MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Today was the day Chief Justice Roberts creeped out the Republicans by doing the unthinkable: He figured out a way to square the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) with the constitution and gave it his okay (if not exactly his blessing). Such a donnybrook! The Dems couldn't believe it, but the Republicans couldn't believe it even more.
I won't be explaining the whole thing here, not because I can't (I really can't), but because every person with a keyboard has already weighed in on what it all means. But even though I didn't know exactly what was going on, I was on top of it all, even before the pundits on TV. At the very moment the decision came down, the supersmart bunch at SCOTUSblog were live-blogging from inside the courtroom, sending out the minute-by-minute news as it happened, ticker-tape style, and I have to tell you, I got goosebumps! Because there I was, in the loop, watching those guys on MSNBC having to wait until Pete Williams came outside to tell them what had gone on inside--which, ha! I already knew! (Click here for SCOTUSblog's simple explanation of what happened at the Supreme Court today. It'll explain everything. At least for today.)
Yes, it was quite a day The decision came down around 10:15 AM or thereabouts, and within minutes the screws began to come loose.
Both Fox and CNN jumped the gun and told their viewers Obamacare had been declared unconstitutional.
Petitions to impeach Chief Justice Roberts appeared and people came out of nowhere to sign the things. One petition got 124 signatures before it shut down, for reasons known only to the petitioners. Another one was at 28 signatures by 9 PM (including the ubiquitous Seemore Butts of Geneva, Il.), hoping for 1000 names by whenever.
Matthew Davis, a former GOP spokesman in Michigan wrote an email right after the decision that moved swiftly through the blogosphere, The Koch-fueled Mackinac Center published it on their CAPCON page (Michigan Capitol Confidential), along with some straight reporting that gave no indication of where they stand when it comes to (cough, gag, retch) Obamacare.
A Lansing-based civil rights attorney who has held positions with the Michigan Republican Party and Department of Corrections, questioned in a widely distributed email today whether armed rebellion was justified over the Supreme Court ruling upholding Obamacare.
Matthew Davis sent the email moments after the Supreme Court ruling to numerous new media outlets and limited government activists with the headline: “Is Armed Rebellion Now Justified?”
He stressed that he wasn't calling for armed rebellion but added his own personal note to the email, saying, “… here’s my response. And yes, I mean it.”
He said he was writing with an "eye toward asking at what point the Republic is in peril."
“There are times government has to do things to get what it wants and holds a gun to your head," Davis said. "I’m saying at some point, we have to ask the question when do we turn that gun around and say no and resist.
"Was the American Revolution justified?”
Davis said the key word was “justified,” adding that a peaceful resolution toward changing the law is the goal. He said rebellion often is the end result of people who get backed against a wall and wondered when that might occur when it comes to the Obamacare ruling.
Michael Savage offered up the reason Roberts voted the way he did: It was his epilepsy medication. Yeah. That's the ticket.
In the Twitterverse, a rash of tweets went viral, much to the consternation of the original tweeters who swear they never, ever, ever tweeted that if Obamacare wasn't overturned they were moving to Canada!
And that was just today.
(Cross-posted at Ramona's Voices)
Comments
I AM MOVING TO CANADA TO ESCAPE THE TYRANNY OF SOCIALIZED MEDICINE! Hahahahahaha, that is so awesome.
by tmccarthy0 on Thu, 06/28/2012 - 11:36pm
Actually moving to Canada and buying into their system is still cheaper than ACA.
by cmaukonen on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 7:18am
Baby steps, cm, baby steps. It's a start. We've never even come close before.
by Ramona on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 8:19am
I am moving to Canada to get away from hockey.
by Doctor Cleveland on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 2:13am
I am moving to Canada to get away from environmental destruction.
by Donal on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 8:21am
Pour sortir de hocky? Vous devez être plaisante.
by cmaukonen on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 8:22am
I particularly liked this tweet from Timmy, the guitar player:
"Obama, how is this a victory for all? People who have jobs can afford health care. I might as well move to Canada."
by Oxy Mora on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 9:38am
So after 2014 you have to have some sort of health insurance or you get fined by the IRS. How about putting THAT money into a special fund and earmark it for health care.
by cmaukonen on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 1:18pm
Good idea. Kind of like a perpetual motion machine. Or Stone Soup.
If EVERYONE pays the tax, then we'll have enough money to pay for everyone's health care.
by Peter Schwartz on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 1:20pm
These disputes must seem so quaint to you folks up north.
Actually, to almost everyone in the Western world.
by Peter Schwartz on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 1:21pm
Or FICA
by Ramona on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 2:12pm
Re: Matt Davis. He just got a job at MLive writing conservative political opinion. He's apologized for the armed rebellion thing.
Meh.
by wabby on Fri, 06/29/2012 - 5:54pm
That's what we need, all right, another Right Wing spokesperson in Michigan. Well, that's it. I won't be going to MLive for my info again.
by Ramona on Sat, 06/30/2012 - 3:44pm