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Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Why is it that so many "scholars," particularly legal scholars, ignore the obvious?

The author of this post:
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/23/american-judicial-idol/

proposes that the Supreme Court should not sign opinions, all opinions should be per curium, etc., to end the "cult of celebrity" associated with the Supreme Court.
This is me, playing the world's smallest violin, for those schmucks upset about the "cult of celebrity" of Supreme Court justices. And this is why I think... no, I know... that her arguments for changing the Supreme Court are without merit. I posted this on Above the Law earlier today:

As a guest mentioned yesterday, we live in a common law jurisdiction, not a civil law jurisdiction. ALL of the other countries mentioned, where there are only per curium opinions, unsigned, no dissenters, are all civil law countries. For those of you who never took a comparative law course in law school (or a history course in high school - these comments, and the original article from Ms. Greenhouse, are proof that public education needs some serious work) application of a civil code requires a very different role for judges. Rather than "interpreting" the law, it is the job of the lawyers to explain to the judges the interpretation of the law, and then only if the language of the code is unclear. The judges apply the code. Also, in every single case, the code and the words of the code trump judicial decisions. There is no "precedent" in civil law. So, what is important is the decision, because it applies the code, but the judge who applied it did not make "new" law or change it. If there are too many inconsistent decisions, the code is changed. Here in Louisiana, they change the code all the time. The code, however, is NOT a constitution, and is not meant to be applied as such. Civil Law countries also have Constitutions, like we do, and neither the Code, other statutes, or application thereof, are allowed to conflict with a particular jurisdiction's constitution.
In sum, making the changes in this article is the first step in abandoning our judicial system, which has had an awful lot to do with the shaping of our culture, and particularly our evolving individual rights.

It is true, Miss Greenhouse, that "the toxic confirmation battle in selecting Supreme Court justices is a truly American experience. So? America remains the greatest country on the planet, and it is because of the particularities of our history that we remain the greatest country. People, stop trying to screw this up. I'm no conservative, and I don't really like the decisions coming out of the Court now, either, but come on. If our judges were like those of France or Italy, America there would have been even more impediment toward the establishment of our now-protected liberties that we hold so dear, like the fact that you can vote. So, stop confusing people with a selective view of reality, and no look to history.

Friday, April 23, 2010

HubbleSite - Wallpaper: Mystic Mountain

This is amazing.

HubbleSite - Wallpaper: Mystic Mountain: "Star Cluster
Source: Hubblesite.org"

About This Image
Hubble's 20th anniversary image shows a mountain of dust and gas rising in the Carina Nebula. The top of a three-light-year tall pillar of cool hydrogen is being worn away by the radiation of nearby stars, while stars within the pillar unleash jets of gas that stream from the peaks.
Credit: NASA, ESA, and M. Livio and the Hubble 20th Anniversary Team (STScI)

Help New Orleans by voting for better Health Care by Tulane


Help TULANE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER win $50,000

We Need Your Vote!

Tulane University Community Health Center (TUCHC) is pleased to be a finalist in the People to People Ambassador Program. People to People, the leader in global educational travel, would like the citizens of New Orleans to know that the devastation of Hurricane Katrina has not been forgotten and that is dedicated to assisting the ongoing recovery efforts in New Orleans.

How Can You Help TUCHC win $50,000?
1. Visit http://www.remembernola.com/
2. Download the NOLA badge (People to People will donate $1 for each download)
3. VOTE for TUCHC!
4. Send this email to friends, family and colleagues and ask for their vote! (i.e. Send this email to your friends, post the link to Facebook, etc.)
5. VOTE again tomorrow!

Tulane University Community Health Center will put the $50K toward construction costs of our new location to expand quality medical services to more patients in a new, healthy environment. The new location is 3.5 times the size of our current clinic, and will be LEED certified.

What is TUCHC?
TUCHC is dedicated to improving the health of our New Orleans neighbors by providing high-quality, cost-effective, neighborhood-based care to all, regardless of insurance status. We have offered quality primary care and mental health services since our meager beginnings as a first aid station in Sept 2005 following Hurricane Katrina. We actively train the next generation of health professionals, and partner with the community to develop innovative models of care. TUCHC recognizes that health is more than getting a person to a doctor, thus offers supportive services and provides a team-based approach to care. Activities to occur at the new location include a Community Room for community meetings, exercise classes and educational forums so patients can develop lifeskills for success. The focus is to keep people healthy so they can contribute to a more equitable and thriving New Orleans.


