Jim Raynor wrote:OK, I admit that I'm not the most well-informed on this subject, but does upholding the law as a "tax" make any tangible difference for people? Did it change anything in the law that didn't exist yesterday? Because within minutes of the announcement, the FOX News crew was all but openly scheming to use the word "tax" as a rhetorical weapon. Seems like a bunch of semantics to me, but it's already having an effect. I work with a few conservatives, and they quickly fell in line with FOX and started bitching about Obama "raising our taxes."
Well, there is the tax argument. There is also the fact that it was
not upheld on the Interstate Commerce Clause*, but under the taxation - so this represents another limit on the ability of Congress to use Article 1 Section 8 Clause 3 to expand federal authority. Trust me, "He raised taxes!" will be used in campaigns going forward.
One other thing to keep in mind is the medicare ruling - from what I've read (and I haven't read the entire ruling yet - that's planned for tomorrow) Congress can't place new strings on old money, which limits their ability to influence the states.
*I'll check, but it looks like it was 9-0 in this respect.
Right now, this doesn't change anything for the average person - but it does change the potential landscape moving forward, and only time will tell us how.
"I believe in the future. It is wonderful because it stands on what has been achieved." - Sergei Korolev