Originally posted by sgreger1
Originally posted by sgreger1
2. This could backfire easily, most particularly in states with very strained budgets, who are already cutting services. The politicians will have to find a way to justify these expensive court cases in the present economic environment, assuming this is something more than political grandstanding.
3. I wish them luck explaining how representatives legally chosen by the voters, as deemed in the Constitution, who then legislate on behalf of the voters who elected them, can somehow be demonstrated to be 'cramming law down the throats' of the citizens. It's not like we lack the numbers to prove the black hole in the federal budget (going back for years) with respect to health care costs. It's not like we lack the enormous number of medical bankruptcy cases to prove the problem the law is attempting to address. It's not like we lack the numbers to demonstrate the exceedingly high cost of health care US citizens pay, and the little return we receive for it, as can be shown by statistics in comparison to other countries.
Comment