Statements about Health Care
Between 2000 and 2006, "health insurance company profits quadrupled."
"Between the year 2000 and 2006, (insurance) premiums in this country doubled."
Says that before health care reform, one of every three health care dollars spent -- more than $800 billion a year -- didn't go for health care.
Says Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine is hypocritical for challenging the constitutionality of the new health care law.
The health care reform law "offset[s] 6 years of benefits with 10 years of tax increases."
Says 15,000 IRS employees "have to be added to administer ‘ObamaCare’ and look at the tax implications."
Ohio taxpayers spent more than $67 million "for the year" on food stamps and Medicaid for Wal-Mart workers
"We had an amendment in the health care law that said the federal government is going to take over education."
New provisions of the health care law bar the use of flexible spending accounts and health savings accounts to pay for aspirin and other non-prescription health needs.
Says the state's Medicaid waiver proposal "has languished in a file cabinet at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for more than two years."
"Rhode Island has the highest percentage of uninsured adults of any state in New England."
The tax-cut deal "adds more than $800 billion to the deficit over two years -- more than the cost of TARP and more than the cost of the Recovery Act" and about the same as health care reform.
Those who fail to buy health insurance under "Obamacare" face the threat of jail time
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The Democrats' health care reform law is a "government takeover of health care."
Says that in his first 17 months as president, the United States doubled its world-leading $500 million a year commitment to fighting global AIDS.
"When Social Security was passed, there were all kinds of lawsuits," just as there have been in the legal battle over the new health care law.
Says Joe Straus "was co-author of a bill that would have allowed Planned Parenthood to control public school sex education."
Says federal health care overhaul will cost Texas state government "upwards of $30 billion over the next 10 years."
Eliminating the state tax on health savings accounts will "make it easier for small business owners to provide health insurance to their employees."
In the case of a catastrophic event, the Atlanta-area offices of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will self-destruct.
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