Meet the Mild-Mannered Investment Adviser Who's Humiliating the Administration Over Obamacare

and another thing...
Now that this is all out in the open, the Supreme is unlikely to accept the. "its was a legislative typo argument." Gruber has made it clear it was designed to this way to put pressure on the states.
I believe it's been made part of the argument that is to be made before SCOTUS. Going to be kind of hard to prove otherwise.
 
From what I read it was the argument before the lower appellate courts... with mixed results.
However, now with the rest of this context... I just can't see how roberts can side with the leftist side of this argument. .

Their cover has been destroyed by the architect of the law.
They knew what they were doing and it was done on purpose.

If Roberts re writes this one... he will go down as an activist judge who rewrote the obamacare act back and forth depending on the issue.
 
The voters are going to get their premium increases next year and then vote again in 2016. Obamacare is expected to be overturned next year or the year after... Personally, I'm way too much Amerind to really believe anything any government, anywhere says... My version of healthcare is to be as healthy as I can and not get in traffic accidents or shootings. I learned herbs and nutrition and even more and at 70 yo I can kick some ass, walk lots of miles, write software in 14 hour days... All you fat fuckhead sugarshit eaters that are so dependent on your doctors can die for all I care.
 
ObamaCare architect earned millions from taxpayers at federal, state levels
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/201...as-earned-millions-from-taxpayers-at-federal/

“My job was just to see if the numbers added up,” Dr. Jonathan Gruber, the controversial architect of ObamaCare, told PBS two years ago.

And add up the numbers did – at least in terms of Gruber’s consulting fees. A Fox News review of state and federal websites, as well as published reports, finds the MIT economist and his firm have secured millions in federal and state contracts stretching back over the last fifteen years.

Most famously, the Department of Health and Human Services retained Gruber in March 2009 to produce, as the contract stipulated, “a series of technical memoranda on the estimated changes in health insurance coverage and associated costs and impacts to the government under alternative specifications of health system reform.”

That contract netted Gruber $95,000, and an additional HHS contract, inked that June, added $297,600 to the deal – steering almost $400,000 to the creator of the Gruber Microsimulation Model. Still another contract with the agency, as reported here, was said to have exceeded $2 million in value since 2007.

The National Institutes of Health clinched a deal for a like amount ($2.05 million), and the Department of Justice contracted with Gruber for nearly $1.74 million. DOJ? You might ask. Why would the Justice Department be hiring the architect of ObamaCare? Records show Gruber earned the DOJ fee for helping to develop viable incentives to be extended to the tobacco companies in order to dissuade them from targeting teen smokers.

Similarly, Gruber collected $103,500 from the State Department for his services as an expert witness, providing testimony in a NAFTA dispute with a Canadian tobacco firm.

Then there are the state governments. The Fox News review finds Gruber and his firm have consulted for, or provided computer modeling to, at least fifteen states. Glenn Kessler, the widely respected Washington Post columnist who writes under the moniker “The Fact Checker,” reported last week that “at least eight states” have hired Gruber to assist with the launching of their health care exchanges – and Kessler added: “It’s safe to say that about $400,000 appears to be the standard rate for gaining access to the Gruber Microsimulation Model.”

Fox News found that Gruber and his firm shared in a $481,050 contract with Michigan, a $400,000 deal with Wisconsin, and a contract with Minnesota worth nearly $330,000. Other contracts included deals with California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts – where Gruber notably worked with then-Governor Mitt Romney – Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia, and Wyoming.

Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, a longtime Gruber critic, told Fox News on Monday that the economist has never been as transparent as he should have been in divulging his consulting contracts to lawmakers when he was testifying before them. “This is not saying the amount of money he made was wrong,” Grassley said, “but when he's testifying before Congress, there ought to be full disclosure of this so that you know if he's got a non-biased opinion -- or not.”


(More at above url)
 
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