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I love politics, last night I listened to most of the GOP debates in Florida and was finally impressed with Gov. Romney. (I can't see why he wants to be president, that is the only thing that bothers me about him fundamentally)
The GOP is (in my Opinion) responsible for the Recession and the lackluster recovery. That said I notice that other than claiming that the Obama Administration's excessive raising of taxes (which did not happen), its near curtailment of extracting Gulf of Mexico oil during a moratorium it imposed after BP spilled nearly 500 million of crude, and its imposition of regulations on Business that is costing them money, the biggest gripe is The Affordable Health Care Act that was passed by the Democratic Party when it controlled the Senate and the House (no small feat).
So what is the deal? Are Republicans really opposed to everyone carrying health insurance? I for one am not. Nor do I appreciate being tethered to a relatively low paying job that provides it as a benefit. (I really see the current Employer based system as a subsidy to Businesses big enough to be eligible for the discounts)
These arguments have been made in a previous thread. (http://www.infjs.com/forums/showthread.php?t=8923)
The GOP is (in my Opinion) responsible for the Recession and the lackluster recovery. That said I notice that other than claiming that the Obama Administration's excessive raising of taxes (which did not happen), its near curtailment of extracting Gulf of Mexico oil during a moratorium it imposed after BP spilled nearly 500 million of crude, and its imposition of regulations on Business that is costing them money, the biggest gripe is The Affordable Health Care Act that was passed by the Democratic Party when it controlled the Senate and the House (no small feat).
So what is the deal? Are Republicans really opposed to everyone carrying health insurance? I for one am not. Nor do I appreciate being tethered to a relatively low paying job that provides it as a benefit. (I really see the current Employer based system as a subsidy to Businesses big enough to be eligible for the discounts)
These arguments have been made in a previous thread. (http://www.infjs.com/forums/showthread.php?t=8923)
Frankly, I don't think most people who dislike the health care reform know what the hell they are talking about. But I want to give them an opportunity to prove otherwise....
-Should health care reform include requiring most Americans to buy health insurance? If someone uninsured ends up sick and in the emergency room, then the cost is spread out to everyone else anyways, so why is this a bad option? We have mandatory car insurance and that seems to work out fine. And a benefit is that the market will have millions of new customers. How would you make health care reform work if you didn't require everyone to buy insurance?......... .
Would Madison see protection against Cholera as promoting "general welfare" or providing for "the common defense"? I see diseases and environmental deterioration as enemies of the people. Ones that we may not be able to combat entirely but where we can we should. In the instance of Health Insurance, it has been made clear to me that an under funded system, morally obliged to provide care for the masses is untenable. Before Medicare, retirees who could not afford medical attention got it pro-bono or went without. Doctors felt morally obliged to assist them without payment. In our present (pre reform) situation, hospitals have a moral (and legal) obligation to provide treatment to the injured and ill that present themselves, often without payment. How is this tenable? Taxing those who refuse to carry carry medical insurance is a concept that Madison, in his day, would not be able to appreciate.
.............................. That the founders could not conceive of particular details or imagine future technological advances doesn't alter the aims of republican government. What makes the founders' experiment so unique is that the American regime is founded on the idea that a just government's premier goal is the preservation of its people's liberties and safety; therefore, no matter what new occurrences arise, these sacred things ought always to be protected.
Today we see the word "safety" or "general welfare" and assume that the federal government is entitled to extend its authority to all aspects of human life that come under one threat or another; which is why I've made the comment here before that the progressives' true aim is the elimination of hardship in toto. Because all hardship represents a threat to a life of absolute peace.
But contrary to your conclusion, Madison, for example, was very aware of the potential for massive federal interference. Indeed in his Republican Manifesto he lectures those who would use the terms "common defense" and "general welfare" to extend the federal government's authority beyond its constitutional bounds:
In other words, What is the point of enumerating powers to a government of limited authority when we take the phrases "general welfare" and "common defense" to be a grant to unrestrained government interference?