By Alan
Caruba
If you
type in “Obamacare” on Wikipedia you will discover 25,500,000 links. That’s a
lot of news coverage and related commentary about the Affordable Care Act. Most
of it is negative. The more people have learned about it, the less they like it
and, if we had a Congress that could or would do anything about it, it would
have been repealed by now.
A March 28
Associated Press poll revealed that only 26% of Americans support Obamacare, a
point less than December 2013 and January 2014.
The
Republicans in the House of Representatives have voted more than 60 times to
repeal or dismantle Obamacare. The Senate, namely Harry Reid its Majority
Leader, has killed all efforts to address what is clearly a national
catastrophe. When passed in 2009, not one Republican member of Congress voted
for it. When it was passed, then Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, famously
said they had to pass the 2,700 page act in order to find out what was in it.
In 2010,
voters gave power in the House to Republicans, but the Senate remained under
Democrat control. The fact that Barack Obama, when campaigning to become
President in 2008 and thereafter lied repeatedly to Americans about it has
tarnished his reputation and his approval ratings. Since then he has altered
the law unilaterally despite the fact that he utterly lacks any constitutional
right to do so.
In
February the Heritage Foundation’s legal experts put together a list of seven
illegal actions by the President that included delaying Obamacare’s employer
mandate, giving Congress and their staffs special taxpayer-funded subsidies,
preventing layoff notices from going out just days before the 2012 election, as
well as non-Obamacare actions that included gutting the work requirement from
welfare reform, stonewalling an application for storing nuclear waste at Yucca
Mountain, and making “recess” appointments when the Senate was still legally in
session.
The first
element of the Obamacare catastrophe is an utterly lawless President who
Congress has done little to restrain and nothing to impeach.
Another
element of the Obamacare catastrophe has been the failure of the mainstream
media to address the impact the law has had on America. On March 26, the Media
Research Center reported that “They’re just burying the story. They aren’t in
denial. They know the truth. They’re just choosing to ignore it. They are
pretending there are no broken promises about keeping your insurance plan, or
keeping your doctor, or lowering your premium by $2,500 a year.”
An
analysis by the Center of the three network evening news broadcasts in 2014
“found only 12 stories on three networks in almost three months.” For example,
“NBC Nightly News” broadcast only one story on Obamacare and that was on January
1 when Lester Holt called it “a new era in health care in this country.” ABC
“World News” provided only six minutes and 58 seconds on Obamacare and “CBS
Evening News” managed to provide only 19 minutes and 17 seconds over the course
of three months.
“None of
the networks,” said the Center’s analysis, “dared to report the ongoing
opposition of the American people to Obamacare in 2014, even when they were the
ones doing the polling.”
Sen. John Thune, (R-SD) posted an article from the Washington Free Beacon on his website,
“Fourth Anniversary of Obamacare Brings Billions in Costs to Economy” that
cited a report by the American Action Forum that concluded that “From a
regulatory perspective, the law has imposed more than $27.2 billion in total
private sector costs, $8 billion in unfunded state burdens, and more than 159
million paperwork hours on local government and affected entities.”
Sen. Thune
said, that “Four years after Obamacare became the law of the land, millions of
Americans have little but canceled policies, fewer choices, and skyrocketing
costs to show for it. From seniors to young adults, to middle-class families,
and small businesses, Obamacare has been to be an equal opportunity
offender…people living under this law are acutely aware of the harm Obamacare
is causing in their lives.”
I have
held back from writing about Obamacare because so many others are doing so, but
it is impossible to hold back from declaring it the worst law ever passed by
Congress and to urge readers to go to the polls in the November midterm
elections and remove from office those Democrats who voted for it and are
seeking reelection.
There is
little need for me to do an Obamacare analysis, but I can recommend one that
appeared in The Weekly Standard on February 17. Those who have been following
the history of lies and broken promises will find it a detailed study. Is
author, Christopher Conover, summed it up saying that “Obamacare has failed
miserably on nearly every major promise made about it. The processes used to enact
and implement the law have been tarnished by actions of questionable legality
and a pervasive lack of transparency.”
The
ultimate impact of Obamacare on the economy must wait for a calculation, but
the demand for its repeal must increase to a point where a future Congress must
respond to the voter’s demand. Without that, we are headed for an economic
collapse.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
3 comments:
Our representatives, all of our institutions (in this case, both Congress and the Supreme Court, not to mention the Executive branch, in the hands of a criminal coup d'etat), have failed us utterly. It is up to each of us, now, to help ourselves. Just say no (!) Don't argue, don't debate, don't let them dictate the field of "debate"; all of that is just a vain waste of time. They are criminals, and tyrants, period, and have no standing in the confrontation with our inalienable rights.
I'm afraid it's economic collapse whether or not Obamacare is cancelled.
The die is cast on that issue, the only question is not "if" the economy collapses, but "when."
Today, tomorrow, or that day after tomorrow, as the day of soft economic landings are way past tense.
Yep, it is indeed a new era in American healthcare. Not a good one, mind you, but new.
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