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Title: Be Careful What You Wish For
Source: The Future of Freedom Foundation
URL Source: http://www.fff.org/comment/com1201i.asp
Published: Jan 14, 2012
Author: Richard Schwartzman
Post Date: 2012-01-14 16:58:03 by Fibr Dog
Keywords: None
Views: 1082
Comments: 3

Mitt Romney’s recent comment about how he would repeal Obamacare if elected president was almost laughable. After all, Romney was the man who brought the same type of mandatory health coverage to Massachusetts when he was that state’s governor.

Government healthcare has been a political issue for generations, and interest accelerated during the Clinton years, when it was called “Hillarycare.” But Mitt delivered Romneycare.

No matter whose name is on the alleged care, it’s government controlled, and that’s a problem for at least two reasons: the practical and the constitutional

Let’s look at the practical first. Universal healthcare will be anything but what its advocates say it will be. The idea is reminiscent of George Orwell’s Animal Farm, where, after the animals held their successful revolution for equality and overthrew the farmer, some animals became more equal than others and said they were deserving of special privileges and luxuries.

It was former U.S. Representative Joe Sestak who led me to make the analogy. Let me first say that I truly respect the man and his thirty-one-year naval career. I’ve had the opportunity on a number of occasions to interview him and even have personal conversations. I like him, but I disagree with him.

During his first campaign for Congress in 2006, he explained that he became strongly aware of a need for government healthcare while his young daughter was being treated for cancer. She received excellent care and, he said, he couldn’t imagine how other families managed without the ability to pay for such wonderful treatment.

Well, let’s face it. Mr. Sestak was then Rear Admiral Sestak. You bet his daughter got good care. It’s called RHIP: rank hath its privileges.

For confirmation, I’ll offer my own personal experience with government-provided healthcare. As an eight-year-old, I went to visit relatives in New Orleans. I had a bicycle accident and cut my leg from knee to ankle. My uncle was a commander in the navy and he got me to the emergency room at the naval base, where I received prompt and excellent treatment. All that I was left with was a scar and an entertaining story to tell.

Jump ahead twelve years. At that point I was a twenty-year-old Air Force enlisted man who got sick one day while stationed at Westover Air Force Base. I had to go to sick call three times before the doctor ever put a stethoscope to my chest. When he did, he immediately admitted me to the hospital with pneumonia.

Would an officer’s relative have had to wait three days for a doctor to perform such a basic check? Would a senator’s relative? In private practice, listening to a patient’s heart and lungs would be routine.

Universal healthcare is supposed to make care accessible for all, regardless of income or social status. But just like the animals in Animal Farm, whenever there is political influence, some people will become more equal than others — and there is political influence in anything and everything the government does.

Beyond that fact, there is the question of whether government healthcare is even constitutional. Most politicians really don’t care about that. The contemporary proof of that carelessness comes from an exchange between U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, D-SC, and Judge Andrew Napolitano during the 2009 discussions over Obamacare.

According to Napolitano, the judge asked Clyburn where in the Constitution Congress is granted the authority to get involved in healthcare. The congressman responded saying that most of what they do in D.C. has nothing to do with the Constitution.

So what’s next?

The country is waiting for the Supreme Court to drop its shoe regarding federally mandated healthcare in the form of the Affordable Care Act. The single most controversial aspect of the bill is the individual mandate, the requirement that everyone buy some form of health insurance.

How anyone can read Article 1, Section 8, of the Constitution and say that the federal government has the power to force such a thing is beyond reason. It goes back to Clyburn’s comments about Congress doing things that have nothing to do with the Constitution, even though the oath of office is to preserve, protect, and defend that document.

The court will hear arguments for and against the mandate and make a ruling later this year. One can only wonder at this point what the high court will decide. It’s a scary thought.

Getting the government involved in the health of society and its citizens creates a dangerous situation. The promise of equal access to medical care beyond what the free market can deliver is a lie and a smokescreen. There was a time — 1927 in Buck v. Bell — when the court even ruled that forced sterilization of undesirable people was constitutional. How’s that for government health care?

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#1. To: Fibr Dog (#0)

According to Napolitano, the judge asked Clyburn where in the Constitution Congress is granted the authority to get involved in healthcare. The congressman responded saying that most of what they do in D.C. has nothing to do with the Constitution.

Let's let USSC decide the matter as it is already coming up this year.

But, I want to point out Romney's BS:

Mitt Romney’s recent comment about how he would repeal Obamacare if elected president was almost laughable.

It is the same political rhetoric that Americans hear all the time from cheap politicians. The JERK can't do anything other than (as POTUS) urge the Congress to repeal the same. And those ASSHOLES only perform the bidding of Israel while on the golf course collecting millions of dollars from well-funded lobbyists.

They are all a pack of DO-NOTHING CHARLATANS in Washington DC, from the top-down with one exception: Ron Paul and his staff members.

buckeroo  posted on  2012-01-14   17:16:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: buckeroo (#1)

Let's let USSC decide the matter as it is already coming up this year.

51 Votes to Obamacare Repeal?

By Daniel Foster, February 10, 2011 11:43 A.M.

That’s the case Karl Rove makes after talking to some folks who ought to know:

Keith Hennessey, a former White House colleague of mine, says Democrats are wrong. He argues that Republicans can repeal health-care reform with a simple Senate majority.

Director of the National Economic Council under President George W. Bush, Mr. Hennessey now teaches at Stanford Business School and is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution. Last week on his website, KeithHennessey.com, he made the case that congressional Republicans could use the reconciliation process to kill ObamaCare with 51 votes in the Senate and a majority in the House of Representatives.

The Budget Act of 1974 established the reconciliation process. The House and Senate Budget Committees can direct other committees to make changes in mandatory spending (like ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion and insurance subsidies) and the tax code (such as ObamaCare’s levies on insurance policies, hospitals and drug companies) to make spending and revenue conform with the goals set by the annual budget resolution.

For example, under reconciliation the Senate Budget Committee could instruct the Senate Finance Committee to reduce mandatory spending on insurance subsidies and Medicaid expansion. These two items make up more than 90% of spending in ObamaCare. All the changes from all the committees are then bundled into one measure and voted upon. Because reconciliation is protected by the rules of the budget process, it doesn’t take 60 votes to bring it up and it requires only a simple majority to pass.

Will this 51-vote strategy work? One long-time GOP budget whiz, embarrassed he hadn’t thought of this, told me it would. Another Republican veteran of the budget wars agreed, though she had some concerns that certain elements of ObamaCare, such as some insurance provisions, might be beyond the reach of reconciliation. For example, would reconciliation allow Republicans to kill the requirement that younger, healthier workers pay higher premiums than they rightly should to keep premiums for older workers lower?

Mr. Hennessey believes that these are “strategically unimportant” items. He says the goal should be to repeal ObamaCare’s big-cost drivers, and reconciliation provides the tool to do it.

As we learned last March, the reconciliation rules are to a certain extent open for interpretation. Even if Republicans were in a position to try this come 2013 (and had a friendly pen in the White House), they’d have to draw the lines around the reconcilable bits very carefully.

Food for thought, though.

Quiz of the Day: Who made the statement "The world would be a better place if only Men were to vote?????? HINT: It was a woman!!!

CZ82  posted on  2012-01-14   18:01:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: CZ82 (#2)

To me, Karl Rove is just another GOP coward and charlatan trickster warmongering idiot. He made that point of view a year ago after 0bama Kare was passed. This is another year later and the USSC is FINALLY reviewing the matter. I think their decision is due in June this year.

buckeroo  posted on  2012-01-15   1:03:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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