THE COURT
More on health care, Stolen Valor rulings
We've been told that most Americans oppose the Affordable Care Act -- and, indeed, a survey Thursday on MSN.com of some 120,000 people as of this writing indicated that 60 percent of those responding think the Supreme Court erred in blessing the act's constitutionality. I'm in the minority that supports the act and am mystified that it's a minority view.
What is the majority opposed to? Pushing coverage toward universal? Allowing kids to stay on parents' plans until 26? Covering preexisting conditions?
Before I retired, I had to have private health care, and my wife is a cancer survivor. I was paying almost $2,000 a month for coverage, and what I had (a COBRA continuation) was my only option. How can this make sense to anyone?
My guess is that the avalanche of negative ads opposing the ACA has made Americans behave against their own self-interests. And worse, many of the allegations against the act (for example, that it's a deficit raiser) fly in the face of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office position.
In other words, they are either misrepresentations or outright lies. We appear to be poisoning our own well.
JOHN HETTERICK, PLYMOUTH
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Many Minnesota conservatives are passionately bemoaning the ruling, and rightly so. Obamacare will be a monstrous drain upon our already overburdened economy. However, some of these same conservatives have no one to blame but themselves.