Reasons for passing the Reforming American Healthcare Act

Nonnegotiable:

1. The tax system in this bill (expected to generate $660.5 billion per year (the amount of money formerly spent on Medicaid and TANF and the Premium Tax Credits that recently expired)) is absolutely necessary (as is the legal assurances that the money exclusively go $5 billion to the IRS to enforce the taxes and the rest to go exclusively towards compensating for medical care) in order to keep the system stable, and the make sure the money is being generated out of an otherwise unproductive and often untaxed portion of our economy: real estate (but not as a matter of taxing the productive part of real estate of building new houses).

2. That the qualifications for who can be the Administrator of the National Medical Fund must remain fixed. The purpose of those clauses is initially to get Dr Rohin Francis, a U.K. National Health Service cardiologist to be chosen as the Administrator, and otherwise exclusively choose people who have similar motivations, and experience actually treating the most dire patients (where making a mistake as a cardiologist means someone will die) inside of a government-run health system. That the Administrator needs to be a man basically comes down to needing to have the expectation that he can make a cold decision to remove a doctor or nurse from the payroll on suspicion of wrongdoing or profiteering (even if it means someone could die), and have a slightly higher chance of resisting pressures from healthcare industry lobbyists.

3. That the Administrator has the duty to impose price controls. Without price controls, any money spent on healthcare immediately gets eaten up by rising costs, which spreads to be general inflation in the economy.

Other Aspects:

This bill, as a matter of avoiding the worst forms of profiteering, also prohibits corporate ownership of hospitals and clinics and doctor offices, instead requiring them to be fully owned by one doctor CEO who makes the winning bid at the auction at the front entrance of the hospital or clinic or doctor’s office.

Because Medicaid provided the money to run the medical residency program in the United States, this replacement RAHA bill needed to replace the medical residency requirement for doctors to instead simply have a new tax exemption that allows a U.S. citizen to hire another U.S. citizen as a “unique personal assistant” (exactly one per year) without needing to do any additional paperwork, and have medical residency consist of a Medical School graduate working under 4 different doctors, treating 400 patients, over 4 years, and getting each of those doctors to endorse them for their work.

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