January 2012

Governors are now criticizing the health care bill backed by the Obama administration, saying it will cause health care costs and state deficits to skyrocket, while driving up unemployment.  Arizona Governor Janice Brewer said the bill would end up “exacerbating our state’s fiscal woes by billions of dollars.” Rhode Island’s Donald Carcieri said “this legislation is bad for Rhode Island, its taxpayers, seniors, and economy….This bill is not about health care. It’s about ideology and special interests.” Indiana’s Mitch Daniels said it would lead to insurance “premium increases ranging up to 78 percent,” “huge tax increases” for medical “device manufacturers” that employ many, and “job losses” and “a job killing tax of $2,000 per employee” that “will be levied on many companies.”

Earlier, Tennessee’s governor, Phil Bredesen (D), called the bill the “mother of all unfunded mandates,” saying it will force states to spend so much that they will have to either massively raise taxes, or run large budget deficits that violate state constitutions.

The health care bill has now been changed to add additional tax increases, such as increasing the tax on uninsured individuals by an extra $2 billion and on employers by $25 billion. Also added are new cuts to Medicare Advantage, increased by $13.7 billion (to $131.9 billion), and Medicare Advantage interactions, by $53 billion (to $70.4 billion).  This is according to the Congressional Budget Office.  But the CBO has cautioned that “the agency has not thoroughly examined the reconciliation proposal to verify its consistency with the previous draft,” so there may be additional major changes that remain undisclosed until the House votes on the bill.

While the CBO has scored the health care bill as not increasing the federal deficit, thanks to the many tax increases in the bill, it has done so only by accepting many accounting gimmicks that even pro-Obama journalists have admitted are deceptive and conceal the bill’s enormous cost and the fact that it will massively increase the deficit.

Earlier, health care cost expert James C. Capretta explained how “Obamacare Is A Budgetary Disaster” that will cost at least $1.4 trillion more than promised.

The Congressional Budget Office, which refused to question Obama’s gimmicks to lowball the cost of his health care plan, nevertheless admits that “President Obama’s policies would add more than $9.7 trillion to the national debt over the next decade.”

There are $3,000,000,000,000 in tax increases in Obama’s budget.  But he’s spending money at such a furious pace that the deficit will skyrocket anyway: “The president’s budget would borrow 42 cents for each dollar spent in 2010,” and “double the national debt over the next decade.”  Obama recently ran up the largest budget deficit in history, by a huge margin.

ObamaCare would reduce medical innovation, raise taxes, drive up insurance premiums, and break campaign promises.  It  would cut the quality of  care, while imposing restrictions that failed when tried at the state level.  It ignores advice from experts about how to cut costs.

Some of my colleagues recently brought to my attention this grossly misinformed, misleading, and error-laden essay by Carolyn Moffa, “Corporatism: Say No to G.M.O!” on the Campaign for Liberty’s website.  My first instinct was to ignore it, since this seems to be an aberration for the Campaign for Liberty and its generally principled defenders of freedom.  However, the essay’s pro-nanny state, anti-consumer choice, and just plain absurd point of view was too much to ignore.

Ms. Moffa seems to suggest that the federal government isn’t doing enough to protect us from modern technology, and that the Food and Drug Administration ought to force bioengineered foods to be segregated and labeled.  Moffa even praises the governments of Germany, Austria, Hungary, Greece, France, and Luxembourg for banning bioengineered foods.  “If these frankenfoods aren’t good enough for other countries, why are we eating them every day here in America?”  If I keep reading, I thought, will she also call for industrial central planning, labor union rioting, and socialized medicine?  “If a free market for health care isn’t good enough for other countries, why would we want it here in America?”

Forget about all the factual inaccuracies, I thought – and believe me, there are many, which I’ll address in another post.  But, surely this kind of nanny state idiocy would be rejected by the C4L on first principles, and in fairly short order to boot.  Seems I was wrong, however.

