Maga Pill was good while it lasted, but the guy doing it quit part way through.
I know some of you will advise me to ignore this guy, but I expect to meet with someone who hates Trump, considers him an absolute crook and someone who would do anything to hurt America as long as he comes out on top. I know, I know. But I'm not ready to give up on him yet. He used to love Trump and I honestly don't know what happened, but I want to try to get him back on the Trump train again. I want to remind him of all the great things Trump did. If you can help me out, I'd appreciate it. Thanks.
I have it, but posting it here as text squishes it all together. I have tried to format it nicely but it ends up looking like garbage here.
Prioritized resources for the most vulnerable Americans, including nursing home residents. • Quickly established guidelines for nursing homes and expanded telehealth opportunities to protect vulnerable seniors. • Increased surveillance, oversight, and transparency of all 15,417 Medicare and Medicaid nursing homes by requiring them to report cases of COVID-19 to all residents, their families, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). • Required that all nursing homes test staff regularly. • Launched an unprecedented national nursing home training curriculum to equip nursing home staff with the knowledge they need to stop the spread of COVID-19. • Delivered $81 million for increased inspections and funded 35,000 members of the Nation Guard to deliver critical supplies to every Medicare-certified nursing homes. • Deployed Federal Task Force Strike Teams to provide onsite technical assistance and education to nursing homes experiencing outbreaks. • Distributed tens of billions of dollars in Provider Relief Funds to protect nursing homes, long-term care facilities, safety-net hospitals, rural hospitals, and communities hardest hit by the virus. • Released 1.5 million N95 respirators from the Strategic National Stockpile for distribution to over 3,000 nursing home facilities. • Directed the White House Opportunity and Revitalization Council to refocus on underserved communities impacted by the coronavirus. • Required that testing results reported include data on race, gender, ethnicity, and ZIP code, to ensure that resources were directed to communities disproportionately harmed by the virus. • Ensured testing was offered at 95 percent of Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC), which serve over 29 million patients in 12,000 communities across the Nation. • Invested an unprecedented $8 billion in tribal communities. • Maintained safe access for Veterans to VA healthcare throughout the COVID-19 Pandemic and supported non-VA hospital systems and private and state-run nursing homes with VA clinical teams. • Signed legislation ensuring no reduction of VA education benefits under the GI Bill for online distance learning. Supported Americans as they safely return to school and work. • Issued the Guidelines for Opening Up America Again, a detailed blueprint to help governors as they began reopening the country. Focused on protecting the most vulnerable and mitigating the risk of any resurgence, while restarting the economy and allowing Americans to safely return to their jobs. • Helped Americans return to work by providing extensive guidance on workplace-safety measures to protect against COVID-19, and investigating over 10,000 coronavirus-related complaints and referrals. • Provided over $31 billion to support elementary and secondary schools. • Distributed 125 million face masks to school districts. • Provided comprehensive guidelines to schools on how to protect and identify high-risk individuals, prevent the spread of COVID-19, and conduct safe in-person teaching. • Brought back the safe return of college athletics, including Big Ten and Pac-12 football. Rescued the American economy with nearly $3.4 trillion in relief, the largest financial aid package in history. • Secured an initial $8.3 billion Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Act, supporting the development of treatments and vaccines, and to procure critical medical supplies and equipment. • Signed the $100 billion Families First Coronavirus Relief Act, guaranteeing free coronavirus testing, emergency paid sick leave and family leave, Medicaid funding, and food assistance. • Signed the $2.3 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, providing unprecedented and immediate relief to American families, workers, and businesses. • Signed additional legislation providing nearly $900 billion in support for coronavirus emergency response and relief, including critically needed funds to continue the Paycheck Protection Program. • Signed the Paycheck Protection Program and Healthcare Enhancement Act, adding an additional $310 billion to replenish the program. • Delivered approximately 160 million relief payments to hardworking Americans. • Through the Paycheck Protection Program, approved over $525 billion in forgivable loans to more than 5.2 million small businesses, supporting more than 51 million American jobs. • The Treasury Department approved the establishment of the Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility to provide liquidity to the financial system. • The Treasury Department, working with the Federal Reserve, was able to leverage approximately $4 trillion in emergency lending facilities. • Signed an executive order extending expanded unemployment benefits. • Signed an executive order to temporarily suspend student loan payments, evictions, and collection of payroll taxes. • Small Business Administration expanded access to emergency economic assistance for small businesses, faith-based, and religious entities. • Protected jobs for American workers impacted by COVID-19 by temporarily suspending several job-related nonimmigrant visas, including H-1B’s, H-2B’s without a nexus to the food-supply chain, certain H-4’s, as well as L’s and certain J’s.
