Saturday, June 30, 2012

Chief Justice Roberts Wouldn't Eat Their Brocolli

Chief Justice Roberts gave the four Democrats on the Supreme Court the crucial fifth vote to keep Obamacare from being unconstitutional in NFIB v. Sebelius

And yet you would have to call it a fractured majority:
"Justice Ginsburg, with whom Justice Sotomayor joins, and with whom Justice Breyer and Justice Kagan join as to Parts I, II, III, and IV, concurring in part, concurring in the judgment in part, and dissenting in part."
Ginsburg and company had a strange way of thanking the Chief Justice for his vote, calling him rigid, crabbed, warranting disapprobation, homeless, plowing, redolent, underwhelming, unpausing, disserving, disquieting, puzzling, unsatisfying, yet mightily striving, short on substance, and relying on newly minted doctrines, novel constraints, inapt analogies, spurious complaints, formalistic distinctions, parading broccoli horribles, hypothetical and unreal possibilities, and specious logic.
"According to The Chief Justice, the Commerce Clause does not permit that preservation. This rigid reading of the Clause makes scant sense and is stunningly retrogressive."
"The Chief Justice's crabbed reading of the Commerce Clause harks back to the era in which the Court routinely thwarted Congress' efforts to regulate the national economy in the interest of those who labor to sustain it."
"The Chief Justice relies on a newly minted constitutional doctrine."
"The Chief Justice's novel constraint on Congress' commerce power gains no force from our precedent and for that reason alone warrants disapprobation."
"The Chief Justice draws an analogy to the car market. An individual 'is not "active in the car market,"' the Chief Justice observes, simply because he or she may someday buy a car. The analogy is inapt."
"The Chief Justice also calls the minimum coverage provision an illegitimate effort to make young, healthy individuals subsidize insurance premiums paid by the less hale and hardy. This complaint, too, is spurious."
"The Chief Justice's limitation of the commerce power to the regulation of those actively engaged in commerce finds no home in the text of the Constitution or our decisions."
"The Chief Justice plows ahead with his formalistic distinction between those who are 'active in commerce,' and those who are not."
"At bottom, The Chief Justice's and the joint dissenters' 'view that an individual cannot be subject to Commerce Clause regulation absent voluntary, affirmative acts that enter him or her into, or affect, the interstate market expresses a concern for individual liberty that [is] more redolent of Due Process Clause arguments.'"
"As an example of the type of regulation he fears, The Chief Justice cites a Government mandate to purchase green vegetables. One could call this concern 'the broccoli horrible.'"
"Yet no one would offer the 'hypothetical and unreal possibilit[y],' of a vegetarian state as a credible reason to deny Congress the authority ever to ban the possession and sale of goods. The Chief Justice accepts just such specious logic when he cites the broccoli horrible as a reason to deny Congress the power to pass the individual mandate."
"The Chief Justice's argument is short on substance."
"The Chief Justice's reliance on cases in which this Court has affirmed Congress' 'broad authority to enact federal legislation' under the Necessary and Proper Clause is underwhelming.
"Nor does The Chief Justice pause to explain why the power to direct either the purchase of health insurance or, alternatively, the payment of a penalty collectible as a tax is more far-reaching than other implied powers this Court has found meet under the Necessary and Proper Clause."
"In failing to explain why the individual mandate threatens our constitutional order, The Chief Justice disserves future courts."
"In the early 20th century, this Court regularly struck down economic regulation enacted by the peoples' representatives in both the States and the Federal Government. The Chief Justice's Commerce Clause opinion, and even more so the joint dissenters' reasoning bear a disquieting resemblance to those long-overruled decisions."
"Ultimately, the Court upholds the individual mandate as a proper exercise of Congress' power to tax and spend “for the . . . general Welfare of the United States.” I concur in that determination, which makes The Chief Justice's Commerce Clause essay all the more puzzling. Why should The Chief Justice strive so mightily to hem in Congress' capacity to meet the new problems arising constantly in our ever-developing modern economy? I find no satisfying response to that question in his opinion."
Really, it reads like the Democratic Justices were downright angry to get Chief Justice Roberts's vote upholding Obamacare. And to what did the Chief Justice owe this hysterical harangue of the hinnies? He ate the meat and potatoes of their argument but wouldn't eat their broccoli.

Here's how you write a concurrence:
"The discussion of the commerce clause in the Chief Justice's opinion and the dissenting opinions is not necessary to today's decision upholding the ACA individual mandate under the taxing power. It is mere dicta unless the Court finds a case for these new ideas of what constitutes commerce to apply."
Now, if I'd have been the Chief Justice, I would have highlighted the phrases in the circulation draft, dropped by Justice Ginsburg's office, and plopped the thing on her desk with the comment, "I thought you wanted my vote." Then I would have walked out.

