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Over 50 and for Freedom

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Say you’re a senior citizen. You’re concerned about the rising costs of medical services, but are not ready to surrender your care to well-meaning but naive advocates of ever-greater government. What to do?

Many seniors belong to AARP, a kind of combination consumer group and political lobbyist association for people age 50 and over. Fifty seems kind of youngish to me to be a senior citi — ow! crick in my back! — but okay.

Members get discounts and also get AARP spokesmen pretending to represent them on political questions. AARP supports a big-government overhaul of medical services. However, they’ve discovered that the issue is touchy. So they have taken pains to dispute President Obama’s recent claim that AARP endorses any particular bill.

Some AARP members fear that Medicare benefits are at risk. Other AARP members and former members just like their freedom.

Thank goodness AARP has competition. There’s a group called 60 Plus, and now a new outfit, the American Seniors Association, is offering a special deal to all seniors who submits a torn-up AARP card with their application.

ASA’s president, Stuart Barton, is blunt: “President Obama must think the American people are idiots. . . .” if he thinks they’ll buy “the idea that health care rationing, restrictions and regulations being debated in Congress will save money and result in better preventative medicine.”

You know what? I’m not even going to wait until I turn fifty. Sign me up.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

2 replies on “Over 50 and for Freedom”

I am 89 and my wife and I have belonged to AARP for at least 30 years and I am not senile yet that I don’t know they are far to the left on many subjects and I disagree with them.

However, I have my supplemental Medical insurance and my Medicare D insurance through them with United Health Care and they are very costly but I have never had my costs beyond what Medicare allows disputed and despite the cost I am glad even at the cost when I see others with other plans restricted as to the doctors and hospitals they can use and extra payments they make for services. So you see even if I don’t care for their far left policies I cannot or don’t want to upset the plans I have used for years. Even when I had 3 separate open heart surgeries for valves over the last 20+ years I have not had to worry about paying the bill.

I am 64, but would not join AARP when I turned 50, because of their contributions to Planned Parenhood and support of abortion, and I did not believe they were truly representing seniors.
I did join ASA a few weeks ago, after learning about the organization when the AARP came out in support of Obama’s healthcare plan.

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