It’s been a little while since it came out, and details have finally been revealed – the media has even taken a hesitant look in places. First, there were areas the Democrats missed, of course. And the Democrats will get mad at anyone who points that out.

As expected, health careand therefore governmentis going to get more expensive. It’s going to cost many American companies and quite a few states a lot of money. Maybe even congress itself. And Democrats will go after anyone who points that out or challenges the legalityeven if they’re legally required to, unless they realize that would bring more media attention to the issue. It’s obvious once again that running the economy leads to failure, but Democrats can’t let anyone point that out.

Democrats are also coming clean and admitting it’s about wealth redistribution – socialism – and they don’t think there’s anything wrong with that. Except for when they’re called on it, or when it was brought up before the bill was passed.

Oh, and there are death panels. And again, it was only offensive when mentioned by conservatives opposing the bill. Now it’s a good thing.

We already have physician shortages, and socialism always exacerbates issues with shortages. And how much is innovation going to be slowed down? Get ready to lose individualized care.

How many other companies are going to become “too big to nail”?

Also, your grandmother should divorce.

Democrats won’t talk about the constitutionality of the bill – heck, they claim they can’t find anyone who will debate the constitutionality of regulating non-commerce within states and forcing people to buy a product or arresting them – a blatantly untrue claim. And of course submitting to this authority makes us more free.

Now, lets look at how some of the systems Obamacare is meant to copy are doing:

First, the NHS of Great Britain. Let’s see, they’ve just been caught stealing people’s organs, sending political mailings off of hospital records, and their system that’s already short on doctors and hospitals and has waiting lists is closing more hospitals and firing more staff.

Second, Massachusetts: Insurers need to raise rates or start losing money – and so they sued. And lost. The government has ordered them to lose money, and like it. Now they’ve stopped offering insurance to new businesses, because it’s not worth it. Oh, and towns are facing higher taxes because of the cost of providing Cadillac health plans to their employees.

What else is wrong with Massachusetts besides the price? Well, people are already gaming the system, breaking the very reason it was supposedly such a necessary reform, and the state is considering forcing Medicare/Medicaid to be covered by physicians in the state, on penalty of stripping them of their license.

Yeah, this health care bill sounds great.