Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Open Letter to Senators

This document is approved by Omar Dyer, it’s a legal public document, and is authorized by the state of New Jersey’s Notary and Treasury Department. New Jersey's Notary Public Commission 2/02/2009 end commission 2/02/2014 I.D. NO. 2381929 www.coaches101.org 201-984-5225.

Dear Senators Joe Manchin, Claire McCaskill and Jon Tester:

Our battle with Health Care, (Affordable Patient Care act of 2010) needs a united approach, and the party we fight for need a level of hope. It has been incumbent on these stringent measures where the levels of concerns, grant me to write this letter to you today. And because of the great lengths of technology left solitude of grate improvements, on how leaders, experts, citizens, and elected representative interact with their constituents. The vow to remove the individual mandate in Affordable Patient Care Act – charged by the republican base, and Tea-Party gender goes without merit. This mandate helps seniors who are facing sky rocket prices that were given to them under Universal Health Care: signed into law by Former president George W. Bush; placed a heavy burden on seniors who income is below the $75,000 range. The plan that included Medicare Prescription drugs part (D), where they gave a catholic plan – left seniors whom aren’t wealthy enough to foot the bill. Over the last 8 years – it resulted in lawsuits that ranged up to $4.1 trillion dollars.

This problem that deals with the drug prescription companies – where there’s a mandate that required every senior citizen to buy prescription drugs! Which created a loop in the system called the Dough Nut Hole. That problem resorted in millions of Americans to file lawsuits on malpractice. Removing the mandate for the Affordable Patient Care Act would force or give judges the right to overturn, cases that have been won by the people – thus violating their 11th amendment rights. It would transcend the gap between those that are poor, and those that are rich, when it comes to those who are at the retirement age. This mandate helps, seniors who can’t afford health care get the care that they need. It allows those that are under the retirement age gab to be capped in the system. And removing this mandate will leave them victims to the insurance companies – when their premiums jump through the roof in 2014: when the age gap and baby boomers reach that road. Now social security is in fact intact – yet, without Total Corporation from every individual – the future generation in 35 years won’t have these. And it’s not fair to have them pay for seniors now – without having a cushion in the future. My question is: Why should a healthy Omar Dyer have to pay through the taxes on social security – for Senator Mitch McConnell to have a better life; raid the system, and leave me out of retirement care.

Life is worth the battle, and saying that my future health in this great country is unconstitutional is classism – radical, and discrimination on parts of the amendments you swore to protect. Now every law written in the foundation of this country has a resulted effect on the citizens of the future. The Affordable Patient Care act isn’t the best, since there isn’t a single payer system. It allows parts of the bill to be marketable, like companies being allowed to 1099 their insurance cost. It allows competition for business to travel across state lines, and helps small business to open shop in the industry – where it has a dividend to save families $3,000 per year on overrun cost. And it allow middle class families to finally be capped into the system where they don’t have to worry about which bill to harm, the mortgage on the house, or my personal health. What is unconstitutional is to allow, those that are 30-55 be discriminated on because of age, income, and health? Discrimination can take many shapes and forms – laws are created to adjust to the times, and this is why we need this law. You can fix the law, but removing it would be detrimental to everyone, plus it would cost more to undo, then it would to just improve.

I am Omar Dyer: Small Business owner: health Care advocate: and an Appointed member of the DNC (09915790).

Omar Dyer
Notary Public
Masters in legal Studies
Bachelors in Technical Communications
Associates in Child Development
Associates in Children’s literature
PO Box 4463
Jersey City NJ

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Health Care

Dear President Barack Obama:

Our fight with health care isn’t over, and with the lust to create jobs – plus the push to find alternative solutions to energy. After the historic year battle, of heath care rallies, and debates – two years later we find ourselves back at the battle table. We find ourselves with looking at insurance companies deliberately lying to refuse coverage to those that aren’t insured. We find that this country is still discriminating on citizens based on income – as we now see that the judicial branch at the state level is over stepping boundaries, saying a judge in the state of New Hampshire has more power than a senator – or even a president.

When the State superior court judge, ruled on the mandate to make claims about amendments in the Health Care plan as a detriment to the constitution – brought things that are not soundly true. Recently, at the hill a company based in New Jersey called Perfect Printing complained to Congress – being baby fed and white handkerchief or spoon fed questions that leaned to a waterloo on health care. Yet, in their own answer, they made general conclusion that if they would have either hired a health care advisor, or applied to the correct departments of financing, they would fully qualify and receive the needed criteria to help them. It was their own refusal, and lack of education on the package that makes them less likely to afford health care coverage – not the rules in the law. And in fact the rules in the law made it easier, if they would have consulted with a health care specialist.
I can say, as someone who monitors that amendment – someone who fought hard for this bill—these attacks mounted by the Republicans, is an attempt to stall any positive growth you had for this country. Senator Mitch McConnell doesn’t want to create jobs, or lower the national debt. Mitch McConnell wants to end Social Security – it was his pledge when he first walked into office, and it probably will be his fight, until he is out of the senate. We can’t allow one senator’s personal vendetta on Social Security define what the entire nation needs.

Mr. President: it’s been a long time since I wrote a letter to you – and when it comes to defend the nations on the problems we face with health care: I am here for the fight. As a member of the organization we built together when you were a senator, that fight for health was there, and as a member fighting the good fight for all – we can’t put up a sign that says mission complete. There’s more work to do, the job has to be finished, and I signed the petition to rally for health care, signed the petition to place it in the books; and signed the petition to fight against the repeal. Now I am writing to you, on the notion that Mitch McConnell’s personal battles with Social Security shouldn’t be placed on the backs of the tax payer. Removing the Donut hole was a great tool to lower premiums come 2012. Making sure babies that have pre-existing conditions, get the coverage they need – without being discriminated on. Helping the poor who can’t afford coverage, get coverage; allowing those that would have been capped out – to finally be capped in; while allowing people whose labor is more important to the country than the job they work, get the coverage in health care they need. By allowing small business to get 33% off the cost, if they cover their workers! We need to fight harder for health care, keep the dream alive; fight the issue on jobs, and redefine the taxing code-- so that it helps entrepreneurs advance and not depress under economical situations. A taxing code that is simple, and don’t have to focus so much on municipal approval – in a way it rules out corruption due to negligence, and saves money on the budget. Our fiscal problems are because of negligence in the taxing code, where transparency isn’t as inclusive to where it should be.

Thank You
President Barack Obama

Thanks for reading this letter

Dr. Omar Dyer
New Jersey