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793

Oh I so do not care. Well, I guess I do in a way. I want every single one of these people deported. You are not my people. This is not your country. Get the fuck out. NOW.

No Exceptions, No Asylum, Amnesty.

Archive: https://archive.today/SWMRn

From the post:

>More than 21,000 undocumented people in Colorado could lose Medicaid coverage if the Republicans’ bill to extend 2017 tax cuts makes it through the final gauntlet in Congress. H.R. 1, the legislation formerly known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, has a provision that would penalize states such as Colorado that use their own funds to cover undocumented people. Colorado covers any undocumented children who sign up for Medicaid, but restricts coverage for adults to pregnant and postpartum women. The bill would reduce the federal government’s share of the costs for what’s known as the expansion population — adult citizens who earn up to 138% of the poverty line and don’t qualify for Medicaid because of pregnancy or a disability — from 90% to 80%, forcing states to either come up with millions to cover that population or to stop insuring undocumented people. Colorado could lose about $300 million in federal funding annually if the federal government reduced its share, Gov. Jared Polis said.

Oh I so do not care. Well, I guess I do in a way. I want every single one of these people deported. You are not my people. This is not your country. Get the fuck out. NOW. #No Exceptions, No Asylum, Amnesty. Archive: https://archive.today/SWMRn From the post: >>More than 21,000 undocumented people in Colorado could lose Medicaid coverage if the Republicans’ bill to extend 2017 tax cuts makes it through the final gauntlet in Congress. H.R. 1, the legislation formerly known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, has a provision that would penalize states such as Colorado that use their own funds to cover undocumented people. Colorado covers any undocumented children who sign up for Medicaid, but restricts coverage for adults to pregnant and postpartum women. The bill would reduce the federal government’s share of the costs for what’s known as the expansion population — adult citizens who earn up to 138% of the poverty line and don’t qualify for Medicaid because of pregnancy or a disability — from 90% to 80%, forcing states to either come up with millions to cover that population or to stop insuring undocumented people. Colorado could lose about $300 million in federal funding annually if the federal government reduced its share, Gov. Jared Polis said.

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