THE HEALTHCARE REVOLUTION HAS STARTED:
And Two States Are Leading The Way
Someone had to go first.
Someone had to stand up and say,
“This isn't working."
Someone had to fight back.
Texas and Tennessee just did.
While the rest of the country continues to follow the old, broken healthcare rules, these two states just threw out the rulebook. They did something so obvious and logical that it must make you wonder why it wasn't always this way.
They decided to let patients win.
Think about that for a moment.
In a system designed to
confuse,
complicate,
and constrain,
two states just said: "Enough."
The revolution started with a simple idea:
What if we treated patients like people?
We know that the system isn't broken because people don't care.
It's broken because it was designed to be broken. It's broken by design.
Let's talk about the dance we all know too well:
You need medical care.
You have insurance.
You pay monthly premiums.
But the insurance company,
even your own, won't help until you spend thousands of your own dollars first.
They call this a deductible.
You call it frustrating.
This isn't just another policy change.
It's a shot across the bow, a declaration that the old way of doing things—where insurance companies hold all the cards—must end.
Think of it as healthcare's Boston Tea Party moment. Two states are throwing outdated rules overboard and daring others to follow.
The revolutionaries did this:
They decided that if you're smart enough to ask for the cash price—ALWAYS dramatically lower than the "insurance price"—it MUST count toward your deductible.
Let's see what this rebellion looks like:
SCENARIO A (The old regime):
MRI with insurance: $2,800
Counts toward deductible: Yes
You feel Trapped
SCENARIO B (The failed rebellion):
MRI with cash: $400
Counts toward deductible: No
You feel Clever but cheated
SCENARIO C (The revolution wins):
MRI with cash: $400
Counts toward deductible: YES
You feel Empowered
This is what rebellion looks like in healthcare.
Not with picket signs and protests but with common sense breaking through the walls of "that's just how it works."
The resistance isn't just coming—it's here and winning.
Consider these revolutionary truths:
1. Markets work better with transparency
2. People make better decisions when they have skin in the game
3. Innovation happens at the edges, not the center
4. Change comes from challenging "that's just how it works."
Every revolution has its catalysts, spark points, and moments when looking back, we'll say, "That's where it all changed."
Texas and Tennessee just lit the fuse.
Here's how you can join the revolution:
1. If you're in Texas or Tennessee, You're on the front lines. Use this. Show others it works. Be the proof.
2. If you're not: Be the voice in your state asking, "Why not us?"
3. Either way, Become the change agent your healthcare system needs.
The old guard will say what they always say:
"It's too complicated."
“Transparency is racism.”
"The system isn't built for this."
"It will never scale."
“You don’t care about the poor.”
But that's the sound of power shifting, control transferring, and patients becoming participants instead of just recipients.
The healthcare system isn't going to fix itself. But it MUST get fixed by thousands of small decisions made by people like you who decide to:
- Ask questions
- Make choices
- Share stories
- Demand better
Remember: Every system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets. If we want different results, we need different systems.
This isn't just about insurance deductibles anymore.
This is about taking back control.
This is about making healthcare work for people, not systems.
This is about you becoming part of something bigger.
The revolution won't be televised.
But it will be itemized on your medical bill.
Your move, warrior.
PS: When the history of healthcare reform is written, let them say you were part of the revolution that started with two states saying "enough." You MUST join this fight.
- Rojas out


Pretty basic stuff right Dutch? The issue is getting legislators who aren’t in the lobby trap to make common sense changes.
The bigger market is Medicare and Medicaid. That is the CMS/Government insurance cartel.