passed a law requiring all law abiding of military age citizens to purchase and own a gun or face a tax penalty, would that be ok? It would certainly be constitutional now that a precedent has been set by the SCOTUS that congress can force someone to buy something or face a tax for inaction. It is also constitutional since the 2nd amendmant is quite clear about the private ownership of firearms and maintaining a militia. Im not suggesting that they should pass such a law, in that I still firmly believe in an individual liberty, but it begs the question would the anti-gun liberals be ok with a law that they morally oppose despite the fact that it is now utterly constitutional thanks to SCOTUS and ACA.Again, Im not advocating this law, I am merely opening the discussion about a new precedent which has been set. some day the political winds may shift, and those vocal advocates of obama care will find themselves on the opposing end of a law they dont like. It really goes to show what a dangerous precedent has been set by the SCOTUS when they give congress too much power.[Edited on July 2, 2012 at 12:18 PM. Reason : .]
7/2/2012 12:15:57 PM
I'm guessing they would be opposed to it on the grounds that everyone owning a gun is stupid, and not on the constitutionality of the tax penalty for noncompliance.
7/2/2012 12:17:15 PM
They can oppose it as stupid all they want, as some may find the current healthcare law stupid, but if such a law were to pass because its now constitutional.....then what?seems hypocritcal.just goes to show how stupid this current law is for giving congress this new unchecked power to tax any kind of INACTION they please.
7/2/2012 12:22:21 PM
interestingly enough, switzerland gives a mililtary issue rifle to each adult male as part of their civic duty to the swiss militia. They are required to keep this rifle at their residence for a specific time period.
7/2/2012 12:43:18 PM
congress has always been able to tax, tax, tax away. if taxing death (estate tax) isn't taxing inactivity, i don't know what is. the issue in this case was that no one working to pass the aca (especially obama, who insisted he wouldn't tax people earning less than 250k, i.e.- "rich") wanted to call the penalties of the individual mandate a tax. no one like taxes. politicians have a nasty habit of promising not to tax people. if the law you propose was passed, it would certainly be constitutional. our system of government is designed such that checks and balances prevent, to a certain degree, stupid shit like this make believe law you describe. the politicians who made this law would have to be held accountable at the next election. to me, that is the interesting outcome of the scotus interpretation of the aca case. congress got to pass (through budget reconciliation, mind you) a very controversial law, based on the enumerated power of the ability to levy taxes, and they didn't have to own up to calling it a tax during the sausage-making - scotus did that for them, after that fact.
7/2/2012 1:02:21 PM
7/2/2012 1:16:04 PM
7/2/2012 2:03:31 PM
7/2/2012 2:24:58 PM
7/2/2012 2:34:26 PM
7/2/2012 2:41:10 PM
7/2/2012 3:18:41 PM
RABBLE RABBLE RABBLEI DON'T AGREE WITH THIS LEGISLATION THEREFORE IT IS UN-CONSTITUTIONALRABBLE RABBLE RABBLE
7/2/2012 3:42:39 PM
The tax clause is the new commerce clause[Edited on July 2, 2012 at 4:21 PM. Reason : I'm not even really sure why it wasn't upheld under the commerce clause. See Wickard v. Filburn]
7/2/2012 4:20:24 PM
7/2/2012 4:37:23 PM
7/2/2012 6:08:23 PM
7/2/2012 6:49:56 PM
You people are so missing the point. This is not about debating the constitutionality of this, like it or not SCOTUS upheld it thereby making it constitutional. I disagree, but I am currently not seated on the supreme court last time I checked.This is about the consequences of the precedent which has been set. What happens when congress, drunk on their own power, mandates you to do something you DONT like or agree with under penalty of tax and prison for failure to pay the tax.
7/2/2012 7:01:37 PM
7/2/2012 7:09:43 PM
7/2/2012 7:10:06 PM
I'd probably go buy a gun and learn to shoot the motherfucker since every asshole in the country will have one.
7/2/2012 9:24:30 PM
So what's this thread about exactly? That you have a right to be mad?Sure, go right ahead and be mad. I'm sure if this hypothetical law you've come up with passed anti-gun people would be mad, but not because of constitutional reasons but because their side lost, the same reason you're mad right now.
7/2/2012 11:19:52 PM
7/2/2012 11:30:08 PM
The difference between your gun scenario and health care, is that we are all already paying for poor peoples' health care.Either through higher premiums, greater costs for medical care, corruption/cronyism, and probably tons of other mechanisms.If a poor sick person walks into a hospital, they get cared for. Right now, the hospital has to try to cover these costs somehow.Under the new system, rather than the hospital guessing where these compensations come from, they know.Obamacare does nothing to affect how much you are paying for poor peoples' healthcare, we are all ALREADY doing this.
7/3/2012 12:00:54 AM
this thread is not about obamacare
7/3/2012 12:09:36 AM
There's no way for this thread to not be about the ACA to a certain degree. It provides both context for the ruling itself and context for application of the ruling to other issues (if it ever is).You would have a point if the ACA consisted of nothing but the mandate (buy insurance or pay the fine). Unfortunately, it doesn't and you don't.
7/3/2012 12:43:50 AM
7/3/2012 6:32:43 AM
7/3/2012 10:52:47 AM
7/3/2012 11:04:16 AM
7/3/2012 11:18:21 AM
United States Senator Mike Lee?"I was hoping the Supreme Court would do its job of restricting federal power. It didn't do its job, and now we have to rely on the political process to fix this problem."
7/3/2012 3:09:16 PM
well apparently they decided that the supreme court's job of restricting legislative power does not include striking down tax penalties for not buying a product.
