Without Obamacare "I'd have lost the farm," says Alabama farmer.

When did I say the farmer fit in that category? I was talking about the stupid comment that "the majority creams themselves over the thought of free insurance".

Yes, you were. You'll talk about lots of things In an effort to avoid responding to Post 10. Do it again.
No, I wasn't. You said specifically that the *majority* blah blah blah, and that was exactly what I was speaking to.

I made no reference to farmer handless.
 
My bad...once more with content:

Without Obamacare 'I'd have lost the farm,' says Alabama farmer

Sometimes it helps to put a human face on the reasons why access to health insurance and affordable care is important.

The myth that "the only people benefiting from this are leeches who don't work and expect something for nothing" is just that.





So, I looked up the claim and interestingly enough it seems that the farm was only established in 2010. So, I am wondering how his family could have been "farming it for 3 generations" when it has only been around for a few years. Same guy as the one in the picture, so I am beginning to think there might just be a problem with this story.

That being said, of course some people are going to benefit. That was never in doubt. What is also not in doubt is that MORE people are being screwed, than helped.


Adcock Farms
Hank Adcock
2025 Joy Road
Hayden, AL 35079 - View Map
Phone: (205) 559-7579
Adcock Farms

A privately held company in Hayden, AL. Is this your business? Claim This Profile

More Details for Adcock Farms
Categorized under Farms. Our records show it was established in 2010 and incorporated in Alabama. Current estimates show this company has an annual revenue of $1 to 2.5 million and employs a staff of approximately 1 to 4.

Company Contacts
Is this your business? Claim This Profile


http://www.manta.com/c/mr5vxws/adcock-farms

So unless you see the bloody stumps of his hands you won't believe?





There is a very old saying "Falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus" which means a falsehood about one thing, means a falsehood about everything. The fact that the claim for a farm of three generations is false leads me to believe the whole thing is made up. Don't you? Or are you so invested in disseminating your propaganda that a clear case of false claims will be ignored by you?

I'll commend you for your research into the provenance of the farm. I think the deception is a shame, because it'll be used as a baby/bathwater scenario. I very much doubt that he faked the injury, but I'm sure there are posters here who will claim he did.

Any added information you come across would be appreciated.







A shame? That's the best you can muster? In a court of law everything this man said would be tossed out and he would have been tossed in the grey bar Hilton and the best you can come up with is "it's a shame"?

Here's the deal, when the propagandists must resort to outright lies, like this, to support what they are selling, they are losing. The PEOPLE of this country despise individuals who lie to them in this manner and they don't forget. Nor do they forgive.

You had best remember that...

That's why someone bitching about not affording health coverage yet they go to the movies, have I-Phones and on and on. Problem is their priorities are all screwed up

That's why they're not my problem

They just need slapped and told to pull their pants up

-Geaux
 
Last edited:
My bad...once more with content:

Without Obamacare 'I'd have lost the farm,' says Alabama farmer

Sometimes it helps to put a human face on the reasons why access to health insurance and affordable care is important.

Hank Adcock of Nectar lost half his right hand in a farming accident in June – but he'll tell anybody who will listen that he would have lost a lot more if it weren't for Obamacare.

"I'd a lost the farm, I guess," said Adcock.

The farm has been in his family for three generations, and Adcock has been working it for most of his 62 years. In June, both hands got caught in a hay baler while Adcock worked alone on Straight Mountain.

The machine yanked off his right ring and pinkie fingers, along with most of the muscle and bones connecting them to his wrist. He pulled the right hand out with his left, which then got caught, crushed and cut in the machine.

Adcock estimates that it took nearly 10 minutes to free himself from the machine. Then he wrapped up his mangled right hand and drove his truck – a stick shift – to the nearest house.

"Us country folk are tough," he said.

But they aren't particularly rich, which is why the Adcocks didn't have health coverage since the late 1980s. The family couldn't afford to pay nearly $1,200 a month for a policy.

The Obamacare policy they signed up for last year cost $102 a month, and it completely covered Hank's $63,000 hospital bill. Without it, the family could have been financially ruined.

"I tell everyone I can about Obamacare, but some people don't want nothing to do with it." Adcock said.

This year, even fewer people may be open to hearing his story. Experts are predicting slower enrollment in Alabama and across the nation in 2016. Open enrollment begins on Sunday.

