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Legality of taxation is the key to health reform

Written By anfaku01 on Thursday, April 5, 2012 | 7:04 AM

The underlying connection was closed: A connection that was expected to be kept alive was closed by the server. Error in deserializing body of reply message for operation 'Translate'. The maximum string content length quota (8192) has been exceeded while reading XML data. This quota may be increased by changing the MaxStringContentLength property on the XmlDictionaryReaderQuotas object used when creating the XML reader. Line 1, position 8864. One afternoon in 1934, Supreme Court Justice Harlan Fiske Stone decided to quietly help Labor Secretary Frances Perkins out of a jam.

Her quandary was how to write a Social Security law that would survive scrutiny by the court's conservative bloc. Stone, a progressive, pulled her aside during a tea party at his home, glanced around to make sure he wasn't overheard, and whispered, "The taxing power of the federal government, my dear; the taxing power is sufficient for everything you want and need."

As Stone counseled, the court had earlier held that the government's taxing power was virtually absolute. And so it was that tax provisions were liberally sown throughout the bill enacting the nation's landmark social insurance program, which handily survived Supreme Court challenge a few years later.

Nor is there any mystery why a federal tax is the hub of the federal healthcare reform act's individual mandate, the constitutionality of which is being argued this week before the current Supreme Court. The tax is the mechanism for enforcing the mandate — if you don't have insurance, you'll pay a tax. Or why the court's upholding of Social Security in 1937 has been cited repeatedly in their briefs and oral arguments by the lawyers defending the mandate, not to mention by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg during oral arguments Tuesday.


The tax issue pervades the judicial debate over the healthcare law, but whether Congress' clever maneuver was enough to inoculate the act from court hostility is open to question. At least, that's one question. You don't have to go as far as the attack brief by a lobbying group for small business, which calls the mandate an "unprecedented … threat to individual liberty," to understand that no act of Congress in recent times has a greater potential effect on how businesses perform, government regulates, individuals conduct their lives.


The court acknowledged the act's importance by scheduling an unprecedented six hours of arguments on its constitutionality over three days, including a two-hour session Tuesday on the individual mandate and its associated tax penalty alone.


As befits a measure implicating legal and ideological principles so directly, the discussion was a dramatic one. Three conservatives, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin Scalia and Samuel Alito, and purported swing voter Anthony Kennedy, worried the law's defender, Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr., as mercilessly as dogs with a bone, leading some court watchers to declare the mandate dead.


Once the lectern was turned over to lawyers for the challengers, including the small-business group and 26 states, that wasn't so clear. Kennedy and Roberts both indicated that they were at least receptive to the government position that healthcare is an interstate market that involves virtually every American, and is therefore ripe for congressional regulation.


"The young person who is uninsured is uniquely proximately very close to affecting the rates of insurance and the costs of providing medical care in a way that is not true in other industries," Kennedy said. "That's my concern in this case."


Of course, it's well understood that projecting the court's ultimate decision, which won't come for months, from the justices' comments during oral arguments is a mug's game. As in sports, you have to let the contest play out — sometimes Lehigh will beat Duke, after all.


Fundamental to the question of whether and how the federal government should regulate the delivery of health coverage is society's unwillingness to let people sicken and die without care. That's why Congress in 1986 passed the Emergency Treatment and Active Labor Act, which forbids emergency rooms to turn away patients regardless of their ability to pay.


It's why Americans end up spending more than $116 billion a year in treatment for the uninsured, a bill that ends up being covered out of premiums charged to those who do have insurance to the tune of an average $1,000 per family policy. The figures, which are from the government's Supreme Court brief, lie at the heart of the government's argument that the uninsured are inextricably part of the web of interstate commerce that brings the health insurance market into Congress' regulatory ambit.


Although critics of the healthcare law would have us think otherwise, the Supreme Court well knows that this is not the first time that Congress has taken up social welfare as a fundamental concern or fashioned an all-encompassing mandate to address it. The precedent is Social Security, which addressed a crisis of poverty among the elderly that didn't look as if it would be going away.