TUCHC will be awarded $50,000 the first week of July--if we receive the most votes!
Online voting runs now through May 31, 2010. You are not restricted on the number of times you can vote.
Your support is appreciated. Together we can build a healthy New Orleans.

Want Palin to speak? She demands a private Lear 60 Jet and bendy straws

The New York Times reported the following last week:

The Caucus: Report: For Palin Speeches, Luxury Rooms and Bendable Straws
By By ANAHAD O'CONNOR
Published: April 13, 2010
A contract suggests that when Sarah Palin gives a speech, careful preparations are necessary.

Basically, a few ballsy students went dumpster-diving for pieces of the speaking agreement between Sarah Palin and California State University at Stanislaus. I commend the students dedication to the truth, and although what was discovered is not shocking in the least considering what Palin is (a media-contrived harpy with dollar signs and white houses in her one good non-winking eye) it does uncover the fact that, in the middle of an unprecedented budget crises, a state-funded California University is paying what must add up to be hundreds of thousands of dollars for an ex-governor to speak at a $500/plate fund-raising event. How much money do they expect to make from this event, exactly?

From the article:
A local state senator, Leland Yee, Democrat of San Francisco, has been trying to uncover details of the event for weeks. But the university has said that a private foundation hired Ms. Palin for the event and that her contract contains a privacy clause forbidding the release of details of her contract.
On Tuesday, Mr. Yee held a news conference in Sacramento to announce that a group of students apparently had discovered parts of the contract. He was accompanied at the news conference by the students, who said they found the documents last week in a garbage bin outside the school’s administration building after getting a tip that school officials might be shredding them.

According to The San Francisco Chronicle, the documents do not specifically identify the “speaker” as Ms. Palin, but the contract included specifics on travel arrangements from Anchorage. The documents state that the speaker must fly to California first class if she flies commercial. If not, “the private aircraft MUST BE a Lear 60 or larger,” The Associated Press reported. Other perks include a suite and two single rooms at a luxury hotel near the campus. The contract, however, does not specify how much the speaker will be paid for her services.

Both Mr. Yee and the A.P. had previously requested details of Ms. Palin’s contract from the university, citing the California Public Records Act. But the university turned them down, saying university foundations were not subject to the public records requirements. Mr. Yee is now introducing a bill that would force campus foundations to follow public records requirements.


I hope Mr. Yee gets somewhere, and if there is ever an excuse for stepping on someone's back in order to further your own career, Mr. Yee, you found it. Best of luck.

Unfortunately, no Palinites will budge because of this. They are all as learning disabled as her son, who has been thrust into the media spotlight as her only credential as "Jane six-pack." Oh yeah, she also spent her childhood getting free healthcare from Canada...

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Is Health Care Reform Constitutional? From JURIST - Forum

This came from the Jurist, and pretty much writes my Constitutional Law exam for me... to bad it's closed book...

Blog: JURIST - Forum
Post: Is Health Care Reform Constitutional?
Link: http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/forumy/2010/04/is-health-care-reform-constitutional.php

Is Health Care Reform Constitutional?

JURIST Guest Columnist Sallie Sanford of the University of Washington School of Law says that although challenges to the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act are valuable for inspiring dialogue within and outside the legal community, they are unlikely to succeed in the face of decades of Supreme Court case law....



The ink had barely dried on the president’s signature when the lawsuits commenced. Three lawsuits filed in federal court now challenge the constitutionality of key provisions in the new health care reform law.

If a court does reach the merits in these lawsuits, it will almost certainly uphold the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Under existing case law, Congress has appropriate authority under either its power to regulate interstate commerce or its power to tax and spend for the general welfare. To find otherwise would require a significant shift in Constitutional jurisprudence.

The Individual Mandate

The primary challenge in each of the lawsuits is to the “individual mandate” – the requirement in the new law that most citizens have health insurance or pay a tax penalty. There are several statutory exemptions, including for religious objections, for financial hardship, and if the least expensive plan would cost more than 8% of household income.

