BartenderElite
Verified User
He made the promise.![]()
It goes back to 2016, when his supporters kept repeating - like a mantra - you should take him seriously, but not LITERALLY.
Like, WTF?
He made the promise.![]()
Day 1, Earl. Day 1.
It's going up. As economists predicted w/ new tariffs.
But MOST of them will be Libtardians. If they don't like all the changes they should have ran a MUCH better candidate then the mildly retarded woman they ran who got her start by sleeping with old men to get ahead.^^ Many of them will be Trump voters.
So you say.But MOST of them will be Libtardians. If they don't like all the changes they should have ran a MUCH better candidate then the mildly retarded woman they ran who got her start by sleeping with old men to get ahead.
We don't care. As long as he owns the libtards were good. In fact,....if he ever started Jailing them we would tear down the statue of Liberty in a hot minute and have a gigantic likeness of him built in its place.Mainly because of inflation - which Trump failed to stop.
Yup,....and most others do as well or they would have voted for her. But.................THEY DIDNT.So you say.
SoMedicaid is the largest federal government program providing medical and health-related services to low-income people across the country and currently serves some 72 million Americans.
Lawmakers in some states have looked at reducing the eligibility for Medicaid, either by letting existing legislation expire or by actively repealing the expansion brought about by the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which could impact the healthcare of millions.
But according to KFF Health News, nine states—Arizona, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Utah and Virginia—have trigger laws that require termination of the expansion if the share of federal funding drops.
While individual states pay for Medicaid, the federal government provides states with an enhanced federal matching rate, known as FMAP, of up to 90 percent for their expansion populations. If federal funding falls below a certain rate in these states with trigger laws, it means the expansion of Medicaid could end, cutting health coverage for potentially millions of Americans.
"While laws in the so-called 'trigger' states require action, the substantial loss of federal funding would likely force all states to reassess whether to continue the expansion coverage," KFF Health News reported in November 2024.
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Millions of Americans could lose Medicaid coverage
Some Medicaid enrollees could see their coverage come to an end if federal funding drops.www.newsweek.com
The Democrat's policy is not owning the contards.We don't care. As long as he owns the libtards were good. In fact,....if he ever started Jailing them we would tear down the statue of Liberty in a hot minute and have a gigantic likeness of him built in its place.Its a Trump world now.............Beetches.
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That's their problem......The Democrat's policy is not owning the contards.![]()
Because they're not children?That's their problem......![]()
Until it hits them.The new MAGA reply when people lose rights, freedoms & assistance of any kind:
So?
Oh, how noble of you to defend Medicaid, the crown jewel of big government's socialist agenda! Let's ignore the fact that it's ballooning our national debt with its unsustainable costs, shall we? Those trigger laws? Just a smart move by states to protect themselves from the whims of a bloated federal bureaucracy that loves to dangle funding like a carrot. And reducing eligibility?Medicaid is the largest federal government program providing medical and health-related services to low-income people across the country and currently serves some 72 million Americans.
Lawmakers in some states have looked at reducing the eligibility for Medicaid, either by letting existing legislation expire or by actively repealing the expansion brought about by the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which could impact the healthcare of millions.
But according to KFF Health News, nine states—Arizona, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Utah and Virginia—have trigger laws that require termination of the expansion if the share of federal funding drops.
While individual states pay for Medicaid, the federal government provides states with an enhanced federal matching rate, known as FMAP, of up to 90 percent for their expansion populations. If federal funding falls below a certain rate in these states with trigger laws, it means the expansion of Medicaid could end, cutting health coverage for potentially millions of Americans.
"While laws in the so-called 'trigger' states require action, the substantial loss of federal funding would likely force all states to reassess whether to continue the expansion coverage," KFF Health News reported in November 2024.
![]()
Millions of Americans could lose Medicaid coverage
Some Medicaid enrollees could see their coverage come to an end if federal funding drops.www.newsweek.com
In other words, ignore the veterans.Oh, how noble of you to defend Medicaid, the crown jewel of big government's socialist agenda! Let's ignore the fact that it's ballooning our national debt with its unsustainable costs, shall we? Those trigger laws? Just a smart move by states to protect themselves from the whims of a bloated federal bureaucracy that loves to dangle funding like a carrot. And reducing eligibility?
That's not cutting healthcare; it's promoting personal responsibility! Why should hardworking taxpayers foot the bill for everyone's healthcare? Maybe if federal funding drops, it's a sign we need less government handouts, not more. But sure, keep crying about 'millions impacted' as if personal accountability and fiscal responsibility are dirty words. No, worries our kids and their kids will pay for what we can't, the usual intelligent view of libtards without a clue.
Yeah, brilliant as usual, can you read something and actually comprehend what you read? I only ask because I've never seen any evidence that you can.In other words, ignore the veterans.
You're such an idiot, it's like talking to 3rd grader. I'm trying to be nicer, I was going to say 2nd grader, you can thank me later.AI Overview
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Medicaid can help veterans pay for health care by limiting out-of-pocket costs.
I'm not the one who cheers cutting Medicaid off.You're such an idiot, it's like talking to 3rd grader. I'm trying to be nicer, I was going to say 2nd grader, you can thank me later.
Again, you say 'cheer' like an idiot that can't comprehend anything, ever. lol DumbassI'm not the one who cheers cutting Medicaid off.