Lacking facts and reason, health-care foes use fear

"Fear is the most powerful enemy of reason. Both fear and reason are essential to human survival, but the relationship between them is unbalanced. Reason may sometimes dissipate fear, but fear frequently shuts down reason." — from "The Assault on Reason" by Al Gore

"I'm afraid of Obama!" — woman at a town hall meeting on health-care reform

I have no opinion on H.R. 3200. Mainly because I haven't read it.

Pardon my presumption, but chances are beyond excellent that you haven't, either. The PDF file of the bill, otherwise known as the America's Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009, clocks in at 1,017 pages of often-dense legalese and jargon. I'd like to read it, but I'd also like to have a life, and the two are incompatible.

So excuse me, beg pardon, but it would be really valuable to hear an explanation of the bill by those who presumably have read it, followed by vigorous questioning. Instead, the circus has come to town.

I refer, of course, to the chaos that has erupted at town hall meetings as Democratic lawmakers try to sell the bill. The New York Times reports shouting matches, fistfights, threats, injuries and arrests. Georgia Congressman David Scott says he's had death threats and a visit from vandals who painted a swastika outside his office.

If you wonder what the Nazis have to do with this, join the club. It's an incoherent protest and where there is incoherence, naturally, there is Sarah Palin. The former governor of Alaska weighed in on Facebook with a claim that Democrats were proposing a "downright evil" system in which the fate of the elderly and the disabled would be determined by "death panels."
She said she was referring to Sec. 1233 of the bill, so I read it. It would require your doctor to regularly consult with you on the need for a living will and advanced care directives, i.e., decide ahead of time if you'd want to be kept alive in a persistent vegetative state. The requirement may or may not be a good idea but it's hardly "downright evil" and it bears no resemblance to the image Palin conjures: Granny forced to justify her continued existence before a panel of men in black hoods.

Conservatives would have you believe this pandemonium is spontaneous. Truth is, it's about as spontaneous as a shuttle launch. The Times account tells us a banner appeared on the Web site of Fox News host Sean Hannity inviting people to "Become a part of the mob!" A group calling itself Tea Party Patriots advises its members to pack the hall and "yell out." This is manufactured outrage.

And that's fine. If people choose to become part of a synchronized protest, they have every right to. Nor is there anything wrong with dissent. As many of us pointed out when George W. Bush's enablers sought to silence his critics, dissent is patriotic.
But shouting down those who disagree with you is not. Neither is threatening, shoving, hitting, painting swastikas or otherwise rendering reasoned debate impossible. That's not love of country, it's not dissent, it's not even civilized. It's boorish, oafish and crude, the rantings of people panicked beyond reason.

In other words, conservatives. OK, not all of them. But too many of them? Definitely.

By now, it has become reflex, this instinct of theirs to manipulate the debate and muddy the waters by stoking people's primal fears, whether of gays, Muslims, Hispanics or now, health care reform. "I'm afraid of Obama!" screams a woman. And doesn't that just say it all? Doesn't that speak volumes about the intellectual bankruptcy and decayed moral authority of the political right? With apologies to Franklin Roosevelt, the only thing they have to sell is fear itself.

And no, that's not patriotism. It is the cynical behavior of people who have little faith in their ability to win the debate. So they pick a fight and try to win that instead.

Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for The Miami Herald. His e-mail address is: lpitts@miamiherald.com. Leonard Pitts will be chatting with readers every Wednesday from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. EDT on www.MiamiHerald.com.

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

mad dad's picture

For Lil. Here is an

For Lil. Here is an AMERICAN quotation. "America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves" Abraham Lincoln. Something to think about as the Feds take over the banks, auto industry, health care/insurance, etc. I'm a registered independent, but I don't trust our current one party system at the Federal level, anymore than I trust our one party system in Maine.

Govt2Big's picture
verified

Most of the fear and lies

Most of the fear and lies are coming from the Far Left, not the Right. If we take a realistic look at what two major political organizations are doing, ACORN and SEIU, I believe many of our current state and federal problems can be associated with their activities. For example, here are four (4) items and the related website for your review:

1. Playbook of Dirty Tricks: http://nygoe.wordpress.com/2009/08/06/seiu-front-group-declares-war-on-t...
2. The “Muscle for Money” program funded by SEIU: http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/blogs/beltway-confidential/Uni...
3. ACORN’s “Muscle for Money” does the bidding of SEIU: http://www.sfexaminer.com/opinion/ACORNs-Muscle-for-Money-does-the-biddi...
4. ACORN Covering Up SEIU Ties?: http://spectator.org/blog/2009/04/22/acorn-covering-up-seiu-ties

Since groups like ACORN and SEIU are out doing these things, does it really surprise anyone we have so much fear and civil disobedience at some of these meetings?