Unless an exemption applies, however, each citizen will be required to have health insurance, either through Medicare, Medicaid, an employer-sponsored plan, or individual purchase; premium and cost-sharing subsidies will be available for those with incomes below 400% of the federal poverty level. People who are required to have insurance and do not will be taxed, with the tax rate ratcheting up over time to reach $695 per person or 2.5% of household income, whichever is greater.

Commerce Clause and Tax and Spend Authority

Under our system of government, Congress may exercise only those powers that are specified by the Constitution or that are “necessary and proper” for exercising those express powers. Among the express powers is the regulation of interstate commerce.

In the 1942 case of Wickard v. Filburn, the US Supreme Court considered a challenge to the federal government’s authority to regulate, under a Depression-era price-stabilization law, wheat grown for a farmer’s own personal use. The court concluded that this wheat production, though not for sale, did impact interstate commerce because it reduced the amount the farmer would buy and, considering the activities of similar-minded farmers, would impact the total amount grown.

Following this decision, a variety of federal laws have been upheld as authorized under this power to regulate activities that “arise out of or are connected with a commercial transaction, which viewed in the aggregate, substantially affects interstate commerce.” In the Heart of Atlanta Motel case, for example, the Court held that a motel owner’s decision not to allow black people to rent rooms impacts interstate commerce and thus could be prohibited by the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Even the federal Partial-Birth Abortion Ban was grounded in Congress’ interstate commerce powers.

Health care constitutes a huge portion of our nation’s economy, currently constituting more than 17% of the GDP. Both health care and health insurance indisputably impact interstate commerce.

Two modern cases have, on a 5-4 basis, overturned federal laws as beyond the scope of the Commerce Clause. In the 1995 case of United States v. Lopez, the Court struck down a law mandating a gun-free zone around public schools because it was “a criminal statute that by its terms had nothing to do with ‘commerce’ or any sort of economic enterprise.” The court wrote that there must be a distinction between Congress’ authority and the general police powers retained by the states, between “what is truly national and what is truly local.” Utilizing a similar rationale, and also on a 5-4 basis, the Court’s 2000 decision in United States v. Morrison invalidated part of the Violence Against Women Act.

In 2005, however, a 6-3 Supreme Court decision, Gonzales v. Raich, once again affirmed an expansive view of the Commerce Clause. The Court held that the federal government has the power to supersede state law, and to prohibit marijuana cultivation, even if grown at home for personal medical use and not for sale.

Writing for the majority, Justice John Paul Stevens wrote that: “We need not determine whether respondents’ activities, taken in the aggregate, substantially affect interstate commerce in fact, but only whether a ‘rational basis’ exists for so concluding.” Congress could rationally conclude that medical marijuana might find its way into interstate commerce, and, as with Farmer Filburn’s wheat, that growing one’s own could impact the overall market, particularly considering the cumulative impact of numerous growers.

Justices Anthony Kennedy and Antonin Scalia formed part of the Raich majority. Justice Scalia’s concurrence explains that this case differed from Lopez and Morrison (in which both he and Kennedy had voted to limit Congress’ authority) and that Congress may in the appropriate circumstance regulate non-economic intrastate activity.

In his Raich concurrence, Justice Scalia maintains that “the authority to enact laws necessary and proper for the regulation of interstate commerce is not limited to laws governing intrastate activities that substantially affect interstate commerce. Where necessary to make a regulation of interstate commerce effective, Congress may regulate even those intrastate activities that do not themselves substantially affect interstate commerce.” Under the structure of the new health reform law, the requirement to have insurance is integral to Congress’ overall approach to regulating insurance practices and attempting to stabilize the insurance market.

The Inactivity Argument

The plaintiffs in the pending lawsuits argue, however, that the individual mandate is different because it attempts to regulate inactivity. By definition, they maintain, a person who declines to purchase health insurance is not engaging in commerce at all.

A gamble to remain uninsured does, however, impose economic costs in at least two ways. The first is when an uninsured person seeks medical treatment. Because of a federal emergency care law, state legal requirements, hospital mission obligation, and actions rooted in medical ethics, that care is sometimes mandated and is often provided. Particularly when the patient comes in through the emergency room, as is not infrequently the case, costs are substantial and often go unpaid, either because of a decision at the outset to provide “charity care” or because the patient does not pay the bill.

