I have experienced this myself and several people I know have also
experienced it. When you go for your doctor's visits you may be asked a
series of very personal questions that have nothing to do with the reason for
your appointment. They can be very invasive types of questions and frankly are
none of the government's business! Why are they asking these questions? The
reason is obvious, they are building a database of very personal information on
you. In the future, the information that you supplied them can be used against
you when Obamacare comes into full swing. Panels (and there WILL BE panels) when
they review and recommend (or not recommend) treatment for you will use this
information, that you supplied, to make their decision. Note that this decision
will be made by non medical professionals, Washington bureaucrats, and
not solely between you and your doctor.
This comes right back to the original premise of the chief architect of
Obamacare, Dr. Ezekiel J. Emanuel.
He has written extensively about who should get medical care, who should
decide, and whose life is worth saving. He believes that expensive medical care
should be reserved only for those "most productive to society". Emanuel espouses
a school of thought that redefines a physicians duty toward working toward the
"greater good of society" (as defined by him), rather than focusing on a
patient's needs. In effect, it is de facto rationing of healthcare. Many
physicians find this view dangerous. His approach to healthcare has a
similarity to that of Dr. Josef Mengele, the Angel of
Death of Nazi Germany, where certain groups of people are considered
expendable for the greater good.
In addition to the fact that Obamacare was forced through Congress by back
room threats and bribes, not openly on C-Span as promised; that we were outright
lied to about keeping our current healthcare and doctors; that it was going to
be less expensive; etc. etc......It is also fundamentally based upon evil
premises of denying certain groups of people life saving healthcare.
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