Obama Just Got His Private Army - Hidden in Healthcare Bill

FrankRep

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Update, Clarification From HotAir:


The phrase “is amended” should have alerted readers that this section already exists in law — and actually has existed for over 60 years.

In 1964, Lyndon Johnson restructured the Ready Reserve Corps by executive order as a deployable response team reporting to the Surgeon General for disaster relief. Actually, that EO appears not to have created the RRC but merely to have codified its chain of command under the Surgeon General. According to Findlaw, the relevant statute creating the RRC originated in 1944, during World War II, and has been repeatedly modified since, reorganized in 1949, 1966, and 1993.​


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Obama Just Got His Private Army


Nancy Matthis | American Daughter
March 26th, 2010


Remember when Obama said he wanted a “national security force”? Not the national guard, but a civilian one that has not sworn to uphold the Constitution? On July 2, 2008 in a speech in Colorado Springs, Barack Obama called for a police state.

YouTube - A Chilling Proposal by Barack Obama

Remember that first alarming glimpse of what that army might look like? Notice how much these "Hitler youth" - type young men talk about health care!

YouTube - Obama Youth Brigade March in Formation

Obama just got his private army…

…And no one seems to have noticed. It is buried in the Senate revisions to the health care bill.

Subtitle C–Increasing the Supply of the Health Care Workforce

Sec. 5201. Federally supported student loan funds.
Sec. 5202. Nursing student loan program.
Sec. 5203. Health care workforce loan repayment programs.
Sec. 5204. Public health workforce recruitment and retention programs.
Sec. 5205. Allied health workforce recruitment and retention programs.
Sec. 5206. Grants for State and local programs.
Sec. 5207. Funding for National Health Service Corps.
Sec. 5208. Nurse-managed health clinics.
Sec. 5209. Elimination of cap on commissioned corps.
Sec. 5210. Establishing a Ready Reserve Corps.

Subtitle D–Enhancing Health Care Workforce Education and Training​


See the Patient Protection Affordable Care Act, page 1312:

SEC. 5210. ESTABLISHING A READY RESERVE CORPS.

Section 203 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 204) is amended to read as follows:
SEC. 203. COMMISSIONED CORPS AND READY RESERVE CORPS.
(a) ESTABLISHMENT–
(1) IN GENERAL.–here shall be in the Service a commissioned Regular Corps and a Ready Reserve Corps for service in time of national emergency.
(2) REQUIREMENT.–All commissioned officers shall be citizens of the United States and shall be appointed without regard to the civil-service laws and compensated without regard to the Classification Act 2 of 1923, as amended.
(3) APPOINTMENT.–Commissioned officers of the Ready Reserve Corps shall be appointed by the President and commissioned officers of the Regular Corps shall be appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate.
(4) ACTIVE DUTY.–Commissioned officers of the Ready Reserve Corps shall at all times be subject to call to active duty by the Surgeon General, including active duty for the purpose of training.
(5) WARRANT OFFICERS.–Warrant officers may be appointed to the Service for the purpose of providing support to the health and delivery systems maintained by the Service and any warrant officer appointed to the Service shall be considered for purposes of this Act and title 37, United States Code, to be a commissioned officer within the Commissioned Corps of the Service.
(b) ASSIMILATING RESERVE CORP OFFICERS INTO THE REGULAR CORPS.—Effective on the date of enactment of the Affordable Health Choices Act, all individuals classified as officers in the Reserve Corps under this section (as such section existed on the day before the date of enactment of such Act) and serving on active duty shall be deemed to be commissioned officers of the Regular Corps.

[Note here that those personally appointed by BO -- without advice and consent of the Senate -- automatically become a part of the Regular Corps. Ed.]

(c) PURPOSE AND USE OF READY RESERVE.–
(1) PURPOSE.–The purpose of the Ready Reserve Corps is to fulfill the need to have additional Commissioned Corps personnel available on short notice (similar to the uniformed service’s reserve program) to assist regular Commissioned Corps personnel to meet both routine public health and emergency response missions.
(2) USES.–The Ready Reserve Corps shall–
(A) participate in routine training to meet the general and specific needs of the Commissioned Corps;
(B) be available and ready for involuntary calls to active duty during national emergencies and public health crises, similar to the uniformed service reserve personnel;
(C) be available for backfilling critical positions left vacant during deployment of active duty Commissioned Corps members, as well as for deployment to respond to public health emergencies, both foreign and domestic; and
(D) be available for service assignment in isolated, hardship, and medically underserved communities (as defined in section 399SS) to improve access to health services.
(d) FUNDING.—For the purpose of carrying out the duties and responsibilities of the Commissioned Corps under this section, there are authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary to the Office of the Surgeon General for each of fiscal years 2010 through 2014. Funds appropriated under this subsection shall be used for recruitment and training of Commissioned Corps Officers.​

How many of you, dear readers, were aware of the fact that the health care bill created another army?

Related:

Right Side NewsAre you Ready?

God and Country USAObama's army in the health care bill

RANDA Stability Police Force for the United States: Justification and Options for Creating U.S. Capabilities


SOURCE:
http://frontpage.americandaughter.com/?p=3549
 
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I don't think this is as alarming as you make it out to be, Frank.
Take it away, Cap'n Ed:

The phrase “is amended” should have alerted readers that this section already exists in law — and actually has existed for over 60 years. In 1964, Lyndon Johnson restructured the Ready Reserve Corps by executive order as a deployable response team reporting to the Surgeon General for disaster relief. Actually, that EO appears not to have created the RRC but merely to have codified its chain of command under the Surgeon General. According to Findlaw, the relevant statute creating the RRC originated in 1944, during World War II, and has been repeatedly modified since, reorganized in 1949, 1966, and 1993.

