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What can we do to provide affordable healthcare to any and all?

The first question at hand for today is: “What can we do to provide affordable healthcare to any and all?” We have some idea of how busy you are, the rest of the panel of course, and how valuable your time is, so thank you again for stopping in, Professor, but  we believe we can wrap this up today.

It’s good of you to say so, but the time I’ve spent, we’ve spent, with you in what I consider to be one of the greatest political endeavors since America’s founding is value added for me–and for all of us. So, thank you. 

You ask, “What can we do to provide affordable healthcare to any and all?” It’s apparent, along with the solutions the other initiatives provide in their purview, that the Fare Health Care Initiative also provides concrete answers and solutions to these vexing, life threatening, troubles. Again it is useful to summarize:

  1. By focusing, perhaps targeting, on a manageable medical deductible at a percentage of a less than catastrophic premium levels or a fixed amount between 30 to 40 thousand dollar, will immediately make lower end medical costs affordably manageable over an extended repayment period even for those who opt not to have deductible medical insurance; of course they’d still have to contribute to the Catastrophic Fund out of their own pocket before even becoming liable for a deductible medical debt.

  2. For the sake of argument, with a Catastrophic Fund at a minimal scale of hundreds of billions, there will be  enough to cover the vast majority of higher cost medical care. The Electoral Conscience must of course oversee this with the help of initiative established commissions when the need to address medical issues in varying areas of mental and physical health…paying and planning for medial needs before and when they arrive.

  3. Freedom of medical choices will also be part of this reform…it must, particularly at the deductible insurance levels. Here again is the necessity of the Electoral Conscience and Its essential partners of established Fare Powers commissions. Reading “between the lines” of the Fare Health Care Initiative, proclaims, when otherwise unstated, expansion of available heath care of all stripes. One can only begin to imagine what that will mean for the good of all. 

That’s just about all, in this limited time, I can define. So let’s move on, shall we?

Yes. Happily; let’s move on, Professor!

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