Tuesday, July 10, 2012

In the End, It’s a Tax

Now that the president’s health care plan has been exposed by the Supreme Court, America must act

George Nethercutt
The Supreme Court’s 5-4 health care decision makes one thing clear: President Obama sold the massive health care law to the public and Congress on a campaign of deception.

Mr. Obama’s argument for the wholesale takeover of health care two years ago was based on his public claims that the legislation was “definitely not a tax” and was lawful under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution, asserting the federal government could compel all citizens to purchase private health insurance. He sold it that way, and the public will remember it so, but the Supreme Court effectively invalidated those arguments when it found the Commerce Clause justification unconstitutional. Government lawyers argued to the court that the law’s mandate was a “penalty,” not a tax, but hinted that it could be a tax, proof that the president’s prior no-tax assurances were fraudulent.

But even today, with the election in sight, the Obama administration perpetuates the deceit, claiming the “penalty” is not a tax, despite the court’s finding to the contrary. Of course, the problem with any 2,000-page law is that its true meaning is often conveniently hidden.

Furthermore, does anyone doubt that Mr. Obama would have labeled the Supreme Court “political” had the health care decision gone against him by one vote? It would be equally inappropriate for opponents of the court’s decision to now dismiss it as partisan, even as four liberal justices made up the majority.

The president should be careful in celebrating the decision. The health care ruling has energized his opponents when many Americans still despise Obamacare two years after its enactment. Doubts now linger whether patients can still see their own doctor for medical needs. The law’s practical implementation is legally uncertain, its sweeping mandate is in jeopardy, but costs heretofore unmentioned will soon hit taxpayers. On January 1, 2013, safely after November’s elections, a new 3.8 percent health care surtax will attach to investment income, unwelcome news for most investors. Americans don’t like being lied to or fooled by politicians.

Mr. Obama’s healthcare deception has now joined other deceptions he’s foisted on the public since 2009:

Mr. Obama said he would unite our nation, but the United States is more deeply divided now than when he first took office.

Mr. Obama’s order directing federal government actions designed to intimidate Arizona and Texas on immigration recently is hardly unifying.

The Obama promise of unemployment below 8 percent if his policies were followed has failed; it’s now 22 percent in some parts of America.

The Obama promise of openness and transparency in government has failed. He deceived the public into believing lobbyists had no place in his administration. Yet, after three years, his administration is secretive and regularly collaborates with Washington’s lobbying community.

Mr. Obama’s promise to the left that he would close Guantanamo Bay detention facilities remains unfulfilled.

These failures are products of Mr. Obama’s deceptive actions while president. His additional deceit on profligate government spending, use of executive orders, federal hiring, unilateral social policy changes and expanding government regulations have made many Americans seriously fear for the free nation they’ve always known and loved. Their faith in President Obama’s competence in office is shaken.

The world needs American leadership and international wisdom in hot spots such as Syria, where violence against innocents continues. Mr. Obama even deceived the world when his administration said the United States was “leading from behind” when Gaddafi was driven from power in Libya last year. He holds little sway with foreign leaders who question whether the United States is a strong and reliable ally. Mr. Obama’s silence when dissidents sought liberation in Iran and Egypt was deceptive; it showed his reluctance to stand up for those risking life for freedom. As in health care, what we’ve seen (and heard) is not what we’ve gotten.

The Supreme Court didn’t decide the wisdom of the health care law, only its constitutionality. Deciding whether the law should stand is up to the voters. They will soon choose who leads our country to implement the law — or repeal it.

Recent Gallup polls show that a large majority of Americans consider themselves patriotic. As such, Americans must accept the Supreme Court’s decision on health care, in spite of its questionable implications, and join the many committed to changing leaders this November to assure that the laws passed at the behest of the president are not enacted under false pretenses.

If voters stand up for truth in government in November’s elections, deceptive federal leaders will be properly replaced.

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Imagine my shock when the first article I read was of a rich, old, white person blasting Obama... thankfully I was sitting down at the time. This type of article filled with hyperbole and biased opinion is one of the major causes for how divisive our country is. Your close-minded, absurd opinion of Obama is unfortunately much too common amongst people in your demographic. The lack of respect you and your peers show the POTUS is nothing short of astonishing.

Yes, Obama has failed on some of his promises but please stop acting as if this is the only president that has failed to deliver promises. In terms of uniting the nation and congress, the only way that would be possible is if people entered a discussion with an open mind, which is something the GOP (and even worse, the Tea Party members) have failed to do since Obama was sworn in. The GOP´s idea of negotiating is, "either you agree to give us what we want or we´ll filibuster".

Let´s have a little history lesson shall we. When George W. Bush entered office he was handed a robust economy, a balanced budget, a projected surplus for the deficit, one of the strongest middle classes ever, the lowest unemployment rate in 30 years. When Obama entered office he was handed the worst economy since the Great Depression, an out of control debt problem, 2 wars that cost a lot of money (which he left off the books) and american lives, a housing market collapse, a completely corrupt Wall Street due to de-regulations, a stock market crash, an employment market that was losing 700,000 jobs a month and a health care system that pretty much squeezed out everyone except the upper middle class. The GOP set a ridiculous expectation that Obama needed to fix all of these things in 4 years... many of the problems caused by their policies i.e. cutting taxes in the middle of 2 expensive wars.

The Affordable Health Care Act is far from perfect but it´s certainly a major step forward from our current system.

I agree with your last statement that voters will have a chance to stand up for what they believe in, I just hope voters educate themselves and stay away from biased, obnoxious articles/commentaries like this piece. As far as deceptive federal leaders, I think Mr. Romney takes the gold medal for that as his history of flip-flopping has been well documented up to this point. Maybe Obama should get this guy to promote the Healthcare Bill:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7PG4j2K0dA

Jul 12, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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