She voted for Trump. Now she fears losing the Obamacare plan that saved her life

Concepts of thoughts and prayers..

Reporting from Lake City, Fla. — Kathy Watson was anxious about her health coverage even before she woke up gasping for breath last month and drove herself to the emergency room with a flare-up in her heart condition.

After struggling for years without insurance, the 55-year-old former small-business owner — who has battled diabetes, high blood pressure and two cancers — credits Obamacare with saving her life.

Watson also voted for Donald Trump, believing the businessman would bring change. She dismissed his campaign pledges to scrap the Affordable Care Act as bluster.

Now, as she watches the new president push to kill the law that provided her with a critical lifeline, Watson finds herself among many Trump supporters who must reconcile their votes with worries about the future of their healthcare.

Watson, a proud, salty woman who was uninsurable a few years ago, isn’t ready to renounce Trump. But she’s increasingly frustrated by his vague promises to replace Obamacare with something better.

“I’ve been through enough,” Watson said recently, sitting on the patio outside her mobile home, down a sandy road in a rural corner of northern Florida. “I don’t want to go back.”
Cool. I hope she dies in her car.
 
Concepts of thoughts and prayers..

Reporting from Lake City, Fla. — Kathy Watson was anxious about her health coverage even before she woke up gasping for breath last month and drove herself to the emergency room with a flare-up in her heart condition.

After struggling for years without insurance, the 55-year-old former small-business owner — who has battled diabetes, high blood pressure and two cancers — credits Obamacare with saving her life.

Watson also voted for Donald Trump, believing the businessman would bring change. She dismissed his campaign pledges to scrap the Affordable Care Act as bluster.

Now, as she watches the new president push to kill the law that provided her with a critical lifeline, Watson finds herself among many Trump supporters who must reconcile their votes with worries about the future of their healthcare.

Watson, a proud, salty woman who was uninsurable a few years ago, isn’t ready to renounce Trump. But she’s increasingly frustrated by his vague promises to replace Obamacare with something better.

“I’ve been through enough,” Watson said recently, sitting on the patio outside her mobile home, down a sandy road in a rural corner of northern Florida. “I don’t want to go back.”

If I recall, obamascare was mandatory for almost everyone who didn't get insurance through their employer. The only thing Trump did was to make it not mandatory (some silly thing with it being unconstitutional to DICTATE to an American citizen that they MUST purchase a particular service or item from a government source). What if Trump comes up with something better and cheaper... and constitutional?
 
Concepts of thoughts and prayers..

Reporting from Lake City, Fla. — Kathy Watson was anxious about her health coverage even before she woke up gasping for breath last month and drove herself to the emergency room with a flare-up in her heart condition.

After struggling for years without insurance, the 55-year-old former small-business owner — who has battled diabetes, high blood pressure and two cancers — credits Obamacare with saving her life.

Watson also voted for Donald Trump, believing the businessman would bring change. She dismissed his campaign pledges to scrap the Affordable Care Act as bluster.

Now, as she watches the new president push to kill the law that provided her with a critical lifeline, Watson finds herself among many Trump supporters who must reconcile their votes with worries about the future of their healthcare.

Watson, a proud, salty woman who was uninsurable a few years ago, isn’t ready to renounce Trump. But she’s increasingly frustrated by his vague promises to replace Obamacare with something better.

“I’ve been through enough,” Watson said recently, sitting on the patio outside her mobile home, down a sandy road in a rural corner of northern Florida. “I don’t want to go back.”
Cognitive dissonance seems ubiquitous among MAGA morons.

This week, JPP MAGAs have been dashing around the board trying to justify why far right-wing Republicans are actually enthusiastic defenders of their liberal Social Security benefits.
 
Watson also voted for Donald Trump, believing the businessman would bring change. She dismissed his campaign pledges to scrap the Affordable Care Act as bluster.
Now, as she watches the new president push to kill the law that provided her with a critical lifeline, Watson finds herself among many Trump supporters who must reconcile their votes with worries about the future of their healthcare.
:lolup:
 
If I recall, obamascare was mandatory for almost everyone who didn't get insurance through their employer. The only thing Trump did was to make it not mandatory (some silly thing with it being unconstitutional to DICTATE to an American citizen that they MUST purchase a particular service or item from a government source). What if Trump comes up with something better and cheaper... and constitutional?
And we are STILL waiting for the great , better / cheaper healthcare program Trump said he already had to be rolled out.
It has been what almost 8 years now?
 
Elections have consequences. When trumpers vote for him because they thought it would be funny, they get a disaster that does not feel so funny to live through.
So did she lose her obamacare as a consequence of her vote? That article
Is from two thousand and seventeen...
 
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