Let the games begin

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U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Roberts said in his confirmation hearing that he’d be playing the role of an umpire, calling strikes and balls. As conservatives see it, Roberts must call balls and strikes as he sees it, not according to the whims of the crowd sitting on the bleachers. But out of nowhere he called a ball.

Essentially, he told voters, “If you don’t like the bums, throw them out of office!” He also crystallized that the U.S. Congress and President Obama lied that it isn’t a tax. But the core logic of Robert’s decision-employing judicial restraint-was a model of analytic clarity, according to some legal analysts. Others say he “bequeathed the country a monstrosity” that will “grow, fester, and metastasize”. I won’t turn apoplectic for the political toxicity or otherwise of the decision.

Perhaps Roberts came close to following the dissenting view but found respite, focusing on the authority of Congress to tax. His decision opens up 21 new taxes while leaving hollow hope for individual and religious freedom, the more difficult legal issues.

Retired Judge Andrew Napolitano observed: “Perhaps Justice Roberts really means what he wrote-that congressional power to tax is without constitutional limit-and his opinion is a faithful reflection of that view, without a political, legal or intra-court agenda. But that view finds no support in the Constitution or our history. It even contradicts the most famous of John Marshall’s big-government aphorisms: The power to tax is the power to destroy.”

The former judge added, “The logic is so tortured, unexpected, and unprecedented that even the law’s most fervent supporters did not make or anticipate the court’s argument in its support.” He pointed out that a “tax must originate in the House, which this law did not, and it must be applied for doing something, like earning income or purchasing tobacco or fuel, not for doing nothing.”

What it means for Medicaid

When your doctor decides to refer your case to a medical specialist here or in off-island medical facilities, the cost associated with it must ALL come from your pocket. I recall that at most even a high option health insurance only covers $50,000 that must be mirrored against, e.g., heart surgery, that runs between $40,00 to $280,000, depending on the complexity of your condition.

This aspect would be devastating for those with or without Medicaid assistance. It could easily drain the family of its last savings, including the sale of property to meet this cost. I’ve seen this happen already and it is mind numbing the instant loss of treasured family land and the subsequent hardship it must face as a result of having to pay costly medical bills. Remember, it deals with medical conditions requiring the attention of medical specialists.

There’s also the humorous side of the Roberts decision: President Obama’s oxymoronic view that it isn’t a tax, but the court said it is a tax! Too, he misunderstood the difference between access to health coverage and access to healthcare. Mr. President, why can’t you say what you mean and mean what you say? It helps clarify the issue for all Americans who now must figure out how to fit a huge elephant into a needle’s hole via their pocketbooks.

The fortunate part of the recent decision lies in the fact that agreeable and disagreeable we may be, the whole issue reverts to “We the people” and this November the voice of the people would effectively remove threats to our freedom before it literally rips our dreams from rebuilding the path to a more prosperous future for our country.  Let individual freedom ring!”

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New illness: Magas-itis

Warning: If you’re in middle management and up, you could be at risk of contracting magas-itis (magasitis). It’s a serious affliction of arrogance plaguing people picked for powerful posts.

If you’re suffering from the following symptoms you might want to see your physician in immediately. They include: tendency to be a loner, belief that you’re smarter than others, preference for loyalists, stubborn attitude to changing course even in the face of failure-and love of royal treatment like taxpayer-paid steak and lobsters.

If perchance the power you have gets into your head, there’s a likelihood that you’d act imperiously as though the universe revolves around your teeny self, seemingly equipped with undeveloped brain cells. If you don’t find time soon to get your feet back on the ground, you’d be sailing the fearful dark skies out west with destination unknown as you struggle shamefully to deflate your overblown ego. Before you do, please consult your physician. If not, see me so I could get you an escort at top speed to Fiscal Cliff near Banzai.

We’ve seen aplenty the corrupt attitude of neglect or isolation from people at the helm suffering from juvenile magasitis. We could set their eyes aglow by jerking their subdued demeanor. Invite them to a staged ceremony to hand them their golden trophy of “Do-Nothing.” Throw the bums out this November and substitute it with adios-itis! (adiositis). It’s the only cure to magasitis!

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Deluge of bankruptcy

Is there a ray of hope for something better amidst the deluge of bankruptcy? I have a feeling the next level is prayer for divine intervention. With the guys and gals snoozing heavily, mañana is in full bloom.

Does it mean we must wait for a miracle of sorts to ease the mounting fiscal trauma at home? But we know that the genesis of the financial trauma is far removed from myth and legend. It is solely and factually based on a healthy business climate and the derivatives from it. But the business climate is very poor. Would we use the cargo cult mindset?

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Entitlement assistance is fine for those who really need it. Admittedly, this is the case here and across the country. I can understand and feel for those of our people who have to swallow their pride by accepting NAP assistance. There’s the quiet sentiment of humiliation but what’s the choice when one is jobless because city hall has failed on wealth and jobs creation. NAP recipients still say that rugged individualism is the hallmark of hardworking people. Most prefer meaningful jobs versus feeding off a hog’s back.

By John S. DelRosario Jr.
Contributing Author

John S. Del Rosario Jr. | Contributing Author
John DelRosario Jr. is a former publisher of the Saipan Tribune and a former secretary of the Department of Public Lands.

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