This article is from the archive of our partner .

Florida Gov. Rick Scott met with senior citizens on Tuesday to talk about how Obamacare-mandated cuts to Medicare Advantage were ruining their lives. They didn't know what he was talking about. “I’m completely satisfied,” Harvey Eisen, 92, a West Boca resident, told Scott, according to The Sun Sentinel.

Most of adults in the audience hadn't experienced any changes to their insurance and argued that, “if, as you say,” there are cuts to Medicare, they didn't see why they shouldn't share the wealth of government subsidized health care. “We’re all just sitting here taking it for granted that because we have Medicare we don’t want to lose one part of it. That’s wrong to me. I think we have to spread it around," Ruthlyn Rubin, a 66-year-old from Boca Raton said, according to The Sentinel. "This is the United States of America. It’s not the United States of senior citizens,” she added. (Though maybe it's close, given how reliably senior citizens vote in midterm elections.)

Unfortunately for Scott, older Americans are not reliably anti-Obamacare. “As I travel the state and I listen to seniors they tell me stories about how their plans are being changed, how they are losing their doctors, the coverage is changing, and so what I’m here to do is just hear your stories,” he said.