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| SCOTUS: Dissenting Opinion Wins, Majority Opinion Fails, In My Opinion Posted: 29 Jun 2012 02:24 PM PDT
The dissent responded to this issue in these terms:
A penalty implies that a law has been broken and justice must be served in the form of said penalty. The Government argued that this is no longer a penalty but a tax for choosing not to spend income on the mandated health insurance requirement. The Dissent argued that the Court has made a clear line between a tax and a penalty saying, “‘…a penalty…is an exaction imposed by statue as punishment for an unlawful act.’” (United States v. Reorganized CF&I Fabricators of Utah, Inc.). The language that Congress used was specific to a mandated requirement and it attached a punishment in the form of a penalty to said requirement, not a tax. The Court decided to rewrite the legislation, over reaching it’s powers, by changing the terminology from penalty, as prescribed by Congress, to tax, in order to find constitutional the Government’s petition that because Congress has the power to tax and The Requirement to Maintain Minimal Essential Coverage is indeed constitutional. Again Scalia in dissent states:
Justice Thomas and the majority became part of the Legislative Branch in their opinion. Instead of letting Congress correct the issues at hand, keeping it close to the people, and therefore allowing the people to have a voice and the ability to throw out of office those who do not listen to their concerns regarding this issue, the Court became sovereign in this matter by upholding the constitutionality of a section that affects the individual, as well as the State and the Nation as a whole. Judicial activism joined hands with a Congress bent on pushing through a flawed legislation while ignoring the majority its citizens who voiced its disapproval of this bill. The Court has again changed the face of this Nation leaving “We the People” gagged and bound on this issue that most would like to see repealed. According to Rassmussen, on Monday, June 25, 2012, the latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey shows that 54% of Likely U.S. Voters at least somewhat favor repeal of the health care bill, while 39% are at least somewhat opposed. The report stated that most voters feel the same as they did when Congress passed the bill in March 2012, and that the desire for repeal has been steady for years. The turn over in Congress after the bill passed, as well of the fight, and subsequent lawsuit demonstrates the voice of the people, and yet, the Court has found a way, through verbal shenanigans, to reword the Congressional bill, while ignoring the vast over reach of power that will ultimately hurt the very citizens for which the represent. Ironically, the very people the Government says it desires to help, it hurts by strong arming the States to follow suit or look like the bad guy by refusing to go along with the new Medicaid expansion. Once again this Administration passes the buck of responsibility for its policies onto others, only claiming victory when something positive happens. The Court states that “Congress may not cross the ‘point at which pressure turns into compulsion, and ceases to be inducement.” (Steward Machine, 301 U.S., at 590. Accord, College Savings Bank, supra, at 687; Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority v. Citizens for Abatement of Aircraft Noise, Inc.). If this applies to States when they refuse to accept grants and money from the Government, how is it that the citizens that make up the States do not achieve the same meaning when they choose to not buy mandated insurance? How is it coercion at the State level, but constitutionally acceptable at an individual citizen level? The Administration ignores the very concept of balance of power put in place through Federalism by attempting to force the States hand into accepting the Medicaid Expansion. J. Kennedy dissenting in Davis, states, “Coercing States to accept conditions risks the destruction of the “unique role of the States in our system.” Again, as stated in Printz, and presented in the dissent, “it may be state officials who will bear the brunt of pubic disapproval, while the federal officials who devised the regulatory program may remain insulated from the electoral ramifications of their decision.” This is precisely what has happened to the individuals who make up the States and this very Nation. The Federal Government that has ignored the voice of its electorate regarding this issue and by placing it in the hands of the Supreme Court, has taken away the built in electoral ramification and blocked its ears ignoring the people. The Court itself has violated the citizen of the United States by disregarding this very argument when the individual is concerned. The ability to “un-elect” the Supreme Court Justices makes this ruling all the more grievous as it makes it all the more difficult to undo foolish policy. When a State chooses not to accept the Medicaid Expansion, the Court finds the penalty as coercion and therefore unconstitutional; but the Court finds, at the individual citizen level, the coercion of taxation for not accepting the Individual Mandate as constitutional. The tax is not a tax, but a penalty, that becomes a tax and again and the citizens are hurt by the very people who are elected to be our servants. All is not lost, but the fight for liberty has again been highlighted by a Government that has grown too big for its britches and a Court that continues to rewrite the Constitution that belongs to the People of the United States. We have the election, we can decisively fight back, but we cannot lay down, until the Government heeds the voice of its constituents and this failed legislation is repealed. A final thought,
This ruling is less wise, it is unconstitutional and therefore we must fight back in the coming election. Link to this post! |
| A Sad Day for Individual Liberty Posted: 29 Jun 2012 07:30 AM PDT June 28, 2012, was a sad day for individual liberty in America. The fundamental issue that the Supreme Court had to consider was this: To what extent can the government tell the people what they must do? What – if any – limiting principle says to legislators, "This far and no further? Your writ to interfere in the lives of citizens, no matter how noble your intentions, stops here." Five members of the Court thought that the line had not been crossed. It matters little that they cited the power to tax instead of the Commerce Clause as granting such extraordinary authority. What matters is that they saw fit to find such a pernicious authorization anywhere. A while back, a leading Democrat – I think it was Nancy Pelosi – said that when the Supreme Court speaks, "It's as if God has spoken." She did not mean, as one might guess, that a great many Democrats either snicker or ignore it. She meant that they were the final word. She was wrong as usual. In America, it may take awhile, but the people are the final word. Five out of nine is a pathetic statistic stacked up against the 60 percent of Americans who consistently say that they want his very bad law repealed. And here is the best part: we don't need flintlocks, or even pitchforks. All we need is our ballots, and the temerity to correct the actions of our supposed betters. Are you tired of being pushed around by out-of-touch legislators in safe seats? Tired of being dictated to by messianic community organizers with delusions of adequacy? Tired of being sold out by black-robed deities with lifetime appointments? Well, then go to bed early on November 5th, because on the 6th we all have a job to do. Amy Sinclair is county supervisor in Wayne County (Iowa) and the Republican candidate for Iowa State Senate in Senate District 14. Link to this post! |
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