Scalia sets precedent for insurance mandate
The right wing's inconsistencies on limited government do nothing but create precedent for more and more and government regulation in the market.
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2010/mar/29/reform-backers-cite-court-ruling/
WASHINGTON – Defenders of the newly enacted national health care law and its rule that all Americans get health insurance have a powerful and recent Supreme Court precedent on their side, a 2005 ruling that upheld federal restrictions on home-grown marijuana in California.
At issue in that case, like the coming challenge to the health care mandate, was the reach of the federal government’s power.
Conservative Justices Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy joined a 6-3 ruling that said Congress could regulate marijuana that was neither bought or sold on the market but rather grown at home legally for sick patients. They said the Constitution gave Congress nearly unlimited power to regulate the marketplace as part of its authority “to regulate commerce.” Even “non-economic local activity” can come under federal regulation if it is “a necessary part of a more general regulation of interstate commerce,” Scalia wrote.
The right wing's inconsistencies on limited government do nothing but create precedent for more and more and government regulation in the market.
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2010/mar/29/reform-backers-cite-court-ruling/
WASHINGTON – Defenders of the newly enacted national health care law and its rule that all Americans get health insurance have a powerful and recent Supreme Court precedent on their side, a 2005 ruling that upheld federal restrictions on home-grown marijuana in California.
At issue in that case, like the coming challenge to the health care mandate, was the reach of the federal government’s power.
Conservative Justices Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy joined a 6-3 ruling that said Congress could regulate marijuana that was neither bought or sold on the market but rather grown at home legally for sick patients. They said the Constitution gave Congress nearly unlimited power to regulate the marketplace as part of its authority “to regulate commerce.” Even “non-economic local activity” can come under federal regulation if it is “a necessary part of a more general regulation of interstate commerce,” Scalia wrote.
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