Posted on 10/31/2014 6:42:55 PM PDT by right-wing agnostic
If youre trying to convince the Supreme Court not to grant certiorari in a high-profile case, I suspect that publishing an op-ed in the Washington Post on the day the Court is scheduled to consider the petition is not the best strategy. I also suspect that it would be a good idea to ensure than such op-ed not include blatant falsehoods. It would be one thing for such an op-ed for forcefully advocate a given perspective on a contested issue. Quite another for it to simply make stuff up. In this case, however, we see the latter.
Friday the Supreme Court is scheduled to consider the petition for certiorari in King v. Burwell. Fridays Post also features an op-ed defending the IRS rule authorizing tax credits for the purchase of health insurance in exchanges established by the federal government at issue in King and several other pending cases. The op-ed is authored by Senators Tom Harkin (D-IA) and Ron Wyden, and Representatives Sander M. Levin (D-Mich.), George Miller (D-Calif.) and Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.). As the accompanying byline notes, all five were heavily involved in the efforts to enacted health care reform and the eventual passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. So if anyone knows how the law was passed, it should be these gentlemen. That makes the substance of their essay all the more odd.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
Your only point is deliberate obfuscation. You are reversing dependencies, blithely dismissing the existence of the income tax and reversing Roberts own ruling in order to try to confuse people. I explained these issues clearly in the article. To claim that the ACA is not dependently linked to income tax liability is a bald-faced, obvious and arrogant lie and the technique of a crude shill.
You're a waste of my time.
Don't forget to wipe your mouth.
Absolutely false.
It’s so cute that you wish to portray yourself as a “great thinker”, but your basic premise is that a penalty is a tax.
Magically, somehow.
So, I will LAUGH at you.
Because it is quite amusing in a “aw, look at that child” kind of way.
The penalty in the ACA is not a tax, it is a penalty.
And no amount of gymnastics will make it magically a tax.
Roberts screwed up.
And no amount of wishful thinking by others will change that.
http://jeffduncan.house.gov/full-list-obamacare-tax-hikes
ObamaCare is a revenue bill which originated in the Senate. That's unconstitutional.
Making things up is what the Supreme Court is all about.
>> The good thing is it can be repealed the same way.
Yeah. Boehner will get right on that.
What Roberts ruled on was not a tax.
He invented it that “tax” to save Obamacare.
It was NOT in any way hidden brilliance on his part.
That some idiots believe such is amusing.
Oh look a tag-team shill who insults as a child would.
Especially in leaving out those pesky facts in order to get to the schoolyard taunts.
The details of the penalty versus tax discussion are, of course, in my linked analysis. And as they arise from the legal definitions of Title 26, as used long before Obamacare came along (as was pointed out by Roberts), they are not subject to argument, only application.
Which is why the Chief Justice invoked the jurisdictional definitions and limitations of the income tax, of course, and warned against misapplying that power of enforcement.
So that's what you're claiming to laugh at - that I'm pointing out that Roberts pointed out that Obamacare doesn't apply to most people.
But then, you're not really laughing. What you're really doing is flipping through shill NLP manuals trying to find words to scare soccer moms into not reading or understanding the ruling. Which is, of course, pretty pathetic. But when I watch you do your Muppet dance and realize that you actually believe your tactics are invisible, then it is I who laugh - for real.
Children, children everywhere, and all with loaded diapers.
"LOL, thanks for playing. Go have another glass of wine."
Thanks for playing!
That wasn't an insult, it was a response to another poster who was misrepresenting the legal issue. There were two possibilities - one, she was a paid shill disrupter deliberately lying, or two, she was drunk. Being a kind and compassionate person, I opted to believe she was drunk, rather than someone who had sold her soul to Satan.
Let me put that in perspective: I would never dream of calling you a drunk.
Thanks for playing.
It was an insult, don’t play stupid.
One of the major causes of tyranny is the Court's continuing failure to distinguish between things which are legitimate, and things that cannot be shown to be illegitimate. This distinction is important, since the benefits of the doubt, which should be afforded to those who endeavor in good faith to act legitimately, should not be extended to those who deliberately act in ways whose legitimacy is at best murky.
LOL, who's playing stupid?
Thank you, from the bottom of my heart. It's taken two full years for someone to point this out since my analysis of the Roberts decision.
The judiciary is playing a very deceitful game in America. They play all sorts of jurisdictional games with the citizens of this country, not just to throw people into jail who they actually have no authority over, but also to allow themselves to not admit what they are doing to the people to whom they are doing it.
It's a bad, bad situation. Since I've discovered it, I've endeavoured to expose its existence as carefully as I can so people can understand the reality of the problem. Which, of course, has meant dealing with a lot of shill spit. Nevertheless, it had to be done.
But there's nothing I can do about indifference, or worse, cowardice. I suppose in the great scheme of things, I've spoken the truth about the lie, and I'm glad for it. But I weep for an America which turns its back on the very mechanism of its enslavement. Such actions, historically, attract the wrath of God. And that doesn't mean terrorism. Far worse than terrorism is the loss of the American spirit, the pursuit of goodness, replaced by mocking cynicism and worldly materialism. There's no need for terrorists when Americans simply give up on the essential goodness of their country's founding ideals.
Americans have been given a special dispensation apart from all the other countries of the world - a government under the God-given rights of the People. To turn our backs on that staggeringly valuable gift is a sin so vast I literally don't know what God's response will be, except it won't be good. And it will be beyond the petty efforts of any person or group. Nobody believes in Divine Intervention anymore, so it must not be true... except AFAIK God doesn't give a damn about Facebook.
So you aren’t playing at being stupid?
You seriously believe that post 17 “have another glass of wine” wasn’t an insult?
Must be nice in your world.
And you sure got your nose out of joint wh n you got told to put down your bong!
Your huffy response “you’re a waste of my time!”
Lol, mayhaps you should lay off the coke, talisker.
Bye.
I'm not sure what can be done to undo all the rot, but I think it would help if people could realize that although:
You all DID notice how he saved us, didn't you?
*crickets*
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