The piece has gotten a handful of critical comments wondering why the C4L would beg for, or at the very least provide aid and comfort to, more government intervention.  A few commenters even corrected some of the most glaring factual errors.  But, much to my surprise, most of the comments have been favorable.  One commenter even suggests that,

“We as libertarians need to point out the dangers of GMO to conservatives and the fact that government organizations set up by liberals, most of who understand the dangers of GMO but incorrectly attribute the escalating danger to what they mistakenly refer to as ‘the free market,’ are being taken over by the very corporations that the liberals think they are going to control through the proliferation of government bureaucratic power.”

So, let me get this straight:  A handful of corporations and other businesses develop a new technology. They sell it to farmers who wish to buy the technology, and who are even willing to pay a hefty premium for the privilege of doing so.  And, with only a modest amount of effort, consumers who don’t want the products of that technology, can buy something else instead.  If that’s all it takes for a libertarian to believe he or she is being “taken over,” then I suppose it’s not just liberals who are mistaken about the free market.

Now, the article rightly criticizes agricultural subsidies, which certainly ought to be eliminated.  It takes some swipes at intellectual property protection – a view I do not share, but which is held by many libertarians for principled reasons.  And it decries the too-cozy relationship between corporations like Monsanto and the federal government, which I myself have done on numerous occasions (see here and here for examples).  But it mistakenly conflates corporatist governmental practices with the value or safety of a particular technology.  You may hate big government.  You may even hate Monsanto.  But what does either have to do with whether or not products made with biotechnology are safe or useful?

The main thrust of the piece is that so-called Genetically Modified Organisms, by which Ms. Moffa appears to mean crop plants modified with recombinant DNA technology, are unnatural and very probably harmful to humans.  The most charitable thing I can say about the essay, then, is that it is narrow-minded and uninformed clap-trap.  Worse still, judging by the comments, it appears that a non-trivial number of libertarians shares the almost religious belief that, “If this technology is too complicated for me to understand, well then nobody could possibly understand it.”

I believe it was Arthur C. Clarke who wrote that “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”  And, for some libertarians at least, what scientists call recombinant DNA technology must be the blackest of magic indeed.

This kind of fundamentalist rejection of the fruits of science and technology is dangerous.  So, in the hope of shedding some light on the subject, I’d like to explain why bioengineered foods, or GMOs in the common idiom, are well understood by those who take the time to learn, and why they pose no threat to consumers or the environment.

Let’s start at the beginning:  Ms. Moffa writes, as though we should all be scandalized to learn, that “Genetically Modified Organisms are created through changing the DNA of a plant.”  But, since the dawn of agriculture some 10,000 years ago, the whole point of domesticating and breeding plants has been to change their DNA in order to change their traits.  One important fallacy embraced by those who don’t understand the basics of genetics or plant and animal breeding is the belief that so-called “natural” genetic modifications (i.e., those that result from selection or simple hybridization) are in some relevant way different (and therefore inherently safer) than those arising from more sophisticated methods.  What matters, though, is not how the genetic changes are made, but what traits those changes produce.  Indeed, the most dangerous plants that have ever existed are all “wild” – that is, wholly unmodified by human hands, products of good ol’ Mother Nature.

As the National Academy of Sciences concluded way back in 1987:

“There is no evidence of the existence of unique hazards either in the use of recombinant DNA techniques or in the movement of genes between unrelated organisms. The risks associated with the introduction of recombinant DNA-modified organisms are the same in kind as those associated with the introduction of unmodified organisms and organisms modified by other methods.”

Because most people know very little (if anything) about genetics or plant breeding, why this is so may take a little explaining.  So, please bear with me.

