2012

As horses age, their teeth often wear down into points. This can cause the animals great pain if they bite into their tongue or cheeks. Chewing can also become problematic. A horse floater’s job is to keep that from happening. They are a kind of equine dental specialist. Floaters anesthetize the animal then grind its teeth into smoother shapes.

But regulators are clamping down on horse floaters. Many states want to require them to be licensed veterinarians. This would throw a lot of floaters out of business. Most of them specialize in horse teeth and have no need for full veterinary training. That’s why few have bothered to get it, since it takes years of school and thousands of dollars.

Horse floater Carl Mitz told a reporter, ‘Saying only veterinarians can do this profession … if they’re successful, it eliminates me. After 25 years, I’ll no longer have a job.’

Mr. Mitz is fighting back in court. But he shouldn’t have to. He has a right to make an honest living. And he has been for at least 25 years. Regulators should respect that right.

The cover of Al Gore’s new book, Our Choice: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis, features a satellite image of the globe showing four major hurricanes – results, we’re meant to believe, of man-made global warming. All four were photoshopped. Which is nice symbolism, because in a sense the whole hurricane aspect of warming has been photoshopped.

As I note in my article in Forbes, it was all really based on just two data points – with the names “Katrina” and “Rita.”

Now with both greenhouse gas emissions and levels in the atmosphere are at their highest, but this year had the fewest hurricanes since 1997, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. For the first time since 2006 no hurricanes even made landfall in the U.S.; indeed hurricane activity is at a 30-year low.

Whoops! So much for Gore’s cover and all the hullabaloo.

In a 2005 column, I gave what now proves an interesting retrospective.

“The hurricane that struck Louisiana yesterday was nicknamed Katrina by the National Weather Service. Its real name was global warming.” So wrote environmental activist Ross Gelbspan in a New York Times op-ed that one commentator aptly described as “almost giddy.” The green group Friends of the Earth linked Katrina to global warming, as did Germany’s Green Party Environment Minister.

The most celebrated of these commentaries was Chris Mooney’s 2007 book Storm World: Hurricanes, Politics and the Battle Over Global Warming. Mooney, for the record, is also author of the best-selling book The Republican War on Science.

Yet there were top scientists in 2005 such as Roger Pielke Jr., a professor of environmental studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder, publishing data showing the Rita-Katrina blowhards had no business building a case around two anomalies. But his paper was squelched by Kevin Trenbarth of “Climategate” fame.

It’s fascinating stuff. Read it!

The health care bills backed by the President require that individuals buy health insurance if it is not provided by their employer. Is that unconstitutional? It may well exceed Congress’s power under the Commerce Clause and other constitutional provisions. But would the courts strike that down as unconstitutional? Probably not, if Obama gets to replace one of the five moderate or conservative justices on the Supreme Court with a more liberal appointee. This is just one of several potential constitutional violations in the bill.

Obamacare is certainly controversial, with most Americans opposing it. It would reduce lifesaving medical innovation, raise many taxes, drive up insurance premiums and the deficit, break many campaign promises, and impose heavy burdens on state budgets. It would also jeopardize the quality of medical care for many, while imposing restrictions that failed when tried at the state level, and ignoring advice from federal and academic experts, and lessons from countries with universal healthcare, about how to keep costs down.

But bad policy is not synonymous with unconstitutionality. If the “individual mandate” is struck down, it will be because of Congress imposed it directly, rather than as a condition of states receiving federal funds, and clumsily drafted the penalties for the mandate in way that takes them outside the reach of its tax powers.

Unlike state governments, the federal government does not have a broad power to legislate in any way it sees fit, as long as it does not violate an individual right. Instead, it can only legislate under a power specifically enumerated in the Constitution — such as its broad powers to regulate interstate commerce, spend money for the general welfare, or impose taxes. So while states can (and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in fact does) mandate that individuals buy health insurance as a matter of course, that is not necessarily the case for the federal government

The most common argument given by Senators like Max Baucus (D-Mont.) for imposing the individual mandate is that it is authorized by Congress’s power to regulate interstate commerce. But that power has limits, and, under the Supreme Court’s decision in United States v. Morrison, 529 U.S. 598 (2000), cannot be used to regulate non-economic activity, even if the activity affects the national economy. (The Morrison case invalidated Subtitle II-C of the Violence Against Women Act, which federalized gender-based violence, rejecting arguments that such violence was subject to Congressional regulation under the Commerce Clause because of uncontroverted claims that it affected the national economy by billions of dollars every year and sometimes caused people employed in commerce to quit their jobs. I was one of Morrison’s lawyers).

