Oh-bummer for Obamacare!
Chuck Norris
Reuters reported, "The U.S. Appeals Court for the 11th Circuit, based in Atlanta, ruled 2 to 1 that Congress exceeded its authority by requiring Americans to buy coverage, but it unanimously reversed a lower court decision that threw out the entire law."
Do you hear angels singing, too?
Of course, it ain't over until the fate of the Supreme Court sings a similar judgment. It is upon their voice that the legality of individual mandate ultimately hinges and will be placed upon the already burdened backs of Americans in 2014. And the Supreme Court's ruling could possibly be handed down a few months before the November 2012 presidential election.
The White House wasted no time in denouncing Friday's federal court ruling that the individual mandate of Obamacare is unconstitutional: "We strongly disagree with this decision and we are confident it will not stand."
The White House loves to cite how a few other courts have upheld Obama's health-care law. But last week's ruling is the first that a Democrat-appointed judge has ruled against a critical aspect of Obamacare.
The president knows everything rides on the perpetuity of Obamacare's individual mandate. Without it, the entire law collapses. So Obama adviser Stephanie Cutter reiterated in the White House response the administration's same weak defense and rhetoric in hope of sparing what the president calls "individual responsibility provision."
First, she wrote, "The Congressional Budget Office [CBO] estimated that only 1 percent of all Americans would pay a penalty for not having health insurance in 2016."
But how can the government-instituted CBO project the amount of Americans who in some way will renege on Obamacare in the year 2016? (After all, it's not like the feds stand on a credible record of predicting economic trends lately!) If citizens can't afford to buy medical insurance in 2016, what makes the feds think they can afford to pay a penalty for not having it? What are the feds going to do then: throw the economically downtrodden in jail? Who is going to pay for the incarceration of one percent of society or roughly 3.5 million potential new inmates?
Though the CBO says only 1 percent will pay penalties, you can rest assured that 100 percent will pay for this mammoth health-care reform law one way or another via taxes and trickle-down costs for things like employer mandates, Medicaid expansions, tax credits for uninsured, funding grants for states, additional government administration and IRS personnel, etc.
Aug. 14, 2011