The Right Opinion
Roberts' Ruling Took Guts
Why not just cut open a goat and be done with it?
In ancient Rome, a special kind of priest called a haruspex would "read" the entrails of sheep to divine the will of the gods, the health of the growing season, or whatever else was weighing on the minds of men. Because animal guts don't, in fact, impart that much information about, say, next year's wheat harvest, the haruspices (called "auspices" in Latin -- from which we get the English word) could pretty much make it up as they went along. The same went for the auguries (priests who studied the flight of birds). Ultimately, the auspices and auguries made their decisions based upon the whims, vicissitudes and demands of politics in one form or another. If the rulers were happy with the result, they didn't much care what the guts actually said.
Fast-forward to chief haruspex John Roberts.
In the majority opinion written by Roberts, the Supreme Court held that the mandate to buy health insurance under the Affordable Care Act (aka ObamaCare) is unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause and the Necessary and Proper Clause. But Roberts also found that it's constitutional under Congress's power to tax. It is on these grounds that Roberts upheld the constitutionality of ObamaCare, siding with the four liberal justices of the bench.
The upshot is that Congress cannot use the Commerce Clause to force you to eat broccoli, but it can tax you into doing so. Huzzah for liberty!
To reach this decision, Roberts had to embrace a position denied by the White House, Congress and vast swaths of the legal punditocracy: that the mandate is a tax for the purposes of constitutional consideration but not a tax according to the Anti-Injunction Act (which bars lawsuits against taxes until after they're levied). Roberts' effort, wrote Justice Antonin Scalia in dissent, "carries verbal wizardry too far, deep into the forbidden land of the sophists."
Let the record show that the sophists were valued defenders of entrail-reading.
Of course, there are substantive arguments in favor of Roberts' reasoning. But as far as I can tell, no one is confident, never mind certain, that Roberts actually believes his own position. And among supporters of ObamaCare, from the White House on down, no one cares whether he does.
President Obama -- self-praised constitutional scholar -- mocked those who called the fees and penalties under ObamaCare a tax. Now he celebrates a decision that mocks him back. Democratic National Committee Executive Director (and former White House aide) Patrick Gaspard seemed to summarize the depth of concern on his side of the aisle when he responded to the ruling on Twitter: "it's constitutional. B----es."
More sober-eyed liberal legal experts took similar positions. Roberts' opinion was "statesmanlike," they claimed, and, more bizarrely, "apolitical." Some, such as constitutional scholar Jeffrey Rosen, speaking on National Public Radio, even celebrated Roberts' brilliance at finding a way to save the reputation of the court by deploying what Thomas Jefferson called "twistifications."
Indeed, before and after the ruling, much of the journalistic and legal establishment argued that a 5-4 ruling to overturn ObamaCare would be "political" because the majority would be comprised entirely of Republican appointees. But a 5-4 ruling to uphold ObamaCare would be apolitical because, well, it just would be.
In other words, if five conservative justices rule according to their well-known convictions, it's illegitimate. But if Roberts twists himself like an illustration in the Kama Sutra to find a way to uphold the law, then that amounts to "leadership."
Now, I don't know what's in Roberts' heart, but no court watcher I've heard from puts much weight on the idea that Roberts did anything other than reason backward from the result he wanted in order to buy respect from the court's critics at the expense of his own beliefs.
At least that's one thing both fans and critics of this ruling can largely agree on.
Some of Roberts' defenders claim he's outmaneuvered everyone. By upholding ObamaCare, he's made future conservative decisions unassailable. He's poisoned the well of the commerce clause for liberals. He's removed the court as an election-year issue. He's gift-wrapped for Mitt Romney the attack that Obama has raised taxes massively, violating a host of promises and assurances. And, again, he's saved the legitimacy of the court.
That's all very interesting, but it leaves aside the real issue: None of those concerns are what was asked of the court. That so few people seem to care augurs poorly for the rule of law and the auspices of our republic.
(C) 2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

13 Comments
M Rick Timms, MD in Georgia
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 12:57 AM
So the court has handed the ball back to the American people to decide who will hold the newly fortified power of "taxation". With the knowledge that the Congress holds the power to tax us severly if we do not purchase a Chevy Volt, should they decide to do so, we had better choose carfully those who will represent us.
Recall that the ObamaCare law could not be passed by the normal process of lawmaking. Instead, the democrats sidestepped the will of the American people and treated the bill as a "budget reconciliation" maneuver which allowed them to avoid a defeat in the Senate.
The law has been misrepresented from the start. The democrats, and the fawning media, have ingored the Republican alternative, based on Health saving Accounts, focused improvements in Insurance coverages for dependents and pre-existing or newfound illness. The Republican plan also preserves Medicare for those already in the utilization phase, while phasing in a private system of competitive free market heathcare options that restore patient choice and quailty care from physician and providers who work for the patient - not for the government or for the goverment controlled hospital system.
American voters must decide if they want to go to a doctor that works for them, or one who answers to Uncle Barrack.
JJStryder in California
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 1:25 AM
Impeach John Roberts! He now resides with the Warren courts!
Ct-Tom in NC
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 7:52 AM
Great column, Jonah. Thanks!
Bruce R Pierce in Qwensboro, Ky
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 8:05 AM
Before you go calling for impeachment read the letters that are the explanation of the Constitution. In the Federalist Papers the subject of taxes were talked about and yes it was even said that the government’s power to tax must be unlimited and even mentioned the reasons. That power to tax can be misused even more than the commerce clause because it is unlimited. The issue with “Obama Care” is with the legislature, the only way to change that is to change the legislature.
Bubba in USA
Tuesday, July 10, 2012 at 1:38 PM
You lie. Hamilton was speaking about war and natural disasters. And he offered that the states would serve as a bulwark against this power.
