of this was happening anyway? Seems like increases of 10-25 percent were becoming pretty common over the last decade.
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If your Dad is over 62 and covered under Medicare Part D then we have been
paying for his drugs over the last 5 years.

According to research by the Partnership for Health Care Reform, the total government cost is almost twice as high for every enroll-ee to Part D from an employee plan. Five million retirees going into Part D would be an additional cost
of 2.7 BILLION per year.

Now add all the soon to retire" yuppie generation" and i don't want to do the math.


Most of the increases over the last 10 years have come from increase in malpractice insurance, where every Doc will tell you there are 2 groups, those who have been sued and those about to be, and all the new high tech test costs.

Tort reform and across state insurance competition is one way to reduce costs
imho.

Last edited by justplugit; 10-25-2010 at 07:23 PM..

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Old 10-25-2010, 12:52 PM   #17
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I don't smoke so I really don't care but all tobacco users will pay higher Healthcare premiums in 2011 at my company because they use tobacco (even an occasional Cigar on the Golf Course). If they say they don't use and get caught, they can be terminated.

People who participate in "Extreme Sports" as hobbies carry a higher premium too, sky diving, motor cycle riding, mountain climbing, skiing, etc (fishing isn't on there yet). If you say you don't do these things to not pay the higher premium and get hurt doing them, you are not covered by insurance. I guess the saft bet is to sit on the couch and watch TV all day.

Where will it end?? I can tell you that the fat people I work with are getting nervous because they will be next. "You are overweight and you are a health risk so your premium will now cost more"

What about drinking a beer? Will that be next too?

The reason for these changes is all because the dink in the oval office wants some of the people to pay for healthcare for all of the people.................sounds socialist to me

"I know a taxidermy man back home. He gonna have a heart attack when he see what I brung him!"
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Old 10-25-2010, 01:19 PM   #18
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I don't smoke so I really don't care but all tobacco users will pay higher Healthcare premiums in 2011 at my company because they use tobacco (even an occasional Cigar on the Golf Course). If they say they don't use and get caught, they can be terminated.

People who participate in "Extreme Sports" as hobbies carry a higher premium too, sky diving, motor cycle riding, mountain climbing, skiing, etc (fishing isn't on there yet). If you say you don't do these things to not pay the higher premium and get hurt doing them, you are not covered by insurance. I guess the saft bet is to sit on the couch and watch TV all day.

Where will it end?? I can tell you that the fat people I work with are getting nervous because they will be next. "You are overweight and you are a health risk so your premium will now cost more"

What about drinking a beer? Will that be next too?

The reason for these changes is all because the dink in the oval office wants some of the people to pay for healthcare for all of the people.................sounds socialist to me
Good. You take part in risky behaviors, you should pay a higher rate. I'm 27, hardly ever seriously sick, never broken a bone, fit, eat well, don't smoke and have low cholesterol. Yet I have to pay the same rates as some fat ass who eats at McDonald's every day, smokes a pack of day, gets their exercise by their multiple trips to the fridge, probably has diabetes and heart disease.

They should make it like car insurance, force people with unhealthy habits to pay a surcharge. What's socialist about it is that everyone is treated the same regardless of their health.
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Old 10-25-2010, 02:33 PM   #19
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yeah, but he is funny, has a great first name and a cool moustache too

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Old 10-27-2010, 01:17 PM   #20
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You would approve of special bill to cover certain individuals?

Why do you think the government has passed bills pertaining to health care for the last 60 or 70 years? There were bills proposed/passed by both parties in that time.
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Old 10-27-2010, 05:26 PM   #21
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You would approve of special bill to cover certain individuals?
It's already being done for the blind by tax credit.

I'd rather see tax credits to help uninsured individuals to help pay for their HC through private plans rather than completely changing HC for 3o8 million people.

We still don't know how many people don't have HC with estimates ranging
from 20 to 40 million.

Start cutting give a way programs and use the 640 Billion they claim will
be saved from Medicare fraud to make up the loss of tax income.

Obama- care, as seen in recent days, is opening Pandora's box for companies to drop their employees private HC.

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Old 10-28-2010, 05:15 AM   #22
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this should help too...400 million/year for "FOOD DESERTS" NOT "DESSERTS"

Mrs. Obama’s multi-million dollar anti-obesity initiative seeks to eradicate so-called food deserts. “Right now, 23.5 million Americans, including 6.5 million kids, live in what we call ‘food deserts’—these are areas without a supermarket,” Obama explained in May. “And as a result these families wind up buying their groceries at the local gas station or convenience store, places that offer few, if any, healthy options.” According to Obama, these “food deserts” lead to increased levels of obesity.



We’re creating a Healthy Food Financing Initiative that’s going to invest $400 million a year—and leverage hundreds of millions more from the private sector—to bring grocery stores to under-served areas and help places like convenience stores carry healthier options,” she announced.

But Jeffrey wonders if the situation is as dire as Mrs. Obama describes it and whether this new financing initiative is warranted. Pointing to a 2008 government study of “food deserts,” Jeffrey concludes the First Lady’s characterization of American “food deserts” is “fatuous at best.”

