In its King v. Burwell decision, the U.S.
Supreme Court majority simply maimed the Constitution, leaving it for dead with
tortured reasoning to produce a political outcome that rivals Dred Scott v.
Sandford for its politicization and incoherence. By not understanding “established
by the state,” the majority ruled that words have no meaning except that which
it decides to give them according to whatever ideology at least five archons
believe in, should they think that the democratic institutions would fail to
follow the same.
However, as this was a matter of
federal law, essentially Louisiana need do nothing as a result. With the law
dealing with health insurance exchanges that made it optional for states to
establish, it can continue to save money by making the federal government pay
for these (and proportionately lightening the burden on state taxpayers, even
as they pay for this in a much smaller proportion on their federal taxes) until
which future time they are abolished when meaningful and genuine health care
reform replaces the current unsustainable law that empowers the state at the
expense of the individual.