Findings in the new law estimate the costs of providing uncompensated care at $43 billion in 2008. While many of these costs are ultimately borne by federal, state, and local governments (in the form of subsidies to hospitals and clinics), a substantial amount is shifted to insured patients. Findings in the new law estimate that $1,000 of the cost of an employer-provided family insurance premium (out of an average of about $13,000) is attributable to uncompensated care.

The second way that being uninsured imposes economic costs is by shifting the insured risk pool. Among the approximately one in seven United States citizens who lack insurance, a significant percentage is young and healthy. By not participating in the insurance market, by gambling that they will not need expensive health care (or that if they do, someone else will pick up the tab), they skew insurance pools towards an older and sicker population, raising the premium costs. Thus, this sort of inactivity or non-participation does have an economic impact, and certainly a far more substantial economic impact than the growing of marijuana for personal, medical use.

The plaintiffs also argue that unlike with state requirements to have car insurance, one cannot avoid the requirement by declining the activity. One can avoid a state’s requirement to purchase car insurance by not driving. Unless an exemption applies, however, one cannot avoid the requirement to have health insurance, as it is attached simply to the condition of being a citizen.

There is no direct precedent for a federal law requiring purchase of a private product without the option to not engage in the triggering activity. Businesses can in theory avoid federal requirements to install (privately purchased) environmental or safety equipment by not engaging in the business. Those of us who did not want to buy a new television or sign up for cable service to maintain realistic access after the recent conversion could simply not watch television at home.

More to the point, though, the health reform law does offer a choice. Rather than purchasing health insurance (though an employer-sponsored plan or on the individual market) one can choose to pay the tax. The tax has been criticized by many, in fact, as being too low to act as an incentive. These critics raise the policy concern that some will choose to pay the tax until they get expensively sick or injured and then, based on other, inexorably linked provisions in the new law, insurance companies will be obligated to sell them a plan without pre-existing condition limits or cost adjustments.

The Supreme Court has long upheld the ability of the federal government to regulate behavior through taxation. In a 1937 case, the Court noted that “[e]very tax is in some measure regulatory. . . . But [it] is not any less a tax because it has a regulatory effect[.]” Congress’ taxation power cannot burden a fundamental right, but there is no fundamental right to be uninsured. Some have argued that if this is not really a behavior-encouraging and revenue-raising tax but more of a pure penalty, then there needs to be a separate source of authority, such as the power to regulate interstate commerce.

The Current Court

Even if that is true, the Supreme Court, as described above, has recently reaffirmed a broad interpretation of the commerce clause. The two most recent justices to join the court replaced two dissenters, and thus if they change the calculus it would be to add support to the view that the law is constitutional. Justice Scalia, however, who concurred in the judgment in Raich, has long advocated an “originalist” or more limited view of federal power. It is conceivable that he might find that the health care reform’s individual mandate goes beyond the reach of federal powers and into the state’s police power domain.

That potentially leaves Justice Kennedy as the swing vote. And, of course, the author of the Raich opinion has just announced that he will retire at the end of the current term. The loss of Justice Steven’s persuasive force might have an impact on the court’s analysis.

Medicaid Expansion and Insurance Exchanges

The Florida Attorney General’s lawsuit, which a dozen other attorneys general have joined, also contends that the new law encroaches on state sovereignty by creating state-based insurance exchanges and by expanding Medicaid eligibility. Both of these provisions, they argue, will impose on the states increased costs and expanded administrative burdens and, generally, will “commandeer” them into the service of the federal government.

These arguments have even less of a chance of success than do those related to the individual mandate. The states are not required to set up the exchanges. Under the terms of the law, if a state does not do so, the federal government will. To encourage states to use their regulatory and administrative powers to set up these exchanges, the law offers some funding.

Similarly, states are legally free to drop out of the Medicaid program and to forego the matching dollars that accompany it. Medicaid is a joint federal-state program in which the federal government sends financial support to state programs that, in compliance with federal guidelines, provide health care to low-income people. Wealthier states have a baseline 50/50 match, meaning that for every dollar they spend, the federal government contributes at least a dollar. The less well-off states have at least a 25/75 match.

