“And, double whammy, they can use that pre-existing condition requirement as an excuse to drop your coverage after they’ve collected premiums for years (when, suddenly, you need it), by claiming that anything wrong with you was pre-existing at the time you signed up.”
No insurance company can drop you unless you stop making payment. They can only not renew your policy.
Uh, no, at least not nationwide. There is plenty written about policy rescissions, or you can watch testimony from a Congressional hearing about it. It’s perfectly legal, and the fundamental reason we need a public option.
This American Life did a great piece on recissions and the congressional hearings surrounding them. Act three of the episode “Fine Print”. Around 35 minutes in.
But I’m not a huge proponent of a public option, as I’m a big single-payer supporter. LET’S GET SOCIALIST!
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brianglidewell reblogged this from benzado and added:
This American Life did a great piece on recissions...the congressional hearings...
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brendanmc reblogged this from benzado and added:
yay ben. i learned what an elastic good was from watching the wire.
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heyjb reblogged this from vaov and added:
The Public Option is a mistake. While the concept is nice (provide a public subsidised plan for those who can’t afford...
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adambozarth reblogged this from benzado and added:
Please think of your fellow starving artist/working actor/freelance geniuses.
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benzado posted this