Great Healthcare for Americans Empowered American patients by greatly expanding healthcare choice, transparency, and affordability. • Eliminated the Obamacare individual mandate – a financial relief to low and middle-income households that made up nearly 80 percent of the families who paid the penalty for not wanting to purchase health insurance. • Increased choice for consumers by promoting competition in the individual health insurance market leading to lower premiums for three years in a row. • Under the Trump Administration, more than 90 percent of the counties have multiple options on the individual insurance market to choose from. • Offered Association Health Plans, which allow employers to pool together and offer more affordable, quality health coverage to their employees at up to 30 percent lower cost. • Increased availability of short-term, limited-duration health plans, which can cost up to 60 percent less than traditional plans, giving Americans more flexibility to choose plans that suit their needs. • Expanded Health Reimbursement Arrangements, allowing millions of Americans to be able to shop for a plan of their choice on the individual market, and then have their employer cover the cost. • Added 2,100 new Medicare Advantage plan options since 2017, a 76 percent increase. • Lowered Medicare Advantage premiums by 34 percent nationwide to the lowest level in 14 years. Medicare health plan premium savings for beneficiaries have totaled $nearly 1.5 billion since 2017. • Improved access to tax-free health savings accounts for individuals with chronic conditions. • Eliminated costly Obamacare taxes, including the health insurance tax, the medical device tax, and the “Cadillac tax.” • Worked with states to create more flexibility and relief from oppressive Obamacare regulations, including reinsurance waivers to help lower premiums. • Released legislative principles to end surprise medical billing. • Finalized requirements for unprecedented price transparency from hospitals and insurance companies so patients know what the cost is before they receive care. • Took action to require that hospitals make the prices they negotiate with insurers publicly available and easily accessible online. • Improved patients access to their health data by penalizing hospitals and causing clinicians to lose their incentive payments if they do not comply. • Expanded access to telehealth, especially in rural and underserved communities. • Increased Medicare payments to rural hospitals to stem a decade of rising closures and deliver enhanced access to care in rural areas. Issued unprecedented reforms that dramatically lowered the price of prescription drugs. • Lowered drug prices for the first time in 51 years. • Launched an initiative to stop global freeloading in the drug market. • Finalized a rule to allow the importation of prescription drugs from Canada. • Finalized the Most Favored Nation Rule to ensure that pharmaceutical companies offer the same discounts to the United States as they do to other nations, resulting in an estimated $85 billion in savings over seven years and $30 billion in out-of-pocket costs alone. • Proposed a rule requiring federally funded health centers to pass drug company discounts on insulin and Epi-Pens directly to patients. • Ended the gag clauses that prevented pharmacists from informing patients about the best prices for the medications they need. • Ended the costly kickbacks to middlemen and ensured that patients directly benefit from available discounts at the pharmacy counter, saving Americans up to 30 percent on brand name pharmaceuticals. • Enhanced Part D plans to provide many seniors with Medicare access to a broad set of insulins at a maximum $35 copay for a month’s supply of each type of insulin. • Reduced Medicare Part D prescription drug premiums, saving beneficiaries nearly $2 billion in premium costs since 2017. • Ended the Unapproved Drugs Initiative, which provided market exclusivity to generic drugs.