Officials at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released estimates earlier this month that only about 1 million to 1.5 million people would gain health insurance through the marketplace this year. About 9 million gained coverage during the first two enrollment periods.

Marketplace coverage in Alabama has grown more slowly than the national average in the first two years of the program. Only 28 percent of eligible Alabamians have purchased coverage on the insurance exchange, compared to 36 percent nationwide, according to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The uninsured rate in Alabama has fallen from 17.7 percent to 14.5 percent since the launch of Obamacare, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In Alabama, about 160,000 people who haven't enrolled are eligible for tax credits that would offset the costs of healthcare coverage through the marketplace, according to Kaiser.

Those tax credits made it possible for the Adcocks to afford their Blue Cross health plan.

"I tell everyone I can about Obamacare, but some people don't want nothing to do with it." Adcock said.

An analysis of premium changes in 50 U.S. cities for 2016 shows that the benchmark silver plan – which is the most popular, will cost approximately 9 percent more next year in Birmingham, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. But customers eligible for tax credits could end up paying much less.

"While you are seeing premiums going up in Alabama, it's pretty much on par with the average you're seeing across the country," said Cynthia Cox, associate director of the Program for Study of Health Reform and Private Insurance at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Growth has been slower in many of the states that didn't expand Medicaid. In many cases, people who would qualify for tax credits under Obamacare may not want to get coverage because they don't trust it, said Doug Hoffman, a navigator for Enroll Alabama.

Hank Adcock was wary of Obamacare coverage when he first spoke to Hoffman. His suspicions weren't driven by politics, but by concerns about the legitimacy of the coverage.

"There are just so many con artists out there these days," he said.

Although there is still distrust in Alabama, cost is not as big an obstacle as it is in parts of Tennessee, where premiums are expected to increase by more than 38 percent.

Many states with low enrollment are experiencing bigger increases in cost than Alabama, Cox said. One of the reasons that costs aren't increasing more may be due to the participation of the state's young people. Only about 28 percent of those enrolled nationwide are young, but in Alabama, it's 32 percent.

"Despite the relatively few people enrolled, Alabama has a large number of young adults," Cox said.

Many Alabamians who already have Obamacare coverage will be shopping for new policies this year. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama – which dominates the insurance market in the state – announced that it would discontinue its only platinum plan and one of its gold offerings. The more expensive plans are less popular with consumers than bronze and silver plans, and the insurer sought hefty premium increases in the summer.

The good news for customers who are reenrolling and looking for a different plan is that shopping on the marketplace seems to save customers money, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. In Alabama, customers who changed plans between 2014 and 2015 saved an average of $16 a month according to the department.

Hoffman said the state still struggles with a large number of people who fall into the "Medicaid gap." Since the state opted out of expanding Medicaid, many of its lowest-income residents who would have been covered by the program do not qualify for tax subsidies that would help them afford private insurance on the exchange. In Alabama, 185,000 people fall into the Medicaid gap.

"About half of them are working," Hoffman said.

The Adcocks could fall into that gap starting next year, with the decrease in income resulting from Hank's injury.

He and his wife Sharon will do whatever it takes to keep their income above the level required to qualify for tax credits. They are considering selling a couple cows.

"It's the best thing that ever happened to us," Adcock said. "We'll do anything to keep it."

The myth that "the only people benefiting from this are leeches who don't work and expect something for nothing" is just that.





So, I looked up the claim and interestingly enough it seems that the farm was only established in 2010. So, I am wondering how his family could have been "farming it for 3 generations" when it has only been around for a few years. Same guy as the one in the picture, so I am beginning to think there might just be a problem with this story.

That being said, of course some people are going to benefit. That was never in doubt. What is also not in doubt is that MORE people are being screwed, than helped.


Adcock Farms
Hank Adcock
2025 Joy Road
Hayden, AL 35079 - View Map
Phone: (205) 559-7579
Adcock Farms

A privately held company in Hayden, AL. Is this your business? Claim This Profile

More Details for Adcock Farms
Categorized under Farms. Our records show it was established in 2010 and incorporated in Alabama. Current estimates show this company has an annual revenue of $1 to 2.5 million and employs a staff of approximately 1 to 4.

