03/24/10
From FOX News
Updated January 16, 2010
Health Care Mandate Applies to All -- Except the Amish
By Molly Henneberg
Most Americans would have to prove they have insurance or face a fine under the
health reform legislation that is now nearing the finish line in Congress, but
at least one group won't have to worry, on religious grounds.
Democrats are planning to exempt the Amish and similar religious groups from the
health insurance mandate in the final health care bill.
That's because when the Amish need medical care, they go to regular doctors and
hospitals and pay in cash often with financial help from their church and
neighbors. They rely on each other, not the government or insurance companies as
a tenet of their faith.
"The Amish believe it's the fundamental responsibility of the church to care for
the material needs of the members of the church," said Steven Nolt, a professor
at Goshen College who has written books on the Plain community of Amish.
"And so they don't buy commercial health insurance and they don't participate in
public assistance programs."
So while most Americans would be required to sign up with insurance companies or
government insurance plans, the church would serve as something of an informal
insurance plan for the Amish.
Law experts say that kind of exemption withstands scrutiny.
"Here the statue is going to say that people who are conscientiously opposed to
paying for health insurance don't have to do it where the conscientious
objection arises from religion," said Mark Tushnet a Harvard law professor. "And
that's perfectly constitutional."
This would not be the first time the Amish received this type of special
accommodation. Congress exempted this and other communities from Social Security
and Medicare taxes since 1965 for the same religious reasons.
But if the Amish can opt out, then some civil libertarians say they want out,
too -- not for religious reasons but because they don't think the underlying
health insurance mandate is legal.
"If they can do it for religious objection, well, I have a different type of
objection," said Ilya Shapiro, a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the
libertarian Cato Institute said. "I think I'm being coerced into doing something
against my will, and so the challenge would be from a different perspective."
* * * * *
So, I've pretty much decided that I'm going to become Amish... Then I find out that the Amish are not big fans of computers or firearms or justified homicide or any of my other hobbies.

Maybe I'll just move to Russia. At least they know that Communism doesn't work.