We now have a very interesting legal situation developing as many Democrats continue to maintain that the individual mandate is not a tax. Is that grounds to go back to the Supreme Court for a rehearing?

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Dread Pirate Roberts Joins the Tax and Spend Marauders

When you are right, you are right:
"My prediction is that the individual mandate is ruled constitutional as a tax but not as an affirmative requirement that you must go out and buy health insurance."
Chief Justice John Roberts broke ranks with his fellow Republicans to join the Democrats on the U.S. Supreme Court in upholding the ObamaCare individual mandate under the power of Congress to tax.

States who don't want to participate in the Medicaid expansion necessary to fully achieve Obamacare's expanded coverage targets will face with the hard choice of turning down what Justice Elana Kagan called "a boatload of money to take and spend."

Remember, the damsel in distress only gets rescued at the end of the movie, and only if she wants to be rescued.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Obama Second to None as Romney Closes Gap

The last presidential primary was held Utah yesterday. All through the early months of the Republican primaries we heard about the enthusiasm gap, the lack of enthusiasm among Republican voters for frontrunner Mitt Romney.

That enthusiasm gap has disappeared with Romney closing out with more primary votes than John McCain in 2008 and second-highest primary vote total among Republican nominees going all the way back to Ronald Reagan.

Republican Year Votes
Mitt Romney 2012 9,685,780
John McCain 2008 9,615,533
George W. Bush 2004 7,853,863
George W. Bush 2000 12,034,676
Bob Dole 1996 9,024,742
George H.W. Bush 1992 9,199,463
George H.W. Bush 1988 8,253,512
Ronald Reagan 1984 6,484,987
Ronald Reagan 1980 7,709,793

Meanwhile, President Barack Obama has been running in Democratic primaries of his own. These primaries lacked a serious challenger to be sure, but as a show of support for the President, the results exhibit a serious lack of enthusiasm, not so much an enthusiasm gap as an enthusiasm chasm.

Democrat Year Votes
Barack Obama 2012 6,158,064
Barack Obama 2008 17,584,692
John Kerry 2004 9,930,497
Al Gore 2000 10,626,568
Bill Clinton 1996 9,706,802
Bill Clinton 1992 10,482,411
Michael Dukakis 1988 9,898,750
Walter Mondale 1984 6,952,912
Jimmy Carter 1980 10,043,016

Only 35% of Obama's primary voters from 2008 came out for him again in 2012. He got the least primary votes of any Democratic nominee since Jimmy Carter in 1980. In fact, less than any Democratic or Republican nominee since 1980.

Let's compare the 2012 Barack Obama primary vote to some past second-place primary finishers. Yes, he beats John McCain's 2000 primary total. But he trails Hillary Clinton (2008), Ted Kennedy (1980), and even Jesse Jackson (1988).

Second Place Year Votes
Barack Obama 2012 6,158,064
Hillary Clinton 2008 17,857,501
John McCain 2000 6,061,332
Jesse Jackson 1988 6,788,991
Ted Kennedy 1980 7,381,693

What conclusion to take from so many Democratic voters sitting out of this historic poor vote showing? Six million votes is a second place finish. Barack Obama lost the 2012 primaries to None of the Above.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Nancy Pelosi and Her Inspiring Math Skiils

I got an email from Barack today:
"Donate $3 or more right now to elect a Democratic majority in Congress."
Then Nancy Pelosi jumps in:
"Your response to President Obama's message today has been inspiring! If you donate today, my Democratic colleagues and I will triple-match your gift. Donate $3 or more."
Triple-match? So if I give $3 then Nancy will put up $9, right? Not so fast, better read the fine print:
"If you contribute today, a group of committed Democrats will match your gift 2-to-1, tripling your impact."
That's only a $6 match. That ain't no triple match. Where did you learn to multiply, Nancy?

And what happened to you and your colleagues, Nancy? You downgraded that to "committed Democrats" which of course could very well be other ordinarily people giving money today in response to these emails.

But I am heartened, Nancy, that you find my response to these email messages inspiring.

Barack Did All the Right Things on First Date with Michelle



How the first date between Barack Obama and Michelle Robinson went down:

(1) Browse through the Art Institute of Chicago
(2) Lunch by the courtyard fountain at the Art Institute
(3) Stroll down Michigan Avenue
(4) Catch Spike Lee's new movie Do the Right Thing

Do the Right Thing does seem an improbable date movie, even for an African-American couple, but perhaps they had other things on their minds.

I had seen Spike Lee's first big splash, She's Gotta Have It. That was an essentially uplifting movie. Do the Right Thing was a fatalistic turn.

Mookie, Spike Lee's character in Do the Right Thing is going to be back this summer for a cameo in a new Spike Lee movie, Red Hook Summer. In it a young boy from middle-class Atlanta is sent to spend the summer in the Brooklyn housing projects with his religious grandfather.



That doesn't look very promising as a date movie either, but if in 20 years you can be President and your future spouse can be First Husband, well, you'd better talk your would-be boyfriend into taking you.

