R
ringil
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My question is whether Robert’s act earns him the illustrious CAF nomiker “Self-Identified Catholic”, or is this reserved for those who lean left.
I believe it did, in fact I’m pretty sure.Did one of them attain 1000 posts in less than 24 hours?
To be honest, I wouldn’t be surprised… that was a F&F topic for sure!
lol.Is this information based on research?
Lots of pages. Yes, I noticed several of them after I posted with a reference.Didn’t you read through all 900+ posts? LOL I had pointed that out a couple of hundred posts earlier.
My question is whether Robert’s act earns him the illustrious CAF nomiker “Self-Identified Catholic”, or is this reserved for those who lean left.
Roberts didn’t decide that it was a tax on his own. He just happened to be the one who wrote the opinion for the 5 judges who said it was a tax.The chief justice Roberts said that the mandate is a tax to the surprise of the rest of the court, the president(who said it was not a tax)and everyone else. It’s like he just made it up.Since they upheld the entire mandate does this mean that Catholics will not have the religious freedom to decline selling things that are against their faith?
Roberts didn’t decide that it was a tax on his own. He just happened to be the one who wrote the opinion for the 5 judges who said it was a tax.
Yes, but Dawnia, the other four were *known* enemies of the Constitution as written, and were foolishly confirmed as such. But Roberts knows better, and his intellect is, or was, superior to all of them. I am angriest at him, b/c in the past he has never shown himself to be a friend of a leviathan, intransigent federal leviathan. He is either a weak vessel, was blackmailed, or is losing mental competence. His ruling today was gibberish. As for me, I will never forgive him for his part in crushing individual rights. :mad: RobThe Cycle | Aired on June 28, 2012Roberts didn’t decide that it was a tax on his own. He just happened to be the one who wrote the opinion for the 5 judges who said it was a tax.
Joe,It looks like it got upheld 6-3, though the Individual Mandate has to be considered a tax on those who don’t buy insurance rather than a fine.![]()
Because it is an abuse of power for the government to tax people for not purchasing insurance.No it doesn’t.
If you have health insurance, you don’t pay the tax.
And why shouldn’t those who refuse to buy insurance pay the tax?
No,it doesn’t work that way. One person’s hospital bill is not linked with another person’s lack of insurance. Hospitals don’t just get compensated by private insurance,After all, they’re the one’s who cost us who do, lots of money when they show up in ER’s without health insurance.
Unfortunately, your analogy presumes more than is evidenced.My beef is that you seem more concerned with accusing the authorities with what you term ‘stealing’ than with the happy fact that people who are indeed starving (by any objective measure) are being fed.
If “it was never aimed at the poor,” why are those who will benefit most from it those who now qualify (or might qualify, depending on the Cooperation Factor of the State in question) for Medicaid? Even on the “progressive” Ed Show this evening, Howard Dean admitted that Medicaid qualifiers are by far the greatest beneficiaries (I assume he means in the short term). He also admitted misgivings about the practical funding for Medicaid (he must mean the option for the States).Obamacare, as we have discussed, is destined to fail. Thus the poor are not being fed. It was never aimed at the poor, thus it was not the poor who would be fed by it.
In fact, as you alude, it is a huge, complicated Rube Goldberg device constructed upon many dubious assumptions but there are some very simple reasons to expect that it will ultimately collapse of it’s own dead weight (not least of which is that the tax for not buying health care is lower than the cost of health care insurance). And when it collapses you can be sure that those who foisted it upon us will be demanding more government to fix it.If “it was never aimed at the poor,” why are those who will benefit most from it those who now qualify (or might qualify, depending on the Cooperation Factor of the State in question) for Medicaid? Even on the “progressive” Ed Show this evening, Howard Dean admitted that Medicaid qualifiers are by far the greatest beneficiaries (I assume he means in the short term). He also admitted misgivings about the practical funding for Medicaid (he must mean the option for the States).
I keep hearing claims on the news (from supporters of it) about all the supposed new advantages (lower premiums for everyone, greater efficiency of health delivery, and more), but in the last 3 years I haven’t seen the actual math laid out. The only way that truly everyone will be able to afford premiums (if not Medicaid) is (a) if everyone purchases plans, which is not guaranteed, and/or (b) if the rich greatly subsidize the poor via massive Medicaid expansion. There are many, many households & individuals that cannot afford more than ~$200/mo in premiums. If their premiums or out-of-pocket costs are more than that, who will pay those?
Maybe the math does add up, but if so, I think it’s been poorly laid out by the administration.
I’m guessing no.Now that the supreme court has weighed in, I know there is just one question on everyone’s mind: Will O’Reilly keep his promise?
rawstory.com/rs/2012/06/28/oreilly-promised-to-apologize-for-being-an-idiot-if-heath-law-was-upheld/
Nope.Do you trust Romney on the health-care issue then?