Supporting the elderly was going to be society's responsibility any way you cut it, Congress was told by Edwin Witte, the Social Security bill's chief architect; the question was how to do it humanely, efficiently and effectively. "This growing number of old people will have to be supported," he said, "and whether you do it in the form of pensions or in some other way, that cost is there."


The option Congress chose was a contributory pension scheme designed to apply to every wage-earner. (The law initially left out many workers, including domestic workers, but was consistently broadened until today only a limited number of state and local government workers remain outside the system.)


As Ginsburg observed, Social Security faced many of the same criticisms laid against the individual mandate. "A lot of people said — maybe some people still do today — I could do much better if the government left me alone.... They're forcing me to paying for this Social Security that I don't want." But it was constitutional.


Then, as now, the new program was seen as a novel approach to both a novel social problem and the novel recognition that social welfare had to be seen as a federal responsibility.


Social Security had been brought before the court essentially as a tax case — was the employers' share of the payroll tax constitutional? But then, as perhaps will happen now, that issue became a springboard for a broader consideration of how law and our interpretation of the constitution must evolve to accommodate the modern world.


"Needs that were narrow or parochial a century ago may be interwoven in our day with the well-being of the nation," wrote Justice Benjamin Cardozo, delivering the Court's 7-2 opinion upholding Social Security. "What is critical or urgent changes with the times.... The purge of nationwide calamity that began in 1929 has taught us many lessons. Not the least is the solidarity of interests that may once have seemed to be divided."


President Franklin Roosevelt had made that point earlier, kicking back at the court's nullification of a key New Deal program in a decision that turned, as do this week's arguments, on the reach of the Constitution's commerce clause, which defines the limits of congressional authority.


"The country was in the horse-and-buggy age when that clause was written," FDR groused. "Probably 80 or 90% of the human beings in the 13 original states were completely self-supporting." Constitutional interpretation, he maintained, had to keep up with "present-day civilization." That's the heart of the debate the court will have to undertake as it digests this week's oral arguments over the Affordable Care Act: whether it wishes to rest on principles with a reach not far beyond the 19th century, or adjust them to the undeniable realities of the 21st.

7:04 AM | 0 comments

Supreme Court again looks primed to confound a president

WASHINGTON — Eight years ago, George W. Bush administration lawyers went before the Supreme Court arguing that the justices should defer to the president during wartime and allow the commander in chief to decide how to treat "enemy combatants" held at Guantanamo Bay.

To their surprise, they lost. Justice Anthony M. Kennedy joined with the liberal bloc to rule that these prisoners had a right to a judicial hearing.

This week, President Obama's lawyers went before the Supreme Court arguing that the justices should defer to Congress when it comes to regulating health insurance. But they too ran into sharply skeptical questioning, this time from Kennedy and the court's conservatives.

The tenor of the comments over three days of oral arguments suggested the nine justices had made up their minds.

On Friday morning they will meet in private to cast their votes. Their decision will be kept secret within the court and is not likely to be announced until late June. Then, the court will issue a lengthy opinion for the majority explaining its ruling, along with one or more strong dissents.

Although the opinions will be revised and rewritten throughout the spring, the outcome will almost certainly depend on the votes cast Friday. It's rare for a justice to switch sides in a major case after the vote is taken.

This week's arguments cheered conservatives and shook liberal supporters of the federal healthcare law.

"I left the court each day feeling as good as could be," said Georgetown University law professor Randy Barnett, a libertarian and the leading academic critic of the law's mandate that all Americans buy health insurance. The arguments, he said, "couldn't have gone much better for our side."

Barnett has argued that although Congress has broad power to regulate commerce, it cannot force any person to buy a product or engage in commerce. For that reason, he contends that the individual mandate is unconstitutional.

Kennedy, seen as the crucial swing vote, seemed to adopt this view in Tuesday's arguments. He called the mandate to have insurance "unprecedented" and "a step beyond what our cases have allowed." He said the government had "a heavy burden" to justify such a law because it "requires an individual to do an affirmative act."

If President Obama's healthcare law is struck down, "this will be the second consecutive presidency in which the Supreme Court imposed significant limits on the primary agenda of the sitting president," wrote George Washington University law professor Orin Kerr, a former Kennedy clerk.

