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BattleMoose wrote:Do you just expect everyone to assume that this Health Care Law relates to the USA? There are many other countries in this world, which have laws too! :-/
sardia wrote:http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/15/health/policy/health-care-is-changing-despite-federal-uncertainty.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&ref=business
Who's ready to hear arguments by the Justice Department? I for one dislike their line of reasoning on what Congress can force people to do. I would have preferred if they had argued that they were taxing everyone who didn't have insurance. Instead, they are going with the commerce clause argument, which leads to awkward line of thought. The idea that health is a commercial product does not resonate as well as taxing behavior/status. (either you're insured or not)(healthy/not healthy.)
Steroid wrote:Perhaps it was linking to an article in the New York Times that carried the implication. Or that the high court is (according to Wikipedia) called the Supreme Court in the US, Bangladesh, Israel, and Uganda, and counted on the Bangladeshis, Israelis, and Ugandans to not raise a fuss.
Steroid wrote:Taxation is legal.
Oh man, we should totally legislate things based on wildly hypothetical super-people. I mean, if I had magical super powers that let me punch people in the face and cure them of cancer, I wouldn't be allowed to do that! That's stupid, so punching people in the face should be legal!!!!!Steroid wrote:Taxation is legal. It's the defenders of the law who want it called a tax. The challenge is that the federal government is unprecedentedly mandating every person purchase a service from a private company, and if they can do that because failing to do so affects interstate commerce, then there are no practical limits on federal power over the citizen. Such limits were intended by the Constitution, therefore the mandate is illegal, modus tollens, QED. It's not making health a commercial product, just insurance. In fact, the law is saying that health is an unfair benefit. If you were immune to all diseases and were unbreakable like in the Shyamalan movie, you should still have to pretend that you're not and insure your own medical care.
Steroid wrote:If you were immune to all diseases and were unbreakable like in the Shyamalan movie, you should still have to pretend that you're not and insure your own medical care.
There are people who may not need health insurance. However, it is impossible to tell those people from others beforehand. I suppose if we could predict who gets what ailment, we could solve the healthcare problem, but until this thread, I was unaware Congress Is Magic.Adam H wrote:There are people that do not need health insurance. If you think that is false, then we have very different definitions of "need".
omgryebread wrote:Meanwhile, without low risk people in the insurance pool, insurance companies won't accept people who need insurance the most, and I'm paying 15 dollars a day for medication, and 150 a week for therapy I literally require to function in society.
I agree that socialized medicine is better.Chen wrote:omgryebread wrote:Meanwhile, without low risk people in the insurance pool, insurance companies won't accept people who need insurance the most, and I'm paying 15 dollars a day for medication, and 150 a week for therapy I literally require to function in society.
This is a good reason for socialized healthcare. Its not a great reason to force people to buy private insurance. But of course, that would be too socialist for the US so they go about this convoluted and possibly unconstitutional way of trying to get the same result and most likely still failing to do so.
Adam H wrote:There are people that do not need health insurance. If you think that is false, then we have very different definitions of "need".
Ixtellor wrote:But everyone else gets to pay for your irresponsible behavior... so we have to make cuts to police, education, roads, and protecting the environment to save your lazy ass.
omgryebread wrote:I agree that socialized medicine is better.Chen wrote:omgryebread wrote:Meanwhile, without low risk people in the insurance pool, insurance companies won't accept people who need insurance the most, and I'm paying 15 dollars a day for medication, and 150 a week for therapy I literally require to function in society.
This is a good reason for socialized healthcare. Its not a great reason to force people to buy private insurance. But of course, that would be too socialist for the US so they go about this convoluted and possibly unconstitutional way of trying to get the same result and most likely still failing to do so.
Individual mandate isn't unconstitutional though. I mean, sure you could call it that, but you'd be disagreeing with judicial precedent since John Marshall.
You're not required to have auto-insurance unless you want to drive a car on government regulated roads (and there are ways to get out of it in that case, anyway).Malice wrote:Can somebody explain to me why requiring auto insurance is constitutional but requiring health insurance isn't?
addams wrote:Politics is hard. I can't do it.
It takes a nasty Jr. High School Girl in a man's body to keep up.
Malice wrote:Can somebody explain to me why requiring auto insurance is constitutional but requiring health insurance isn't?
