debbiedowner
Gold Member
- Feb 12, 2017
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It gets kinda confusing, at least for me. If the appeal process overturns the Texas ruling, then a subsequent Democrat president and Congress could change the $0 tax penalty for the mandate to whatever but something more than zero, true? Could they do that under reconciliation with less than 60 votes in the Senate? IOW, the ACA would live again and probably once again go through all sorts of new changes by the Dems. Might even end up as a UHC program.
BUT - if this ruling is appealed and NOT overturned then the ACA is indeed dead, true? We would have to find a new and hopefully better solution, whatever that might be. Or let the market and the states go about their business and do it piece-meal, like before. In the meantime, what we've got is a program that no one wants except those who get a gov't subsidy to pay for it. Most people that don't have an employer-based plan can't afford it and are leaving by the millions unless they or a family member have a pre-existing condition and have to stick with the ACA. How can we continue to afford that, the taxpayers are essentially forced to foot the bill for those medical bills. I guess that as the recent 2018 elections suggest, that's what people want. But between that and the rising costs of Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid, and the interest on the debt, we're on a fast-moving train to insolvency. At some point, future generations are going to get effed.
Yes, if it's upheld all the way and to include the SCOTUS it is dead.