7/3/2012 3:12:51 PM
7/3/2012 3:52:33 PM
Well, they're using the power they already had (taxation) to accomplish something new (compel people to buy something).The pre- revolutionary war tax grievances aren't necessarily different by nature, I agree. If I understand it, it was just a classic case of "the taxes are too damned high!" If anything, what we have now is more involved than what the king did, which was using the colonies as a moneymaker like the rest of their empire.I do see, however, that it would be difficult to strike down what they try to do with Obamacare while still allowing the wide variety of tax loopholes and subsidies we have today. Perhaps carrots for buying hybrid vehicles are constitutional but sticks for not buying insurance are not. I think that's a tough sell, and the only way to get around it would be to cite the fact that the bill authors called it a mandate.
7/3/2012 4:16:33 PM
7/3/2012 4:24:39 PM
Who here doesn't pay for health insurance?[Edited on July 3, 2012 at 6:58 PM. Reason : ,]
7/3/2012 6:58:14 PM
I sure as hell don'tinstead I follow the Republican Health Care Plan
7/3/2012 8:44:09 PM
I stopped paying.I figured many will play, few will win a big payout.
7/3/2012 8:55:03 PM
How does that make sense.
7/3/2012 11:11:59 PM
It's fairly simple to see.People like my terminally ill sister have accrued $1,800,000 of medical bills from the age of 16 to 24 because she has like 8 to 9 surgeries a year. All of these tests are experiments, not cures. They even gave her chemo, not for cancer, but for a lung-glue problem. The doctors are ridiculous and she can't change doctors due to health care coverage. She will most likely die from be an experiment rather than from her illness. Anyway...She didn't pay in that amount of money INTO insurance, so someone else is losing their insurance money. Multiply this times the number of patients that are stuck in the hospital for equally terminal diseases.Multiply this times the number of kids who haven't put any money into the system.That means your money isn't going to be there LATER in life because they are using YOUR money allotted for YOUR future medical bills, on OTHER patients TODAY.Your money also has to fund insurers' paycheck, taxes, mortgages, paperwork, attorneys, and every other expense it takes to run the insurance company. (All that money could be cut out of the budget if you do finances directly with the doctor) Insurance is the biggest ponzi scheme ever known to our country. It's designed to ruin the country and I maintain that America is being brought to its knees on purpose.
7/4/2012 12:31:14 PM
Instead, if you're uninsured and get gravely ill...sux2bu, the best outcome is medical bankruptcy
7/4/2012 12:33:48 PM
^ most likely, people will get the treatment they need, and just ignore the bill.Sticking the hospital with it, which takes it out on everyone else anyway.^^ if people did business directly with a dr. who would pay for your sister's bills? Did she have a spare 1.8 million $$ laying around?[Edited on July 4, 2012 at 12:44 PM. Reason : ]
7/4/2012 12:42:20 PM
You're absolutely correct, moron. If medical bills are too expensive for 90% of Americans to afford without insuranceand the medical bills that are paid are greater than what 90% of Americans put into it,then either1) Insurance is losing money2) Stealing money from a vast majority of people who HAVE insurance but don't use it.Now insurance is going to cover 10 million more people's hospital bills that they didn't have to care about previously, including those with pre-existing illnesses.
7/4/2012 12:52:23 PM
Isn't this what happens when we pay tax and the government spends it on the military?I don't want a significant portion of the spending the government does "on my behalf," but that's how a tax worksYour scenario is actually better than a regular tax since you are directly getting something in return (a gun) rather than a military that is assuring us it is doing wise things
7/4/2012 1:07:58 PM
I see your point, but a ponzi scheme is when you expect a return on your investment later down the road. A ponzi scheme is able to satisfy early and initial investors' returns, but the returns won't be there for the people down the road because the money was already spent today.
7/4/2012 1:22:42 PM
7/4/2012 1:58:11 PM
I'm not here to call you an idiot or criticize you. I'm here to help you understand.The lottery system is a calculated gamble. Lots of people play, but there is only a few winners and a majority are losers.The casino system is a calculated gamble. Lots of people play, but there is only a few winners and a majority are losers.IF, we took your idea that the health care system is a calculated gamble, there is only a few winners and a majority are losers.The only difference between the lottery and casino versus the health care gamble, is that the payout is much larger than what people pay in. Meaning there are city-sized populations of winners and everyone who lives is expected to become ill or terminally ill at least once in their lifetime. I bet the healthcare system is about to go under because they can't afford to pay the returns from the policies they have right now.They can't keep raising the investors(policy holders) rates because people are dropping out because insurance costs too much.The only way to keep a ponzi scheme going is to collect from more investors (who don't use the system). Therefore, this bill HAD to pass in order to save the entire system from collapsing. It's only a temporary fix, however, because there are no more investors after an all inclusive bill is passed.[Edited on July 4, 2012 at 2:27 PM. Reason : .]
7/4/2012 2:24:17 PM
I'm not "paying into" anything with my insurance. I pay a flat monthly charge so in the event I get hit by a car I don't go bankrupt. I'm not expecting anything back apart from owing less money in the event something happens. That's why its call insurance.
7/4/2012 2:28:11 PM
How much do you pay monthly, sir.
7/4/2012 2:39:19 PM
$187. It's hospital insurance that pays for a doctors visit with no copay every 6 months or so. I'm an independent contractor so my company does not pay for anything. It's not great but protects me in the event of an emergency.[Edited on July 4, 2012 at 2:45 PM. Reason : Copay]
7/4/2012 2:45:00 PM
If you're paying $187/myou're paying $1,870 every 10 months.you're paying $11,220 every 60 months. (5 years)you're paying $112,200 every 50 years.What's your deductible per year?
7/4/2012 3:09:08 PM