Company Contacts
Is this your business? Claim This Profile


http://www.manta.com/c/mr5vxws/adcock-farms

So unless you see the bloody stumps of his hands you won't believe?





There is a very old saying "Falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus" which means a falsehood about one thing, means a falsehood about everything. The fact that the claim for a farm of three generations is false leads me to believe the whole thing is made up. Don't you? Or are you so invested in disseminating your propaganda that a clear case of false claims will be ignored by you?

As I said from the beginning...it's a fluff piece by a propagandist.
 
My bad...once more with content:

Without Obamacare 'I'd have lost the farm,' says Alabama farmer

Sometimes it helps to put a human face on the reasons why access to health insurance and affordable care is important.

Hank Adcock of Nectar lost half his right hand in a farming accident in June – but he'll tell anybody who will listen that he would have lost a lot more if it weren't for Obamacare.

"I'd a lost the farm, I guess," said Adcock.

The farm has been in his family for three generations, and Adcock has been working it for most of his 62 years. In June, both hands got caught in a hay baler while Adcock worked alone on Straight Mountain.

The machine yanked off his right ring and pinkie fingers, along with most of the muscle and bones connecting them to his wrist. He pulled the right hand out with his left, which then got caught, crushed and cut in the machine.

Adcock estimates that it took nearly 10 minutes to free himself from the machine. Then he wrapped up his mangled right hand and drove his truck – a stick shift – to the nearest house.

"Us country folk are tough," he said.

But they aren't particularly rich, which is why the Adcocks didn't have health coverage since the late 1980s. The family couldn't afford to pay nearly $1,200 a month for a policy.

The Obamacare policy they signed up for last year cost $102 a month, and it completely covered Hank's $63,000 hospital bill. Without it, the family could have been financially ruined.

"I tell everyone I can about Obamacare, but some people don't want nothing to do with it." Adcock said.

This year, even fewer people may be open to hearing his story. Experts are predicting slower enrollment in Alabama and across the nation in 2016. Open enrollment begins on Sunday.

Officials at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released estimates earlier this month that only about 1 million to 1.5 million people would gain health insurance through the marketplace this year. About 9 million gained coverage during the first two enrollment periods.

Marketplace coverage in Alabama has grown more slowly than the national average in the first two years of the program. Only 28 percent of eligible Alabamians have purchased coverage on the insurance exchange, compared to 36 percent nationwide, according to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The uninsured rate in Alabama has fallen from 17.7 percent to 14.5 percent since the launch of Obamacare, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In Alabama, about 160,000 people who haven't enrolled are eligible for tax credits that would offset the costs of healthcare coverage through the marketplace, according to Kaiser.

Those tax credits made it possible for the Adcocks to afford their Blue Cross health plan.

"I tell everyone I can about Obamacare, but some people don't want nothing to do with it." Adcock said.

An analysis of premium changes in 50 U.S. cities for 2016 shows that the benchmark silver plan – which is the most popular, will cost approximately 9 percent more next year in Birmingham, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. But customers eligible for tax credits could end up paying much less.

"While you are seeing premiums going up in Alabama, it's pretty much on par with the average you're seeing across the country," said Cynthia Cox, associate director of the Program for Study of Health Reform and Private Insurance at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Growth has been slower in many of the states that didn't expand Medicaid. In many cases, people who would qualify for tax credits under Obamacare may not want to get coverage because they don't trust it, said Doug Hoffman, a navigator for Enroll Alabama.

Hank Adcock was wary of Obamacare coverage when he first spoke to Hoffman. His suspicions weren't driven by politics, but by concerns about the legitimacy of the coverage.

"There are just so many con artists out there these days," he said.

Although there is still distrust in Alabama, cost is not as big an obstacle as it is in parts of Tennessee, where premiums are expected to increase by more than 38 percent.

Many states with low enrollment are experiencing bigger increases in cost than Alabama, Cox said. One of the reasons that costs aren't increasing more may be due to the participation of the state's young people. Only about 28 percent of those enrolled nationwide are young, but in Alabama, it's 32 percent.

"Despite the relatively few people enrolled, Alabama has a large number of young adults," Cox said.

