The American Revolution Comes to a Pitiful Close
June 2012 - and especially its last week - was ripe with ominous  metaphor, all revolving around the Supreme Court's decision on June 28th  to uphold President Barack Obama's signature health-care reform  legislation, the Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as Obamacare.
For  those not in the know, the highest court in the land - the historic  mission of which was to guard against tyranny by ensuring that laws  passed by Congress abide by the constraints imposed by our Constitution -  has now rubber-stamped the most comprehensive expansion of federal  power since the New Deal. 
The so-called "individual mandate"  provision of Obamacare, which compels every American to have  government-approved health insurance or face government-enforced  penalty, stands thanks to (supposedly) conservative Chief Justice John  Roberts, who sided with the four liberal justices to uphold the law.   According to the Roberts Court, government can now order a private  citizen - that's you - to engage in commerce and punish you if you  don't...so long as that punishment is called a "tax."  In one fell  swoop, the distinction between public and private is erased.
The very next day, mirabile dictu -  the wrath of Heaven came down on Washington D.C.  First came the heat, a  record 104 degrees, as if the insane Supreme Court decision was an  infection that the Gods of Liberty were attempting to fry with a  frightful fever.  Then came the rain; a brief but violent summer storm  swept through D.C. and its environs Friday night,  leaving millions without power (and thus air-conditioning) smack in the  middle of aforementioned fever.  As of this writing, days later,  hundreds of thousands are still with partial or no power, and officials  are claiming it may be a week or longer before full service is restored.   
The rest of America should take note - the city that has just  given itself the power to micromanage your health (and thus every aspect  of your existence) cannot even keep its own lights on after a summer storm.
As if it all wasn't fitting enough, the "lights-out" week in Washington D.C. extends over the 4th of July holiday.   It's all too ironic for words, really -  the American Revolution  started with outrage over some trifling taxes, taxes which were lawfully  passed by the Imperial authority in Britain and which affected a small  number of American colonists. Nonetheless, the unjust nature of the  Stamp Act and other intrusions into American life spurred our ancestors  to war - and ultimately to Independence and freedom.
Now, just in  time for Independence Day 2012, an unelected man in a black robe has  single-handedly imposed a tax on Americans not passed by any legislature  (the mandate was sold as a penalty by the President and his allies, who  knew it would never pass Congress if labeled a tax), and handed the  Government unlimited power over our lives via an unelected taxation  bureaucracy  - the IRS.  
The Founders knew that the tax power  was government's most dangerous instrument.  The American experiment in  self government was born in opposition to this power, a struggle lit by  hope as much as rockets' red glare. That experiment has ended now in  utter and fitting darkness, as the government of our Founders claims the  authority to tax anything you do, and anything you don't.
END
Matt  Patterson is the Warren Brookes Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise  Institute and senior editor at the Capital Research Center.  Mpatterson.column@gmail.com




