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Uninsured in America
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Publication time: 2009-06-05 15:19:23
Tags: reuters | uninsured | 
User: ReutersVideo  Favorites

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46 million Americans have no health coverage and struggle with tough choices on care.
123bigrFavorites  2010-02-25 03:44:12
@jjrglobal Again u missed the point. The housing market is not the entire financial system. You are forgetting other markets that have contributed to this economic melt down. The housing market is just the scapegoat. U can buy those lies if u want to, but I suggest u look a little deeper.
jjrglobalFavorites  2010-02-24 21:03:13
@123bigr Ohhh well allow me to retort, at ten billion a month it would take 83 years to equal what the housing crisis has cost the US. Do you need a calculator? We have dumped more than ten trillion into the open market to attempt to rescue our entire financial system and we still don't know if it can be saved. The war is peanuts in comparison. Don't get the wrong idea, I'm against the war too, but not because of the costs in dollars, the costs in lives on both sides is what bothers me.
123bigrFavorites  2010-02-24 16:18:53
@jjrglobal dumbass? Classic case of someone that feels so bad about themselves, they have to attempt to degrade another. U have some internal issues that need to be addressed. BTW, I said 10 billion a month, so what r u talking about? You missed the point. We are spending billions on a war we were lied into, which means it is money we never had to spend. The war is not producing money for America, it only takes. The housing issue can not even touch that kind of waste.
jjrglobalFavorites  2010-02-24 06:35:43
No, Trillion is more than billion, so 2 billion a month for 500 years would be about the same as the housing issue, dumbass.
gagothesithFavorites  2010-02-24 00:21:47
Don't you dare diss poetry when the The Messiah got elected throw a mixture of poetry and nursery rhymes (The Little Engine That Could inspiring "Yes, we can! Yes, we can! Yes, we can!"). And why can't the "artists" among us indulge our "creativity" with the support of those who actually have income thus SHOULD pay more taxes to finance all the government programs designed to support everyone else? It is selfish to refuse to help those who have no income because they're busy being "creative".