Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Bloomberg Blasts Health Reform Law (Obama Care)


I’m not a Mike Bloomberg fan because he’s basically a Liberal who believes in Global Warming and other Lib causes. But, he’s somewhat of a fiscal Conservative and he advocates on behalf of the City of New York like a good mayor should when he sees his city about to get kicked in the ass by Obama Care.

The New York Post reports:

Mayor Bloomberg said yesterday that President Obama's health-reform plan does nothing to contain runaway medical costs or deliver better care.

"It does not address the total cost of health care in our country, it does not address the fact that we spend double what they do in Western Europe and have a lower life expectancy, but it does address coverage," Bloomberg told reporters.

"It's a system we can't afford in total in this country, and a system that's not delivering the kind of health care that we want."

Bloomberg also indicated that he has no choice but to enforce the law of the land.

"At this point, Congress has spoken . . . the president will sign it and then we'll have to implement it. And that's where I'm going to focus my efforts," he said.

The mayor's Office of Management and Budget is conducting an analysis of reforms to determine if they'll end up as a net plus or loss for the city.

Last week, Bloomberg warned that New Yorkers would pay a disproportionate share of the expenses since the Medicare tax is being increased 0.9 percent starting in 2013 on couples earning $250,000 or more ($200,000 for singles), while an added Medicare tax of 3.8 percent is being imposed on investment earnings of those same high-earning taxpayers.

A majority of Americans have a dim view of the sweeping reform passed by the House, saying it gives Washington too much clout and won't do much to reduce their own health care costs or federal deficits, according to a new poll released yesterday.

A CNN/Opinion Research Corporation survey, conducted before the vote, found that 59 percent opposed the bill, and 39 percent favored it.

In addition, 56 percent said the bill gives the government too much involvement in health care; 28 percent said it gives the government the proper role and 16 percent said it leaves Washington with an inadequate role.

Full story

Via New York Post

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