Geof Castle, Collingswood
Now dig into health-care costs
Now that the legality of the health-care act is settled, the next major step should be a comprehensive, bipartisan investigation of all issues that contribute to health-care costs. This should include HMOs, and insurance, drug, and medical-device companies — all with shareholders who must be satisfied — and also for-profit hospitals and doctors whose monetary return must be satisfied, as well as that of all ancillary personnel. This is a very complicated issue that does not allow the government time to dawdle.
Howard A Jones, West Chester
Desperate move by Roberts
The Supreme Court's decision on Obamacare was the most unjust decision since the Dred Scott ruling. Chief Justice John Roberts, in desperation to avoid having the court be accused of being political, decided to change water into wine by spinning a penalty into a tax.
Bill Hinski, Harleysville
Next up, single-payer system
The Supreme Court's decision on the Affordable Care Act looks like a mixed blessing. Chief Justice John Roberts has earned the gratitude of the health-insurance corporations by upholding a popular but only partial reform of our health-care system. The ACA does little to reduce the high cost of that system. We, the insurance-premium payers, still have to support the insurance companies' bureaucracy and bottom line.
The battle for the real solution to the high cost of medical care, which already exists for government officials and for Medicare recipients like me, is single-payer, like Social Security.
S. Allen Bacon, Kennett Square
A defeat for democracy
Simply put, the Supreme Court's upholding of Obamacare is a victory for socialism and a defeat for democracy in the United States.
Nick D'Orazio, Philadelphia
No longer a derogatory name
The Affordable Care Act was frequently derided by Republicans as "Obamacare." However, many once-derogatory names take on new meaning with time. "Obamacare" may likely give this administration another term in office, as well as an honored place in the history books.
David W. Long, West Chester
Subjects, not citizens
President Obama, the Democrats in Congress, and now five justices have fundamentally changed what it means to be an American. We are no longer citizens; we are subjects.
John Harrison, Millville, N.J.
The difference in November
Obama Cares. Mitt Romney doesn't.
Aaron M. Fine, Swarthmore
Dysfunctional court
What is wrong with our Supreme Court? What is it that makes intelligent justices find things in the Constitution that aren't there and ignore things that are there? It's dysfunctional. It's inherently dysfunctional because of the number of 5-4 decisions on our most important issues. It's morally dysfunctional because some judges do not follow the Constitution they swore to uphold. This makes it even more important that we elect a president who will appoint judges who will follow the Constitution.
Ettore Cattaneo, Cape May