Actions we can take to protect our access to health care
Comments
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The ACA rally that took place in Chicago, was held inside in a union hall, and I saw news reports about it, and it was strictly about health care. Both Senator Dick Durbin, and Representative Jan Schakowskiy spoke at it. A friend of mine works with somebody who attended it, and she said the room was packed.I think the biggest ACA rally was supposed to be the one Bernie spoke at, and that one was in the Detroit area maybe because it was centrally located. That one I believe was also union organized, and unions are not going to be concerned with gay rights or pro choice.
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BB, the point I was trying to make was that Hillary would not have destroyed, or attempted to destroy, the ACA. Also, yes, the election is over, but another one is coming up in 2 years. How Congress handles the ACA will have a big impact on those results.
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I'm with Bosum Blues. One of the reasons I've really appreciated these threads is for the focus I'm finding here. I live in deep blue territory and could, if I wished (I don't), join two protests a day or more. Friends are involved in any number of causes here. But for me, as for others of you, the ACA is life and death, because my husband and I are self-employed. We've always made a decent living, and we've always had insurance. Now, if we lose the protections around pre-existing conditions, I'm sunk.
So I come here because I'm trying to figure out what I can do, specifically in the arena of health care, to influence the political process. It's not that I don't have opinions on other areas--of course we all do. But to the extent that I can make time for activism, I'll use that for health care, and I want to use the time wisely and effectively.
Thanks to all who contribute here.
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In terms of Actions We Can Take, I mentioned that people protested about the ACA outside my Dad's GOP congressman's office. I'm on that Rep's email list and last night ( just a few days after the protest) he sent a message about the topic. (He mentioned how it's complicated and you can't change just one piece, etc and asked for more feedback).
So protests at the local Rep's office definitely get their attention!
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I'm not going to respond to what I consider right wing propaganda. With that I say adieu to this thread.
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Again, I'm hoping we can allow this thread to be focused on us sharing/discussing the actions we are taking to protect our health care (and use the other threads for debates). Thank you.
Action: attend a town hall. The week of Feb 20-24 our members of congress are supposed to be home meeting w/ their constituents. So attend their meeting. If there isn't one, called the office and tell them you expect them to hold a town hall meeting. Gather your family, friends and neighbors to go with you, since it affects them too (the ACA repeal could change employer plans and Medicare. Paul Ryan wants to replace Medicare with vouchers and have retirees buy insurance through the marketplace).
Here's one town hall meeting that got a lot of coverage in CA.
Rep. McClintock Town Hall Yields a Thousand With #ACA & Other Questions
http://blog.health-access.org/rep-mcclintock-town-...
This particular Rep was already worried about the ACA repeal
In Private, Republican Lawmakers Agonize Over Health Law Repeal
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/27/us/politics/aff...
"We had better be sure that we are prepared to live with the market being created," said Representative Tom McClintock of California, because "that's going to be called Trumpcare." He added, "Republicans will own it lock, stock and barrel, and we'll be judged on that."
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I was not able to march in the Seattle woman's march in January but I found out my neighbor was one of the organizers. She told me they are planning more marches. I think they work in that the current administration is sensitive to the sheer number of people that attend wearing the pink hats help cement the visual.
Check out websites and you can find local demonstrations in your area.
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The woman's march was not strictly geared towards keeping the ACA in place. That is what the healthcare protests on January 15 that Bernie Sander's had a hand in were for. They had marches promoting keeping the ACA and medicare in place, and keeping funding for planned parenthood. I just looked and I could not find any other planned marches strictly for healthcare that are coming up. I believe all congressmen are supposed to be home in their district this next week, and a lot of them are planning on having town hall meetings. Those meetings would be a good way for constituents to make their congressman aware that keeping the ACA in place is important.
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peaches, I haven't seen anything either I did see the day without a woman strike. I am not sure what that is suppose to look like. I would like to participate in rallying for womens rights, I don't want to see planned parenthood defunded. I have been a supporter since college, basic healthcare and birthcontrol.
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Yes, there were many (70?) protests around the country on Jan 15 that were focused on saving our access to health insurance. I saw part of the video from Warren MI, with Bernie Sanders and others. In addition to politicians they had other speakers, like the (female) head of a union, speaking on behalf of many (1000s?) of employees.
BTW, did see the coverage of the GOP Rep in Utah Yes, they protested about many things but one is the ACA. So these town hall meetings are getting attention, especially for GOP reps. Is there one is your town?
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It took me forever to find the link for this. I finally had to go through my computer history for yesterday, but I ran across a schedule for town hall meetings arranged by state.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1yq1NT9DZ2z...
There is a town hall meeting taking place in my district but it centers on funding for mental health, which I know is really underfunded. The women's march is also promoting huddles, which are meetings which take place in individual homes or public places such as coffee houses. If you host a huddle, you can focus it on a specific topic such as health care, or immigration reform. The women's march has 10 actions in 100 days, and they post a new one every 10 days. They are also trying to organize a women's strike, but a date has not been determined for that. The problem with that though is that you could get fired if you don't show up for work, and you won't get paid. On February 17th there is also a day where you don't go to work, and you don't spend any money.
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Those huddles sound awesome. It's times like this that I wish I had friends...
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I watched some of Meet the Press this morning, and they had Bernie on. He mentioned that there are going to be rallies taking place all across the US promoting the ACA on February 25th. It sounds like they are only going to focus on health care. I looked at his website on Friday, and I did not see anything about this, and so this must be new.. If I find a link, I will post it.
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BB- I did a little bit of research, and apparently this is along the same lines of the rallies for the ACA that took place on 1/15. These rallies are also being organized by Bernie and Senator Schumer, and are being led by other Democratic senators. I don't know what happens if you do not have a Democratic senator in your state. BTW- Trump supporters are also holding "Make America Great Again" rallies on that date too, and so I hope no altercations take place between the two groups. The "Make America Great" group wants to get rid of Obamacare.
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The White House posted a survey, asking for our priorities. Maybe we can all reply and have our voices heard. Feel free to send this to everyone you know.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/joint-address-issues-su...
There's a place for comments, so I'm planning to write something like this:
The GOP has said it will protect people with pre-existing conditions. This is what we need:
- the same rates for all patients, male and female, and those with pre-existing conditions.
- no High Risk pools. Those have failed.
- no annual caps.
- no lifetime caps.
High Risk pools have been tried in 35 states and failed. Problems:
- prohibitively high rates, effectively denying coverage.
- waiting periods after signing up—but cancer doesn't wait; treatment must start right away
- waiting lists just to sign up.
- annual caps and lifetime caps.
- government funding shortfalls. Even the Federal pool ran out of money.
If high risk pools worked, we wouldn't have needed the ACA.
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The White House is asking how the ACA has impacted you. Let's all respond and tell them our ACA success stories. Pass it on to everyone you know who wants to continue to have access to health insurance.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/obamacare-share-your-st...
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Thank you peggy, done. fwiw.
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I let the white house know how the ACA has helped me and others here. People should be warned though, that if you comment, they will ask for your email, and they will send you emails on an almost daily basis. I signed the petition that somebody here posted on the whitehouse website right around the time Trump came into office, and I have gotten emails from them on a regular bases. I don't know if you can just skip the info you are supposed to give them after you make your comment.
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One way to get around receiving unwanted emails in your current and probably only email box is to set up a 2nd or even 3rd email address. I use one email address for almost all emails except for those used to send to government officials and others I do not want jamming my frequently used email. Using different email for different purposes works for me.
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Did anyone else notice the typo in "White House" at the bottom of the survey?
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HA!!! Nice.
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