It is true that, as a practical matter, states are heavily reliant on the matching Medicaid dollars to care for their poorest citizens and to support key safety-net health care providers. It is also true that Medicaid funding is a significant part of most states’ beleaguered budgets. The new law expands eligibility by opening the program up to all citizens and legal residents with incomes below 133% of the federal poverty level. This will have the effect of adding many adults to the program. Initially, the federal government will cover all of the costs of providing care to the newly eligible, though this coverage will ratchet down to 90% over a few years.

The Supreme Court has upheld similar conditional-spending arrangements as valid exercises of Congress’ tax and spend authority. In South Dakota v. Dole, for example, the Court upheld a federal law that withheld 5% of highway funds from any state that did not raise its legal drinking age to 21. The Court did recognize in Dole that “in some circumstances the financial inducement offered by Congress might be so coercive as to pass the point at which ‘pressure turns into compulsion.’" To date, the Court has not identified such a circumstance.

It is hard to reasonably argue that the new law’s Medicaid expansion inducement reaches the point of compulsion. Congress has changed Medicaid conditions numerous times over the years and, with this new eligibility expansion, the federal government will initially assume most of the costs of the newly eligible. The exchanges present even less of a case for compulsion as they do not yet exist, and the new law provides some administrative funds for their establishment.

Procedural Hurdles

The plaintiffs also face significant hurdles before a court would get to the merits of their claims. One hurdle is ripeness. The challenged provisions do not go into effect for several years. In general, a claim is not ripe for adjudication if it rests upon contingent future events that might not occur; an exception might be made for a purely legal challenge to a law, such as this one, that will require significant advance groundwork. However, with Republican calls to “repeal and replace,” it is not far-fetched to wonder if the challenged provisions will survive. Such was the fate of the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act, which, in the late 1980s, was repealed before it went into effect.

Another procedural hurdle is standing. In general, only those who are being, or imminently will be harmed by a law can challenge its constitutionality. The individual mandate, if it were in effect, would certainly harm some individuals. Its harm to the states is less clear, and it is on the states’ behalf that the plaintiffs in the Florida case have filed their complaint.

In a 2007 case, the Supreme Court did grant states standing to challenge the EPA’s inaction on greenhouse gas regulation, finding sufficient injury on the theory that the states were impacted by potential changes to their coastlines and to overall environmental wellbeing. Drawing on this 5-4 decision, perhaps the states could make a not-yet-articulated argument having to do with diverted state tax revenue and population wellbeing, but this seems a stretch. The separate complaint filed by the Virginia attorney general is based on that state’s recent enactment of a law purporting to nullify the individual mandate as to Virginia residents, and the defense of that law perhaps provides a toe-hold into standing. The Thomas More Law Center plaintiffs do include four individual citizens. And of course, if the other complaints survive the ripeness and other challenges, individuals might join as plaintiffs.

Nonetheless, based on decades of Supreme Court case law, the substantive challenges to the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act are unlikely to succeed. They are likely, though, to continue to inspire discussions within the legal community and within the general public about the role of government, the nature of health care, and the obligations of citizens. Perhaps that, in itself, is a valuable outcome.


Sallie Sanford is an Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Washington.

April 21, 2010
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Thursday, April 15, 2010

'Steven Seagal Lawman' taping canceled; sheriff invites accuser to file report | - NOLA.com

This content is thanks to:

'Steven Seagal Lawman' taping canceled; sheriff invites accuser to file report

By Michelle Hunter, The Times-Picayune


'Steven Seagal Lawman' taping canceled; sheriff invites accuser to file report | - NOLA.com: "Jefferson Parish Sheriff Newell Normand today invited Kayden Nguyen, a California woman who filed a lawsuit alleging she was held captive at a Jean Lafitte mansion by actor and reserve deputy Steven Seagal and treated like a 'sex toy' during the taping of the television show 'Steven Seagal: Lawman,' to contact the agency and file a criminal complaint."


Sheriff Newell Normand press confence about Steven Seagal













April 14, 2010, 5:11PM