Showing posts with label Supreme Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supreme Court. Show all posts

Thursday, June 28, 2012

The Obamanation Stands, 'Bitches'

Topher Morrison


Thank the Heritage Foundation and Mitt Romney not Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi – they merely took the health care handoff.  While you’re at it, thank George W. Bush for wildly expanding Medicare and nominating Chief Justice John Roberts who sided Thursday with the central powers ethos of our ailing Constitution.  Make no mistake the over 2,700 page Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, known lovingly as Obama Care is an abomination borne of the dysfunctional marriage between Republicans and Democrats.

This is no Car Insurance

The linchpin of the entire health care reform relies on the individual mandate, the brainchild of Stuart M. Butler of the conservative Heritage Foundation.  In 1989 Butler published “Assuring Affordable Health Care for All Americans,” which included a provision to “mandate all households to obtain adequate insurance.”

In 1993 amidst the Hillary Care years Republican senators Orin Hatch and Charles Grassley proposed two bills including the mandate.  In 2006 then Governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney was “very pleased” with his insurance mandate.

Over the last 20 years the mandate has been often rationalized as similar to requiring motorists to purchase car insurance.  The major difference of course is not everybody drives.

Purchasing, leasing or borrowing a car moreover, involves a choice prior to the requirement of obtaining car insurance and even then the “minimum coverage” is designed to offset others’ costs in the result of an accident, not your own.  You being a bad driver results in higher premiums, confined to you alone, not spread out over a large risk pool.

That being said, none of us were given the choice to live.  Had we been notified we’d be living under the thumb of centralized medical control perhaps some of us would have taken the bus, taxi, a bike – hell maybe we would have ran and saved millions in preventive care by staying in shape.

The Fallacy of Insurance

Like football players who believe a helmet will protect them from harder and harder hits on the field and pursue that behavior until an inevitable concussion or brain damage debunks their faith the idea that insurance will always be there to protect us from our risky lifestyles is self deluding.
Millions of Americans are taking part in a revolution of nutrition and exercise nothing of, which is addressed under Obama Care.  One may argue the impetus for this change was in fact rising health care costs.  It was obvious to many merely pumping ourselves full of drugs at an old age at great cost was pointless and unsavory.

Our medical model is not expensive necessarily because of unscrupulous corporations, although it will be as Obama Care is implemented, but because of the treatment model rather than focusing on prevention.  Our medical establishment performs wonders in the emergency room, in acute care and major surgery, but when it comes to some of the biggest killers it continues to provide little besides pain management and a fund raising bonanza for scientific research.

Real health care is a life long and dutiful process of mitigating the affects of our environment, the modern medical establishment offers next to nothing by way of prevention besides the regular check up.  Traditional medical schools madate little in the way of nutritional, physical education or behavioral modification.

As we detailed in the War on Fact Expands so does Big Government, prexisting conditions are often similarly a part of risky behavior.  Consider the number of women giving birth into their 40s and 50s and beyond is at record levels.  This choice is generally fraught with developmental problems, birth defects and other maladies, which are then thrown into this “preexisting” category.

In recent years it has become more and more accepted that major diseases like multiple schlerosis, diabetes, cancer, etc. are a result of dietary malfeasance.  While susceptibility is most assuredly genetically predetermined actually developing a disease is vastly influenced by lifestyle.  The concept we are victims of our genetic baggage is in many ways a hangover from the years of eugenic theology.

On the individual level the motivation to explore healthful alternatives are sapped when faced with universal coverage.  Similarly on the corporate level, if prevention is no longer a preeminent strategy, more research and development (if it gets approved) will be devoted to invasive and life numbing treatments like chemotherapy, radiation and the cornucopia of pharmaceuticals addicting swaths of the American citizenry.

