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Robert Scheer

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Five Hypocrites and One Bad Plan

Posted: 03/29/2012 4:57 am

The Supreme Court is so full of it. The entire institution, as well as its sanctimonious judges themselves, reeks of a time-honored hypocrisy steeped in the arrogance that justice is served by unaccountable elitism.

My problem is not with the Republicans who dominate the court questioning the obviously flawed individual mandate for the purchasing of private-sector health insurance but rather with their zeal to limit federal power only when it threatens to help the most vulnerable. The laughter noted in the court transcription that greeted the prospect of millions of the uninsured suddenly being deprived of already extended protection under the now threatened law was unconscionable. The Republican justices seem determined to strike down not only the mandate but also the entire package of accompanying health care rights because of the likelihood that, without an individual mandate, tax revenue will be needed to extend insurance coverage to those who cannot afford it.

The conservative justices, in their eagerness to reject all of this much needed reform, offer the deeply cynical justification that a new Congress will easily come up with a better plan -- despite decades of congressional failure to address what is arguably the nation's most pressing issue. In their passion to embarrass this president, the self-proclaimed constitutional purists on the court went so far as to equate a mandate to obtain health care coverage with an unconstitutional deprivation of freedom; to make the connection they cited the spirit of a document that once condoned slavery.

These purists have no trouble finding in that same sacred text a license for the federal government to order the young to wage undeclared wars abroad, to gut due process and First Amendment protections, and embrace torture, rendition and assassination, even of U.S. citizens.

Now they hide behind the commerce clause of the Constitution to argue that the federal government cannot regulate health care coverage because that violates the sacrosanct principle of states' rights. If the right-wingers on the high court consistently had a narrow interpretation of federal power over the economy, there would be logic to the position expressed by the Republican justices during the last three days of questioning. Of course, the court's apparent majority on this has shown no such consistency and has intervened aggressively, as did the justices' ideological predecessors, to deny the states the power to protect consumers, workers and homeowners against the greed of large corporations.

We would not be in the midst of the most severe economic meltdown since the Great Depression had the courts not interpreted the commerce clause as protecting powerful national corporations from accountability to state governments. Just look at the difficulty that a coalition of state attorneys general has faced in attempting to hold the largest banks responsible for their avarice in the housing disaster.

The modern Supreme Court has allowed the federal government to pre-empt the states' power to protect homeowners, whose mortgage agreements were traditionally a matter of local regulation and registration. The court has no problem accepting Congress' grant of a legal exemption in the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 that allows the bundling of home mortgages into unregulated derivatives.

The court has vitiated the power of the states to control interest rates, even though quite a few had explicit provisions in their constitutions banning usury. The result is that loan-sharking by banks that can claim to be engaged in interstate commerce is constitutionally protected, which is why there are no limits on mortgage, credit card or personal loan interest rates.

The sad truth is that President Obama and the Democrats brought this potential judicial disaster upon themselves. In light of what has been said this week in the Supreme Court, it seems inevitable that the linchpin of the 2010 reform -- mandated coverage -- will be thrown out, probably along with the crucial accompanying reforms. Forget coverage for the young and those with pre-existing medical conditions. The Democrats will protect themselves from this reversal by arguing that all they did was copy the program that this year's prospective Republican presidential candidate implemented when he was the governor of Massachusetts. Mitt Romney's plan included the dreaded mandate that he and the Republican justices condemn.

How ironic that Barack Obama's health care agenda would be in a far stronger legal position had the president stuck by his earlier support of a public option. Clearly, our federal government has the judicially affirmed power under our Constitution to use public revenues to provide a needed public service, be it education, national security, retirement insurance or health care. Obama's health care reform should have simply extended Medicare and Medicaid coverage to all who wanted and needed it -- no individual mandate -- while allowing others to opt out for private insurance coverage. That's an obvious constitutional solution that even those die-hard Republican justices would have a difficult time overturning.

 
The Supreme Court is so full of it. The entire institution, as well as its sanctimonious judges themselves, reeks of a time-honored hypocrisy steeped in the arrogance that justice is served by unaccou...
The Supreme Court is so full of it. The entire institution, as well as its sanctimonious judges themselves, reeks of a time-honored hypocrisy steeped in the arrogance that justice is served by unaccou...
 