Many Alabamians who already have Obamacare coverage will be shopping for new policies this year. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama – which dominates the insurance market in the state – announced that it would discontinue its only platinum plan and one of its gold offerings. The more expensive plans are less popular with consumers than bronze and silver plans, and the insurer sought hefty premium increases in the summer.

The good news for customers who are reenrolling and looking for a different plan is that shopping on the marketplace seems to save customers money, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. In Alabama, customers who changed plans between 2014 and 2015 saved an average of $16 a month according to the department.

Hoffman said the state still struggles with a large number of people who fall into the "Medicaid gap." Since the state opted out of expanding Medicaid, many of its lowest-income residents who would have been covered by the program do not qualify for tax subsidies that would help them afford private insurance on the exchange. In Alabama, 185,000 people fall into the Medicaid gap.

"About half of them are working," Hoffman said.

The Adcocks could fall into that gap starting next year, with the decrease in income resulting from Hank's injury.

He and his wife Sharon will do whatever it takes to keep their income above the level required to qualify for tax credits. They are considering selling a couple cows.

"It's the best thing that ever happened to us," Adcock said. "We'll do anything to keep it."

The myth that "the only people benefiting from this are leeches who don't work and expect something for nothing" is just that.





So, I looked up the claim and interestingly enough it seems that the farm was only established in 2010. So, I am wondering how his family could have been "farming it for 3 generations" when it has only been around for a few years. Same guy as the one in the picture, so I am beginning to think there might just be a problem with this story.

That being said, of course some people are going to benefit. That was never in doubt. What is also not in doubt is that MORE people are being screwed, than helped.


Adcock Farms
Hank Adcock
2025 Joy Road
Hayden, AL 35079 - View Map
Phone: (205) 559-7579
Adcock Farms

A privately held company in Hayden, AL. Is this your business? Claim This Profile

More Details for Adcock Farms
Categorized under Farms. Our records show it was established in 2010 and incorporated in Alabama. Current estimates show this company has an annual revenue of $1 to 2.5 million and employs a staff of approximately 1 to 4.

Company Contacts
Is this your business? Claim This Profile


http://www.manta.com/c/mr5vxws/adcock-farms
This is so fucking classic. I wonder if Arian will continue to chortle and smirk at thread bumps NOW.

As we all recognized, your OP is a garbage bit of propaganda fronted by a corrupt and vile regime. Crawl back under your rock, pig. Nobody buys this shit anymore.
 
My bad...once more with content:

Without Obamacare 'I'd have lost the farm,' says Alabama farmer

Sometimes it helps to put a human face on the reasons why access to health insurance and affordable care is important.

Hank Adcock of Nectar lost half his right hand in a farming accident in June – but he'll tell anybody who will listen that he would have lost a lot more if it weren't for Obamacare.

"I'd a lost the farm, I guess," said Adcock.

The farm has been in his family for three generations, and Adcock has been working it for most of his 62 years. In June, both hands got caught in a hay baler while Adcock worked alone on Straight Mountain.

The machine yanked off his right ring and pinkie fingers, along with most of the muscle and bones connecting them to his wrist. He pulled the right hand out with his left, which then got caught, crushed and cut in the machine.

Adcock estimates that it took nearly 10 minutes to free himself from the machine. Then he wrapped up his mangled right hand and drove his truck – a stick shift – to the nearest house.

"Us country folk are tough," he said.

But they aren't particularly rich, which is why the Adcocks didn't have health coverage since the late 1980s. The family couldn't afford to pay nearly $1,200 a month for a policy.

The Obamacare policy they signed up for last year cost $102 a month, and it completely covered Hank's $63,000 hospital bill. Without it, the family could have been financially ruined.

"I tell everyone I can about Obamacare, but some people don't want nothing to do with it." Adcock said.

This year, even fewer people may be open to hearing his story. Experts are predicting slower enrollment in Alabama and across the nation in 2016. Open enrollment begins on Sunday.

Officials at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released estimates earlier this month that only about 1 million to 1.5 million people would gain health insurance through the marketplace this year. About 9 million gained coverage during the first two enrollment periods.

Marketplace coverage in Alabama has grown more slowly than the national average in the first two years of the program. Only 28 percent of eligible Alabamians have purchased coverage on the insurance exchange, compared to 36 percent nationwide, according to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The uninsured rate in Alabama has fallen from 17.7 percent to 14.5 percent since the launch of Obamacare, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In Alabama, about 160,000 people who haven't enrolled are eligible for tax credits that would offset the costs of healthcare coverage through the marketplace, according to Kaiser.

