After repeated humiliation, White House raises signature requirement for “We the People” petitions to 100,000
There have been petitions by at least 47 states requesting to secede from the Union. There have been petitions for the White House to commission the construction a Death Star space station. There have been dozens of embarrassingly successful petitions that the White House has been forced to answer.
Finally, the White House has had enough humiliation and is raising the bar for response to it’s ridiculous “We The People” petitions to 100,000 signatures before the Obama administration will give an official response.
from the White House:
When we launched We the People, none of us knew how popular it would be, but it’s exceeded our wildest expectations. Through the past year, interest in We the People exploded and we’re closing in on 10 million signatures.
When we first raised the threshold — from 5,000 to 25,000 — we called it “a good problem to have.” Turns out that “good problem” is only getting better, so we’re making another adjustment to ensure we’re able to continue to give the most popular ideas the time they deserve.
Starting today, as we move into a second term, petitions must receive 100,000 signatures in 30 days in order to receive an official response from the Obama Administration.
This just further proves that the We The People site is simply a PR stunt where the Obama administration tries to give the impression that they care what Americans are passionate about.
If the White House really gave a rip about how as few as 100,000 Americans felt, they wouldn’t have passed Obamacare, they wouldn’t have raised taxes, they wouldn’t be trying to raise the debt ceiling, and they wouldn’t be announcing new gun regulations tomorrow.
Obama gun executive orders.
The following is a list, provided by the White House, of executive actions President Obama plans to take to address gun violence.
I don’t have a future, this is why.
With Obamacare and the individual mandate being upheld. I don’t have much of a future left. With the student loans I have, and can’t pay for. The no ability of getting work, do I can pay may debts.
Now were not only the mandate is a required purchase and jail-able offense with massive fines. It is now also a tax. Guess what? Now I am going to be a tax evader a another jail-able offense.
This means I am a criminal, there for I could go to jail. On top of that It will make it almost impossible to get work. I would never pass a background check. All because something I can’t offered to pay in the first place because I have no employment.
My only option at this point is suicide. I have no future, it is dead. No job, most likely ending up in jail. With a massive student debt. What do I have? Nothing!!!!!!!!!
- Thanks Obamacare: 83% of Doctors Surveyed Say They May Quit (askmarion.wordpress.com)
- Breaking: Mitt Romney Pushed The Individual Mandate, Emails Show! (dailypaul.com)
- Five Devastating Effects Obamacare Will Have on Young Adults (heritage.org)
Is the Affordable Care Act Unconstitutional? (by LearnLiberty)
Does Congress possess the constitutional power to force its citizens to purchase health insurance? Prof. Elizabeth Price Foley says that’s the key question in the Supreme Court challenge to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The Supreme Court must decide whether the “individual mandate” portion of the law falls under Congress’s power to “”regulate commerce,” as enumerated by Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution.
Prof. Foley argues that whether or not you personally support the health care legislation, you should be worried about the precedent that the individual mandate would set. If the power to regulate commerce is interpreted as including the power to force people to buy something, then that power doesn’t just apply to health care. It would give Congress the power to make individuals buy anything, which poses a significant threat to individual liberty.
Prof. Foley worked with the Institute of Justice to file an amicus brief on the case: http://www.ij.org/health-insurance-reform-a-the-supreme-court
Obamacare’s Impact on Doctors (by HeritageFoundation)
Dr. Martha Boone, an Atlanta urologist, explains the consequences of the new health care law. Because of her fears about Obamacare, Boone has moved to a less-expensive office to avoid dropping Medicare patients or laying off an employee.
Learn more about the effects of Obamacare at www.heritage.org/ImpactOfObamacare.
Obamacare’s Impact on Families & Future Generations (by HeritageFoundation)
Obamacare expands government-controlled health care — passing the cost to future generations of taxpayers — and weakens families’ choice of coverage. Larry Patterson describes the impact Obamacare will have on his family and the concerns he has with the new law.
Learn more about the effects of Obamacare at www.heritage.org/ImpactOfObamacare.
Obamacare’s Impact on Seniors (by HeritageFoundation)
Like most seniors, Ann Lorenz relies on Medicare as she copes with serious health care challenges, including Parkinson’s Disease. Ann sees a number of doctors and depends on a variety of prescription drugs and therapies to stay independent. She worries that Obamacare threatens her access to doctors, treatment options and insurance plans — and her neurologist shares her concerns.
Learn more about the effects of Obamacare at www.heritage.org/ImpactOfObamacare.
