Update II: Pelosi Proctology (Constitutional Creativity)

Constitution,Democrats,Healthcare,Regulation

            

I wonder if a constitutional challenge will ever be mounted against this Bill’s many manifestly unconstitutional mandates. WSJ:

In a tight vote, the House passed its sweeping health bill late Saturday, marking the biggest victory yet for Democrats in their drive to create near-universal health insurance.

The bill passed by a 220-215 margin, with one Republican, Anh “Joseph” Cao of Louisiana, joining 219 Democrats in favor. Thirty-nine Democrats voted against the bill. The passage came after House leaders made a surprise last-minute concession that blocks abortion from the new government insurance plan in order to win over wavering Democrats.

BETSY MCCAUGHEY parses the Bill:

“What the government will require you to do:

• Sec. 202 (p. 91-92) of the bill requires you to enroll in a “qualified plan.” If you get your insurance at work, your employer will have a “grace period” to switch you to a “qualified plan,” meaning a plan designed by the Secretary of Health and Human Services. If you buy your own insurance, there’s no grace period. You’ll have to enroll in a qualified plan as soon as any term in your contract changes, such as the co-pay, deductible or benefit.

• Sec. 224 (p. 118) provides that 18 months after the bill becomes law, the Secretary of Health and Human Services will decide what a “qualified plan” covers and how much you’ll be legally required to pay for it. That’s like a banker telling you to sign the loan agreement now, then filling in the interest rate and repayment terms 18 months later.

On Nov. 2, the Congressional Budget Office estimated what the plans will likely cost. An individual earning $44,000 before taxes who purchases his own insurance will have to pay a $5,300 premium and an estimated $2,000 in out-of-pocket expenses, for a total of $7,300 a year, which is 17% of his pre-tax income. A family earning $102,100 a year before taxes will have to pay a $15,000 premium plus an estimated $5,300 out-of-pocket, for a $20,300 total, or 20% of its pre-tax income. Individuals and families earning less than these amounts will be eligible for subsidies paid directly to their insurer.

• Sec. 303 (pp. 167-168) makes it clear that, although the “qualified plan” is not yet designed, it will be of the “one size fits all” variety. The bill claims to offer choice—basic, enhanced and premium levels—but the benefits are the same. Only the co-pays and deductibles differ. You will have to enroll in the same plan, whether the government is paying for it or you and your employer are footing the bill.

• Sec. 59b (pp. 297-299) says that when you file your taxes, you must include proof that you are in a qualified plan. If not, you will be fined thousands of dollars. Illegal immigrants are exempt from this requirement.

• Sec. 412 (p. 272) says that employers must provide a “qualified plan” for their employees and pay 72.5% of the cost, and a smaller share of family coverage, or incur an 8% payroll tax. Small businesses, with payrolls from $500,000 to $750,000, are fined less.

Eviscerating Medicare:

In addition to reducing future Medicare funding by an estimated $500 billion, the bill fundamentally changes how Medicare pays doctors and hospitals, permitting the government to dictate treatment decisions.

• Sec. 1302 (pp. 672-692) moves Medicare from a fee-for-service payment system, in which patients choose which doctors to see and doctors are paid for each service they provide, toward what’s called a “medical home.”

The medical home is this decade’s version of HMO-restrictions on care. A primary-care provider manages access to costly specialists and diagnostic tests for a flat monthly fee. The bill specifies that patients may have to settle for a nurse practitioner rather than a physician as the primary-care provider. Medical homes begin with demonstration projects, but the HHS secretary is authorized to “disseminate this approach rapidly on a national basis.”

A December 2008 Congressional Budget Office report noted that “medical homes” were likely to resemble the unpopular gatekeepers of 20 years ago if cost control was a priority.

• Sec. 1114 (pp. 391-393) replaces physicians with physician assistants in overseeing care for hospice patients.

• Secs. 1158-1160 (pp. 499-520) initiates programs to reduce payments for patient care to what it costs in the lowest cost regions of the country. This will reduce payments for care (and by implication the standard of care) for hospital patients in higher cost areas such as New York and Florida.

• Sec. 1161 (pp. 520-545) cuts payments to Medicare Advantage plans (used by 20% of seniors). Advantage plans have warned this will result in reductions in optional benefits such as vision and dental care.

• Sec. 1402 (p. 756) says that the results of comparative effectiveness research conducted by the government will be delivered to doctors electronically to guide their use of “medical items and services.”

Questionable Priorities:

While the bill will slash Medicare funding, it will also direct billions of dollars to numerous inner-city social work and diversity programs with vague standards of accountability.

• Sec. 399V (p. 1422) provides for grants to community “entities” with no required qualifications except having “documented community activity and experience with community healthcare workers” to “educate, guide, and provide experiential learning opportunities” aimed at drug abuse, poor nutrition, smoking and obesity. “Each community health worker program receiving funds under the grant will provide services in the cultural context most appropriate for the individual served by the program.”

These programs will “enhance the capacity of individuals to utilize health services and health related social services under Federal, State and local programs by assisting individuals in establishing eligibility . . . and in receiving services and other benefits” including transportation and translation services.

• Sec. 222 (p. 617) provides reimbursement for culturally and linguistically appropriate services. This program will train health-care workers to inform Medicare beneficiaries of their “right” to have an interpreter at all times and with no co-pays for language services.

