November 5, 2009
AARP West Virginia endorses House health bill
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. --   

AARP West Virginia joined its national organization Thursday in backing the health-care overhaul proposal that is pending in the U.S. House of Representatives.

The seniors group believes the bill will end insurer discrimination based on age and pre-existing conditions, help older Americans afford prescription drugs, and protect Medicare, said AARP senior state director Gaylene Miller.

"By far and away, the Affordable Health Care for America Act meets those priorities," Miller said at news conference at the group's Charleston offices.

The state organization announced its endorsement as AARP held a news conference in Washington, D.C., where CEO Barry Rand said the sweeping measure would ensure that access to health care "will never again be based on your luck or your wealth."

The bill, which would cover 96 percent of Americans, could be voted on as soon as Saturday. Democratic House leaders said Thursday they believe they have the 218 votes needed for passage.

AARP West Virginia plans to encourage its 300,000 members to contact members of Congress to support the bill and pass a final health-care overhaul by the end of the year.

The organization has traveled the state to speak with seniors about their biggest health-care worries, which include drug costs and coverage for those who aren't old enough to qualify for Medicare, Miller said.

Several AARP members joined the Charleston news conference to talk about their personal health care battles.

Jackie Henry, 69, of Charleston, said she tried to save money last year by taking only one puff daily of her inhaler -- instead of the two her doctor had prescribed.  

"I ended up in the hospital," Henry said. "My lungs were hemorrhaging."

Her husband had retired as a salesman, she said. But medical bills from a heart problem have sent him back to work at age 73, this time as a bus driver.

Another AARP member, Pam Lowry, said she hasn't visited a doctor or taken medicine for two years. The 60-year-old retired secretary has multiple health problems and couldn't afford insurance on her $1,700 monthly pension. The plans she saw cost $850 to $1,200 a month.

About 52,000 West Virginians between the ages of 50 and 64 are uninsured, Miller added. Half are working and still don't have access to insurance.

Critics of the House bill have pointed to Medicare spending cuts, which would lower payments to providers and trim Medicare Advantage, the program where private companies run Medicare-approved plans.

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Posted By: AaronS (6:19pm 11-11-2009)
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And here I thought one of the rules for posting was to keep it civil, the personal attacks, insults or harrassment of any kind are subject to removal.

I guess that only applies to conservative posters and not the "Howard Dean" paid bloggers who occasionally contribute to the op-ed page.

And to think I received a warnign to me from the managing editor of the Gazette via my personal email for sending a from my private email to his private email my feelings on his personal attack on me. The fact that it in NO way involved the Gazette or their servers didn't seem to matter to the two individuals who 'warned' me to stop or I would be banned from the Gazette site.

Just more of those things that make you go HMMMMMMMMMMMMMM.

Posted By: One Citizen (5:40pm 11-11-2009)
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Pacaderm is a troll, insulting anyone who hopes that our leaders can get this country back to where it was before Bush's cadre seized it. Or else he spreads disinformation and the propaganda he spreads strongly indicates exactly who he is and why he does it

Whether on the internet, or at townhall meetings, or at "astroturf" events (like the recent Michelle Bachmann Teabag-O-Rama at the Capitol in D.C. last week), right wing trolls typically use race-baiting, cat-calling and silly lies to disrupt the flow of real information

There are professionally trained online right wing trolls paid just to confuse and frustrate the public into not actively taking part in open discussions

MUCH MORE HERE

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Astroturf_blogging

ALSO SEE

http://www.alternet.org/blogs/themix/37619/

AND

http://tinyurl.com/ybjyosw

By the way, there are now 50 rightwing astroturf events planned all across the country just to stop Obamacare

Posted By: Eliz (11:35pm 11-10-2009)
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pacaderm....I believe that OC is correct on this issue, our President nor did the Democrats lie about passing a bill to cover "illegal aliens" for free. There is nothing in the bill that recently passed indicates that illegal aliens were included in the House Bill for health care reform.

Posted By: One Citizen (2:08pm 11-10-2009)
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Pacaderm lied about the Dems passing a bill to cover "illegal aliens" for free and I can prove it
http://tinyurl.com/PACADERM-is-LYING

It could be that he's embarrassed because the House Republican Plan aided their industrial use of illegal workers by expanding U.S. coverage to include “Sweatshop Insurance”.

Their proposal tried to explicitly expand the definition of ‘State’ to include not just D.C. and Puerto Rico, but adds BY NAME the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa and Jack Abramoff’s favorite client the Northern Marianas home of the ‘Made in the USA’ Chinese-owned slave labor sweatshops!

See pages 121-122 of the House Repub bill at this link (pdf):

http://tinyurl.com/yf2h674

Now, pacaderm, if you believe the House just passed a bill which would provide free health insurance to illegals, then why don't you post ANOTHER link which proves it? Because the last one you posted actually revealed that it was YOU who was lying, and race-baiting to boot

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