Liberal advocates were taken aback by the hostile questioning from the court's conservative wing.

"I was very surprised to see how it played out. But I'm not completely despondent," said Ian Millhiser, a lawyer and policy analyst at the Center for American Progress. He said he remained hopeful that Kennedy and Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. would not go so far as to strike down a major piece of social legislation.

The nine justices meet alone in an ornate, wood-paneled conference room. The chief justice will begin the discussion, describe the issue to be decided and then say how he will vote. From there, the discussion moves in order of seniority, from Justice Antonin Scalia to the newest, Justice Elena Kagan.

If Roberts is in the majority, he will decide who writes the opinion. But since four separate questions raised by the healthcare law are before the court, there could be more than one majority opinion.
3:28 AM | 0 comments

Green coffee beans show potential for losing weight

Written By anfaku01 on Wednesday, April 4, 2012 | 11:53 PM

When roasted at 475 degrees, coffee beans are sometimes described as rich and full-bodied. But for the full-bodied person who is not so rich, unroasted coffee beans — green as the day they were picked — may hold the key to cheap and effective weight loss, new research suggests.

In a study presented Tuesday at the American Chemical Society's spring national meeting in San Diego, 16 overweight young adults took, by turns, a low dose of green coffee bean extract, a high dose of the supplement, and a placebo. Though the study was small, the results were striking: Subjects lost an average of 17.5 pounds in 22 weeks and reduced their overall body weight by 10.5%.


If green coffee extract were a medication seeking approval from the Food and Drug Administration, these results would make it a viable candidate — more than 35% of subjects lost more than 5% of their body weight, and weight loss appeared to be greater while subjects were taking the pills than when they were on the placebo.


But as a dietary supplement, green coffee extract does not require the FDA's blessing. In fact, it is already available as a naturopathic medicine and antioxidant.


Joe Vinson, the University of Scranton chemist who conducted the pilot study, said the findings should pave the way for more rigorous research on coffee bean extract's effects. A larger trial involving 60 people is being planned.


Vinson, whose research focuses on plant polyphenols and their effects on human health, said it appears that green coffee bean extract may work by reducing the absorption of fat and glucose in the gut; it may also reduce insulin levels, which would improve metabolic function. There were no signs of ill effects on any subjects, Vinson reported Tuesday.


The study used a "cross-over" design, which allowed each subject to serve as his or her own comparison group. For six weeks, volunteers swallowed capsules three times a day, ingesting either 700 or 1,050 milligrams of green coffee extract a day or taking a placebo. After a two-week break, they moved, round-robin style, to another arm of the trial.


Subjects did not change their calorie intake over the course of the trial. But the more extract they consumed, the more weight and fat they lost. Altogether, they reduced their body fat by 16%, on average.


Of the 16 volunteers, six wound up with a body mass index in the healthful range.


One downside is that the extract is "extremely bitter." It would be difficult to take without a lot of water, Vinson reported.


At roughly $20 per month, however, green coffee extract is much less expensive than any of the weight-loss medications available over the counter or by prescription.


The trial was conducted in India and paid for by Applied Food Sciences Inc. of Austin, Tex., a manufacturer of green coffee bean extract.


The pilot study drew strong cautions from several scientists who weren't involved in the research.


"This is certainly a provocative study," said Dr. Gerald Weissmann, a physician and biochemist at New York University. But he said nutrition experts would want assurances that green coffee beans do not cause "malabsorption" within the human gut — a condition that would lead to weight loss as well as malnutrition, heart arrhythmias and other problems because vitamins and minerals are not passing through the intestine.


Dr. Arthur Grollman, a pharmacologist at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, said coffee beans contain about 250 different chemicals — some with positive and others with negative effects on human health. Though Vinson identified polyphenols and chlorogenic acid as the agents that appear to promote weight loss, Grollman said that claim needed further study. In the meantime, he said, consuming an extract that contains both good and bad chemicals in dense concentration seems an unwise thing to do.


melissa.healy@latimes.com

11:53 PM | 0 comments

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