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United States News Title: Bankruptcies Hit People Challenging Health Insurance Rule Facing a very tight monthly budget after the recession hurt his Michigan solo law practice, John Ceci has cut back on movies and restaurant meals, drives a 1996 Honda and has higher priorities than health insurance. I would prefer to purchase a new car rather than pay a monthly health-care premium, Ceci said in a court affidavit after suing to block President Barack Obamas health-care law, which requires most people to have insurance by 2014. I cannot afford both. The recession hit Ceci hard enough that, 13 months before his March 2010 lawsuit to overturn the insurance requirement, he filed for bankruptcy relief from almost $120,000 of unpaid balances on 20 credit cards, according to court records. As the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to review the health- care law next week, Cecis case is one of three lawsuits, filed by 11 individual plaintiffs, in which federal appeals courts have ruled on the insurance mandate. Four of the people who objected to getting health coverage, including Ceci, have gone to bankruptcy court to discharge debts they couldnt pay, court filings show. Questions about who foots the bill for treating the uninsured are key to the Obama administrations defense of the individual mandate. While people challenging the law say they want to choose how to manage their own medical and financial affairs, some may be gambling that they wont need expensive care, said Michelle Mello, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston. Is it a choice about making an arrangement about how to pay for your future needs, or is it deciding that you have higher priorities and youre just going to take your chances? Mello said in a telephone interview. And is part of taking your chances that somebody else may wind up paying your bills? Few people can afford to pay thousands of dollars out-of- pocket if stricken by bolt-from-the-blue injuries or ailments, the government said in court briefs. The cost of treating people without insurance, it said, is passed to others in the form of higher prices and costlier insurance premiums. Every individual is always at risk of requiring health care, and the need for particularly expensive services is unpredictable, the administration said in its Supreme Court appeal. Underscoring the importance of insuring against catastrophic costs, the government argued, health-care expenses contribute to more than six out of 10 personal bankruptcies. Thats the argument advanced by the Obama apologists, Robert Muise, a lawyer representing Ceci, said in a telephone interview. Its utter nonsense to say we can trash the Constitution because there are some people who have had bankruptcies. The health-care debate involves very difficult policy questions that have to be resolved, said Muise, a co-founder of the American Freedom Law Center, which describes itself as a Judeo-Christian public interest law firm. But they have to be resolved in a way thats acceptable under the Constitution. A bankruptcy filing briefly threatened the Supreme Courts review of the insurance mandate. Mary Brown, one of the original participants in the lawsuit at the court, shut down her Florida auto repair shop and filed for bankruptcy in September, listing about $4,700 of unpaid medical bills among $60,000 of unsecured debts. A trial judge had said Brown could challenge the coverage requirement, even though it hasnt taken effect, because she had to make financial preparations now that could endanger her business. After her shop closed, lawyers fighting the insurance mandate had to get the Supreme Courts permission to add new plaintiffs to the case. Browns refusal to have health insurance had little or nothing to do with her financial crisis, as unpaid medical costs represented only a sliver of the debt that pushed Brown and her husband into bankruptcy, said Karen Harned, a lawyer with the National Federation of Independent Business who represents Brown and other plaintiffs in the case. She didnt have the customers, she couldnt support her business anymore and she had to file, Harned said in a telephone interview. Brown still doesnt have health insurance and she doesnt want the government to tell her she has to have it, Harned said. This is not constitutional. An Atlanta federal appeals court in Browns case struck down the insurance requirement, saying it exceeded Congresss authority to regulate interstate commerce. An appeals court in Cincinnati upheld the law against Cecis challenge. In a third case pending at the Supreme Court, Charles Edward Lee and Susan Seven-Sky filed suit in Washington saying they refuse to buy insurance because it violates their beliefs that God will provide for their physical, spiritual and financial well-being. Lee, former owner of Eddie Lee Lawn & Tree Service in San Antonio, filed for bankruptcy in September 2009 with $69,000 of credit-card and credit-line debt, $50 in cash and $61 in checking and savings accounts, according to court records. Seven-Sky, a suburban New York chiropractor and massage therapist, sought bankruptcy protection in September 2006, according to court records, listing almost $58,000 of credit- card debt and $550 of cash and non-retirement savings. What it comes down to is not that people have to declare bankruptcy for various reasons, but can Congress do something that is unconstitutional? said Ed White, a lawyer with the Washington-based American Center for Law and Justice, which represents Lee and Seven-Sky. The ends dont justify the means, White said in a telephone interview. Acting illegally by forcing Americans to buy something when there are a whole array of constitutional, legal options out there isnt the solution. Lee and Seven-Sky both said in their lawsuit that, while they could afford insurance if they wanted it, they have had to start setting money aside now to pay future penalties for lack of coverage. The fact that participants in some lawsuits against the coverage mandate cite difficulty affording relatively modest health-care costs or penalties demonstrates that, without insurance, they couldnt handle the cost of treatment in cases of serious illness or injury, the government argues. Plaintiffs own declarations suggest that a medical expense of any significance could exceed their ability to pay, the Justice Department said in a brief in the Lee and Seven-Sky case. The purchase of insurance is the classic mechanism for addressing that risk. U.S. District Court Judge Gladys Kessler in Washington upheld the health-care law against the challenge by Lee and Seven-Sky, bluntly saying the intentionally uninsured are deliberately shifting inevitable medical costs onto their neighbors. Those who choose -- and plaintiffs have made such a deliberate choice -- not to purchase health insurance will benefit greatly when they become ill, as they surely will, from the free health care which must be provided by emergency rooms and hospitals to the sick and dying who show up on their doorstep, Kessler wrote in her opinion. Those who choose not to purchase health insurance will ultimately get a free ride on the backs of those Americans who have made responsible choices. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upheld Kesslers decision. Whites group, founded by television evangelist Pat Robertson, is seeking Supreme Court review. In that case, Lee said he rejects more than just insurance: Lee so firmly believes in the importance of relying on God to maintain his health that he has instructed his family and friends that, should he be stricken with a serious health issue, for example, a heart attack or traumatic injury, they should only pray for him and not provide him with emergency medical care, his lawsuit said. The governments argument that society at large carries the cost of the uninsured is flawed, Harned said, because some people may never need or use expensive, catastrophic care. At the end of the day, were assuming that all of these people are going to get hit by a proverbial bus, she said. The odds are thats not going to happen. The administrations briefs say most medical costs for people less than 65 years old come from unforeseeable events such as strokes, accidents, cancer or pregnancy complications. An appendectomy costs an average of $13,000, bypass surgery runs about $60,000 and a years supply of some cancer drugs can cost more than $150,000, the government says. An alternative -- denying medical treatment to those who cant pay -- would be far more draconian than requiring individuals to have insurance coverage, or pay a penalty to help defray the cost of treating the uninsured, the administration argued. Ceci, whose law practices website promotes his expertise in bankruptcy and debt-collections, acknowledged in a telephone interview that he would have trouble today paying large medical bills. I dont know whatll happen if I ever find myself in that situation: I dont know if Ill get cancer; I dont know if Ill be in a car accident later today, said Ceci. If I get hit by a bus, theres somebody to sue. I might get cancer one day and, if I do, Ill have to deal with it, he said. I dont know if thats a valid reason to force somebody to buy something, regardless of whether they want it or not. The cases are: Thomas More Law Center v. Obama, 11-117; Department of Health and Human Services v. Florida, 11-398; and Seven-Sky v. Holder, 11-679.
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#1. To: Brian S (#0)
Just partially abort all the liberals. Their arms, legs and heads. Problem solved.
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