The document Obama doesn’t want you to see is available here
Kit Daniels
Infowars.com
October 22, 2013
Healthcare.gov, the official Obamacare insurance exchange website, removed
references to a nationwide premium rate spreadsheet, which allows Americans to
determine the most inexpensive health plans in their area, but it is still available here.
The seven megabyte Excel spreadsheet, which can now only be found by a file
name search on Healthcare.gov, is current as of September 27, 2013 and displays
premium rates for medical plans across America.
By using the filters on the spreadsheet, one can find the cheapest health
insurance plans available in his area.
For example, the cheapest “Bronze” option for a 27-year-old individual in
Travis County, Texas appears to be Blue Cross Blue Shield’s Blue Advantage
Bronze HMO 006, with a monthly premium rate of $144.34.
The spreadsheet reveals some interesting observations.
Multiple counties in Virginia have the most expensive family plan in America,
which has a staggering premium rate of $6,494.54 per month and is a “Gold” level
plan offered by Optima Health.
The “Bronze” version of this plan is also available to a 27-year-old
individual for $1,835.81 per month.
Single 27-year-olds in Comanche Count, Okla. are lucky.
They can get the cheapest “Bronze” plan in the country at $100.36 per
month.
According to the spreadsheet, here is a breakdown of the average premium
rates for families and individuals in America:
It is not known why the references to this incredibly useful spreadsheet were
deleted, especially as healthcare.gov is still broken.
Was it because the federal government, working with the insurance companies
that wrote Obamacare, does not want Americans to save money on their insurance
rates?
That is certainly plausible considering that Obamacare is anything but
affordable.
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
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