Nikc wrote:Silknor is the JJ Abrams of mafia modding
Qaanol wrote:Ixtellor wrote:But everyone else gets to pay for your irresponsible behavior... so we have to make cuts to police, education, roads, and protecting the environment to save your lazy ass.
This is a false dichotomy. See this video.
Malice wrote:Can somebody explain to me why requiring auto insurance is constitutional but requiring health insurance isn't?
Ixtellor wrote:I said (paraphrasing) Every dollar we spend curing people without health insurance is a dollar we can't spend on something else.
The video says the EXACT same thing, it just argues that we SHOULD spend more on healthcare and less on other things.
Heisenberg wrote:Steroid wrote:Taxation is legal.
Taxation is legal on an extremely limited basis. Federal income tax was found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court initially, which is why the Constitution had to be amended to allow it. Certain taxes are prohibited, such as a head tax, or a tax on every American simply for being alive. One could potentially compare this law to a head tax with a tax break for insured peoples.
I don't feel like making that argument, but my point is that even if it's a tax, that tax is not necessarily Constitutional.
Internetmeme wrote:This law is unconstitutional. Nowhere in the constitution does the government have the power to force citizens to buy into private services.
Qaanol wrote: I hope SCOTUS strikes down the individual mandate, so the 2013 congress can enact a comprehensive universal healthcare plan the right way.
Nikc wrote:Silknor is the JJ Abrams of mafia modding
f they wanted to do it in a way that is both consitutional, legal, and right, they would have provided base insurance to everyone and provided tax credits to those who got a better service.
Nikc wrote:Silknor is the JJ Abrams of mafia modding
Griffin wrote:I honestly want to see it struck down. I've read chunks of it, and... I don't think it holds up. The whole thing is bullshit, to be honest, and it never should have got passed to begin with in the state it was in. Its basically a tax on the working class - the rich don't have to worry about it, because they would have insurance anyways. The poor, at least those good at paperwork, get enough government assistance to get it for free, and the working class gets screwed, again, making social mobility that much harder.
If they wanted to do it in a way that is both consitutional, legal, and right, they would have provided base insurance to everyone and provided tax credits to those who got a better service. Instead, the working class bears the brunt of the laws ill effects, all to insure the corps can continue to turn a profit while the wealthy have to contribute nothing. How unsurprising.
Internetmeme wrote:This law is unconstitutional. Nowhere in the constitution does the government have the power to force citizens to buy into private services.
Gellert1984 wrote:Also, bomb president CIA al qaeda JFK twin towers jupiter moon martians [s]emtex.
Malice wrote:Can somebody explain to me why requiring auto insurance is constitutional but requiring health insurance isn't?
Malice wrote:Can somebody explain to me why requiring auto insurance is constitutional but requiring health insurance isn't?
addams wrote:This forum has some very well educated people typing away in loops with Sourmilk. He is a lucky Sourmilk.
Intrade has the coarser bets of individual mandate declared unconstitutional before Dec 31 2012 and Dec 31 2013.buddy431 wrote:Unfortunately, unlike the Presidential Election, I can't find anyone who will actually take my money to bet on the outcome.
omgryebread wrote:Scalia and Thomas at dinner hosted by the lawyers arguing against the health care law.I'm not that torn up about it, because I think Scalia and Thomas do hold sincere ideological beliefs that would have them vote to repeal the law anyway.
A lot of the arguments going on, both politically and here, are pretty ridiculous. Constitutionality is not people's problem with the law, since there are well-acknowledged workarounds. (Raise taxes by the average cost of an insurance plan, implement a tax deduction for having insurance) that are unquestionably constitutional, and opposed by the same people. Constitutionality is just their most expedient argument against this version.
My guess, it will be ruled unconstitutional, because 2 of the justices decided to ignore anything after John Marshall, 2 vote however they want, and 1 seems to flip a coin. Either the individual mandate will be repealed alone, and the administration will be forced to drop the pre-existing condition coverage, and I'll be fucked when I turn 26 and Dad's union doesn't have to cover me, unless I find a job with generous coverage. Or the whole thing will be repealed and I'll be fucked now.
omgryebread wrote:A lot of the arguments going on, both politically and here, are pretty ridiculous. Constitutionality is not people's problem with the law, since there are well-acknowledged workarounds. (Raise taxes by the average cost of an insurance plan, implement a tax deduction for having insurance) that are unquestionably constitutional, and opposed by the same people. Constitutionality is just their most expedient argument against this version.
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