DNA and RNA are the most basic bits of hereditary material, present in all living organisms. They act as recipe books that instruct cells how to express various traits.  The DNA in every organism (except viruses, which have a few modest but noteworthy differences) is composed of the same six chemical building blocks (the nucleotide bases Adenine, Cytosine, Guanine, and Thymine, held together by a sugar and phosphorous backbone), and it works in exactly the same way regardless of whether it is in plants, animals, fungi, or microbes.  Within an organism’s genome, millions of these A, C, G, and T bases are strung together to form chromosomes.  And, while most of the bases on each of the chromosomes do nothing at all, short segments of each chromosome, called genes, provide the cellular recipe for building proteins.  It is differences in the proteins an organism produces from its DNA that account for different traits or characteristics.

So, when breeders wish to alter the traits of a given plant or animal, they have to change the DNA.  Sometimes this is done very subtly, by exploiting a natural mutations.  But, even with conventional plant breeding methods, DNA and genes can often be changed quite substantially.  For example, the wild progenitors of nearly every fruit and vegetable humans eat contain very potent toxins and carcinogens.  Potatoes and tomatoes are in the same taxonomic class as deadly nightshade, and they produce the same class of toxic glycoalkaloids. Only through breeding (i.e. changing the plants’ DNA to eliminate or deactivate the genes that produce those chemicals) were early farmers able to develop plants that are safe to eat.  Similarly, rapeseed, which is the progenitor of Canola, naturally contains genes that produce two harmful chemicals:  a toxin called erucic acid and a class of antinutrients (which are not toxic per se, but which interfere with the absorption of essential dietary nutrients) called glucosinolates.  Again, only by grossly manipulating the DNA of rapeseed were breeders able to produce the modified plant Canola, which produces a safe and nutritious cooking oil.

It’s also worth noting that there is a wide range of more and less sophisticated breeding techniques between basic hybridization and recombinant DNA methods, each of which can alter or suppress existing genes, or add in entirely new genes.  For example, various methods of manipulating seeds and young plants in a laboratory environment can be used to produce “wide crosses” between two plants of different species or genera that are otherwise sexually incompatible. Wide crossing is often used, for example, to mate wheat or rye with various wild grasses in order to introduce a natural resistance or more robust growth from the wild plant to the cultivated one.  Like narrow crosses, the process randomly combines tens of thousands of genes from the two parent plants and commonly transfers thousands of uncharacterized genes and the proteins they encode from wild plants into food crop varieties.  The addition or deletion of any one gene, or combinations of several new and old genes, could introduce a toxin or allergen, reduce the nutritional value of the crop, or add weedy or invasive characteristics to the new variety.

Conventional plant breeders also commonly create entirely new genetic variants by intentionally mutating plants with x-ray or gamma radiation, with mutagenic chemicals, or simply by culturing clumps of cells in a Petri dish and letting spontaneous mutations occur when the cells divide. This “mutation breeding” has been in common use since the 1950s, and more than 2,250 known mutant varieties have been bred in at least 50 countries.  In mutation breeding, just as in sexual reproduction, breeders have no knowledge of the exact genetic changes that produce the useful traits or what other mutations may have also occurred – including those that could alter the ability to cause allergic reactions, over-express a natural toxin or antinutrient, or generate other undesirable changes.  Ironically, this hugely unpredictable method is considered to be a type of conventional breeding, so its widespread and unregulated use is wholly uncontroversial.

Compared with these largely random, hit-or-miss methods of “conventional” plant breeding, recombinant DNA is far more precise and predictable, and its products are therefore more likely to be safe for consumers and the environment.  Although modern biotechnology expands the range of new traits that can be added to crop plants, it also ensures that more will be known about those traits, and that the behavior of the modified plants will be easier to predict.

So, what about adding a gene from one organism into another, such as the movement of a bacterial gene into a crop plant?  “Crossing the species barrier” is just wrong … or dangerous … or something.  Right?  Well, no.  Genes are not proprietary.  Humans, for example, share about 90 percent of the same genes with rats and mice, and nearly 50 percent of the same genes as the plant Arabidopsis thaliana, which is the “lab rat” of the plant world.  So, suggesting that there are “plant” genes on the one hand and “animal” or “bacterial” genes on the other, and that never the twain shall meet, is simply not true.  It makes sense, of course, that there would be broad sharing of genes across not just closely related species, but also across taxonomic kingdoms.  After all, every living organism evolved from the same single celled life forms that appeared on our planet billions of years ago.

