Saturday, March 6, 2010

ObamaCare Issues and Options

You knew some religious sects are exempt from the current healthcare bill, right? What's your exemption?

Political Cartoons by Eric Allie

Onward, He Said, Regardless – Charles Krauthammer

Congress Exempts Amish From Health Care Bill

Published 1, January 18, 2010
There is an interesting controversy brewing over the current version of the health care bill in which Amish families are exempted from the mandatory coverage. Other groups may also receive exemptions.
For some Americans who do not want to pay for health insurance (but face a fine under the law), the exemptions are likely to trigger challenges. Why should an Amish person be allowed exemption, but not someone with political or philosophical opposition to the insurance?

The Amish do use medical facilities and regular doctors, but they pay in cash. They believe that such care is the primary responsibility of their church.

The question is why religious conscientious objectors are given exemptions but not secular conscientious objectors. There are plenty of people who have profound objections to this plan that are not religious based. Is it far to allow only faith-based objectors to get exemptions so that some Christians can apply but not Cato members?
Congress can probably prevail in such distinctions (much like conscientious objectors to the draft), but it raises in my view a legitimate question of fairness.

http://jonathanturley.org/2010/01/18/congress-exempt-amish-from-hea...

The Healthcare Bill and Its Troubling "Religious Conscience" Exemption

By MARCI A. HAMILTON
Thursday, August 6, 2009

When it comes to H.R. 3200 -- the over-1000-page-long bill to overhaul the American health care system -- there is no question that the devil is in the details. While Americans are trying to absorb the positions taken by each party regarding the big picture issues, such as how "universal" is "universal," and whether it is appropriate to limit care for the elderly, they are being told very little about the interest group deals that have been included in the bill.

The one that most troubles me, setting aside the financial and tax ramifications of the whole structure, is the exemption for "religious conscience" at Part VII, Subpart A, Sec. 59B(c)(5) (on pages 170-171 of the House Draft). Including such an exemption in the bill is both unconstitutional and dangerous for children in faith-healing homes.
A Special Exemption that Unconstitutionally Favors Only Established Religions Such as Christian Science.

The Subpart begins with a requirement that a tax be imposed on any individual who does not satisfy the requirements of the bill to obtain medical coverage. The exemption states, however, that this tax "shall not apply to any individual (and any child residing with such individual) for any period if such individual has in effect an exemption which certifies that such individual is a member of a recognized religious sect or division . . . and an adherent of established tenets or teachings of such sect or division. . . ."

First, it is not consistent with the First Amendment to grant exemptions solely to "a recognized religious sect" with "established tenets or teachings." If the government can tolerate a religious exemption, then it must do so evenhandedly among religious believers with the same beliefs. This is sheer favoritism for a certain class of religions, or even for one religion.

Although the language is somewhat opaque, there is little question that the Christian Science Church's lobbyists are responsible for this provision. As Malcolm Maclachlan reported in The Capitol Weekly, according to one of the Church's lobbyists, the Church is lobbying across the country to ensure that medical care exemptions based on religion are included in health care reform bills. They succeeded in introducing the similar exemptions in parallel California bills, which ultimately did not pass.

In a previous column, I pointed out how the Church had obtained funds under the Medicare program to cover the costs of faith healers and hospice-like centers where no medical care was provided. Yes, Medicare funds are now being used to cover faith-healing in circumstances where medical care is being rejected. The first version of that law clearly identified Christian Scientists as the recipients of that federal funding. When that aspect of the law became publicly known, however, Congress amended the law to make it more opaque, even though its wording was tailor-made for Christian Scientists. The few constitutional challenges to the Medicare system's payment of religious practice have been rejected in the lower appellate courts, despite the obvious impropriety of Congress' favoritism shown toward a single church and belief system and of funding non-medical care with funds dedicated to medical care.

The Provision Puts Children In Serious Peril – Including Peril of Death
A second important problem with the exemption – and one that is of grave importance – is that it puts children in danger. Health care reform is an opportunity for the United States to turn back the tide on the ability of religious parents to let their children perish or become disabled. The common law rule is that a parent is required to provide a child with adequate medical care, and that rule should be followed. It is beyond disappointing that in 2009, in a federal bill, this basic need of children has been traded away to lobbyists.
Yet the federal government is not alone in ignoring the common law rule. In a significant minority of states, there are faith-healing exemptions from the state's medical neglect laws. In these states, if a child does not receive medical treatment because a parent is a drug addict, then that parent is liable, usually both criminally and civilly. But in a home where the reason for the failure to treat is religious belief, states give the parents a pass on either civil or criminal liability, or on both. These exemptions were secured by the Christian Science Church, and they are the best argument against religious exemptions that exists, for the stakes could not be higher, nor the consequence of the exemption more baleful.