Lower-income Americans live closer to supermarkets than higher-income Americans.

Overall, median distance to the nearest supermarket is 0.85 miles,” said the Agriculture Department report. “Median distance for low-income individuals is about 0.1 of a mile less than for those with higher income, and a greater share of low-income individuals (61.8 percent) have high or medium access to supermarkets than those with higher income (56.1 percent).”


There are 23.5 million people who live in “low income” areas that are more than a mile from the nearest supermarket. But more than half of these people are not low-income, and almost everyone in these areas–93.3 percent—drive their cars to the supermarket. On average, they spend 4.5 minutes more than the typical American traveling to the supermarket.

“Area-based measures of access show that 23.5 million people live in low-income areas (areas where more than 40 percent of the population has income at or below 200 percent of federal poverty thresholds) that are more than 1 mile from a supermarket or large grocery store,” said the report. “However, not all of these 23.5 million people have low income.

“If estimates are restricted to consider only low-income people in low-income areas, then 11.5 million people, or 4.1 percent of the total U.S. population, live in low-income areas more than 1 mile from a supermarket or large grocery store,” it says. “Data on time use and travel mode show that people living in low-income areas with limited access spend significantly more time (19.5 minutes) traveling to a grocery store than the national average (15 minutes).

“However,” says the report, “93 percent of those who live in low-income areas with limited access traveled to the grocery store in a vehicle they or another household member drove.”

Only 0.1 percent—one-tenth of one percent—of Americans living in low-income areas more than 1 mile from a supermarket took public transit to the store, the report said.


It’s for this “one-tenth of one percent” of American living in low-income areas that First Lady Michelle Obama says U.S. taxpayers need to invest $400 million every year. Is it worth it? You be the judge
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Old 10-28-2010, 11:36 AM   #23
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Quote:
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We’re creating a Healthy Food Financing Initiative that’s going to invest $400 million a year—and leverage hundreds of millions more from the private sector—to bring grocery stores to under-served areas and help places like convenience stores carry healthier options,” she announced.
So now they want to start controlling our food supply as to where
food markets should be and what foods they will need to carry?

Why shouldn't we just pay super markets to deliver food to their house.
After all it does take them an extra 4.5 Min's to get their food.

Funnie though, in Calif., some how, soom seem to find the time to get to Vegas and cash in their monthly welfare cards.

I like TDF's idea.
And don't forget to wear your mittens.

Last edited by justplugit; 10-28-2010 at 12:13 PM.. Reason: needed to make it clearer.

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Old 10-28-2010, 12:00 PM   #24
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Funnie though, in Calif. some how seem to find the time to get to Vegas and cash in their monthly welfare cards.
I believe it was Las Vegas and International cruise ships where the welfare debit cards were being used Nancy Pelosi would tell you that's economic stimulus...
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Old 10-27-2010, 02:23 PM   #25
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What search terms did you use?

I'm talking preventable deaths. Deaths where an intervention or change in lifestyle could have prevented it.

This chart comes from a medical journal published in 2000:

http://proxychi.baremetal.com/csdp.o...earch/1238.pdf
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Old 10-28-2010, 06:41 AM   #26
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Maybe if they walked the "Extra Mile" to the Supermarket there wouldn't be an Obesity problem.......

"If you're arguing with an idiot, make sure he isn't doing the same thing."
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Old 10-28-2010, 12:43 PM   #27
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We need to fight Obesity.....so lets make it easier for people to get food. Trying to grasp the logic in that

"If you're arguing with an idiot, make sure he isn't doing the same thing."
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Old 11-09-2010, 03:21 PM   #28
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Think again Dems.....................I guess we can toss out the theory to add extra tax to junk food's:


(CNN) – Twinkies. Nutty bars. Powdered donuts. For 10 weeks, Mark Haub, a professor of human nutrition at Kansas State University, ate one of these sugary cakelets every three hours, instead of meals. To add variety in his steady stream of Hostess and Little Debbie snacks, Haub munched on Doritos chips, sugary cereals and Oreos, too. His premise: That in weight loss, pure calorie counting is what matters most — not the nutritional value of the food. The premise held up: On his “convenience store diet,” he shed 27 pounds in two months. … His body mass index went from 28.8, considered overweight, to 24.9, which is normal. He now weighs 174 pounds. But you might expect other indicators of health would have suffered. Not so. Haub’s “bad” cholesterol, or LDL, dropped 20 percent and his “good” cholesterol, or HDL, increased by 20 percent. He reduced the level of triglycerides, which are a form of fat, by 39 percent.

"I know a taxidermy man back home. He gonna have a heart attack when he see what I brung him!"
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Old 11-10-2010, 04:21 PM   #29
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We need to fight Obesity.....so lets make it easier for people to get food. Trying to grasp the logic in that


Yup, all about calories, never saw a fat guy comin out of a cocentration camp.

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Old 11-12-2010, 10:12 PM   #30
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"Fathom the odd hypocrisy that Obama wants every citizen to prove

they are insured, but people don't have to prove they are citizens".



- Ben Stein -

"I know a taxidermy man back home. He gonna have a heart attack when he see what I brung him!"
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