 
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Democrat in the South
Empathy, the most important word
11:04 PM on 04/01/2012
I'm still not convinced the law will be struck down. I believe if it were, we would have a reason to fight hard as he!! for what we wanted in the first place, the same thing the Supreme Court justices have, single payer!
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KarmaPatrol
Riverboat Gambler, satellite whisperer. Independe
10:32 AM on 03/30/2012
We accept federal supremacy when it comes to our marijuana policy, setting speed limits, or mandating educational standards, but when it comes to health care, the federal govt should be powerless? Same with the states. If the federal govt cannot tell someone to buy health insurance, what right do state govt have to mandate liability insurance? Of course liability a large chunk of your auto insurance bill now if a person decides to not buy a new vehicle in protest, ... go figure. Maybe more BART (Bay Area's public transport) in protest.
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Democrat in the South
Empathy, the most important word
11:09 PM on 04/01/2012
Since the Federal Government pays most of health care costs now anyway, maybe the Government should just stop subsidizing insurance companies AND American citizens....Let the poor and middle class pay their own $200,000 hospital bill....take personal responsibility. If they can't afford to pay their medical bills, let them become slaves for who they owe and make them work the rest of their lives for free to pay back their bills.....It's only fair that Americans do what ever it takes to keep insurance companies rolling in the dough......
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RedneckDem
The top 1% stole my made in china bootstraps
07:48 AM on 03/30/2012
People who want a free market solution for health care have no idea what they are talking about. Health care will continue to escalate regardless of economy and will eventually drag down the entire free market economy. We've got almost three decades of proof.
Placing ideology over humanity is a trait that leaves nothing to be desired.
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skylark
Tangled up in blue..
08:48 AM on 03/30/2012
Agree completely and love the micro bio.
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spud3
Forward into oblivion
12:47 PM on 03/30/2012
Fire up your windmill and hope the lights don't go out.
07:36 AM on 03/30/2012
The only fix is a political one: give Obama solid majorities in both Houses, including 60 votes in the Senate. Castrate the damn GOP at the ballot box. A tall order, maybe, given the electorate's fecklessness and inability to remember beyond last night's Survivor episode, but it's the only way to get anything substantive done in the near term.
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LateDave
Where I - dreaming - lay amazed
01:28 PM on 03/30/2012
Welcome. Well written. Say 60 non-blue-dog votes (although I hear they have almost killed themselves off due to the wing thing polarization of primaries) and I agree.
06:40 AM on 03/30/2012
The supreme court is clearly political, and after Bush v Gore, has no credibility. It is sad that our country looks to the court for any type of fair ruling on anything. The lifetime appointment needs to be changed.
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skylark
Tangled up in blue..
07:47 AM on 03/30/2012
Fanned and faved.
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spud3
Forward into oblivion
12:48 PM on 03/30/2012
Cry me a river moron.
06:38 AM on 03/30/2012
I think the 5 injustices would overturn anything. There is neither reason nor logic in their manic swings from one right wing hobbyhorse to another. They are ignorant, mean-spirited bullies who pick on the most helpless victims to torment. And the ignorance they displayed of the ACA is embarrassing and frightening. They should not have the jobs they have and they definitely should not have the power they have. Those audio recordings were a mistake because it displayed 5 mean spirited, lazy men who couldn't even be bothered to read the law.
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skylark
Tangled up in blue..
07:48 AM on 03/30/2012
Completely agree with this post, especially about the sadistic bully characterization. Fanned and faved.
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MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
05:23 AM on 03/30/2012
THIS law could have been Constitutional with one small fix.

That small fix, however, would have required political courage.

Have a tax like FICA. Everyone gets vouchers for private coverage.

Or bigger fix...tax then a public option or vouchers.
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waltifarian
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
02:48 AM on 03/30/2012
9 members on the Extreme Court, with lifetime appointments (and heathcare courtesy of their fellow citizens!) for +310 mln people. Times have changed and so should the nature and structure of the court. As it is one person will likely swing the whole decision. Thats nuts.
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watchingduck
Wossamotta U. proud alumnus
01:14 AM on 03/30/2012
i suspect that the court will uphold the law. there are a couple of right wing corporate pragmatists on the court. they know that the law still enables insurance corporations to make obscene profits, and they also fear that if the law is overturned, the backlash may ultimately lead to a one-payer system
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MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
05:32 AM on 03/30/2012
So, your hope is that the corporatism of the Supreme Court upholds a GOP law written by the Heritage Foundation?
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watchingduck
Wossamotta U. proud alumnus
11:51 AM on 03/30/2012
just commenting on how i think it will go down. my personal hope is for a universal single-payer system someday
01:06 AM on 03/30/2012
The Supremely Corrupt Court is nothing more than politicians wearing robes. The lifetime appointment is rediculous. The bickering between the lefties and the righties regarding most things political is absolutely pathetic. The left/right paradigm is dead functionally but alive and well as a propaganda spin tool. Tyrannical fascism is here folks but if looking at life through The Reader's Digest glasses makes you feel better, then by all means, knock yourself out. People call themselves good Christians while the charity of healthcare is taboo to many. Similarly, righties don't want free healthcare for anyone but are happy to allow it for their elected officials who are fighing aginst it for all but themselves. Too much irony.
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12:34 AM on 03/30/2012
Excellent article. The supremes kind of remind me of Alice in Wonderland. "It means whatever I say it means."
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skylark
Tangled up in blue..
07:50 AM on 03/30/2012
Agree. I was thinking of Alice in Wonderland, too. Fanned and faved.
12:29 AM on 03/30/2012
Absolutely.

And we would not be in nearly the mess we are in now if the Republican U.S. Supreme Court had not appointed George W. Bush as president, despite his loss of the 2000 election.

