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Saturday, November 08, 2014

Feds sued for Obamacare’s privacy rights violation

Law 'forces Americans to choose between disclosing personal information, or paying penalty'

Challenges to Obamacare have been to the U.S. Supreme Court twice already, winning once and losing once, and several other cases are moving that direction, one claiming the law is unconstitutional since it was a tax bill that started in the U.S. Senate and another that it is illegal because President Obama has made virtually dozens of arbitrary changes to the law without the consent of Congress.

Should Obamacare survive those claims, a new petition is being submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court asking for a review alleging the law violates the Fourth, Fifth and Ninth amendment provisions on privacy.

The complaint also cites Articles I, II and III of the Constitution regarding the separation of powers and focuses on two issues: the requirement to buy insurance and the control that will be vested in the Individual Price Advisory Board, a new creation of the federal law that is unanswerable to Congress and unaccountable to the federal courts.

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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Probably all valid points. Hope for the best.