YET AGAIN, THE TAXATION IS NOT NEW POWER.
Virtually every single legal scholar agrees that all courts from the bottom up would have upheld the law if Congress had explicitly called it a tax.
Roberts did not expand government at all with the decision, actually dramatically restricting it and daring people to elect those to will repeal the bill when he wrote in his opinion that it is the job of the people to fix policy abuses by Congress, not the court.
LOCKING YOUR CAPS WON'T MAKE THIS A GOOD DECISION, AND IT DOESN'T IMPROVE YOUR "ARGUMENT."
And throw-away dicta about the Commerce Clause will have no bearing on any future decision.
Virtually every legal scholar, except that is, for the actual conservatives on the Court who thoroughly destroyed the claim that the mandate was a tax. Scalia, Thomas, Kennedy and Alito all held that the mandate was NOT a tax. They cited four precedent cases in which the court rejected claims that a penalty could be imposed under the taxation authority of Congress. And they said -- in no uncertain terms: "This Court HAS NEVER BEFORE RULED THAT A PENALTY COULD BE REGARDED AS A TAX."
Now please stop apologizing for the Majority. You're "analysis" is as embarrassing as their opinion.