TEN THOUSAND people a day are submitting health-care insurance applications in California, a state where officials embraced President Obama’s Affordable Care Act. Kentucky’s governor has presided over a relatively error-free implementation of the law in his state, showing leaders across the South what they could do if they cooperated instead of rooting for the policy to fail.
You would have expected similar results in Democrat-controlled Maryland, where officials decided to take charge, instead of punting responsibility for new insurance marketplaces to the feds. Instead, the state’s rollout, led by Lt. Gov. Anthony G. Brown (D), has been an embarrassment.
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2 comments:
If you want to be inundated with sales calls from insurance salesmen asking for you by first name on your cellphone for three days straight, all you have to do is go to the healthcare main page and stare at it for about 3 minuted, then go back to your normal web surfing.
But it's a secure site.
Really.
No one is gleaning your information there.
Really.
You can even log on and give out even more information if you want, and it will be kept top secret.
Really.
Not a doctor, but an undertaker? YES!
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