Saturday, October 06, 2012
|
HR3590 Service Members Home Ownership Act
disguised to appear that Obamacare originated
in the House when it didn't. Obamacare
violates Article I, Section 7.
Without realizing it, I suspect US Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts interjected a time-release poison pill into his Obamacare decision. Thanks to Chief Justice Roberts, The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional from every perspective and it needs a "redo." If the penalty is a tax as the majority ruled, Obamacare has to leap the Constitution's Article I, Section 7 Origination Clause hurdle to be a lawful exercise of Congressional authority.
The law as enacted by the 111th Congress is unconstitutional because Article I, Section 7 of the US Constitution requires that all revenue bills be initiated by the House of Representatives—because THE PEOPLE, not the States, constitutionally control the purse strings of America. That, by the way, is why Congressmen serve two year terms. Their term in office is short enough so that the people can get rid of the big spenders quickly for wasting taxpayer money. (The reason they don't is the subject for another day.) The Founding Fathers divided the authority of the House and Senate, giving specific separate powers to the House and the Senate or, better stated, to the States and to the People. The States, who in reality elect the President, are constitutionally, his "boss." He works for them, not the People.
The special power granted to the People by the Founding Fathers is the absolute control over government spending. All revenue bills must start in the House of Representatives, and all revenues addendums added by the Senate must be approved by the House. Now you understand why House Speaker John Boehner has been so tough on spending bills. The American people want Obama reined in. Boehner and the House Republicans are trying to do just that while the Senate, which wants to give Obama monetary free flow, is blaming Boehner and the House for refusing to cooperate with the White House—their excuse for failing to enact a budget since 2009. (This has been your Primer on Congress 101.)
READ MORE...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.