Who Benefits?  Not Liberals Just Insurance Companies who Wrote the Law

Sensing the prevailing winds it is of course understandable that the insurance companies injected themselves into the debate.  This is what invariably happens when government decides to regulate or wholly remake one sixth of the economy.  The power of central government beckons legions of lobbysists to its steps and the mantra of lobbying if you “can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em” inevitably prevails.
Here are some quotes compiled by Kurt Nimmo writing for Infowars.com:
“This is a very good bill for insurance companies and pharmaceutical companies,” said Rep. Stephen Lynch, a Democrat, in 2010. “The insurers still rule,” Lynch added. “Were just pumping subsidies into the current system, but that won’t drive down costs.”
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In December of 2009, Howard Dean, the former Democratic National Committee Chairman, said the legislation before Congress “is a bigger bailout for the insurance industry than AIG.” Dean characterized it as “an insurance company’s dream.”
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Congressman Dennis Kucinich characterized the bill as “a bailout for insurance companies…Maybe what we’re looking at here is another way that Wall Street’s speculative engine can be fueled, this time with the help of the premiums of tens of millions of Americans,” he said.
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“If a government healthcare plan materializes, it might actually generate more work for insurance companies. A new government program would probably subcontract much of its administrative work to existing insurance companies — which is what Medicare does,” writes Rick Newman for U.S. News & World Report.
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Do insurance companies hate Obamacare as Democrats insist? Not at all. This bill is almost identical to the plan written by AHIP, the insurance company trade association, in 2009. The original Senate Finance Committee bill was authored by a former Wellpoint VP. Since Congress released the first of its health care bills on October 30, 2009, health care stocks have risen 28.35%.
States in a Straight Jacket 

The Medicaid ruling specifically, according to Justice Kennedy’s dissent, puts states in false choice position: “States must choose between expanding Medicaid or paying huge tax sums…for the sole benefit of expanding Medicaid in other states.”  The dissent also foreshadowed more friction between the states and the federal government “usher[ing] in new federalism concerns and places an unaccustomed strain upon the union.”

The union will no doubt be under increasing pressure as many of Obama Care’s provisions have yet to be made manifest.  A growing body of administrative agencies including an army of IRS agents will attend to that.

Most of our laws in this country are created by these agencies, which interpret the mandate provided by congress and detail specific provisions.  The Federal Register for example in a 12-month period, which ended in March of 2006 contained a breathtaking 77,537 pages including laws passed from over 319 independent and executive agencies.

Barack Obama after the passage of Obama Care tentatively created 159 new bureaucratic bodies ostensibly to encourage efficiency and cost effectiveness in the new health care system.  While it most assuredly with fail in this endeavor it will be able to pass laws as most other agencies do with little impunity or oversight as the size of the executive branch and its czars continues to eclipse the elected representatives in Congress and as it will eventually the laws of the several states.

Robert’s Manufactured Opinion and Another Reason to Repeal the Income Tax

Paul D. Clement, representing Florida and 25 other states objecting to the health-care law, argued that Congress exceeded its power in passing the law, which he said compels people to buy a product.  Unfortunately, this argument on whether it was within Congress’s constitutional powers to force citizens to purchase a health insurance product was in essence settled nearly a century ago after the passage of what was originally Social Security “Insurance” under President Franklin Roosevelt.

Similar opposing arguments were lain out then, were rebuffed and under the same “tax” provision as construed under the individual mandate, officially known as the  “minimum coverage” provision.  The main difference is Obama Care wasn’t envisaged to be a tax.  Roberts did not reinterpret, but in fact manufactured a contradictory argument in the face of what Congress called a penalty, not a tax.
The Washington Post reports:
Roberts wrote: ‘The Affordable Care Act is constitutional in part and unconstitutional in part.’ He said the individual mandate ‘cannot be upheld as an exercise of Congress’s power under the commerce clause,’ which allows Congress to regulate interstate commerce but ‘not to order individuals to engage in it.’"
Roberts added: ‘In this case, however, it is reasonable to con­strue what Congress has done as increasing taxes on those who have a certain amount of income, but choose to go without health insurance. Such legislation is within Con­gress’s power to tax.’"
Roberts therein supplied his own basis for upholding the law in absence of a similar rationalization by Congress, or argument by the deputy attorney general and contrary to the President who signed the legislation into law.  According to the Post: “Neither the plaintiffs in the case nor the Obama administration had argued before the court that the individual mandate was a tax.”

Obama himself expressly refuted opponents of Obama Care who claimed that it was in fact a tax.  In an ABC interview Obama emphatically declared: “I absolutely reject that it’s a tax increase.”

The Silver Lining

It may be that Obama Care will be the kick in the pants sovereign states of America need to start ignoring the federal government when it clearly exceeds it constitutional powers.  States where once a part of federal decision-making, via their legislature’s appointed ambassadors, but no longer this may provide the fuel state governments need to enforce there devolved powers.
In the end Mitt Romney may be right when he defended Massachusetts’ health care reform on 10th Amendment grounds.  After all the laboratories of democracy would produce 50 different options for all of us to decide rather than the one size fits all monstrosity about to be imposed on us from Washington.

The Uncomfortable Irony

Mitt Romney today stood up and told us everything we’ve already heard over the past two and a half years: it is time to “repeal and replace.”  Is it not ironic that the man who developed the blueprint for Obama Care, albeit he managed to pass it in some significantly smaller than Obama’s tome, and who was the first to nationalize health care is the only option this country has for repealing it?  For now in the words of DNC executive director @patrickgaspard:
“It’s constitutional. Bitches.”

