Tuesday, March 23, 2010

He Writes Me Every Day...Sometimes Twice A Day!

And, today it really made me smile.

****
Wenderina --


I'm writing to you on a great day for America.

This morning, I gathered with members of Congress, my administration, and hardworking volunteers from every part of the country to sign comprehensive health care reform into law. Thanks to the immeasurable efforts of so many, the dream of reform is now a reality.


The bill I just signed puts Americans in charge of our own health care by enacting three key changes:

It establishes the toughest patient protections in history.
It guarantees all Americans affordable health insurance options, extending coverage to 32 million who are currently uninsured.


And it reduces the cost of care -- cutting over 1 trillion dollars from the federal deficit over the next two decades.


To ensure a successful, stable transition, many of these changes will phase into full effect over the next several years.


But for millions of Americans, many of the benefits of reform will begin this year -- some even taking effect this afternoon. Here are just a few examples:


Small businesses will receive significant tax cuts, this year, to help them afford health coverage for all their employees.


Seniors will receive a rebate to reduce drug costs not yet covered under Medicare.


Young people will be allowed coverage under their parents' plan until the age of 26.

Early retirees will receive help to reduce premium costs.

Children will be protected against discrimination on the basis of medical history.


Uninsured Americans with pre-existing conditions can join a special high-risk pool to get the coverage they need, starting in just 90 days.


Insured Americans will be protected from seeing their insurance revoked when they get sick, or facing restrictive annual limits on the care they receive.


All Americans will benefit from significant new investments to train primary care doctors, nurses, and public health professionals, and the creation of state-level consumer assistance programs to help all patients understand and defend our new rights.

As I've said many times, and as I know to be true, this astounding victory could not have been achieved without your tireless efforts.


So as we celebrate this great day, I want to invite you to add your name where it belongs: alongside mine as a co-signer of this historic legislation. Organizing for America will record the names of co-signers as a permanent commemoration of those who came together to make this moment possible -- all of you who refused to give up until the dream of many generations for affordable, quality care for all Americans was finally fulfilled.


Please accept my thanks for your voice, for your courage, and for your indispensable partnership in the great work of creating change.

History, and I, are in your debt.

President Barack Obama
 
***
 
Only time will tell how effective this program will be.  But I'm convinced that progress - any progress - is better than none at all.  And as we lay in bed last night and wondered at this historic moment, Hubby and I both agreed that President Obama was gonna leave it all out there on the field.  He doesn't seem to be working toward that re-election, he seems to be working on his job.  He'll never fulfill all the promises and we're sure to be disappointed in the process, and some of the results, it's never going to be as pure in the detail as it is in the theory.  But he's doing what I voted for.  And that's more than I can say for most any other government official on my ballot last year.

2 comments:

Jenn @ Juggling Life said...

One of the greatest ideas I've heard lately was one 6-year term for President. Do the job and you're done--and the time to do it.

It's a start--which is just what we needed.

Becky Brown said...

He writes me, too. It's pretty cool to be so buddy-buddy with a cool dude.

I whole-heartedly agree with your post. All of it.