The health care insurance mandate and historical analogues: tea, cotton, and manufactured goods
Finkelman, Paul <paul.finkelman@albanylaw.edu>
Paul.Finkelman at albanylaw.edu
Mon Feb 6 18:45:18 PST 2012
I think you are really reaching here.
One difference of course -- and it is huge -- is that the colonists did not expect to the government to pay for their beverages if they were thirsty, but in fact we all know that when we run out of money the government picks up the tab -- millions of people our parents age are in nursing homes with medicaid picking up the tab (in addition to medicare) rather than their children doing it.
It is far more like a car insurance mandate -- of other required liability insurance -- than like a tea tax.
There were no tariffs to "force" southerners to buy northern goods. You have been drinking John C. Calhoun's cool aid. And slave state representatives voted for these bills as well and slaveowning presidents signed them.
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Paul Finkelman, Ph.D.
President William McKinley Distinguished Professor of Law
Albany Law School
80 New Scotland Avenue
Albany, NY 12208
518-445-3386 (p)
518-445-3363 (f)
paul.finkelman at albanylaw.edu<mailto:paul.finkelman at albanylaw.edu>
www.paulfinkelman.com<http://www.paulfinkelman.com>
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From: conlawprof-bounces at lists.ucla.edu [conlawprof-bounces at lists.ucla.edu] on behalf of Scarberry, Mark [Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu]
Sent: Monday, February 06, 2012 8:29 PM
To: Con Law Prof list
Subject: The health care insurance mandate and historical analogues: tea, cotton, and manufactured goods
It doesn’t seem likely, of course, that the current broad reading of the commerce power will be trimmed back. In terms, though, of whether the power should be extended to justify the mandate, I wonder whether it would be useful to consider historical analogues that would have made the founding generation particularly sensitive to mandates. I imagine others have already considered these points, but
1. Wouldn’t the founding generation have been particularly sensitive to mandates due to the British having in a sense forced tea down their throats (with landing of tea backed up by warships)? (No reference to the current tea party movement intended.) I suppose we all are in the market for beverages.
2. Ditto with regard to intersectional disputes over tariffs, imposed to force southerners to buy northern manufactured goods? (Would there also have been a similar concern about forcing northerners to buy southern and western agricultural products?) Or did the tariff disputes arise too late, historically, to be relevant to any sort of original meaning analysis?
I’m not saying that these issues involved mandates, but I think they would have made it particularly unlikely that the commerce power would have been thought to include the power to impose mandates. I think there would have been a visceral reaction against mandates generally.
Perhaps the historians on the list can help us on these points.
Mark
Mark S. Scarberry
Pepperdine Univ. School of Law
Malibu, CA 90263
(310)506-4667
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