Would a Repeal of the Healthcare Law Hurt Democrats or Republicans?

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who cares, let us all die and bankrupt our families in the process - the new American way!

deadmanwalking of FL 8:41PM March 30, 2012

I think most american voters don't know enough about this plan to make a decision on whether this healthcare is good or bad because we don't know what in it because it has never been told to the american people all we hear is it good for the democratic party or republican party would someone please explain it to the american people !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! thank you and may god bless you and your families

rick gibson of FL 6:01PM March 30, 2012

The GOP will own the fallout. When seniors realize that the donut hole is back and their prescription drug cost skyrocket, when the 40-50 million people with pre-existing conditions realize they can't be insured anymore, when parents have to kick their adult kids off their insurance plans, there will be hell to pay and the GOP better have a replacement plan in place

jgarcia 5:40PM March 30, 2012

What a stupid question. Your article is definitely a testimonial to why this discourse is so politicized.

Perhaps if the focus was on what was good for the country, we might have this bill move on and be focusing on the hundreds of other issues that remain unresolved....

But that would imply that our politicians and pundit press is trying to work on behalf of the public insted of their biased and greed lobbyists....

DeeToo of SC 5:12PM March 30, 2012

The fallacy in mocking the 2,700 page law is that it concerns an industry that needs modernization and a nation that must contend with insurance companies that have made profits by limiting their customers and contracting with suppliers to the detriment of the general population that fears any changes from the status quo. The justices that used outdated cliches show they have no understanding of the marketplace and the complications that arise from making changes to an outdated system. The preferences of the general populace for suppliers they have not looked into demonstrate a lack of knowledge how decisions are made and how costs are miserly controlled. The justices are beyond a decision about constitutionality.

Phillip Manson of CA 4:52PM March 30, 2012

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