Those tax credits made it possible for the Adcocks to afford their Blue Cross health plan.

"I tell everyone I can about Obamacare, but some people don't want nothing to do with it." Adcock said.

An analysis of premium changes in 50 U.S. cities for 2016 shows that the benchmark silver plan – which is the most popular, will cost approximately 9 percent more next year in Birmingham, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. But customers eligible for tax credits could end up paying much less.

"While you are seeing premiums going up in Alabama, it's pretty much on par with the average you're seeing across the country," said Cynthia Cox, associate director of the Program for Study of Health Reform and Private Insurance at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Growth has been slower in many of the states that didn't expand Medicaid. In many cases, people who would qualify for tax credits under Obamacare may not want to get coverage because they don't trust it, said Doug Hoffman, a navigator for Enroll Alabama.

Hank Adcock was wary of Obamacare coverage when he first spoke to Hoffman. His suspicions weren't driven by politics, but by concerns about the legitimacy of the coverage.

"There are just so many con artists out there these days," he said.

Although there is still distrust in Alabama, cost is not as big an obstacle as it is in parts of Tennessee, where premiums are expected to increase by more than 38 percent.

Many states with low enrollment are experiencing bigger increases in cost than Alabama, Cox said. One of the reasons that costs aren't increasing more may be due to the participation of the state's young people. Only about 28 percent of those enrolled nationwide are young, but in Alabama, it's 32 percent.

"Despite the relatively few people enrolled, Alabama has a large number of young adults," Cox said.

Many Alabamians who already have Obamacare coverage will be shopping for new policies this year. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama – which dominates the insurance market in the state – announced that it would discontinue its only platinum plan and one of its gold offerings. The more expensive plans are less popular with consumers than bronze and silver plans, and the insurer sought hefty premium increases in the summer.

The good news for customers who are reenrolling and looking for a different plan is that shopping on the marketplace seems to save customers money, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. In Alabama, customers who changed plans between 2014 and 2015 saved an average of $16 a month according to the department.

Hoffman said the state still struggles with a large number of people who fall into the "Medicaid gap." Since the state opted out of expanding Medicaid, many of its lowest-income residents who would have been covered by the program do not qualify for tax subsidies that would help them afford private insurance on the exchange. In Alabama, 185,000 people fall into the Medicaid gap.

"About half of them are working," Hoffman said.

The Adcocks could fall into that gap starting next year, with the decrease in income resulting from Hank's injury.

He and his wife Sharon will do whatever it takes to keep their income above the level required to qualify for tax credits. They are considering selling a couple cows.

"It's the best thing that ever happened to us," Adcock said. "We'll do anything to keep it."

The myth that "the only people benefiting from this are leeches who don't work and expect something for nothing" is just that.





So, I looked up the claim and interestingly enough it seems that the farm was only established in 2010. So, I am wondering how his family could have been "farming it for 3 generations" when it has only been around for a few years. Same guy as the one in the picture, so I am beginning to think there might just be a problem with this story.

That being said, of course some people are going to benefit. That was never in doubt. What is also not in doubt is that MORE people are being screwed, than helped.


Adcock Farms
Hank Adcock
2025 Joy Road
Hayden, AL 35079 - View Map
Phone: (205) 559-7579
Adcock Farms

A privately held company in Hayden, AL. Is this your business? Claim This Profile

More Details for Adcock Farms
Categorized under Farms. Our records show it was established in 2010 and incorporated in Alabama. Current estimates show this company has an annual revenue of $1 to 2.5 million and employs a staff of approximately 1 to 4.

Company Contacts
Is this your business? Claim This Profile


http://www.manta.com/c/mr5vxws/adcock-farms
This is so fucking classic. I wonder if Arian will continue to chortle and smirk at thread bumps NOW.

As we all recognized, your OP is a garbage bit of propaganda fronted by a corrupt and vile regime. Crawl back under your rock, pig. Nobody buys this shit anymore.
Your as in Arian, not westwall. Sorry can't edit on my asshole phone.
 
