AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
Glitches tell you all you need to know (or not)
Ah, Obamacare, the crown jewel of progressive legislative achievement: retailed by promises that would embarrass a carnival barker; passed, through legislative bribery and procedural trickery, by an evanescent majority. Now we finally get to see what is at the end of the fork. Its rollout, dysfunctional, chaotic, even "excruciatingly embarrassing," might be its first flirtation with standards of truth in advertising.
This is what you're in for, people. Welcome to your new health care system! But should anyone be surprised? Under central planning, "glitches" are not exceptional, they are normal. Read your Hayek. And don't tell me it's enough that you loved her performance as the progressive heroine Frida Kahlo. The madness is just beginning.
CHIP ALLEN, Woodbury
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I don't understand the hype about the disaster that was the initial offering of "Obamacare." I do understand criticism from those on the right, because they are grasping at straws. I do not understand Steve Sack's Oct. 14 cartoon, however, or other persons who are not so Tea Party-minded who agree that the rollout was bad.
For starters, the concept and the implementation are not the same thing. Airplanes were not very reliable in 1915. That didn't mean that we abandoned flying. We designed and built better airplanes.
Second, the initial implementation of the exchanges, in my opinion, was not that bad, either. I was a software engineer for 35 years, and I've seen much worse. In fact, the biggest problem was that the servers were insufficient to handle the volume of inquiries, and every business person knows that having more customers than you can service is the best kind of problem to have.
I conclude that the opening of the exchanges, despite the problems, was a resounding success, and performance will continue to improve.
DAVID M. PERLMAN, New Hope
VOTER REGISTRATION
So much is online, so why not this?
It's pretty hard to have confidence in Legislative Auditor James Nobles when he shares the GOP's concern about the adequacy of data security measures associated with online voter registration. If I can access my health records from the VA and my Social Security account, and if I can bank online securely, then even government officials should know that voter registration can be just as secure.