Night Strike wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:Nice try at sideswiping points I actually made....
I said that the bill was a compromise passed by congress and if its rejected, the impact will be disasterous on us all. I also said that providing healthcare for the people falls under the "common welfare" clause of the constitution.
"Common welfare" does not mean "specific welfare", and even if it did, "common welfare" is in the Preamble to the Constitution, not the actual policy portion. The Preamble is a statement of intent of what the policy will provide, not the actual force of law.
LOL... your twisting and turning to attempt to claim your arguments actually make sense is amazing. The real bottom line is that yes, the government's job IS to protect people and yes, people DO steer that. Unfortunately, those steering don't always know what is best -- which is part of why Republics tend to work better than real Democracies. (time lags in power changes mean changes are at least more gradual)
Night Strike wrote:And even if your argument is correct, how does Obamacare provide health care for all? It mandates that people buy a particular type of product, but it doesn't actually provide them with that care. Where in the Constitution does it say that the government can mandate that a person purchase a product?
WEll, let's see. People have to be vaccinated. You can call that forcing people to purchase a product (and yes, the healthcare act does allow for similar types of exceptions, plus a few of a more practical nature). People have to purchase a license/education to perform many jobs. People have to pay all sorts of taxes, many of which very much do go to support quite private businesses. In fact, if some big muckity muck wants to build a shopping mall where your house or farm lie, they can get it condemned. I can come up with more examples, but why waste my time when I know you are just going to ignore any real point I make? You have done that pretty much throughout this thread, after all.
The clauses of the government were intentionally broad. If the need is truly dire, they can do almost anything -- including forcing you to take up a gun and go shoot enemies in a war you don't support.