Subject: Courant on HealthCare Reform Meeting (Funny NOT).
Date: Apr 1, 2009 12:17 PM
ARTICLE BELOW
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Duh,
Big insurance has flat out stated that they're "just taking over
medicine and that the doctors' groups are just going to have to get
used to the idea."
That evidence still sits, collecting dust in the corrupt US Attorney's
orifice in New HellHoleHaven.
http://www.actionlyme.org/ALDF_BOARD.htm
That author would be none other than John J. Connolly, former
president of New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY.
It's too late.
There's no money for ANYTHING, but there WOULD HAVE BEEN, had the
corrupt USDOJ gone after this cabal in 2003, before AIG got out of
hand.
Since they're part of this Lyme RICO entity.
Yep, that Repuknicant Party horse's arse Kevin J. O'Connor sure cost
the world a great many trillions.
http://www.actionlyme.org/USDOJ_COMPLAINT_RICO.htm
In fact, they're rioting in London, as I type.
Thanks a lot, Kev.
You're a real legal wunderkind.
By the way, did you get a piece of that DCF-Rowlandgate drunken whore
Ragaglia, too?
http://www.actionlyme.org/RAGAGLIA_GRANDJURY_DETAILS.htm
"BIG CHIEF NO UNDERWEAR" Ragaglia Partys and Screws with the BigBoys,
so Chief DCF Slut might go to DC and get a cabinet position when
"Rising Star of the Republican Party" Johnny Handout (Rowland) wins a
bid for the Presidency:
The infamous Ragaglia diary... the dirt that dealt the plea deal:
"On another occasion, a sober Rowland adviser was deputized to warn
another Republican she ought to start wearing underwear beneath her
short skirts when she was around the governor. Mrs. Rowland was said
to be especially insistent that the message be delivered."
"Connecticut's political world is tiny and given to ennui. Witness the
fact that the ***U.S. Attorney, Kevin O'Connor, was barred from
participating in the prosecution of the Rowland scandals because of
his and his wife's close ties to the former governor. Kathleen
O'Connor worked in the office of Rowland's legal counsel. In most
places, that would raise an alarm. Connecticut only shrugs.*** More
Here
http://www.actionlyme.org/RAGAGLIA_GIGGLE_UPDATE_06_NOV_05.htm
Kathleen M. Dickson
=======================
http://www.courant.com/news/health/hc-web-capitol-realtors-0401.artapr02,0,3019501.story
The Connecticut Asociation of Realtors and Small Business for Health
Reform, held a meeting at the Bushnell Wednesday morning. After the
group of more than 700 Connecticut realtors finished their meeting,
the walked over to the Legislative Office Building to meet with their
respective legislators. (RICHARD MESSINA / HARTFORD COURANT / April 1,
2009)
When Linda St. Peters talks to legislators about the need for health
insurance reform, she speaks from hard-earned personal experience.
St. Peters, president of the Connecticut Association of Realtors, once
got her health insurance through her spouse, just like about half of
the of the organization's 18,000 members.
But about 13 percent of its members, mainly independent contractors,
are uninsured. St. Peters found herself facing the same situation in
2006 when he husband died six months after being diagnosed with
leukemia.
"With that, I lost my health care coverage," St. Peter said, shortly
before addressing about 700 real estate agents at the Belding Theater
in Hartford today.
Related links
*
Connecticut Asociation of Realtors and Small Business for Health
Reform Connecticut Asociation of Realtors and Small Business for
Health Reform Photos
The real estate agents and members of the group Small Business for
Health Reform then descended on the state Capitol to lobby for
Sustinet, the Universal Health Care Foundation of Connecticut's plan
for health reform.
The proposal passed its first legislative hurdle March 26, receiving
an endorsement from the public health committee.
As a breast cancer survivor, St. Peters said she faced additional
problems in getting affordable health insurance. She initially got on
COBRA, but her premiums were twice as expensive as her mortgage. She
said she knows of other people in the same situation, some because
they have children with pre-existing conditions.
"You have it (insurance), but it chokes you every time you write the
check," St. Peter said.
Sustinet would create a gigantic health insurance pool by combining
the existing pool of state employees and retirees with people now
covered under state assistance programs and opening it up to the
public. The public pool would compete with, not replace, private
insurance plans.
The Universal Health Care Foundation projected that the plan could
lead to 98 percent of state residents having health insurance by 2014.
Staff Writer Arielle Levin Becker contributed to this story.
"[Real] scientists are *fiercely* independent. That's the good
news."-- NIH's Top Fool, Anthony Fauci