Furthermore, it’s actually pretty common in nature for viruses and bacteria to insert their own genes into plants and animals.  Viruses reproduce by inserting their genetic material into a plant or animal host cell and hijacking the host’s cellular machinery to produce more copies of the virus.  Much of the non-coding, “junk” DNA in the human genome is actually comprised of bits of viral genetic material that were taken up by and incorporated into our own DNA as humans evolved from lower species.

In plants, the family of Mosaic viruses, which are common in dozens of crop species, reproduce by inserting bits of RNA into plant cells.  There too, sometimes the viral RNAs become disabled and are taken up and incorporated into the plant’s genome.  A small number of bacteria work in a similar fashion.  A bacterium known as Agrobacterium tumefaciens causes crown gall disease in plants by inserting a small segment of its DNA into the plant’s cells, which then become incorporated at a more or less random location in the plant genome.  Since neither of these plant diseases is harmful to humans, infected plants often make it into the food supply, and we commonly consume millions of individual genes of viral and bacterial origin in every bite of broccoli, potato, squash, tomato, and very probably every other fruit and vegetable in the human diet.

In fact, plant breeders first discovered how they could use recombinant DNA techniques to introduce genes into plants by piggybacking on the natural process that A. tumefaciens provides.  They used natural enzymes to replace the bacterium’s infectious genes with useful ones, and then let the modified A. tumefaciens naturally insert the target genes into plants.  Thus, there is nothing inherently novel about these kinds of inter-kingdom genetic transfers, and moving genes between species with rDNA does not pose any unique risks.

Again, as with conventional plant breeding, all that matters is the function of the particular gene that is transferred to the daughter plant.  If the novel gene codes for the production of a protein that is safe for humans and the environment, then the modified plant will be safe for humans and the environment.  The addition of a gene that codes for a toxic or allergenic protein can pose environmental risks or make food from that plant unsafe to eat.  But this is true whether it is done by recombinant DNA or conventional methods.  And, because rDNA techniques are more precise and actually aid in the identification of the transferred genetic material and the proteins those genes produce, scientists generally believe them to be safer than most conventional breeding methods.  Indeed, the only thing that truly makes recombinant DNA different from conventional breeding is that, with the former, you know exactly what gene or genes are being introduced into the new organism and you know what those genes do.  The same cannot be said for any form of conventional breeding.

The National Research Council, which is the research arm of the National Academy of Sciences, concluded in a 1989 report that:

“Recombinant DNA methodology makes it possible to introduce pieces of DNA, consisting of either single or multiple genes, that can be defined in function and even in nucleotide sequence. With classical techniques of gene transfer, a variable number of genes can be transferred, the number depending on the mechanism of transfer; but predicting the precise number or the traits that have been transferred is difficult, and we cannot always predict the phenotypic expression that will result. With organisms modified by molecular methods, we are in a better, if not perfect, position to predict the phenotypic expression.”

Ms. Moffa criticizes Monsanto for using rDNA techniques to breed “Roundup Ready” plant varieties that are resistant to the herbicide glyphosate, which Monsanto sells under the trade name Roundup.  Now, leaving aside the fact that Ms. Moffa incorrectly writes that this produces plants that “will kill any pest that eats the plant” (that’s actually an entirely different type of modification), what’s most telling about her essay is that she has nothing at all to say about herbicide resistant plants that have been developed with one or another conventional breeding method.

For example, readers are supposed to be frightened that the Roundup Ready gene was isolated from the common soil bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens (not from E. coli, as Ms. Moffa incorrectly claims).  But, with the Roundup Ready trait, we know exactly what the nucleotide sequence of the gene is and exactly what protein that gene expresses (C4 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase, or EPSPS).  So, what does it matter where the gene was found?