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Supremes F the FCC

Topher Morrison


The Supreme Court ruled Thursday against the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) policy on certain expletives over the airwaves, vacating the lower court’s decision on due process and fair notice grounds.

Airwaves?  The term “airwaves” brings up old memories like the “information super highway” or pagers – mere anachronisms.  Today we consume information – TV programs, movies, news – from around the world and from a variety of sources including radio (over the internet and real radio waves), streaming Netflix, a wide array of video websites, cable and satellite DVR and various on demand providers.

Amidst this constellation of choices does it make a difference what is “broadcast” TV versus any of the aforementioned forms?  No.  But it does to an FCC hanging on to archaic doctrine.  They make it seem as if one “broadcasts” something the subject matter is endowed with all of the strength of a locomotive and the unwitting citizen memorized by the power of the medium is powerless to change the channel.

The FCC penalizes TV and radio stations for airing programs that “describe or depict sexual or excretory organs or activities” in ways that are “patently offensive.”  Suffice it to say their rubric is highly subjective and the reason why this is becoming an extra ideological issue, one in which we can all agree it is time to say: F the FCC.

The Supremes avoided on Thursday the looming and larger First Amendment issues about regulating broadcast indecency in another case, Fox v. FCC.  The Fox case concerned several rather hefty fines leveled against Fox and ABC in the middle of the last decade, after Cher and Nicole Richie each let a fuck fly on live television.  The show NYPD Blue had the gall to allow seven seconds of ass cheeks on air.

While dickhead and bullshit statements may be allowed on news broadcasts there is no official “news exemption” according to the FCC, albeit it may satisfy the “third prong” of their obscenity test – that “[obscene] material, taken as a whole, must lack serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.”  In other words, if they have their way we’ll have to continue to settle for their idea of what is of “serious value.”

Although the Supreme Court had endorsed the FCC’s authority to regulate broadcast indecency over three decades ago, the commission officially started punishing censors’ specific failures to hit the bleep button during President George W. Bush’s first term.  When it was originally granted these powers content-based regulation relied on the argument that TV and radio were “uniquely pervasive” and “uniquely accessible to children.”

Considering there is a dizzying amount of children friendly programming and combined with the fact that nine out of 10 households are served by cable, satellite, fiber-optic TV or in a younger generation by nothing other than an internet connection it would be “unique” if a child or anyone else for that matter had access to “broadcast” TV.

Makes me feel like a song and dance:


In what will hopefully become a trend Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Stephen Breyer, Samuel Alito and Elena Kagan. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg concurred in the judgment.

Don’t be too optimistic though.  As history has shown government agencies, especially ones with the authority to control communication have a tendency to stick around.  There are forces in the American government who would love to retain the services of the FCC to monitor “chatter” across multiple mediums, regulate the internet itself through innocuous sounding terms like “net neutrality” or resurrect in a different form the now dead fairness doctrine.  Keep your fucking eyes peeled.

Monday, June 27, 2011

State of California v. Video Games, 1st Amendment Trumps CA


First Amendment Trumps California in Supreme Court Battle Over Violent Video Games


Stephen Totilo 
5/27/11


The Supreme Court sided with the video game industry today, declaring a victor in the six-year legal match between the industry and the California lawmakers who wanted to make it a crime for anyone in the state to sell extremely violent games to kids.
In a 7-2 ruling Justice Antonin Scalia said the law does not comport with the First Amendment. He was joined by Samuel Alito and Chief Justice John Roberts, who had seemed sympathetic to California's concerns last year. Justices Clarence Thomas and Stephen Breyer, traditionally members of the court's right and left wings, respectively, joined in dissent. [Read the full decision - PDF link.]


The case was The State of California vs. The Entertainment Merchants Association and the Entertainment Software Association. That last party, the ESA, is the gaming industry. The trade group puts on the annual E3 video game showcase, the gaming business' biggest news event each year. The ESA's lawyers argued against the state of California's on Election Day last year, trying to convince the court that video games deserve the same breadth of First Amendment protections as books and movies. The decision, revealed today, was the first time the Supreme Court has weighed in on video games in any fashion.
The law in question would have made it a crime to sell ultra-violent video games to minors in the State of California. It had been ruled un-Constitutional by lower courts.
"The basic principles of freedom of speech . . . do not vary' with a new and different communication medium," Scalia wrote in the Court's opinion, citing an earlier speech case.

To read read more of this article visit Kotaku.com.