Saturday, April 05, 2014

ObamaCare Enrollee Figures Questioned : Suspending Disbelief A Must

Isn't this an uncomfortable if not unacceptable assessment of the number of people that have signed up for ObamaCare? It only took a few days for the entire country to decide ObamaCare was a good thing after all after months of decrying it a disaster?

Given that nearly all assessments for how ObamaCare has been a success have shown to be fabricated or out right lies, why would anyone believe these figures to be actual? Truthful? Honest? Moral?

The Obama administration admits they do not know how many people have actually registered or how many have actually paid the fee, but yet supports of ObamaCare trot out these figures of 7.1 million accepting the plan. The actuate figure might be the 7.1 million having accessed the wed-site but all did not sign up.

To accept the administration's claims of success in meeting their goals for ObamaCare, we have to invoke those immortal words uttered by our fantastic former secretary of state Hillary Clinton when she was grilling General Petrous on the success of the surge in Iraq, "I must be willing to suspend disbelief".

History has funny way of clearing the air of smoke so the truth has a chance to be seen and heard. To accept any pronouncements of success from Mr Obama and or the progressive socialist liberal democrats on any subject, one must suspend disbelief. To believe is to accept failure as a way of life.

(National Center for Policy Analysis)
Obamacare update. After a last-minute surge in applications, the White House announced that they met their goal of 7 million Americans enrolling in private insurance thorough the Obamacare exchanges. That number doesn't include the additional 3 million people newly enrolled in Medicaid. There are still some questions surrounding the validity of those numbers. The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association says that 15-20% of those new enrollees haven't paid their premiums, which is the same as being uninsured, even under Obamacare. HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius all but confirmed that report. Furthermore, the Administration continues to support delays to the enrollment deadline, allowing those who were "in line" but unable to finish an extra two weeks to enroll.

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