A pox on the lot of them.
06:53 AM on 03/30/2012
Not only did they choose Bush in their roles as kingmakers, they never learned anything from a decision that was a terrible mistake and a traumatic event for the entire country, and Iraq as well. They went on to decide in Citizen's United that money =speech. Any fool can see that was not only a stupid decision but also another traumatic event for the country. Instead of learning from their mistakes, they reacted to President Obama's criticism of the decision with petulance and vindictiveness. These men cannot handle the power they have. They are destroying what's left of our democracy. The highest court in the land is dominated by corrupt, venal, immature men. The only good that has come out of this view we have gotten of their "deliberations" is that more of us have realized how unsuitable they are for the job of SCOTUS justice.
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skylark
Tangled up in blue..
07:50 AM on 03/30/2012
Faved. Excellent comment.
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LazarusRises
Tax The Rich, Feed The Poor!!
12:01 AM on 03/30/2012
When are people going o realize that O. KNEW the mandate was Unconstitutional? Had O. truly desired HCR he would have supported The Public Option (Medicare for all) or Single Payer (VA type benefits for all). He not only failed to support either, but he also failed & refused to even explain what each was. How many would have protested against Medicare or VA type benefits for all? The names were a poison pill which allowed O. the cover of making deals with the pharmaceutical industry & health insurance industry & in the end accomplish nothing.

Once you substitute the rightful names, it becomes apparent even members of Congress had no idea of the truth as the continually mixed what each would do & not do. You can decide whether is was simply 3 card Monte or a Shell Game. However, it was never sincere & was a product of deception from both Divisions of our Corporate Party.
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Stephen the Grate
There is grandeur in this view of life ...
02:12 AM on 03/30/2012
Bullcrap! He put together the plan he thought he needed to, to get the support in congress for passage of the bill. He originally supported a public option, but gave in too easily to the naysayers in congress. The health care lobby is one of the most powerful and the fact was he believed he had to go with the mandate to eliminate their objections. We really need a single payer system, but the health lobby will be fighting this tooth and nail!
06:55 AM on 03/30/2012
I don't call it the health lobby because they don't care about our health. If they can save money letting us die, they will. I call it the insurance and big pharma lobbies:)
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LazarusRises
Tax The Rich, Feed The Poor!!
11:18 AM on 03/30/2012
You can ignore, but refute what I stated. Ignorance is bliss & you appear extremely happy. lol I never, ever have stated we should have gone for ANY plan save SINGLE PAYER. We do not have it because O. did not want it. Bots need to use their brain rather than their party loyalty.
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MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
05:25 AM on 03/30/2012
I will say this...I knew the mandate was unconstitutional.

And I never taught Constitutional law at a University.
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Stephen the Grate
There is grandeur in this view of life ...
09:36 AM on 03/30/2012
I think you are making a misstake pronouncing the law unconstitutional. I don't like the mandate either, as it was originally a republican idea. And by the way, hatred is an ugly and childish emotion.
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Nathan Brittles
Duc,sequere,aut de via decede
11:53 PM on 03/29/2012
Scheers on another jag I see, but he is correct at least in that Obama was not only stupid in wasting time on the Thing That No-One Ever Read [ not even himself] thus allowing such things as Transportation Bills and middle class payroll tax relief and energy to slip through his fingers, having two years to sort these things out with total control, but took the left turn at the sign that pointed to either ''Mandate'' or ''Option'' and chose the former. It is merely Scheers turn to sob. Had it been five Regressives, the right would be engaging in similiar caterwauling.
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LazarusRises
Tax The Rich, Feed The Poor!!
11:52 PM on 03/29/2012
The predictable nature of the Court's decisions is making it impossible to believe that the Court is rendering their decisions predicated on an individual analysis of the facts of the case & the Constitutional analysis of each of the justices. It is now (almost universally) a question of whether the question is one of Liberal Politics or Conservative Politics. That does nothing of the Court's function to protect against the government becoming tyrannical. The Court is now tyrannical. It is terrible to have all three Branches functioning from the view of a tyrant instead of each adhering to the Rule of Law.
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MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
05:26 AM on 03/30/2012
I'm a Democrat who knows that the law is unconstitutional.

You are right, but sadly, you are talking about the wrong side.
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LazarusRises
Tax The Rich, Feed The Poor!!
11:23 AM on 03/30/2012
I am a Liberal Independent & U am speaking of both sides. It has been apparent for years that the 5 vote Conservative rather in adherence to the Constitution. Now the 4 Liberals have joined in the misuse of their power & purpose. For over 200 years it was the Court's responsibility to keep the nation on a Constitutional track. Unfortunately, that is no longer the case.
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LazarusRises
Tax The Rich, Feed The Poor!!
12:33 PM on 03/30/2012
I read your prior post as an attack & an insult. I am ow not sure it was. If it was not, I apologize. I draw many attacks for my viewpoints & at times do not take them well & lash out. Sorry about that.