The Morrison decision, however, was a 5-to-4 ruling, joined in by the Supreme Court’s conservatives (Scalia, Rehnquist, and Thomas) and moderates (Kennedy and O’Connor) over a dissent from the Court’s four liberal justices. If Obama gets to pick another justice to replace one of the moderate or conservative justices, that decision may be disregarded or overruled in any future challenge to health care reform. Lower court judges are obliged to follow it, but a future Supreme Court may not.

Defenders of the “individual mandate” have argued that it is acceptable under the Supreme Court’s 2005 decision in Gonzales v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1 (2005), which upheld federal drug laws against a commerce-clause challenge. But drugs are an economic commodity subject to federal regulation. By contrast, the individual mandate applies to young people who never consume health care, much less need health insurance. As a young man, there was a 10-year period when I never went to the doctor or dentist (even during the periods in which I had health insurance), and never purchased any over-the-counter drug. I was simply never ill. Forcing people like my younger self to buy health insurance is not a regulation of economic activity, or even non-economic activity (which Congress cannot do under the Morrison decision), but rather of total inactivity.

Some have suggested that even non-economic activity can be regulated under Raich if it is “necessary and proper” to regulate a national industry like the health care system effectively (an ironic argument given that America has 50 different state health insurance markets, not a truly national health insurance market, since interstate commerce in health insurance is largely banned). But Raich treated drugs as commercial commodities. And, in any event, Congress cannot regulate purely local activity, much less inactivity, simply because it is part of a larger regulation aimed at promoting the economy. As the Supreme Court observed in Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U.S. 46, 91-92 (1907), even if it is the case that “no power is adequate” to advance economic improvement “other than that of the national government,” “if no such power has been granted, none can be exercised.”

The individual mandate is certainly not essential to any regulation of the health care industry. Universal health insurance could be achieved without any mandate at all through expansion of Medicaid or Medicare, or a single-payer system. Requiring young people to buy health insurance does little to prevent free-rider problems, since they do not use many health care services, and most of them will be forced to pay much more for health insurance under Obamacare than they would incur in medical bills without such insurance (if insurers were allowed to discriminate based on age, an actuarially-sound practice restricted by Obamacare, they could offer cheaper health insurance to young people). They are simply being exploited through such a mandate.

The fact that an individual mandate might marginally advance Congress’s goals is not sufficient to make it a “necessary and proper” way of carrying out Congress’s commerce powers. If it were, Morrison would have been decided differently, since banning gender-based violence certainly helps to eradicate actionable sexual harassment in schools, workplaces, and rental housing, all of which are subject to federal harassment regulations, and all of which are regulated by Congress under the civil rights laws (like Title VII and the Fair Housing Act, which were passed under Congress’s commerce power, and Title IX, which regulates universities, where the alleged gender violence in the Morrison case occurred; gender violence often constitutes sexual harassment, for as the Ninth Circuit observed in Brock v. United States, 64 F.3d 1421 (9th Cir. 1995), “every rape committed in the employment setting is also discrimination based on the employee’s sex.”).

Another argument for the “individual mandate” is that its penalties are authorized under Congress’s tax powers. This is an ironic argument, since the bill’s sponsors argue that the penalties are not a tax at all. In The Washington Post, lawyers David Rivkin and Lee Casey argue that the penalties exceed Congress’s tax powers under a decision by the Supreme Court in Bailey v. Drexel Furniture (1922), which essentially holds that Congress cannot get around the limits on its power under the interstate commerce clause by regulating via taxes. (They agree that Congress cannot use its interstate-commerce power to impose the individual mandate, based on the Morrison case I cited above). I am not sure whether the current Supreme Court would adhere to that 1920s era decision, although even if it did not, it seems dubious to rely on Congress’s power to tax to impose the individual mandate (since the penalties are not a tax on income, as is authorized by the 16th Amendment, nor are they “apportioned” in the manner required for direct taxes by Article I of the Constitution, nor do they tax an event, to qualify as an indirect tax).

Congress could easily have gotten around these limits on its regulatory powers by conditioning federal funds to states on a requirement to impose the individual mandate. States have a general police power that Congress lacks, and can easily mandate that their citizens buy health insurance, regardless of whether this is a good idea. (Massachusetts has done so, resulting in skyrocketing costs, and the “most expensive health insurance premiums in the country“). When Congress wanted to raise the drinking age, which it lacked the power to do directly, it achieved the same result indirectly by conditioning federal highway funding on states raising their drinking age to 21 — which all states eventually did. The Supreme Court upheld this condition on federal funds in South Dakota v. Dole, 483 U.S. 203 (1987). But the drafters of Obamacare have been so heedless of constitutional limits and legal etiquette that they have not even bothered with using the sort of figleaf permitted by the Supreme Court in its Dole decision to indirectly make states carry out Congress’s wishes).

