Originally posted by: Kevin Lewis
Simply not true. The insulin discount was in BIDEN'S infrastructure bill. Moron.
You are full of shit.
Originally posted by: Kevin Lewis
Simply not true. The insulin discount was in BIDEN'S infrastructure bill. Moron.
You are full of shit.
Originally posted by: David Miller
You are full of shit.
The insulin discount was in BIDEN'S infrastructure bill. Trump didn't sign it. Moron.
Wanna try to prove that Trump signed Biden's bill? LOL. Speaking of "full of shit."
Originally posted by: Kevin Lewis
Simply not true. The insulin discount was in BIDEN'S infrastructure bill. Moron.
You ignorant asshole - brain dead Biden blocked the signing of the bill the first week he took office - and then like the slime ball he is, he than allowed the policy to go thru and signed it, while taking credit for President Trump's work - a trait that brain dead Biden has done his whole career of taking credit for the work of others - as his multiple instances of plagiarism attest to.
https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/what-is-new-biden-plan-reduce-us-drug-prices-2021-11-03/
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2022/08/08/insulin-price-cap-diabetes-senate-republicans/
Davee-Boi is an ignorant asshole.
And an idiot.
Yeah. He thinks that Trump authored Biden's infrastructure bill. LOL.
''On first blush, President Donald Trump’s $35 insulin discount policy may seem like a serious attack on high prescription drug prices. No doubt, it could help some patients. But the new policy is a limited gesture that is no substitute for comprehensive drug pricing reform. The timing suggests Trump’s insulin plan may be a political ploy to curry favor with senior voters, who – according to recent polling – are turning against the president. On May 26, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced that participating enhanced Part D prescription drug plans will allow beneficiaries to access insulin for a maximum copay of $35 for one month’s supply. Notice the words “participating” and “enhanced.” This means that only those patients who elect (and pay for) enhanced coverage will be able to take advantage of the $35 price cap – and only if their drug plans participate. Millions of seniors whose plans do not include this provision will continue to pay an average of over $1,100 in annual out of pocket insulin costs. Obviously, any policy that lowers seniors’ insulin copays can be helpful, but this is not nearly enough. The president’s order does nothing to reduce the actual price of insulin, one of the most notoriously cost-inflated drugs in recent memory.''
If only Davee-Boi had someont to read this to him....