Are Republicans So Frantic to Stop Obamacare Because They Fear It Will Work?
By Kurt Eichenwald
What is it about Obamacare that compels seemingly intelligent people to explode in bubbling spasms of stupid? Are they misinformed? Unable to see past the rage-fueled partisan sweat dripping into their eyes? Or just plain dishonest?
No matter. At this point, it has become obvious that history will look back on the four-year war on Obamacare as one of the saddest, most bizarre, and most dishonestly embarrassing episodes of our time. I have given up trying to understand the vehement opposition of so many who cannot offer up truthful reasons for their objections, and instead fuel the hatred and fears of the uninformed with the most illogical, mendacious, and fundamentally bizarre arguments that have ever been marshaled. By comparison, Joe McCarthy’s McCarthyistic McCarthyism was an exercise in reason.
Let’s start with the obvious. We are three years into the adoption of Obamacare, with a few months to go before the next big step, when people are required to have health insurance. But no one has killed my mother yet. In fact, my wife—who is a geriatrician—is not preparing for her patient base to be wiped out in a series of “death panel” sessions. She has, however, been forced to assure patient after patient that they are not about to be murdered by Washington.
Not only that, but I’m allowed to see my own doctor—and that is not going to change. In fact, everyone who has the same insurance now that they had before won’t see any narrowing or revisions in their doctors available to them unless the insurance companies decide to make them. And guess what—that was always true.
I don’t have to contact the Oval Office to have a medical procedure. While the price of my family insurance has gone up—just like it does every year—the rate of annual increase has been lower than it has been for as long as we have had our policy.
None of this is to say there aren’t growing pains associated with Obamacare. But my question is: Where is the Armageddon that the G.O.P. has been promising will descend every year for the last few years?
Remember when Rick Santorum and his wife said they feared Americans with special needs—like their daughter—would suffer once Obama began rationing health care based on the “usefulness” of people? Does anyone believe that, now that Obama has been re-elected and Obamacare is about to take the next big step, Santorum is fleeing the country with his daughter to make sure she won’t be euthanized? Of course not—he was lying. Then again, this was the same fellow who, in one of his jeremiads against Obamacare, falsely proclaimed that 10 percent of all deaths in the Netherlands are from euthanasia and elderly folks there wear bracelets saying they do not want to be euthanized—two statements of “fact” that were simply made up. (Rick—for someone who proclaims his fidelity to the Bible, you sure do lie a lot. Perhaps you should read Psalm 101:7. “No one who practices deceit shall dwell in my house; no one who utters lies shall continue before my eyes.”)
For heaven’s sake, even the supposed “filibuster” of Ted Cruz this week was a falsehood. It was no such thing—his speaking won’t stop the continuing resolution to keep the government running from being picked up by the Senate. He engaged in just a form of verbal masturbation, a performance piece to make the legions already fooled into believing in the evils of Obamacare cheer him on—and maybe even sending him money for his campaign.
So, what accounts for the current, last-ditch, fumbling-fuming on the part of the G.O.P. to stop Obamacare, going so far as to threaten a shutdown of the government in an effort to overturn the clear voice of the American people that was expressed in the last election? It’s hard to say. But I think I have an answer:
The lies are about to be exposed. And the Republicans are terrified of what the country will think when the veil of mendacity is torn away.
Little else can explain the hysteria that has grown ever louder with each passing day. Take one simple example, this squirm-inducing ad where a pervy Uncle Sam turns up at a young woman’s gynecological exam. The message? Republicans are urging young people to forgo health insurance. Let me say that again: Republicans are urging young people to forgo health insurance. Not to vote against Democrats, not to lobby against Obamacare—to forgo health insurance. To risk catastrophic financial calamity in the event of a health crisis.
Why? And here, the lies begin. In what must be the creepiest political ad of all time—from Generation Opportunity, a group backed by billionaires Charles and David Koch—Obamacare is presented as a situation where the government, in the metaphorical form of the large-scale puppet-like Uncle Sam, will be giving people Pap smears and prostate exams. “Don’t let the government play doctor. Opt out of Obamacare,” the ads say.
Well, if that was what Obamacare did, maybe there would be a point. But, like death panels and their ilk, the “government takeover of healthcare” canard is a canard. Under Obamacare, people will have the opportunity to purchase private insurance. It’s a little more complex than that, which I’ll explain later, but the government will have nothing to do with the care anyone receives, any more than it would be rational to have an image of an insurance-company executive giving women Pap smears. (Actually, that would make a little more sense.)
What is particularly galling about this “the government wants to get between your legs” concept is that the Republicans really do want to get between your legs—and not metaphorically. After all, it is the conservatives who are pushing—and have required in some states—for doctors to perform invasive, unnecessary trans-vaginal ultrasounds on women seeking abortions. Yes, that means state governments are forcing doctors to insert a device inside of women, whether they want it or not. And then these people have the hutzpah to say that Obamacare is invasive, when it does nothing of the sort?