There are other constitutional violations in Obamacare, but they are in provisions that are less central to it, like its racial preferences, which have been criticized by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Obamacare contains both affirmative action that discriminates against whites, and lesser standards of care for institutions that cater to minority patients, which is a form of discrimination against African Americans and Hispanics. This racial discrimination appears to violate court rulings like the Supreme Court’s Adarand decision.

University of Chicago law professor Richard Epstein argues that regulation of insurers by Obamacare will likely result in unconstitutional takings and other violations.  University of Montana law professor Robert Natelson argues that Obamacare will result in violation of the substantive-due process rights of patients and violate federalism-based constitutional limits on Congressional power.

The first calendar year of the Obama administration draws to a close with organized labor not achieving its top legislative priority: the horribly misnamed Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA). Given the amount of palm-greasing that was required to get reluctant moderate Democratic senators to vote to end debate on Obamacare, it’s unlikely that those same moderate Democrats — especially Arkansas’ Blanche Lincoln — would be eager to expose themselves even more to the criticism that they are shifting to their party’s left.

That doesn’t mean that union-supported Democrats are going to stop trying. We should expect to see “compromise” proposals that replace EFCA’s most controversial provision, the “card check” provision that would effectively do away with secret balloting in union representation elections, with some form of “expedited” election process, or possibly take out card check and leave the rest of the bill intact.

Any such “compromise” would still be economically costly. No EFCA supporters have even entertained the possibility of shedding the bill’s binding arbitration provision, which would impose contracts on newly unionized companies. It would do so by enjoining a federally appointed arbitrator to impose a contract if the company’s management and the union have been unable to reach an agreement after 120 days. This would encourage the union to press for maximal demands, in the knowledge that they are very likely to get nothing worse than management’s final offer.

Worse, binding arbitration could impose huge liabilities on a newly unionized companies without the management having a say. One particularly dangerous liability would be the obligation to pay into dangerously underfunded union pension funds. EFCA would allow unions to keep these funds going — for a time — by corralling in new workers into them. Like all such Ponzi schemes, this is bound to crash some day. Keeping it going longer and with more workers would only make the future losses worse — and endanger more workers’ retirements.

This is the point EFCA opponents need to drive home in 2010.

For more on EFCA, see here.

Richard Morrison, William Yeatman and Ryan Young join forces to bring you Episode 74 of the LibertyWeek podcast. We investigate the Department of Homeland Security’s antiterrorism efforts, China’s climate change conundrum and California’s chance at closing her budget gap. We finish with some dangerous snowballing in the streets and the last echoes in the Ballad of Kwame Kilpatrick.

Many liberals rejoiced to hear the news of the Senate’s passing of Reid’s health reform bill last week. Many more progressives, however, began to speak out against the bill. Unfortunately, their main concerns are not that the legislation harms the market and restricts individual choice, but that it doesn’t do enough of those things.

One of the main problems that progressives cite with the bill is that it leaves out the repeal of the longstanding antitrust exemption for insurers. Some feel that this exemption from antitrust enforcement is allowing an unfair advantage to the insurance industry at the expense of consumers. While early versions of legislation included the repeal of McCarran-Ferguson, Senator Ben Nelson, a former insurance commissioner, argued successfully for its removal from the current bill.

Nelson realized that insurers are only exempt from federal antitrust oversight to the extent that state governments regulate them, so they still must comply with state antitrust laws. The only significant difference in the exemption is that state regulators have historically permitted certain cooperative practices that are generally forbidden under federal antitrust laws, but which help small insurers compete with their larger counterparts and promote insurer solvency. Both primarily help consumers, not the insurance industry.

Still, there have been claims that more oversight and enforcement are needed to “[dismantle] the health insurance monopolies.” These concerns might be overblown as Gregory Conko and I explain in our recent study:

Most mergers in any industry receive only cursory review. But, from 1993 to 2008, the DOJ conducted in-depth investigations of 34 health plan mergers28 and concluded that most of them would not raise serious competitiveness problems, and that many would increase efficiencies that could lead to lower premiums. Indeed, as Boston University health economist Austin Frakt and attorney Ian Crosby have noted, larger insurers with greater market shares appear to be better able to offset the substantial market power held by health care providers. According to Frakt and Crosby, economic research “supports the notion that recent increased market power of insurers does not lead toward monopolistic pricing, but rather it provides a counter-balance to the power held by hospitals and provider groups.”

Ensuring healthy competition in the health care market is an important step toward making health care affordable for all Americans. Repealing the McCarran-Ferguson Act, however, is more likely to reduce competition in the health insurance industry than enhance it. Improving competitiveness in the insurance market will require removing burdensome regulation and oversight, not adding to it.

