Ok real question, is there literally any way in the US to get insurance that isn't via being unemployed or through a 40 hr job? I can do 32 but nobody hires for that set of hours.
I've heard of people enrolling in cheap colleges for only 1 class per semester and getting the school healthcare plan because it's cheaper than buying it normally
They just don't do any school and keep repeating this
Can't you still buy plans independently on the marketplace like they originally required with Obamacare? Not sure what that experience or cost is like though.
I had to do that because something went wrong with open enrollment with my work last year. I pay about $130 a month and it doesn't cover too much. My daily prescription is ~$30 a month and my doctor's office visits are $70. If I hit my $7,500 deductible, the insurance covers the rest. I think it's united healthcare.
It really depends on how much you make. I lived in a shitty red state for a year on one of the plans, but because I was only making like $20,000 a year, it wasn't bankruptcy levels of expensive, and I actually needed some serious medical care that year. I think the problem gets worse the more you make ironically, because they determine all of your discretionary income should actually go to insurance companies. That of course can't happen if you don't have any discretionary income to begin with I guess. Say thank you and go back to work, serf.
I prefer the direct route of armed robbery. I wear a ski mask and come into the ER waiving a gun around. Tape up some small cardboard boxes with wires sticking out that lead to a button (I don't have access to C4). I demand my surgery and drugs etc. Only downside to this healthcare plan is you can't be put under or you just wake up in jail; gotta stay awake so you can hold the gun on the surgeon.
Healthcare itself has a decent amount of positions where full time is 30-36 hours, but those also typically have some prerequisite experience or certification/degree.