This kind of ignorance can only be 'learned' from professors.
tdrag in Kennesaw, Georgia
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 8:27 AM
As we approach the 4th of July, it is sad that the highest court in our nation has chosen to uphold the policies of the most evil man to ever hold the office of the Presidency. The ramifications of the Arizona decision and the Health Care decision show us what will happen when we forget our history of freedom and vote with our hearts instead of our brains. I pray that we will be able to correct this series of mistakes in November, and if we can't, that we will have the courage to be in the streets in December.
Tex Horn in Texas
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 11:03 AM
The president, Congress, and Supreme court, backed by a liberal media, have saddled Americans with what will be the largest tax increases in decades. From what I understand, Obamacare has within it the power to raise taxes 21 times over the next decade. Argue the tactics of the Court all you want, we are screwed, both from a tax viewpoint, and from a healthcare viewpoint.
JAC in Texas
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 1:43 PM
Roberts gave in to the thinly-veiled threats issued by Obozo after the court proceedings ended regarding the court's possible "unprecedented" ruling against a law passed by Congress. So much for integrity.
sfj in Alabama
Friday, June 29, 2012 at 6:36 PM
It will be fun to watch the democraps squirm when confronted by some slick Romney ads referring to this massive tax raise during the coming months. At first, I was pissed at Roberts but in retrospect, I think it was a smart move. This most unpopular legislation was hung around obummers neck for all to see. It will energize the "independents" and others who were considering sitting this one out. Let the house and senate unwind this abomination and then President Romney can sign the bill killing this crappy bill.
Holmes Simons in FL
Sunday, July 1, 2012 at 12:28 PM
The inalienable rights of American citizens have been revoked by the egotistical rantings of one pseudo-intellectual judge in an pathetic attempt to exhibit the superiority of his legal acumen above that of his peers, and, by his singular effort, he has destroyed and repudiated the legacy of individual freedom that is the very foundational principle upon which the Federal Government was created to defend and protect.
So, before one jumps on the bandwagon glorifying the shrewdness of Justice Roberts in advancing conservatism, please consider these two simple facts:
1) The inherent fallacy of the so-called “Commerce Clause”, upon which Congress has relied for years to regulate any and every aspect of economic activity, was upheld; but it cannot be used to regulate “economic inactivity”, such as one not purchasing health insurance.
2) What then can Congress use to regulate “inactivity”? What else but its UNLIMITED power to tax.
What kind of personal behavior falls outside the categories of “activity” and “inactivity”? None, whatsoever! Therefore, the ramifications of ruling by the Supreme Court that the ACA is constitutional grant Congress, a group of corrupt cowards, by one means or another, the power to regulate everything and everyone.
Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, human rights that the Founders considered to be given to an individual by God, are now completely subordinated to the whims and fancies of godless, manipulative politicians.
Let’s hear it for InJustice Roberts: YEA!!!!!
Let’s hear it for God: BOO!!!!!
Let’s hear it for the American Citizen: FU.
Ted R. Weiland in Nebraska
Monday, July 2, 2012 at 1:17 PM
Holmes, there is no such thing as unalienable or God-given rights in the Bible, only God-expected responsibilities. Even if there were, because the framers failed to expressly establish the Constitution on the God of the Bible's morality as codified in His commandments, statutes, and judgments, ultimately there would have been no way to protect such "rights" anyway.
"The Scriptures provide no evidence of God-given (or unalienable) rights. Even life and liberty are not rights, but rather responsibilities delegated by Yahweh. Of course, rights are much more popular than responsibilities. Everyone, including homosexuals and infant murderers, demand their rights, but few are interested in fulfilling their responsibilities.
"The Puritan idea of rights and liberty was quite different from what the framers had in mind:
'John Winthrop [first governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony] … reminded his fellow-citizens of Massachusetts that a doctrine of civil rights [as in the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights] which looked to natural or sinful man as its source and guardian [as in the Preamble] was actually destructive of that very liberty which they were seeking to protect. True freedom can never be found in institutions which are under the direction of sinful men, but only in the redemption wrought for man by Jesus Christ. Christ, not man, is the sole source and guarantee of true liberty.' (C. Gregg Singer, "A Theological Interpretation of American History" (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1964) p. 19.)...."
Excerpted from "Amendment 1: Government-Sanctioned Polytheism" at http://www.missiontoisrael.org/biblelaw-constitutionalism-pt11.php.
Find out how much you really know about the Constitution as compared to Yahweh's moral law (His commandments, statutes, and judgments). Take our Constitution Survey at http://www.missiontoisrael.org/constitutionsurvey/constitutionsurvey.php and receive a free copy of the "Primer" (an 85 page book, normally $7 plus shipping) of "Bible Law vs. the United States Constitution: The Christian Perspective."
Robert A. Hall in Des Plaines IL
Monday, July 2, 2012 at 1:18 PM
Okay, I’ve read all the conservative opinion pieces saying that Chief Justice John Roberts is playing a brilliant long game, that the 5-4 decision upholding ObamaCare is good for conservative principles, etc. My gut tells me that the decision is a disaster for America, for individual liberty, and for our efforts to head off the coming fiscal collapse. I will link to this from my Old Jarhead blog.
Robert A. Hall Author: The Coming Collapse of the American Republic All royalties go to help wounded veterans For a free PDF of my book, write tartanmarine(at)gmail.com
Abu Nudnik in Toronto
Thursday, August 9, 2012 at 10:44 PM
"None of those concerns are what was asked of the court. That so few people seem to care augurs poorly for the rule of law and the auspices of our republic."
Absolutely. And a potential tragedy in the making.
PS: Out of curiosity... I wonder if the mysterious instruments of Hebrew priests, the Urim and Thummim, relate to the haruspices and the auguries.