In plain English language, what voters are asked is whether to allow the government to mandate people to buy health insurance (as the federal health care reform package does). It is doubtful that many voters will even know they are voting on the national mandate. Nowhere in the language do the words "national health care reform" appear. The provision really only asks about one part of the health care reform package
Guess what, jackass... we know that, in fact, we know that we'd never have gotten a proposition on the ballot overthrowing the entire ObamaScare package.
So tonight many commentators will likely report the falsehood that Missourians voted down health care reform. In reality, Missourians voted on a confusing measure, which many will not even understand. Those who do understand still will not have voted against health care reform. They will have voted against the individual mandate provision in health care reform. Finally, the measure will have little to no actual impact on the health care reform bill passed this year.
Oh please, oh great and all knowing j(ackass)ournalist, please tell us what we are so ignorant in our ways.
Let me make this clear, I hate everything about Obamascare.. ITs' wrong for me, it's wrong for the country, and is wrong for every American. that's how i feel. I know what Proposition C was limited to... it was limited to part of Obamascare, so since I'm against that part of Obamascare as well (Or do I have to draw you a Venn Diagram for it to make sense to your enlightened mind?)... so guess which way I'm voting.
So I'm thinking you might have overpaid for those logic classes.
Btw.. to throw one more tidbit in your direction, MR. "Holier than Thou" Denver Journalist... We're not the ones that wrote up Proposition c to try to confuse the voters, in fact, it was our Democratic Sect of State (and now Democratic Senate candidate) Carnahan who _Tried_ To write the proposition so that nobody understood what we were voting on. Guess who failed at that one too.
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