As it turns out, all plants already express an EPSPS protein nearly identical to the one expressed by Roundup Ready varieties.  The protein enzyme helps to produce certain amino acids that plants use to produce chlorophyll.  And glyphosate (Roundup) works by disrupting the production of those amino acids by the EPSPS protein, thereby inhibiting the accumulation of chlorophyll.  Monsanto was able to identify a variant of the EPSPS gene in A. tumefaciens that expresses greater amounts of the EPSPS protein than do plants, which in turn allows Roundup Ready varieties to produce sufficient amounts of chlorophyll even in the presence of glyphosate.  Since no animals or invertebrates rely on the EPSPS pathway, glyphosate is non-toxic to nearly everything that doesn’t have chlorophyll.  And, since all plants already express an EPSPS protein, there is no reason why the higher levels of the protein in Roundup Ready plants should be harmful to anything or anyone.

Compare that to, say, a line of crop plant varieties developed recently by BASF using “conventional” breeding.  Ms. Moffa writes nothing about these varieties, and she may never have even heard of them.  But, since they’re the products of conventional breeding, one might imagine that she would think they’re just swell.  These varieties, named “Clearfield,” are also herbicide resistant, meaning farmers can spray a particular herbicide on their fields and kill weeds without harming the crop plants.

There’s a difference between Roundup Ready varieties and Clearfield varieties, though.  And it’s a big one.  Most of the Clearfield varieties were developed using mutation breeding.  Clusters of the unmodified plants’ cells were doused with a mutagenic chemical in order to produce random genetic mutations.  So, whereas with rDNA modified varieties, we know exactly what genetic changes have been made in the daughter plants, with Clearfield varieties, no one knows what genetic changes account for the herbicide resistance trait.  Nor do we know what other changes in the plants’ DNA were made concomitant to the useful mutation.

I am in no way suggesting that Clearfield varieties pose any danger to humans or the environment.  On the contrary, over the years, plant breeders have developed a number of common sense methods to test their new varieties for safety.  This doesn’t mean that no harm can ever come from a new plant variety.  Indeed, there are a handful of documented cases in which conventionally bred plants (including a few simple hybrids resulting from the mating of two plants of the same species) have produced harmful levels of natural toxins (see here and here for two examples).  But, there isn’t a single recorded example of any rDNA engineered plant put on the market that has caused physical harm to any human being in any way.  Because rDNA methods are so much more precise, biotechnology is generally (and appropriately) considered to be much safer than any of the conventional breeding methods that have ever been used.

Ultimately, a passionate belief that bioengineered foods must be dangerous because they are not “natural” cannot be supported by facts or logic.  That said, if consumers want to exercise their superstitions by worshipping Gaia, eating local, and buying only non-GM food, they should be free to do so.  That is, after all, what markets are for:  You can buy the products you like, and I can buy the products I like, assuming there’s someone at the other end of the voluntary exchange who’s willing to offer those goods for sale at a price we’re willing to pay.  You want to buy non-bioengineered food?  More power to you.  There are thousands of purveyors in this country and others who are more than happy to sell you products that they happily label as organic or non-GMO.  But, please, don’t presume to impose your narrow-minded, uninformed preferences on the rest of us.

Richard Morrison, Jeremy Lott and Dave Weigel come together bring you Episode 84 of the Liberty Week podcast. We cover Washington state’s death wish, new polling on the politics of healthcare, private investment in space exploration, eminent domain abuse in Detroit and the effects of cocaine use on global warming.

“Is global warming the new apocalypse?” asks The Times of London in an article focusing on children’s fears about global warming in the context of a scare-mongering U.K. government advertising  campaign to promote climate-change awareness.

Recently the Advertising Standards Authority ruled that some of the campaign’s print ads using nursery rhymes overstated the risks of global warming and were to be banned. But it passed on a TV ad that got almost 1000 complaints that it was too scary.