Spike Lee soured on America when he got to Hollywood. When Do the Right Thing lost the Best Picture Oscar to Driving Miss Daisy that broke his heart. Hollywood was simply more comfortable with the well-off Jewish woman and her black chauffeur.

It also didn't help when his engrossing film Malcom X also got overlooked at the Oscars with Denzel Washington losing the Best Actor award to Al Pacino for the cute but forgettable Scent of a Woman.

Spike Lee's movies have never broken the magical $100 million domestic box office mark so he's back to directing independent films, just like Mookie is back delivering pizzas. If it's good pizza, that's a respectable calling. Of course, Mookie might have gone into business with Vito when Sal retired and Pino lit out for the suburbs, but Sal's place burned down.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

George Zimmerman and the Right to Remain Silent

This video of George Zimmerman reenacting the Trayvon Martin shooting for police investigators back in February is worth watching.



Let's posit Zimmerman's story is true. Did he commit a crime? Let's consider how Trayvon Martin might tell the same story, if he were alive to tell it.

Martin was walking home alone from a convenience store through a new subdivision and a truck driven by a lone male, George Zimmerman, passed him. The truck parked ahead of him and Martin walked past it. The truck resumed following him, even after Martin turned down another street.

Martin stopped and turned back and walked around the truck to see who was following him, then resumed his route leaving the street and going down a sidewalk between rows of homes. Zimmerman got out of his truck and tried to follow him.

At that point, Martin confronted Zimmerman and asked the man who had been following him, "Do you have a problem?"

Zimmerman, who had unknown to Martin gone so far as to call police about his suspicions of Martin being a potential burglar, did not explain himself or ask Martin to explain himself. He lied and said "No, I don't have a problem."

At that point, Martin hit the man who had been following him, knocked him down, and ground his head into the pavement. A neighbor, in response to Zimmerman's cries for help, came out the back of his house, and said he was calling 911. All Martin had to do was hold Zimmerman down and wait for police to arrive.

Instead, Zimmerman reached up, pulling his jacket up over his gun holster. That put Martin in fear for his life and both Zimmerman and Martin grabbed for the gun. Zimmerman was able to draw it and, rather than wait with gun drawn for the police to arrive, fired the shot that killed Martin.

Now, of course, Zimmerman may not be fully telling the truth. But let's say he is. Did he have the right to put Martin in that situation and then shoot him?

It's not enough, I think, for Zimmerman to say that Martin threw the first punch. Martin was being followed by an armed man for no apparent reason. It's also not enough, as Zimmerman expresses, that no one came to Zimmerman's immediate assistance in response to his shouts for help.

I have some sympathy for George Zimmerman. The way I see it, he does not deserve the death penalty or life in prison. Nor did he deserve to have his brains beat in or to be shot and killed by his own gun. But he did create an ambiguous and dangerous situation, and he bears most of the responsibility for that.

Now here's the rub. A lot of what we know comes from what George Zimmerman has told the police. He had the right to remain silent, but he did not use it. If he had not told his self-defense story, he would almost certainly have been charged at the time of the shooting. He came very close to talking his way out of facing any criminal charges. While it may be that this taped reenactment will be used against him, he does come across as cooperative and truthful, so it seems more likely it may instead help him win acquittal.

That would go against everything every defense lawyer has ever been taught or ever tried to tell their client and against every cop show that has ever been on television.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Rufus Raffles Last Supper with Barack and Michelle

Rufus Gifford, the National Finance Director of Obama for America, has a new twist on the Dinner with Barack V Sweepstakes:
When the President says he's bringing the First Lady as his date to the next Dinner with Barack, you pull up another chair.

This doesn't happen very often -- in fact, a dinner like this has only happened once before, and it could very well be the last one on this campaign.

This is your shot. We'll be flying out three supporters and their guests for dinner with the Obamas.

Donate $150 or whatever you can today, and it can be you -- you'll be automatically entered to win:

https://donate.barackobama.com/Dinner-with-the-Obamas

Thanks,

Rufus
Well, who wouldn't buy raffle tickets to the last supper?

I won't, after reading the fine print:
Sponsor may, at its option, conduct a background check on each potential winner. Sponsor reserves the right to disqualify any potential winner from receiving any prize based on such background check if Sponsor determines, in its sole discretion that awarding any prize to such potential winner could result in a safety or security risk to any person or persons or could result in the disruption of any event associated with the Promotion.
I'm pretty sure the risk of my asking the question, "Are you a socialist?" would be considered disruptive. Yet I wonder if they would let in someone from Occupy Wall Street?

Maybe it's just the capitalist in me but I seem to remember that just last week Julianna Smoot was raffling dinner with the President for $135. Add Michelle and its $150. That's $135 for the President, plus just $15 more for the First Lady. She should sue the campaign under the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act.