Some readers might discount the likelihood that a faith-healing parent will really watch his or her child die an agonizing death without obtaining help. But it does happen. Consider the recent Neumann jury verdict in Wisconsin, where the parents prayed over their 11-year-old daughter, Madeline, but offered no medical treatment for her diabetes. The result: Madeline died of a completely treatable condition. Were her parents outliers? Not at all: They were accompanied in prayer by fellow believers. No one called 911 until Madeline stopped breathing. Ultimately, a criminal jury found her father guilty, but a guilty verdict cannot bring back a young life.
While adults can legally choose to forego medical treatment and, in effect, choose death, parents may not legally choose death for their children (ergo, the medical neglect laws). The provision of the federal health care bill I have described above, however, implies that it is appropriate that a child receive no medical care at all, so long as the child lives with a parent who believes in faith over medical treatment. That rule goes directly against the common law duty owed by parents to their children, to provide adequate treatment.

Such an exemption also means that the state will have to pay for the treatment of these children. In essence, if the bill is passed with the exemption intact, faith-healing parents would be able to avoid the tax imposed on every other underinsured adult, and then, when their children need medical attention, will still be able to expect the state to pay for their care. The federal government, after all, is exempting them from obtaining the health insurance that presumably will cover everyone else. The defense that they should not have to pay general taxes that contradict their religious beliefs was rejected in 1982, in United States v. Lee, when the Supreme Court held that the Amish must pay Social Security taxes for their employees just as every other employer does, despite their religious objections.

Amid The Controversy Over the Healthcare Bill, We Cannot Forget Children's Lives Are Put in Peril By the Exemption.

The sad truth is that members of Congress either do not know this religious-exemption provision exists within the mammoth health care bill, or else they are willing to pander to a small religious group at the expense of children's well-being.

http://writ.news.findlaw.com/hamilton/20090806.html

Either way, this grave and important issue is a very good reminder that no one should ever assume that a piece of legislation actually serves the ends at which it is purportedly aimed. It is irrational to believe that permitting faith-healing parents to forego otherwise mandatory medical insurance will contribute to better health in the United States.

Critical Condition

The Reconciliation Diversion [Jeffrey H. Anderson] - March 04, 2010

Whether intentionally or not, the Obama administration has succeeded in distracting many Americans from the main line of attack. At this point, "reconciliation" is but a diversion. The House is the place under assault. And any and all available weaponry, including federal judgeships for one's family, is being brought to bear in the attack.

And this is true… Reconciliation is only a tool for amendments.

Click link for more information: http://healthcare.nationalreview.com/

Savage": Using Exemptions to Win

Please pass this along to all you know. I was listening to Michael Savage tonight. He stated that this health care bill will exempt Christian Scientist and Amish from being subject to health care due to religious freedom. He was talking about how we should all file lawsuits against the government for religious reasons. Quoting from http://www.michaelsavage.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=10406

"SO HERE’S MY SUGGESTION: IF THEY CAN MAKE EXCEPTIONS FOR THESE RELIGIOUS GROUPS, LET’S FIND OTHER RELIGIOUS GROUPS THAT THEY’LL HAVE TO FIND EXCEPTIONS FOR UNTIL THERE ARE SO MANY PEOPLE EXEMPTED FROM THE SYSTEM, THAT THEY WON’T POSSIBLY BE ABLE TO PAY FOR IT. LET’S THINK ABOUT THE POSSIBILITIES:"

Savage's take is to find some obstacle as it relates to different religious backgrounds that could possible exempt us from this Obamacare. I could not listen to the whole show as I was home and at 9 pm tonight i needed to make dinner, but he was going to take calls as to how we could exempt ourselves based on religious basis. So let's all put our thinking caps, think outside the box and protest and refuse based on religious beliefs. As a network, we can group together by religious types and file class action suits. I say it is worth a shot.

At this point ObamaCare is still short of votes. If they do manage to pass it, the Supreme Court reviews based on unconstitutionality will not be far behind. But that is a very long process and much of the pre-program billing of the taxpayers and hiring of more unnecessary gov’t workers for this program will have started and be costly and then difficult to reverse. In 2012, once Obama is out of office, much of the ObamaCare bill and the 2/3 of related legislation that has already been passed can be over-turned. But in the meantime, we need to do our homework and find and fight all the negative legislation.

But in the meantime, Michael Savage’s exemption program is worth a shot!~

Please keep fighting… contact your own representative and Senators plus the Blue Dogs, fence-sitters, and those that are still wavering. At this moment, nobody believes Pelosi has the votes, no matter what method they use.

75% of the American People do not want this bill…. ObamaCare of any type, yet he is plodding on.

Senators from your State. or Congress.org - Elected Officials

1-202-224-3121- Congressional Switchboard

1-202-225-3121- Congressional Switchboard

(202) 225-0100 - Speaker of the House Pelosi

Related:

2/3 of the HC Bill Passed Already! Hidden in the Stimulus Package that No One in Congress Read…

When There is More Sh_t Than Shinola… It Is Time To Grab a Shovel

John McCain Proposes Natural Supplement Regulation Bill

Doctors Challenging Government Health Care and the AMA

Obama Urges Dems: Pass My Health Bill to Save My Presidency

Read The Full Article and Please Sign Petition

No comments: