Kathianne
02-07-2010, 02:08 PM
Freaking unbelievable. All starts and ends with him:
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Wait until the end, hear the forced laughing? This is the way he treats a dead supporter.
Note too that he implies that 'she couldn't afford...', however that's not quite the case, she made choices:
http://justoneminute.typepad.com/main/2010/02/eulogy-to-the-unknown-campaign-volunteer.html
...From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, we learn that she had catastrophic coverage with a high deductible and skimped on routine exams:
When Melanie Shouse began feeling ill, eventually finding a lump in her breast, she couldn't afford a doctor. She and her partner had just used their savings to open a business.
A year later, doctors told her she had terminal, stage four breast cancer.
She spent the next 4½ years fighting for health care reform that she didn't live to see pass.
Ms. Shouse died Saturday (Jan. 30, 2010) at her home in Overland. She was 41.
...In a speech in November at the Arch grounds, she spoke about the need to "take on the Big Insurance Monopoly and liberate American families from the slavery of skyrocketing insurance premiums and canceled coverage, which leave millions of us in a state of perpetual fear and insecurity ..."
Using herself as an example, Ms. Shouse said she had put off going to a doctor because her health insurance policy had a $5,000 deductible. She called it "'hit by a bus' kind of insurance."
If I can rely on this, it appears that she chose to invest in her business rather than in routine medical care and missed the news of the looming catastrophe. Had she been literally hit by a bus, I assume she would have noticed and taken steps....
Yes, one shouldn't choose a deductible so high that they fail to get to doctor before too late. I feel sorry for the loss of a person that sounded very nice. However, it comes out that it's all about Obama...
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Wait until the end, hear the forced laughing? This is the way he treats a dead supporter.
Note too that he implies that 'she couldn't afford...', however that's not quite the case, she made choices:
http://justoneminute.typepad.com/main/2010/02/eulogy-to-the-unknown-campaign-volunteer.html
...From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, we learn that she had catastrophic coverage with a high deductible and skimped on routine exams:
When Melanie Shouse began feeling ill, eventually finding a lump in her breast, she couldn't afford a doctor. She and her partner had just used their savings to open a business.
A year later, doctors told her she had terminal, stage four breast cancer.
She spent the next 4½ years fighting for health care reform that she didn't live to see pass.
Ms. Shouse died Saturday (Jan. 30, 2010) at her home in Overland. She was 41.
...In a speech in November at the Arch grounds, she spoke about the need to "take on the Big Insurance Monopoly and liberate American families from the slavery of skyrocketing insurance premiums and canceled coverage, which leave millions of us in a state of perpetual fear and insecurity ..."
Using herself as an example, Ms. Shouse said she had put off going to a doctor because her health insurance policy had a $5,000 deductible. She called it "'hit by a bus' kind of insurance."
If I can rely on this, it appears that she chose to invest in her business rather than in routine medical care and missed the news of the looming catastrophe. Had she been literally hit by a bus, I assume she would have noticed and taken steps....
Yes, one shouldn't choose a deductible so high that they fail to get to doctor before too late. I feel sorry for the loss of a person that sounded very nice. However, it comes out that it's all about Obama...