Check out an earlier CEI post on global warming alarmists’ exploitation of children. Look again at CEI’s response to an earlier apocalyptic video shown at the COP15 Copenhagen meeting on climate change.

Over at the American Spectator, I explain why it won’t, but a deregulatory stimulus would. Main points:

-Anything that Washington giveth, it must first taketh away from somewhere else. The jobs bill is a zero-sum game.

-When government borrows more, less investment capital is left over for the productive sector.

-Taxes will have to be raised later to pay for today’s increased borrowing.

-Deregulation is a better approach. The biggest obstacles to job creation and economic growth are all in Washington.

Erin Brockovich became “America’s Sweetheart” because “she brought a corporation to its knees.” As the story goes, the energy company PG&E was storing chromium 6, a cancer agent, in its on-site ponds but it leached into the wells of the nearby tiny desert town of Hinkley, Calif., to sue. The suit blamed the chemical for dozens of symptoms, ranging from nosebleeds to breast cancer, Hodgkin’s disease, miscarriages and spinal deterioration. In 1996 PG&E settled the case for $333 million.

The problem, as I noted in my very first piece critical of Brockovich way back in 2000, is that “no one agent could possibly have caused more than a handful of the symptoms described. Chromium 6 in the water almost certainly didn’t cause any of them. The Environmental Protection Agency does consider chromium 6 a human carcinogen. But it’s linked only to cancer of the lung and of the septum. Further, as one might guess from these two cancers, it’s a carcinogen only when inhaled.”

Nevertheless, PG&E foolishly submitted to arbitration rather than going to court, Brockovich’s firm won a massive $333 million, of which Brockovich in her bonus alone received $2 million.

But were the people of Hinkley actually any more likely to have cancer than would be expected in a town that size of that demographic population?

In light of the trouble Brockovich is currently stirring up in Acreage, Florida, in which she’s rounding up plaintiffs for class action suits regarding an alleged childhood cancer cluster, I decided to check into the final verdict on cancer in Hinkley. Here’s what I found.

California’s “Desert Sierra Cancer Surveillance Program staff reviewed cancer cases that had been diagnosed among residents of the census tract where Hinkley is located.” Conclusion: “Our assessment did not identify any excess in the number of new cancer cases in Hinkley between 1988 and 1993 that is greater than the level anticipated for sampling error.” Moreover, “Recently, we extended our assessment of cancer in the census tract encompassing Hinkley through 1998.” Conclusion: the did “not identify an excess in the number of new cancer cases in the area assessed.”

Conclusion: Brockovich’s original claim to fame was built on a fabrication. And it still is.

I’ve got a list on my Web site of more of my extensive writings on this wicked fraud of a woman. Two of the greatest compliments I’ve received: When Gen. David Petraeus said of my “The New Band of Brothers” article from Iraq: “Great stuff with a great unit in a very tough neighborhood!” and when Australia’s “60 Minutes” asked Brockovich about me and she screeched: “I hate him!”

An annual study claims that the NCAA’s basketball championship tournament makes workers less productive. The illicit temptations of filling out brackets and watching games instead of working will cost the economy about $1.8 billion this year. Over at the Daily Caller, I show why that’s (mostly) a myth.

“No other country in the world has comparable problems with cars accelerating on their own,” observes one of Germany’s top magazines, Der Spiegel — yet “the same cars exist around the world, but no accidents of this type have occurred anywhere outside of North America. There were also cases of stuck Toyota gas pedals in Germany. The drivers braked successfully, and notified their car dealerships. None of them met their deaths.”

Indeed, sudden acceleration appears to be a form of American hypochondria — not just on Toyotas. The data show it, the question is why? Learn about it in my New York Post piece today, “Toyota Hysteria: Real Stories Are about Us.”

Leave it to man to improve upon mother nature. Sure, she’s got trees of every shape color and size, they rustle in the breeze, and produce life-giving oxygen, but can her trees produce jet fuel? Now, ours can:synthetictree

Over at Columbia University, professor Klaus S. Lackner has one-upped the natural world by coming up with a synthetic tree that can absorb carbon dioxide 1000 times faster than “old-style” trees and hundreds of times faster than windmill generators.

