Obamacare Provision: “Forced” Home Inspections
August 15, 2013
Joshua Cook
“Clearly, any family may be visited by federally paid agents for almost any reason.” According to an Obamacare provision millions of Americans will be targeted.
The Health and Human Services’ website
states that your family will be targeted if you fall under the
“high-risk” categories below:
- Families where mom is not yet 21.
- Families where someone is a tobacco user.
- Families where children have low student achievement, developmental delays, or disabilities.
- Families with individuals who are serving or formerly served in the armed forces, including such families that have members of the armed forces who have had multiple deployments outside the United States.
There is no reference to Medicaid being the determinant for a family to be “eligible.”
In 2011, the HHS announced $224 million
will be given to support evidence-based home visiting programs to “help
parents and children.” Individuals from the state will implement these
leveraging strategies to “enhance program sustainability.”
Constitutional attorney and author Kent Masterson Brown states,
“This is not a “voluntary” program. The eligible entity receiving the grant for performing the home
visits is to identify the individuals to be visited and intervene so as
to meet the improvement benchmarks. A homeschooling family, for
instance, may be subject to “intervention” in “school readiness” and
“social-emotional developmental indicators.” A farm family may be
subject to “intervention” in order to “prevent child injuries.” The sky
is the limit.
Although the Obama administration would claim the provision applies only to Medicaid
families, the new statute, by its own definition, has no such
limitation. Intervention may be with any family for any reason. It may
also result in the child or children being required to go to certain
schools or taking certain medications and vaccines and even having more
limited – or no – interaction with parents. The federal government will
now set the standards for raising children and will enforce them by home visits.”
Part of the program will require massive
data collecting of private information including all sources of income
and the amount gathered from each source.
A manual called Child Neglect: A Guide for
Prevention, Assessment, and Intervention includes firearms as potential
safety hazard and will require inspectors to verify safety compliance
and record each inspection into a database.
Last session South Carolina Rep. Bill Chumley introduced a bill, H.3101 that would nullify certain provisions of Obamacare.
The bill would give the state attorney general the authority to
authorize law enforcement to arrest federal agents for trespassing. It
would make forced home inspections under Obamacare illegal in South Carolina. It passed in the House but died in the senate.
Kent Brown and Rep. Rick Quinn discuss “forced” home inspections under Obamacare in the video below.
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Joshua Cook
Joshua Cook is a native and resident of the South Carolina Upstate.
He received his MBA from North Greenville University and is actively
involved in South Carolina politics.

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