Quote Originally Posted by David88vert View Post
Obamacare in GA (more relevant to us):

"Kyle Wingfield, a columnist for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, outlined them this way:

• A 25-year-old, non-smoking male can currently buy the cheapest, no frills plan with high out-of-pocket costs for about $66 a month. If the premium hikes go through, that plan would cost from $150-197 a month, depending on the insurer.

• A 45-year-old male non-smoker can find a low-cost plan for $119 a month. A similar plan offered under the exchange would cost from $217 to $234 per month.

• A 64-year-old male non-smoker can find a low-cost plan for $293 a month. Similar plans offered through Obamacare would cost from $450 to $501 per month.

At the 11th hour, two private health insurers that do business in Georgia, Aetna and its subsidiary, Coventry Health Care, announced that neither would participate in Georgia’s exchange, expected to be operating Oct. 1. Officials for the companies doubted that the plans they would offer would be “financially viable” — meaning that they don’t make sense because they would be net losers for the company. That’s the not-so-hidden flaw in Obamacare — it’s going to require a massive subsidy to keep afloat."
And as I read this, my premiums continue to fall, on Aetna. This tells me there's a difference between the rhetoric, and what's actually happening.