So says Rick Ungar in an intriguing post on his Forbes magazine blog, The Policy Page:
“The ink was barely dry on the PPACA when the first of many lawsuits to block the mandated health insurance provisions of the law was filed in a Florida District Court.
The pleadings, in part, read –
The Constitution nowhere authorizes the United States to mandate, either directly or under threat of penalty, that all citizens and legal residents have qualifying health care coverage.
State of Florida, et al. vs. HHS
It turns out, the Founding Fathers would beg to disagree.
In July of 1798, Congress passed – and President John Adams signed – “An Act for the Relief of Sick and Disabled Seamen.” The law authorized the creation of a government operated marine hospital service and mandated that privately employed sailors be required to purchase health care insurance.”
If you didn’t click that link to read the Act, hit the jump to read a copy the legislation, “An Act for the Relief of Sick and Disabled Seamen.”
[via The Young Turks]
The last campaign had tested his self-control. The eighteen-hour days, the frenetic travel, the bad food, the loss of autonomy, and the silly expectations imposed on him. The ersatz patriotism. The feigned conviviality with strangers who asked him outlandish questions. suffering the predictable whining of reporters who swooned to his message of change but were themselves averse to change. You dropped two points in a poll or said something obviously true but too blunt for ears trained to detect danger in honesty and they were at your throat. People crowding you every waking minute. Take a few days to recharge or a couple of hours to shoot some hoops or take your wife out, and you’re cocky or lackadaisical.
But he had kept it together, mostly. In private, he could become cross when mistakes occurred or when assurances proved false or when pressed to conform to campaign orthodoxies he thought stupid. But staff who had experienced his displeasure marveled at his ability to appear unbothered and focused in public. He didn’t overreact to unexpected setbacks. He never acted impulsively when surprised. Never let his instincts, which were as insistent as any politician’s, overcome his reason. Never seemed to give a [expletive] when reporters or griping party insiders were concerned he wasn’t hustling enough, responding to attacks quickly enough, worrying enough. He never appeared anxious over the outcome or desperate for the office. He told his story. He was different and he would make the stupid, maddening business of Washington politics different.
[Click the ‘more…’ or ‘continue reading’ links below link to read the rest of the excerpt, courtesy NYT]
Related:
Obama inspired book is political science fiction. [Toronto Star]
Previously on The Kitchen:
Keith Olbermann Abruptly Announces He’s Leaving MSNBC!
[via The Daily Caller]
Read more:
– ‘Liberation caravan’ reaches Tunis. [Al Jazeera]
– Tunisian uprising gets second wind with more protests. [The Hindu]
– Tunisian protests continue call for government cleansing [CTV.ca]
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