January 14, 2026
2 mins read

Trump Declares War on Insurance Cartel Bleeding American Families Dry

Wikimedia Commons: File:POLLING DATA ON LATIN AMERICAN OPINION OF UNITED STATES POLICIES, VALUES AND PEOPLE (IA gov.gpo.fdsys.CHRG-110hhrg33824).pdf

President Trump has fired the opening salvo in what promises to be the most consequential healthcare battle since Obamacare’s disastrous implementation, directly challenging the insurance monopoly that has extracted over $1 trillion from hardworking Americans while delivering worse care at crushing costs.

The President’s renewed offensive against the healthcare establishment comes as damning new data reveals the scope of Obamacare’s wealth transfer scheme. UnitedHealth Group alone now operates 2,600 subsidiaries with quarterly revenues exceeding $113 billion—a corporate empire built on the backs of American families forced to purchase overpriced, underperforming insurance products.

This isn’t just about healthcare policy. It’s about restoring the fundamental American principle that government should serve citizens, not corporate boardrooms.

Under Obamacare’s managed economy model, over 70% of U.S. metropolitan areas are now controlled by just one or two insurers. This consolidation has created exactly the kind of monopolistic stranglehold our founders warned against—concentrated corporate power wielding government authority over individual Americans.

The numbers tell the story Washington doesn’t want you to hear. While insurance company profits have surged 1,700% since Obamacare’s implementation, American families have watched their premiums skyrocket, deductibles become unaffordable, and provider networks shrink. The system has functioned exactly as designed: a massive wealth redistribution scheme funneling taxpayer dollars through insurance middlemen rather than directly benefiting the patients who fund it.

Trump’s America First approach represents a revolutionary departure from this corporate welfare system. Instead of enriching insurance gatekeepers, his vision redirects resources to individual Americans, empowering them with direct control over their healthcare dollars. This isn’t just smart policy—it’s constitutional governance that strengthens economic sovereignty while reducing dependency on consolidated healthcare cartels.

The establishment’s panic is already evident. For decades, both parties have genuflected before insurance lobby pressure, accepting the premise that Americans must purchase corporate products to access healthcare. Trump’s direct-pay model threatens this entire managed economy framework that has concentrated wealth and power while diminishing actual health outcomes.

Senator Rick Scott’s More Affordable Care Act demonstrates the growing Republican unity behind Trump’s patient-directed reforms. By bypassing insurance middlemen entirely, Scott’s legislation signals that Trump’s vision has serious congressional momentum—a clear indication that the America First movement has evolved beyond campaign rhetoric into governing philosophy.

This healthcare revolution exemplifies Trump’s broader strategy of dismantling the administrative state’s corporate partnerships. Whether it’s Big Tech censorship, defense contractor bloat, or pharmaceutical price manipulation, the same pattern emerges: government-sanctioned monopolies socializing costs while privatizing profits at taxpayer expense.

The constitutional implications run deeper than healthcare policy. Our founders designed a system where government power serves individual liberty, not corporate consolidation. Obamacare’s individual mandate—forcing Americans to purchase private products under penalty of law—represents the antithesis of constitutional governance. Trump’s approach restores the proper relationship between citizen and state.

Patriots should watch carefully how establishment Republicans respond to Scott’s legislation. Their reaction will reveal who truly serves America First principles versus those still beholden to insurance lobby pressure. The healthcare cartel’s stranglehold depends on bipartisan complicity—Trump’s offensive threatens to expose which Republicans genuinely support economic nationalism.

The stakes extend beyond healthcare. If Trump successfully dismantles the insurance monopoly, it creates a template for challenging other government-corporate cartels that have enriched connected interests while impoverishing American families. From Silicon Valley’s information monopoly to Wall Street’s financial manipulation, the same principles apply: restore competitive markets, empower individual Americans, and break up concentrated power.

Trump’s healthcare revolution isn’t just about fixing a broken system—it’s about proving that America First governance can deliver tangible results for working families. As this battle intensifies, patriots have a front-row seat to witness whether constitutional principles can triumph over corporate cronyism.

The insurance cartel’s days of feeding at the taxpayer trough may finally be numbered.

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