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Full Version: Poll: Majority of Americans Say Obamacare “Not Working As Planned”…
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I'd have a bit of a difficult time with that poll question, as stated, because my answer would be, "There have been so many problems that the law is working as intended."
Killary says that "only a small majority oppose O'care"

WTF is a SMALL MAJORITY?
(05-07-2014 11:22 AM)tigerjaws Wrote: [ -> ]Killary says that "only a small majority oppose O'care"

WTF is a SMALL MAJORITY?

She's an idiot. It just throws off the liberals.
This should be the biggest takeaway from that survey:
Quote:Despite this, the public is inclined to give the law a chance to work rather than throwing it out and starting over. Nearly six in ten (58 percent) say they want their representative in Congress to work to improve the law, while just over a third (35 percent) want them to work on repealing it and replacing it with something else.
(05-07-2014 11:28 AM)Redwingtom Wrote: [ -> ]This should be the biggest takeaway from that survey:
Quote:Despite this, the public is inclined to give the law a chance to work rather than throwing it out and starting over. Nearly six in ten (58 percent) say they want their representative in Congress to work to improve the law, while just over a third (35 percent) want them to work on repealing it and replacing it with something else.

What if it cannot be improved without blowing it up and starting over?

What do you think could be done to improve it without blowing it up and starting over?

The fundamental problem is that it ignores economic reality. That hasn't even come to bear yet, because we are only beginning the stage where that will manifest itself. It's going to get a lot worse, not better.
(05-07-2014 11:32 AM)Owl 69/70/75 Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-07-2014 11:28 AM)Redwingtom Wrote: [ -> ]This should be the biggest takeaway from that survey:
Quote:Despite this, the public is inclined to give the law a chance to work rather than throwing it out and starting over. Nearly six in ten (58 percent) say they want their representative in Congress to work to improve the law, while just over a third (35 percent) want them to work on repealing it and replacing it with something else.

What if it cannot be improved without blowing it up and starting over?

What do you think could be done to improve it without blowing it up and starting over?

The fundamental problem is that it ignores economic reality. That hasn't even come to bear yet, because we are only beginning the stage where that will manifest itself. It's going to get a lot worse, not better.

Maybe the Lawyers, Politicians, and Businessmen can do patient's surgery
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