Obamacare’s Impact on the States (by HeritageFoundation)
Indiana has been a leader in health care reform under Governor Mitch Daniels, but the passage of Obamacare threatens much of that good work. Now, Governor Daniels is speaking out and urging his fellow governors to take a serious look at the threat posed by Obamacare.
Learn more about the effects of Obamacare at www.heritage.org/ImpactOfObamacare.
Romney still believes in RomneyCare…and that’s the problem
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Romney still believes in RomneyCare…and that’s the problem
One can not believe in big government and the free market at the same time.
Romney is just another big government hack.
How can anyone trust Romney to repeal ObamaCare when his plan is the model for it?
Then there is the Romney line that the people in his state like Romneycare. Well, why shouldn’t they, at least for a time? The program schemed to exploit Medicaid’s byzantine rules in order to shift hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars from the rest of the country to Massachusetts. This was not a case of a state going its own way; it was a redistribution of wealth by which Massachusetts got Americans across the country to pay its obligations. And those obligations are metastasizing: Romneycare has driven up medical costs, driven up premiums, and increased taxes on all Americans as well as on citizens of the Bay State. As the Cato Institute (among others) points out, Romney’s claim not to have raised state taxes is false, although most of the rise occurred after he left office — but only because of his unrealistic cost projections,
Obamacare is the issue that inspires the conservative base. Republicans simply must have the base’s enthusiastic support if they are to beat a lavishly funded incumbent who will pull no punches, none, in striving to keep his job. There is no serious person who doubts that Romneycare was the building block for Obamacare: The experts who helped design the former were consulted in the creation of the latter. Yet Romney continues to insist that Romneycare is a smashing success, one he suggests he’d do again without hesitation.
Of course he now says he’d fight to repeal Obamacare, but is Romney really the best candidate to be making that fight? How convincing will he be in decrying wealth redistribution, runaway government spending, and freedom-killing government mandates while he continues championing an overbearing state program that stands as a monument to all those things?
I keep hoping to hear those three words: “I was wrong.” But they’re not coming. Romney supporters on the right keep rationalizing that he is just doing what he must do to stay viable: resisting a colossal flip-flop that would be more damaging than all the others. The candidate, however, says no, and attests that he is defending Romneycare because he believes in it. I usually worry that politicians lie. I’m worried that this one is telling the truth.
Four steps to a free market health care system
Four steps to a free market health care system
Article is pretty old but I think just as relevant.
1. Eliminate all licensing requirements for medical schools, hospitals, pharmacies, and medical doctors and other health care personnel. Their supply would almost instantly increase, prices would fall, and a greater variety of health care services would appear on the market.
Competing voluntary accreditation agencies would take the place of compulsory government licensing—if health care providers believe that such accreditation would enhance their own reputation, and that their consumers care about reputation, and are willing to pay for it.
Because consumers would no longer be duped into believing that there is such a thing as a “national standard” of health care, they will increase their search costs and make more discriminating health care choices.
2. Eliminate all government restrictions on the production and sale of pharmaceutical products and medical devices. This means no more Food and Drug Administration, which presently hinders innovation and increases costs.
Costs and prices would fall, and a wider variety of better products would reach the market sooner. The market would force consumers to act in accordance with their own—rather than the government’s—risk assessment. And competing drug and device manufacturers and sellers, to safeguard against product liability suits as much as to attract customers, would provide increasingly better product descriptions and guarantees.
3. Deregulate the health insurance industry. Private enterprise can offer insurance against events over whose outcome the insured possesses no control. One cannot insure oneself against suicide or bankruptcy, for example, because it is in one’s own hands to bring these events about.
Because a person’s health, or lack of it, lies increasingly within his own control, many, if not most health risks, are actually uninsurable. “Insurance” against risks whose likelihood an individual can systematically influence falls within that person’s own responsibility.
All insurance, moreover, involves the pooling of individual risks. It implies that insurers pay more to some and less to others. But no one knows in advance, and with certainty, who the “winners” and “losers” will be. “Winners” and “losers” are distributed randomly, and the resulting income redistribution is unsystematic. If “winners” or “losers” could be systematically predicted, “losers” would not want to pool their risk with “winners,” but with other “losers,” because this would lower their insurance costs. I would not want to pool my personal accident risks with those of professional football players, for instance, but exclusively with those of people in circumstances similar to my own, at lower costs.
Because of legal restrictions on the health insurers’ right of refusal—to exclude any individual risk as uninsurable—the present health-insurance system is only partly concerned with insurance. The industry cannot discriminate freely among different groups’ risks.