This section of ObamaCare modifies it yet again, mainly in terms of funding. It’s not a great surprise that a bill that seeks to increase the federal government’s role in health care would also seek to expand or at least redefine its emergency response agencies. Even if this was a “private health-care army,” though, it would be a woefully underfunded one with a $12.5 million annual budget. The state of Minnesota alone will spend $1.8 billion on public safety in its biennial budget, with a good portion of that on law enforcement.

http:// hotair.com/archives/2010/03/27/ready-reserve-corps-over-60-years-old/
 
Alarmed!

"We cannot continue to rely only on our military in order to achieve the national security objectives that we've set. We've gotta have a civilian national security force that's just as powerful, just as strong, just as well funded." - Barack Obama

Our military is the most powerful in the world, which by definition means strong, and it's well funded. Who is the civilian national security force going to fight?
 
I don't think this is as alarming as you make it out to be, Frank.
Take it away, Cap'n Ed:



http:// hotair.com/archives/2010/03/27/ready-reserve-corps-over-60-years-old/

Okay I'm lazy. Could you or someone else please bold where this shows up in previous law.



...
 
well, 23 rounds out of the Smith & Wesson Tac .40 and 56 rounds out of the Colt HBAR AR-15 not 15 minutes ago, says that I'm still on target even when I am livid.
 
Okay I'm lazy. Could you or someone else please bold where this shows up in previous law.



...


Historically, the IRR (Inactive Ready Reserve) is composed of members of the active duty military who leave the service and are able to be recalled within 4 years of ending their active (or active reserve) commitments.
 
Yes and you are quoting a Neo-Con source.
Hardly a civil liberties oriented bunch.;)

Just because you disagree with someone's opinions doesn't mean you can dismiss their facts. Heck, I've gotten facts from all over the internet, be the source National Review, DailyKos, or Andrew Sullivan.

Not that you couldn't check this yourself, but here's the relevant section of the Public Health Service Act as it existed on December 31, 2004, that is 2 years before the Obama Administration was even a twinkle in Axelrod's eye.

COMMISSIONED CORPS
SEC. 203. [204] There shall be in the [Public Health] Service a commissioned
Regular Corps and, for the purpose of securing a reserve for duty
in the Service in time of national emergency
, a Reserve Corps. All
commissioned officers shall be citizens and shall be appointed without
regard to the civil-service laws and compensated without regard
to the Classification Act of 1923, 1 as amended. Commissioned
officers of the Reserve Corps shall be appointed by the President

and commissioned officers of the Regular Corps shall be appointed
by him by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. Commissioned
officers of the Reserve Corps shall at all times be subject to
call to active duty by the Surgeon General, including active duty
for the purpose of training and active duty for the purpose of determining
their fitness for appointment in the Regular Corps. Warrant
officers may be appointed to the Service for the purpose of
providing support to the health and delivery systems maintained
by the Service and any warrant officer appointed to the Service
shall be considered for purposes of this Act and title 37, United
States Code, to be a commissioned officer within the commissioned
corps of the Service.
Source: http:// energycommerce.house.gov/images/stories/Documents/PDF/publications/109_health.pdf

I'm sure if you head down to your local law school library, you could even find a copy of the original 1944 law that created the Nation Health Service Reserve Corps, but I can't be bothered to do that myself. The 2004 law hopefully makes the point that this has been around for longer than most of us have been alive.

EDIT: Here's you answer, dwdollar.
 
Just because you disagree with someone's opinions doesn't mean you can dismiss their facts..

Excuse me?
I dismiss their OPINION.
I also disagree with bad laws and un-constitutional programs from farther back than 1944.

There is no disputing that Obama was calling for a civilian defense force to rival the army.
That is documented.
It is still an incredibly bad idea.
:(
 
well, 23 rounds out of the Smith & Wesson Tac .40 and 56 rounds out of the Colt HBAR AR-15 not 15 minutes ago, says that I'm still on target even when I am livid.

I need to practice when i'm livid. i'd probably be all over the place. I guess i may need a shotgun.
 
From some comments I'm seeing on this thread, some folks on here are obviously unfamiliar with the US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps. For those interested, it is a non-military uniformed service of the US government that concerns itself with public health and safety. Read more here: [url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Health_Service_Commissioned_Corps[/URL]

These are the same people who would be called upon to enforce quarantines wearing ACU's carrying M-16's and M-4's driving Humvees and 2 1/2 ton trucks.

These are the same people who would be called on to enforce 'mandatory' (if they were ever issued) vaccines at the point of a gun.

They are also, now, apparently attached to the Ready Reserve Corps which historically has been composed only of formerly active US Military personnel...

Just because they stick the word "health" onto the org does not make them any less disturbing...
 
I need to practice when i'm livid. i'd probably be all over the place. I guess i may need a shotgun.

It is also a good idea (even though it royally sucks) to go running and exercising until you are close to or at the point of vomiting, and immediately (while still jacked up at elevated heart rate etc) run through a pistol mag at 25 feet or a rifle mag at 100 feet.

You will find that excessive exercise and elevated heart rate will mess up your rifle groups more than your pistol groups.

Problem is, of course, in a real-world SHTF situation, you will probably in fact be shooting back after running a mile or so in full gear. So as much as it brutally sucks, it is critically important.
 
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