And if the Supreme Court doesn't do anything about this, then, "Katie, bar the door," it's all over. And this is the plan. So by the same token, if a business is faced with those two spending options -- the 14 to 45% that it costs them to provide health insurance for their employees or 8% as a penalty payment to the government for not provide -- what are they gonna do? They're gonna call you in and they're gonna say, "You know what? It's just gotten too expensive. We can't afford it. We know you don't want to pay for it yourself. So we're ending the program, and here are some options for you where you can go to get health insurance," and it's gonna be your state exchange or your federal exchange.
It's gonna be government provided somehow, somewhere. That's the plan. To it isn't 20 million, folks. It's 50 million, and eventually everybody -- if the Obama gets his way -- will lose employer-provided health insurance. Let's go back. This is March of 2007, Barack Obama speaking at a Service Employees International Union health care forum. He's a candidate for president, and here he explains how his health care plan will lead to the elimination of private insurance. He ought to be asked about this at every appearance, because here he is -- and we've aired this multiple times before. Here is President Obama explaining how he wants to end private health insurance.
OBAMA 2007: My commitment is to make sure that we've got universal health care for all Americans by the end of my first term as president. I would hope that we can set up a system that allows those who can go through their employer to access a federal system or a state pool of some sort. But I don't think we're gonna be able to eliminate employer coverage immediately. There's going to be potentially some transition process. I can envision a decade out or 15 years out or 20 years out.
RUSH: "I don't think we're going to be able to eliminate employer coverage immediately."
Is he not suggesting that that would be preferable? He wants to end employer coverage, but he knows he can't do it immediately. There's gonna be "a transition" of a decade or 15 years, because he knows that you wouldn't accept this if it happened overnight. But if it's parceled out -- if it happened so gradually that you're not even aware of it because it doesn't happen to you -- when it eventually does happen to you, most everybody else will have already been gone and there's nobody to help you. There will be nothing left but for you then to join the government's health insurance program. And once that happens, they get to determine whether or not you get covered and whether you get treated.