Having solved all the nation’s other problems, the federal government has a National Poultry Improvement Plan. Run in conjunction with state governments, “The main objective of this program is to use new diagnostic technology to effectively improve poultry and poultry products throughout the United States.”

Because the government puts so much time and attention into issues like chicken health, it is neglecting its core duty: protecting citizens from attack. Last week’s terrorist attack should be a wake-up call for the government to drop non-essential tasks and concentrate on what it should be doing.

  • 1965, Medicare health insurance authorized for all Americans over age 65 along with Medicaid that covers both seniors and the poor. Somehow for 190 years Americans were able to make do without it.
  • 2006, Largest expansion of Medicare since origin in also covering prescription drugs but only to and beyond a certain point, leaving what’s referred to as a “doughnut hole.”
  • 2009, With the nation running a historic deficit that’s skyrocketing and having just passed a budget-busting health care bill in the Senate, Sen. Maj. Leader Harry Reid declares of the “doughnut hole” we must “forever end this indefensible injustice for American’s seniors.”

CEI Weekly is a compilation of articles and blog posts from CEI’s fellows and associates sent out via e-mail every Friday. Also included in the Weekly newsletter is a brief description of CEI’s weekly podcast and a feature on a major CEI breakthrough made during the week. To sign up for CEI Weekly, go to http://cei.org/newsletters.


CEI Weekly
December 25, 2009


>>[Video] CEI Invites Al Gore to Debate with Additional $200 in Pledges
CEI upped the ante this week by throwing $200 in promised pledges by our viewers, on top of the $500 originally promised, along with a few extra bonuses. Be sure to check out CEI’s invitation here.


>>Shaping the Debate
EPA Delivers Lump of Coal to Appalachia
William Yeatman’s op-ed in the Richmond Times Dispatch

Comprehensive Redux
Alex Nowrasteh’s op-ed in the Washington Times

Christmas Comes Early for the Big Drug Companies
Greg Conko’s quotation in the Washington Examiner


>>Best of the Blogs
Health Care Bill’s Hidden Tax on Pain Relievers, Pedialyte, and Prenatal Vitamins
by John Berlau
If you want to see how Obamacare will hit you and your family in the wallet, look no further than the inside of your medicine cabinet. Open the cabinet door and you may see an antihistamine such as Claritin for allergies, pain relief medicine such as Tylenol or Excedrin. . . All of these items in your cabinet have two things in common. One is that they are classified as “over the counter” (OTC) medicines and available without a doctor’s prescription. The other is that if you pay for any of these items with money in your flexible spending account (FSA) or health savings account (HSA) – and according to this guide from FSA administrator Benesyst , all of these are eligible expenses — you will face an effective tax increase of up to 40 percent on these items in the health care bill that passed the U.S. House of Representatives and is poised to pass the U.S. Senate.

Regulation of the Day 88: College Football’s Playoff System
by Ryan Young
“College football is bringing big bucks to K Street as lawmakers take aim at dismantling the Bowl Championship Series,” says a story in Politico. A six-figure sum is being spent lobbying what really shouldn’t be a government issue. Millions more are being spent on other issues affecting college sports. There’s even a PlayOff PAC that gives money to politicians who take an active stance on college football playoff reform.

Flu Watch Dec. 18 – What Swing Flu Isn’t Doing this Week
by Michael Fumento
New infections continued to drop, down this week to only 391 reported by CDC-monitored labs, compared to 1,370 just two weeks before and 11,470 at the height of the epidemic. So that’s a plummet of over 96% from the height. Deaths and hospitalizations are less than half those of last week, and while formerly the CDC refrained from releasing exact numbers it’s now doing so.


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In a preview to the 2010 census, Michigan learned this week that it was one of only three states to lose members of its population. Of course, since the state has seen a steady decline in population over the past four years this doesn’t exactly come as a shock.

Michigan lost 32,759 people between July 1, 2008, and July 1, 2009, a decline of 0.3%, while the nation’s population grew 0.9% to 307,006,550. Maine and Rhode Island also lost population.

By the end of the decade researchers estimate that Michigan will have lost 20% of its jobs. And the situation isn’t likely to improve. Michigan politicians continue to demonstrate their lack of understanding about how markets work and why jobs and thus residents are exiting the state for friendlier lands. It isn’t a lack of government funding but rather a glut of government intervention that is driving competition, business, jobs, and residents to other states. For example, as I have written about in the past, Michigan’s solution to the high cost of car insurance in the state is not to examine and solve the mechanisms that drive up the cost of writing insurance in the state, but rather to mandate companies simply charge less and take less of a profit. This ignores the fact that insurers in Michigan are making smaller profits than other states and more controls simply add incentive for insurance companies to leave the state, taking jobs and access to insurance with them.