Voter thread 2024

HAPPY 4TH !

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Bro you work on b2b wiring how are you any better

Yeah def making a bigger difference to the business that the light switch in the bathroom is working flawlessly

phag ur celebrating colonizers what loser

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Idc Gaylord’s who think they’re above libtard behavior by literally exhibiting it and getting their panties twisted over nada

Just happy my bros got the day off !

If you dont have a Desert Eagle ur a fa g
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Happy burnt ends day even the fascistas can't stop me from eating them all.

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what up western fa ggots?

Am I multiple people or idk but I hope anyone justifying our convoluted healthcare system has to keep it while we go to universal.

Perhaps they can pick another first world country without universal hc

Nope. They offered physicals. I have a chronic vascular disease that requires regular meetings with a vascular surgeon. I could not afford any health care that met my needs and had to use medi-cal. Even before going back to school I bought HealthNet myself and moved back in with my mom to afford it. USA USA USA USA USA!

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If I recall correctly, if was my university that told me to get medicaid in the first place so I can see the specialists I needed.

And this is the exact reason medicaid exists. And now millions of people won't have those needs met, all so you can le own the libs and Rs can make wealthy people wealthier.

You're just a bad person. No other way to put it.

It hurts plenty of trump voters, and whatever tax breaks won't make up the diffy. It's ok people who refuse raises because they would have to pay more in taxes can't do math anyway, so the 800% higher cuts for wealthy are beyond them.

The rural hospitals tho

For the record I'm not arguing against you, the yns posts got me second hand upset.

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Estimates vary, but the most commonly cited figure is that roughly 45,000 excess deaths per year in the U.S. are linked to people lacking health insurance and thus not receiving timely, appropriate care.


:bar_chart: Key Findings from Major Studies

A 2009 Harvard/Am J Public Health study estimated 44,789 excess deaths annually among working-age adults (18–64) because of lack of insurance, based on their 40% higher mortality risk versus insured peers .

The Institute of Medicine (IOM) in 2002 estimated 18,000 annual deaths, using more conservative methodology .

The Urban Institute (2006) and Families USA reported 22,000–27,000 deaths in that age group — but they only covered ages 25–64 .

A Northwestern University summary pointed to a range of 35,000–45,000 people ages 18–64 dying prematurely each year from being uninsured .

More recent policy analyses (e.g., rollback models of ACA/Medicaid) suggest even higher figures—up to 48,000–50,000 excess deaths annually .


Why the Numbers Differ

Factor Impact

Age range covered Some studies exclude older or younger adults
Mortality risk assumed Varies from ~25% to ~40% higher death risk
Methodology Differences in data sources, adjustments, and modeling
Time frame Earlier vs. more recent uninsured population sizes


So what’s the current estimate?

Based on the most influential studies, the best estimate is around 45,000 preventable deaths per year due to lack of health insurance in the U.S.

Conservatively, the range is between 25,000 and 50,000, depending on definitions and methods.


Why this matters

Lack of insurance isn't just statistics—it means missed screenings, untreated chronic illnesses, and delayed care that leads to premature death. That’s a tragedy for individuals and families, and it also has broader public health consequences.


Bottom line: Approximately 45,000 Americans die annually due to lack of health insurance, although more conservative estimates say it could be as low as ~18,000, and others estimate up to ~50,000.

But a brown person did a crime the other day :pleading_face: And I really care about people :pleading_face:

Are nearly half of illegal immigrants still just visa overstays? Though I guess a lot of those would still be brown

Kill kill Kill kill kill the poor
Behold the sparkly of champagne
The crime rate's gone, feel free again
Oh life's a dream with you, Miss Lily White
Jane Fonda on the screen today
Convinced the liberals it's okay
So let's get dressed and dance away the night

And every time I bring this up, opponents bring up wait times. So let's include insured avoidable deaths including that in the US!

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Including other access barriers, medical debt, and avoidable mortality trends, the total annual burden likely exceeds 100,000 lives lost in the U.S. due to delayed or substandard healthcare.


but All Lives Matter :pleading_face: