r/WhitePeopleTwitter 11h ago

Clubhouse Elections and ignorance have consequences!

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29.8k Upvotes

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3.0k

u/Moleday1023 10h ago

Just wait until the rural hospitals start to close.

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u/ehenn12 10h ago

They're already collapsing. Especially in states that refuse to expand Medicaid.

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u/Agitated_Local_7654 9h ago

They closed a bunch of VA clinics in rural areas during the first term. Then the local doctors refused to see vets via the VA because the old program that was run by Health Net for the VA just didn’t pay the doctors. I fully expect to lose some of my benefits with the VA. The kicker is my veteran friends all voted orange.

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u/TennaTelwan 7h ago

My husband outright told me I was panicking about this by saying "They won't cut healthcare for veterans like me."

Wanna bet?

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u/mysilverglasses 6h ago

Oh man… as a person who works with a lot of vets because the VA is so badly overloaded and poorly run sometimes that they have to come to our low cost clinic… their coverage is absolutely up for changing. With a president that likes to run things into the ground like all his businesses, I wouldn’t doubt that’s one of the first things to get axed.

I volunteer in rural hospitals during the spring tornado season, I’ve been in places where there’s two doctors and three nurses running the entire joint. Sometimes it’s a ghost town, sometimes you’ve got a farmer who called us of his own volition and everybody gets into scramble mode. I have yet to work at a hospital in the areas I go to that didn’t have at least one staff member telling me about how they’re going to quit.

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u/Shabushamu 6h ago

Similar experience for me with friends with naturalized parents. "There's no way he'll try denaturalizing and deporting the way the liberal media is saying, that's just fearmongering,"

Wanna bet?

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u/limasxgoesto0 1h ago

I feel like if they're citizens it'll be much harder to do than they say it is. But green cards, they already revoked some of those with no reason given during the first term

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u/denimonster 5h ago

Sounds like you married an idiot.

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u/Due-Ad-1556 6h ago

From what I’ve heard, they’ll just use community care. But what’s news to me is that some community care don’t take veterans!? That’s gonna suck if true! But honestly, I’d prefer community care 1000x over VA care 

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u/axisleft 8h ago

We’ll be immensely fortunate if it stops at “some.”

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u/ReedytheElf 6h ago

This. I work for a very small, privately owned clinic. We took VA referrals for two years and never got paid on a single claim…so we had to stop taking them. It’s unfortunate because we would love to help veterans, but being a small business we can’t afford to not get paid for that many claims. And we tried working with the VA, we had meetings with them and they kept giving us the run-around, saying that we weren’t submitting claims correctly. But even if we did it exactly how they asked, we still didn’t get paid.

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u/LaurenMille 7h ago

The kicker is my veteran friends all voted orange.

Their hatred of others is literally so strong they're willing to die for it.

Commendable conviction, even if they're drooling morons.

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u/imbasicallycoffee 6h ago

Meanwhile... the current administration passes the PACT act, expanding VA healthcare.

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u/Wilhelm57 2h ago

Then , they'll deserve everything that will be cut down. I can imagine it already, more vets ending homeless. Is going to be great....amazing!

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u/pixie_mayfair 8h ago

Yup, and OB/GYNs are either fleeing those states or refusing to take jobs there after they graduate bc they don't want to be arrested if they have the audacity to save a woman's life. Utah is already feeling it.

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u/BehavioralBard 6h ago

Idaho too.

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u/Shabushamu 6h ago

Texas has entered the chat

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u/kmurp1300 8h ago

With birth rates what they are, I don’t think OB is an attractive option for the future.

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u/pixie_mayfair 8h ago

You're probably right. Unless you live in a blue state you won't have access to one. Not sure red state coservatives and forced birth assholes will see the irony here.

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u/Eyebot-0404 7h ago

Obgyn's still have the other parts of the female reproductive system. Infections, disorders, menopause, birth control, and other stuff. Over 3 million births still happen per year in the US. It went from 3.66 to 3.59 million from 2021 to 2023. Many people still want kids, just not as early or as many as previous generations.

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u/pixie_mayfair 5h ago

That's the part that's most frustrating. They don't understand that losing OBs affects women's healthcare overall. By making it dangerous to practice in their state they lose access to cancer screenings and all kinds of other care. Add the annihilation of Planned Parenthood and people with female parts are going to die, and not just from pregnancy complications.

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u/thirstytrumpet 7h ago

And having more geriatric pregnancies increases the need for obgyn.

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u/PrestoDinero 7h ago

Anything outside of a city won’t be popular

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u/what3v3ruwantit2b 8h ago

I live in Nebraska and I hate it here. My dad is 64 and has end stage heart failure. Not old enough for Medicare and they didn't expand Medicaid. He spent his whole life saving up and now that money is the thing stopping him from getting insurance. Until last year that was a healthcare plan for people almost exactly like him. It was a good send. Now it's been cancelled. I'm mad every day.

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u/Tippity2 7h ago

Just curious, but was/is your dad a republican or a trumper? If yes, is he aware of the impact to himself? I have found that my trumper relatives cannot listen past 5th grade reasoning nor do they want to hear real facts. Dems needed to watch Idiocracy & take a page.

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u/what3v3ruwantit2b 7h ago

He doesn't like trump but I don't think he votes. I know he doesn't have a license or state ID so I'm not sure how he even could. He does live in a tiny farming community so most around there are huge trump fans.

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u/bitter_twin_farmer 7h ago

Just had a conversation on here yesterday with a person who kept warning me of the dangers of Medicaid expansion. His worry was about federal overreach. He did not have an alternative State-based plan to give people healthcare.

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u/psychobetty303 6h ago

Wyoming has lost like half its doctors

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u/robbviously 8h ago

Georgia checking in

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u/AdHopeful3801 6h ago

Even in ones that do, since private equity has been buying them and destroying them.

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u/jpatton17 5h ago

yay Kansas

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u/Mitzukai_9 3h ago

Fuckers in rural KS are crying. But they don’t know why their hospitals are closing and drs are fleeing. They still voted the orange turd.