By Kurt Eichenwald
What is it about Obamacare that compels seemingly intelligent people to explode in bubbling spasms of stupid? Are they misinformed? Unable to see past the rage-fueled partisan sweat dripping into their eyes? Or just plain dishonest?
No matter. At this point, it has become obvious that history will look back on the four-year war on Obamacare as one of the saddest, most bizarre, and most dishonestly embarrassing episodes of our time. I have given up trying to understand the vehement opposition of so many who cannot offer up truthful reasons for their objections, and instead fuel the hatred and fears of the uninformed with the most illogical, mendacious, and fundamentally bizarre arguments that have ever been marshaled. By comparison, Joe McCarthy’s McCarthyistic McCarthyism was an exercise in reason.
Let’s start with the obvious. We are three years into the adoption of Obamacare, with a few months to go before the next big step, when people are required to have health insurance. But no one has killed my mother yet. In fact, my wife—who is a geriatrician—is not preparing for her patient base to be wiped out in a series of “death panel” sessions. She has, however, been forced to assure patient after patient that they are not about to be murdered by Washington.
Not only that, but I’m allowed to see my own doctor—and that is not going to change. In fact, everyone who has the same insurance now that they had before won’t see any narrowing or revisions in their doctors available to them unless the insurance companies decide to make them. And guess what—that was always true.
I don’t have to contact the Oval Office to have a medical procedure. While the price of my family insurance has gone up—just like it does every year—the rate of annual increase has been lower than it has been for as long as we have had our policy.
None of this is to say there aren’t growing pains associated with Obamacare. But my question is: Where is the Armageddon that the G.O.P. has been promising will descend every year for the last few years?
Remember when Rick Santorum and his wife said they feared Americans with special needs—like their daughter—would suffer once Obama began rationing health care based on the “usefulness” of people? Does anyone believe that, now that Obama has been re-elected and Obamacare is about to take the next big step, Santorum is fleeing the country with his daughter to make sure she won’t be euthanized? Of course not—he was lying. Then again, this was the same fellow who, in one of his jeremiads against Obamacare, falsely proclaimed that 10 percent of all deaths in the Netherlands are from euthanasia and elderly folks there wear bracelets saying they do not want to be euthanized—two statements of “fact” that were simply made up. (Rick—for someone who proclaims his fidelity to the Bible, you sure do lie a lot. Perhaps you should read Psalm 101:7. “No one who practices deceit shall dwell in my house; no one who utters lies shall continue before my eyes.”)
For heaven’s sake, even the supposed “filibuster” of Ted Cruz this week was a falsehood. It was no such thing—his speaking won’t stop the continuing resolution to keep the government running from being picked up by the Senate. He engaged in just a form of verbal masturbation, a performance piece to make the legions already fooled into believing in the evils of Obamacare cheer him on—and maybe even sending him money for his campaign.
So, what accounts for the current, last-ditch, fumbling-fuming on the part of the G.O.P. to stop Obamacare, going so far as to threaten a shutdown of the government in an effort to overturn the clear voice of the American people that was expressed in the last election? It’s hard to say. But I think I have an answer:
The lies are about to be exposed. And the Republicans are terrified of what the country will think when the veil of mendacity is torn away.
Little else can explain the hysteria that has grown ever louder with each passing day. Take one simple example, this squirm-inducing ad where a pervy Uncle Sam turns up at a young woman’s gynecological exam. The message? Republicans are urging young people to forgo health insurance. Let me say that again: Republicans are urging young people to forgo health insurance. Not to vote against Democrats, not to lobby against Obamacare—to forgo health insurance. To risk catastrophic financial calamity in the event of a health crisis.
Why? And here, the lies begin. In what must be the creepiest political ad of all time—from Generation Opportunity, a group backed by billionaires Charles and David Koch—Obamacare is presented as a situation where the government, in the metaphorical form of the large-scale puppet-like Uncle Sam, will be giving people Pap smears and prostate exams. “Don’t let the government play doctor. Opt out of Obamacare,” the ads say.
Well, if that was what Obamacare did, maybe there would be a point. But, like death panels and their ilk, the “government takeover of healthcare” canard is a canard. Under Obamacare, people will have the opportunity to purchase private insurance. It’s a little more complex than that, which I’ll explain later, but the government will have nothing to do with the care anyone receives, any more than it would be rational to have an image of an insurance-company executive giving women Pap smears. (Actually, that would make a little more sense.)
What is particularly galling about this “the government wants to get between your legs” concept is that the Republicans really do want to get between your legs—and not metaphorically. After all, it is the conservatives who are pushing—and have required in some states—for doctors to perform invasive, unnecessary trans-vaginal ultrasounds on women seeking abortions. Yes, that means state governments are forcing doctors to insert a device inside of women, whether they want it or not. And then these people have the hutzpah to say that Obamacare is invasive, when it does nothing of the sort?
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