• Secs. 2521 and 2533 (pp. 1379 and 1437) establishes racial and ethnic preferences in awarding grants for training nurses and creating secondary-school health science programs. For example, grants for nursing schools should “give preference to programs that provide for improving the diversity of new nurse graduates to reflect changes in the demographics of the patient population.” And secondary-school grants should go to schools “graduating students from disadvantaged backgrounds including racial and ethnic minorities.”

• Sec. 305 (p. 189) Provides for automatic Medicaid enrollment of newborns who do not otherwise have insurance.”

For the text of the bill with page numbers, see www.defendyourhealthcare.us.

Ms. McCaughey is chairman of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths and a former Lt. Governor of New York state.

Update I (Nov. Eighth): THIS IS FOR POSTERITY. A CNSNews reporter asks a retarded Speaker where specifically does the Constitution allow the enactment of individual health mandates. Pelosi’s retort: “Are you serious?”

Update II (Nov. 9): Sen. Roland Burris (D-Ill.) is a little more creative than Pelosi.

When asked by CNSNews.com what specific part of the Constitution authorizes Congress to mandate that individuals must purchase health insurance, Sen. Roland Burris (D-Ill.) pointed to the part of the Constitution that he says authorizes the federal government “to provide for the health, welfare and the defense of the country.” In fact, the word “health” appears nowhere in the Constitution.
“Well, that’s under certainly the laws of the–protect the health, welfare of the country,” said Burris. “That’s under the Constitution.”

7 thoughts on “Update II: Pelosi Proctology (Constitutional Creativity)

  1. Vic Jones

    On youtube, via CNS news, Pelosi was asked where in the Constitution is it granted that the federal government can mandate individual health insurance choices. [Why not provide BAB readers a hyperlink? Guys, get into that habit.] Her only response to the question: “Are you serious.” I would have to find documentation, but what I have heard is that later there was a release that stated that the Interstate Commerce clause was the basis. Evidently, her response was embarrassing to someone, and so they had to come up with an answer.

    I wish more of our “investigative reporters” would ask tough questions like this one and follow up with such questiions as:

    Can you show in the enumerative powers granted the Federal Government, where exactly it has the right to bail out businesses and determine health care for individuals?

    Can you explain how the Interstate Commerce clause grants the Federal Government power to mandate health insurance for individuals?

    What is your understanding of the “promoting the General Welfare” clause in the Constitution?

    What is your understanding or inalienable or natural rights?

    Do you know where, in the Constitution, the “promoting the General Welfare” clause is located and what exactly it addresses? Ditto with the Interstate Commerce clause.

  2. Steve Hogan

    Here are a few more questions the media should be asking these thugs if they weren’t already co-opted by the fascist corporate-state:

    1. Have you read the entire bill? If not, how can you vote for it without knowing what it contains?

    2. Are you and your colleagues exempt from the bill’s provisions? If this is such a wonderful thing you’re foisting on the public, why aren’t you subject to its dictates, including the hefty fines and prison sentences?

    3. What assumptions were made when estimating costs? Why has the total increased from $800 billion to $1.2 trillion in a matter of a few weeks? Can you cite an example of a large federal program that actually controlled costs and improved quality, as proponents have claimed?

    4. Do you think it’s fair to saddle healthy people with the same coverage as the sick? The young with the old? Why should thin people be forced to pay for obesity coverage? Are you not creating a moral hazard by punishing moderate drinkers while rewarding alcoholics?

    5. Can you define the term “insurance”? If you can’t obtain insurance for a car you’ve already wrecked or for a house that’s already flooded, how can you call it insurance if the person has a pre-existing condition?

  3. Anonymous

    The $1.5 Trillion Fraud

    “The CBO describes an individual mandate as “an unprecedented form of federal action” whose closest analogue in federal law is the draft. But as President Obama told a joint session of Congress, the rest of the legislation won’t work unless the federal government forces Americans to purchase health insurance.”

    http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=10944

  4. Myron Pauli

    Quick comment: I am very suspicious of “Republicans” who argue against Socialist Medicine Plan XYZ in that it will endanger Socialist Medicare or Romneycare or Bushcare Medicine Plan ABC – there is no “RIGHT” to take the money of one taxpayer to pay for “health care” for others period.

  5. Van Wijk

    That is Constitutional which gives the federals more power. This is the mindset of your enemies. At this point in the game they are not to be reasoned with, chided, or cajoled into changing their course.

  6. Myron Pauli

    The 10th Amendment addresses health care: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”

    Then there’s always:
    “What about the ‘GENERAL WELFARE CLAUSE’ ” ????

    ANSWER: We used to have PROPRIETARY COLONIES run for profit for investor/proprietors. The “general welfare” meant that the powers of the government were to be used for everyone, not specific people or groups. This is expressed explicitly in Article IV of the Virginia Declaration of Rights:

    http://www.avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/virginia.asp

    “That no man, or set of men, are entitled to exclusive or separate emoluments or privileges from the community, but in consideration of public services; which, not being descendible, neither ought the offices of magistrate, legislator, or judge be hereditary.”

    Madison also commented on the general welfare clause:

    http://www.connorboyack.com/blog/general-welfare

    “If Congress can do whatever in their discretion can be done by money, and will promote the General Welfare, the Government is no longer a limited one, possessing enumerated powers, but an indefinite one, subject to particular exceptions.”

    I recommend reading the entire link about the “GENERAL WELFARE” clause. But, as Franklin predicted 9/17/1787, the people have “become corrupted”.

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