As a result, health insurers cover a multitude of uninnsurable risks, alongside, and pooled with, genuine insurance risks. They do not discriminate among various groups of people which pose significantly different insurance risks. The industry thus runs a system of income redistribution—benefiting irresponsible actors and high-risk groups at the expense of responsible individuals and low risk groups. Accordingly the industry’s prices are high and ballooning.
To deregulate the industry means to restore it to unrestricted freedom of contract: to allow a health insurer to offer any contract whatsoever, to include or exclude any risk, and to discriminate among any groups of individuals. Uninsurable risks would lose coverage, the variety of insurance policies for the remaining coverage would increase, and price differentials would reflect genuine insurance risks. On average, prices would drastically fall. And the reform would restore individual responsibility in health care.
4. Eliminate all subsidies to the sick or unhealthy. Subsidies create more of whatever is being subsidized. Subsidies for the ill and diseased breed illness and disease, and promote carelessness, indigence, and dependency. If we eliminate them, we would strengthen the will to live healthy lives and to work for a living. In the first instance, that means abolishing Medicare and Medicaid.
DC appeals court rules in favor of health care law
Affordable Care act ruled constitutional: Not that it hasn’t been ruled unconstitutional before, and not that this is the last you’ll hear of the issue. That said, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals ruled in favor of the Affordable Care Act yesterday, a move considered a surprise given the court’s conservative tilt. Said Judge Laurence SIlberman: “That a direct requirement for most Americans to purchase any product or service seems an intrusive exercise of legislative power surely explains why Congress has not used this authority before — but that seems to us a political judgment rather than a recognition of constitutional limitations.” source
Joe Wilson ‘Obama Did Lie
Uploaded by libertywriters on Aug 16, 2011
http://patriotsnetwork.com
Joe Wilson ‘Obama Did Lie’
Obamacare, Gov’t Insurance Exchanges, & The Coming Price Explosion
Uploaded by ReasonTV on Aug 16, 2011
One of the features of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the health-care reform bill colloquially known as Obamacare, is the creation of insurance exchanges that will offer heavily subsidized policies and coverage for people who cannot get insurance through their employers.
In projecting the program’s costs, the Congressional Budget Office figures that about 7 percent of the workforce currently covered by employer-provided insurance will drop those policies and sign up for the subsidized insurance. That estimate - and hence, the cost structure of the program - has been challenged by sources such as McKinsey & Company, the consulting firm, which reckons a far higher percentage of workers will opt out of their current job-based plans. In a survey of employers released in June, McKinsey found that 30 percent will “definitely or probably” drop their coverage as Obamacare kicks into high gear in 2014. Among “employers with a high awareness of reform, this proportion rises to more than 50 percent,” says the report. Why? It will be cheaper to pay fines than to provide coverage.
If those estimates are accurate, the cost savings ObamaCare supporters tout are a pipe dream.
Glenn Morton, the author of the new book Passing Obamacare, has worked for nearly two decades in the health-insurance business, most recently as a broker who helps employers find better deals among providers. In a discussion with Reason’s Nick Gillespie, Morton adds another problem with recently released Obamacare rules: The mandate to reduce the percentage of insurance costs that go to administrative costs effectively means that insurance brokers’ commissions will be either drastically cut or reduced altogether. If brokers’ role in hunting for better coverage plans is eviscerated, argues Morton, companies will lose their main ally in the search for affordable and dependable coverage plans. The result, says Morton, will be that more and more companies will cease to offer insurance, thus driving even more people into the insurance exchanges and the cost of Obamacare up and up. CBO says the cost of giving subsidies to 16 million individuals over Obamacare’s first decade will be $466 billion alone.
About 4.30 minutes. Shot by Meredith Bragg, Jim Epstein, and Josh Swain. Edited by Anthony L. Fisher.
Go to http://reason.tv for downloadable versions of this video. And subscribe to Reason.tv’s YouTube Channel for automatic notifications when new material goes live.
To read Reason’s coverage of health care online, go to http://reason.com/topics/health-care
Federal Court Blisters Obamacare Un-Constitutional
Uploaded by libertywriters on Aug 14, 2011
http://patriotsnetwork.com
Federal Court Blisters Obamacare Un-Constitutional
Mark Levin Commerce Clause Healthcare Mandate PT2of2
Uploaded by kamorm on Oct 26, 2010
Mark Levin talks about the Commerce clause and how it has been interpreted by activist judges.










