I have a column over at AOL today that lays out a strategy for repealing ObamaCare over the next four years. Here’s the set-up:

[T]he rollback of ObamaCare is not only thinkable, it may well become the
defining political cause of the next four years. It will, however, take
legal, civic and political action at every level of American government
to achieve.

While past efforts at repealing social legislation
have usually foundered — with the exception of a costly Medicare
program enacted in 1988 and repealed just a year later — the coming
campaign against ObamaCare has a head start. It’s already unpopular.
Most Americans see it as unaffordable, its tax hikes unwise, its
expansion of dependency unwelcome, and its mandate to buy
government-approved health plans unappealing. As insurance premiums rise
again in 2011 and beyond, public disaffection will certainly intensify.

And the conclusion:

Make no mistake, the eventual repeal of ObamaCare won’t be easy. Its
defenders will fight every step of the way. But it’s foolish to suggest
the cause is lost, or that no meaningful action can be taken until after
the 2012 election. Whatever you think of President Obama’s
health bill, he did manage to accomplish one thing: Health care freedom
is now one of the central political issues of our time. It’s not simply
going to fade away.