Designs, you still are evading a direct answer in favor of raising unrelated issues.
Martians could some day swoop in and pay off the US national deficit and pay for ACA, too, but I prefer to stay grounded in reality. Sure, a trillion dollars in repatrioted offshore funds would be great, but in the big picture, it barely puts a dent in ACA or the Federal debt and solves neither long-term problem. And we both know, the US Govt. is never going to force their friends in the corporate world to pay taxes on all that money they've socked away in foreign banks.
designs: "can bring another trillion home every year". Sorry, designs, you are misinformed! US corportions have aprox. $1.3 trillion in profits in tax havens- of which, if taxed, would result in aprox. $92 billion in taxes. Nothing compared to the overall US deficit, national debt or the cost of ACA.
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DogGone, the CBO numbers have been revised (not a big shock). Not only is there no budget offset, ACA will be more expensive than initially projected (as usual, the real cost must be hidden in order to rally support):
"The Congressional Budget Office has extended its cost estimates for President Obama's health care law out to 2022, taking in more years of full implementation, and showing that the bill is substantially more expensive -- twice as much as the original $900 billion price tag.
In a largely overlooked segment of the CBO's update to the budget outlook released Tuesday, the independent arm of Congress found that the bill will cost $1.76 trillion between now and 2022.
That only counts the cost of coverage, not implementation costs and other changes.
...
that the $1.76 trillion estimate includes only the costs of coverage, not implementation and other costs. He argues that all those drive the price up even further over the first full 10 years of the law.
"The full accounting of the bill is $2.6 trillion. That's a fair and accurate analysis of what the bill would cost, according to CBO,"
In all, some 30 million people will remain without health coverage, according to the estimate.
Sessions noted that the study projects spending in accordance with the law will add at least $700 billion to the deficit in the years 2010 to 2019 -- its first 10 years of enactment.
"Sadly, it may prove much worse than that," he said."
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/03/14/cbo-health-law-estimate-shows-much-higher-spending-beyond-first-10-years/
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Again, I'm asking someone to demonstrate mathematically how a broke government is in a position to support a program it can't afford, adding it to a long list of its current programs it can't afford.