Quote:
Originally Posted by Robbie
Here ya go Crockett...scroll down to the table near the bottom of the page. The top line shows the entire U.S. statistics starting in 1999 and going up to 2012.
Then after you see that with your own eyes...come back and tell me I'm lying and making stuff up...(I would just post the damn thing here for you, but Richard wouldn't believe it then)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_..._United_States
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From your link, am I missing something?
The Rand Corporation reported that by March 2014: "Enrollment in employer-sponsored insurance plans increased by 8.2 million and Medicaid enrollment increased by 5.9 million, although some individuals did lose coverage during this period. The authors also found that 3.9 million people are now covered through the state and federal marketplaces ? the so called insurance exchanges ? and less than 1 million people who previously had individual-market insurance became uninsured during the period in question. While the survey cannot tell if this latter group lost their insurance due to cancellation or because they simply felt the cost was too high, the overall number is very small, representing less than 1 percent of people between the ages of 18 and 64."