Terry Donald, a self-employed junk hauler who lives in St. Petersburg, Florida, didn’t fully appreciate the value of his health insurance until last spring. That's when he sliced his arm open on a broken mirror and had to rush to the ER for stitches. Then on Labor Day, he tripped in the yard and cut his leg. At first it didn’t seem bad, but after about 10 days, the wound began to look infected. He had to get surgery for what turned out to be a severe staph infection. After a long hospital stay, he couldn’t work for a month. Meanwhile, his wife kept filling her regular prescriptions for a thyroid condition.

Some supporters of Obamacare have argued that those “four words” are just a technicality—the government has called it “a term of art”—and that the case is a frivolous one.

Others maintain that it’s a good case rooted in a solid question. That’s why it’s being heard in the highest court in the land, after all.

And not everyone who receives the subsidies supports the law.

Some people feel their share of the premiums are a financial burden, and others prefer not to have to carry health insurance at all. http://news.yahoo.com/end-obamacare-...-politics.html