Republicans always attack the poor and middle class workers. They want people to work but only want this so they work for the super rich...That is all that is all that matters to republicans.

Good to see Obamacare helping people.

Indeed? It actually is the Democrats who hurt the poor and working folks:

The Top 5 Ways Liberal Policies Hurt The Poor

Articles: Admitted: The Democratic Party Does Not Represent the Middle Class

Be strong and resolute: Democrat policies HURT the poor, minorities, middle class, our future

If Democrats want to appeal to the working class, they really need some policies that benefit the working class

But you idiots carry on anyway.
From your first link:

1) Overuse Of Welfare Programs
2) Supporting Illegal Immigrants Instead Of American Workers
3) Fighting FOR Criminals, Not Victims
4) Fighting To Keep Poor Americans Out Of Good Schools
5) Killing Job Opportunities For The Poor

Um, under Clinton, a work requirement became mandatory. How can you repeat that same fucking talking point and not even know that truth. Especially since you sit in front of the Internet.

As far as supporting illegal immigrants:
Survey: GOP executives want immigrant labor, not voters | The Daily Caller
Ya dumb fuck.

Fighting for criminals not victims. Yet the GOP wants everyone armed?

Oh yea, and about schools:

Santorum defends calling Obama a 'snob'
Republican president candidate Rick Santorum defended his statement from Saturday that President Obama was a "snob" because he has said he wants everyone in the country to have the ability to go college.

U.S. job openings hit 15-year high
5.4 million jobs available. But people don't have the skills. Who's fault is that? I'm betting the party who thinks education is for snobs.

I don't believe Republicans will ever be qualified. Unteachable. You prove that.
 
Republicans always attack the poor and middle class workers. They want people to work but only want this so they work for the super rich...That is all that is all that matters to republicans.

Good to see Obamacare helping people.

Indeed? It actually is the Democrats who hurt the poor and working folks:

The Top 5 Ways Liberal Policies Hurt The Poor

Articles: Admitted: The Democratic Party Does Not Represent the Middle Class

Be strong and resolute: Democrat policies HURT the poor, minorities, middle class, our future

If Democrats want to appeal to the working class, they really need some policies that benefit the working class

But you idiots carry on anyway.
From your first link:

1) Overuse Of Welfare Programs
2) Supporting Illegal Immigrants Instead Of American Workers
3) Fighting FOR Criminals, Not Victims
4) Fighting To Keep Poor Americans Out Of Good Schools
5) Killing Job Opportunities For The Poor

Um, under Clinton, a work requirement became mandatory. How can you repeat that same fucking talking point and not even know that truth. Especially since you sit in front of the Internet.

As far as supporting illegal immigrants:
Survey: GOP executives want immigrant labor, not voters | The Daily Caller
Ya dumb fuck.

Fighting for criminals not victims. Yet the GOP wants everyone armed?

Oh yea, and about schools:

Santorum defends calling Obama a 'snob'
Republican president candidate Rick Santorum defended his statement from Saturday that President Obama was a "snob" because he has said he wants everyone in the country to have the ability to go college.

U.S. job openings hit 15-year high
5.4 million jobs available. But people don't have the skills. Who's fault is that? I'm betting the party who thinks education is for snobs.

I don't believe Republicans will ever be qualified. Unteachable. You prove that.

Propaganda at its worse. How is YOUR Obamacare working out for you? Many May Find Unpleasant Surprise on HealthCare.gov: High Rate Increases

You really don't have any insurance. I had better insurance twenty years ago than you have now. I still have better insurance. I can actually use my insurance.
 
Republicans always attack the poor and middle class workers. They want people to work but only want this so they work for the super rich...That is all that is all that matters to republicans.

Good to see Obamacare helping people.

Indeed? It actually is the Democrats who hurt the poor and working folks:

The Top 5 Ways Liberal Policies Hurt The Poor

Articles: Admitted: The Democratic Party Does Not Represent the Middle Class

Be strong and resolute: Democrat policies HURT the poor, minorities, middle class, our future

If Democrats want to appeal to the working class, they really need some policies that benefit the working class

But you idiots carry on anyway.
From your first link:

1) Overuse Of Welfare Programs
2) Supporting Illegal Immigrants Instead Of American Workers
3) Fighting FOR Criminals, Not Victims
4) Fighting To Keep Poor Americans Out Of Good Schools
5) Killing Job Opportunities For The Poor

Um, under Clinton, a work requirement became mandatory. How can you repeat that same fucking talking point and not even know that truth. Especially since you sit in front of the Internet.