The “tree” uses plastic leaves that capture the carbon dioxide in a chamber. The carbon dioxide is then compressed into liquid form. The tree captures the carbon without the need for direct sunlight, which means that, unlike traditional trees, the synthetic trees can be stored in enclosed places such as barns, used anywhere, and transported from one site to another regardless of conditions.

Lackner says the captured CO2 could be used to create fuel for jet engines and cars, the two most common carbon emitters. In other cases, the CO2 could be used to enhance current production of vegetable produce.

klaus-lackner-of-columbia-uni1

The “trees” are similar to devices used to capture carbon from the flue stacks of carbon power plants, but the major difference is that these new trees capture ambient carbon from the environment at all times.

One thing this achievement highlights is how environmental problems can be solved by the free market. Rather than passing laws that simply mandate industry use less energy or emit less carbon dioxide, creating an effective way to reuse energy and create cheaper fuels is likely to result in systemic changes in the way energy and pollution are dealt with. With these “trees” the perception of emissions from naughty pollution to the wastefulness. Why freely emit carbon dioxide into the atmosphere when we can re-purpose it for cost-effective fuels?

Even the Associated Press admits that President Obama is not telling the truth about his health care plan and how it would affect health insurance premiums, in a news story entitled, “FACT CHECK:  Premiums Would Rise Under Obama Plan.”  (The Associated Press is so pro-Obama that it depicted criticism of Obama’s links to the unrepentant former terrorist Bill Ayers as somehow being “racist” even though Ayers is white, and so liberal that it claimed that the Democratic Party platform was “centrist”).   The AP writes, “Buyers, beware: President Barack Obama says his health care overhaul will lower premiums by double digits, but check the fine print.”  The AP notes that the Congressional Budget Office “concluded that premiums for people buying their own coverage would go up by an average of 10 percent to 13 percent, compared with the levels they’d reach without the legislation.”

Earlier, the AP admitted that Obama’s health care plan “would drive up the deficit by billions of dollars,” and that Obama was not telling the truth about the extent to which abortions are covered under his plan.

The procedural gimmick that congressional leaders plan to use to enact Obamacare is unconstitutional, writes law professor Michael McConnell, who recently retired as a judge on the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals (clearing the way for Obama to appoint a replacement), in the Wall Street Journal.  The so-called “Slaughter solution” violates Article 1, Section 7 of the Constitution, and the Supreme Court’s rulings in Clinton v. New York (1998) and INS v. Chadha (1983).

A CBS News commentary notes that ObamaCare would create perverse incentives for employers to create a divisive two-tier labor market, and for some employees to keep their income from rising lest they lose more in government health care subsidies than they would gain in take-home pay due to provisions in ObamaCare that condition health-care subsidies on not increasing your income beyond a specified level, and thus constitute a “massive penalty if their income rises.”

A pro-Obama New York Times columnist admits that ObamaCare’s enormous cost is hidden by dishonest gimmicks.  Earlier, health care cost expert James C. Capretta explained how “Obamacare Is A Budgetary Disaster” that will cost at least $1.4 trillion more than promised.

A governor explains how Obamacare would cause massive harm to his state, such as “job losses,” and says it would add “more than a trillion dollars to the national debt.”

There are $3,000,000,000,000 in tax increases in Obama’s budget.  But he’s spending money at such a furious pace that the deficit will skyrocket anyway: “The president’s budget would borrow 42 cents for each dollar spent in 2010,” and “double the national debt over the next decade.”

Obama’s health care plan will further increase deficits, as even Democrats have admitted.   Obamacare would reduce medical innovation, raise taxes, drive up insurance premiums, break campaign promises, and increase state deficits.  It  would cut the quality of  care, while imposing restrictions that failed when tried at the state level.  It ignores advice from experts about how to cut costs.