As far as supporting illegal immigrants:
Survey: GOP executives want immigrant labor, not voters | The Daily Caller
Ya dumb fuck.

Fighting for criminals not victims. Yet the GOP wants everyone armed?

Oh yea, and about schools:

Santorum defends calling Obama a 'snob'
Republican president candidate Rick Santorum defended his statement from Saturday that President Obama was a "snob" because he has said he wants everyone in the country to have the ability to go college.

U.S. job openings hit 15-year high
5.4 million jobs available. But people don't have the skills. Who's fault is that? I'm betting the party who thinks education is for snobs.

I don't believe Republicans will ever be qualified. Unteachable. You prove that.
The work requirement was a Republican requirement, btw, and was tremendously successful. And the first thing the food stamp prez did was to roll it back.
 
The rest of rtards post is equally disengenuous. People aren't qualified because the school system is a failure, and most of the unemployed either can't pass piss and background checks, have no work experience, or all three. That's why rtard doesn't work.
 
Here's yet another one for your enlightenment: Obamacare will add to Dems' 2016 problems

And running against the Trumpster will be a gift.

Glad you appreciate it. Perhaps we will even hear of Hillary's combat experience in Bosnia.
You've already convinced yourselves that a man who started life with a mere million dollars is a "self-made man," so the gullibility is strong in you.
 
Here's yet another one for your enlightenment: Obamacare will add to Dems' 2016 problems

And running against the Trumpster will be a gift.

Glad you appreciate it. Perhaps we will even hear of Hillary's combat experience in Bosnia.
You've already convinced yourselves that a man who started life with a mere million dollars is a "self-made man," so the gullibility is strong in you.

I've convinced myself not to be jealous or envious of him as you are.
 
Republicans always attack the poor and middle class workers. They want people to work but only want this so they work for the super rich...That is all that is all that matters to republicans.

Good to see Obamacare helping people.

The song I hear sung on this board is even more ridiculous. "The only people benefiting from Obumacare are those who don't work."

On the one hand, it's laughable, but on the other, it's insidious.

Yes, leftist mouthpieces find the truth insidious and funny.

What do you think of the article in the OP?
I think it's a fluff piece done by a propagandist.

Sp you don't believe anything unless it comes from FOX and approved by the Australian?
 
If you are white and already rich, like Republicans in congress, you deserve millions in farm subsidies.

But

If you are poor or middle class or minority and own a farm and you are struggling the least little bit, you deserve to go bankrupt. It's your fault. Why should you get help? Are you a "producer" like wealthy white Republicans in congress? Are you a conservative? Fuck you. Shut up and die.

Is Your Congressman One Of The 13 Who Get Federal Farm Subsidies But Voted To Cut Food Stamps?

Yeah, I doubt this farmer had his dad give him a small loan of a Million Dollars. like Donald...
 
If you are white and already rich, like Republicans in congress, you deserve millions in farm subsidies.

But

If you are poor or middle class or minority and own a farm and you are struggling the least little bit, you deserve to go bankrupt. It's your fault. Why should you get help? Are you a "producer" like wealthy white Republicans in congress? Are you a conservative? Fuck you. Shut up and die.

Is Your Congressman One Of The 13 Who Get Federal Farm Subsidies But Voted To Cut Food Stamps?

Yeah, I doubt this farmer had his dad give him a small loan of a Million Dollars. like Donald...

How many $35.000.00 tractors and hay bailers did he own? How much additional acreage has he purchased? Why didn't he buy insurance back when he was a young man as I did?
 
So a guy getting subsidized healthcare likes it...what a surprise.

And the guys who still believe it's a "government insurance company" hate it. That's no surprise at all.

I've convinced myself not to be jealous or envious of him as you are.

Do y'all have a buzz-phrase for each of your candidates?

So far you've got "You hate Carson because he's black" and "You hate Trump because you're envious of him."

Whatcha got for the rest of the Clown Car? Better hurry; some of 'em are falling off the edge of your Earth...
 

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