Lil's picture
verified

Who came up with "death

Who came up with "death panels"?
______________________

"We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give."
Winston Churchill

tron's picture

The quitter from Alaska.

The quitter from Alaska.

tron's picture

Despite the fear mongering

Despite the fear mongering by the Republicans, the Democrats still have the power to fix this system. It needs to be fixed. But it sure would be nice to find a few level headed Republicans willing to work WITH the Democrats and make this system work for the betterment of ALL Americans. If there are any patriotic Republicans out there willing to work for the common good, let us all know.

BobStone's picture
verified

Tron... I don't think it has

Tron...

I don't think it has anything to do with patriotism. Now you are starting to sound like Nancy Pelosi and the other name callers.

It is much easier to fix a system in the conceptual stage than it is when the system has been designed, programmed and implemented. An executive worth his salt will make sure that as many stakeholders fingerprints are all over the design. If people feel that they have input into the design, they will tend to support it and try to make it work.

I've read that there are five plans working their way through Congress. None of us really knows what the final plan looks like. Obama apparently has a plan in his head and we hear about it in bits and pieces.

You are correct in that the Democrats could just pass "reform" and we'd have to live with it. We wouldn't have to like it, but would have to live with it. If Republican or unenrolled input is not required. then the Democrats should do us a favor and install their design. We'll see how it works.

I think the problem is that the Democrats are not sure that this thing won't blow up in their collective faces. The Obama-Biden team is as liberal as liberal gets, and more sensible heads on the Democrat side really know that we are being fed a bunch of hogwash and are trying to talk some sense into the Leninists in the Obama camp.

There are many alternatives which are being shut out by Obama. Tort reform. Shared responsibility in paying for this huge socialization of American business. On and on.

We are doing all of this for about 8 million people, about 3 percent of Americans. The 47 million is a bogus number and anyone who is halfway informed understands that it is a wild overstatement of the problem.

Of course, changes should be introduced into the existing system. But let's make them in a careful, balanced manner that won't ruin our great American health care that we enjoy today. Insurance isn't medical care and the two should not be confused.

The great Paul Nadler coined the phrase "There is no such thing as a free lunch." I think many Obama supporters believe there is a free lunch. Let's preserve health care and figure out a better way for ALL of us to pay for it.

All the best,

Bob Stone

tron's picture

Mr. Stone With the onset of

Mr. Stone
With the onset of the Obama administration, the Republicans, fresh from their sound thrashing at the elections, decided to become completely obstructionists. "I hope he fails" was the mantra from the party leaders and the rank and file followed suit. The Republicans refused to work on anything. Well the government must move on, and the Democrats have the necessary votes to do so. So they did. Now the Republicans risked becoming irrelevant and they are really scared. So this new tactic to create loud confrontations, showing the public they care. Well, while realizing that they lost the election, if they sat down and put forth concrete proposals, some of them would be part of the bill today. Yes there are five proposals, but notice the reason not one of them isn't law now, is because of the blue dog Democrats, not the Republicans. Only one party is having a dialog. Tort reform is an idea, but you never mention what to do with bad doctors. Right now we have insurance companies refusing to cover them, we need a better system than that. That won't happen with tort reform. If you're getting the idea, then tell your compadres to work together. America deserves the best from everyone.

BobStone's picture
verified

Tron... The GOP did

Tron...

The GOP did themselves in. They ran a poor candidate (McCain) and a poor campaign. They lost control of spending during the Bush years and alienated their base. (I am a FORMER Republican for that, and several other, reasons) They feature a number of "moderates", like Snowe and Collins, who stand for very little other than getting re-elected. (But who can blame them...the money is good.)

With the White House and Congress in control of free-spending Democrats, the GOP IS irrelevant. About all the Democrats can hope for from the GOP is "cover" for their spending and socialization of America. And they will get that from Snowe, Collins, McCain and the bunch. It then can be christened "bi-partisan."

I agree with you on the Blue Dogs, they slowed the Obama train down. Obama is sinking like a rock in approval ratings, and needs to pass health care "reform" in a hurry. I think he's already lost it. I was looking at a Facebook poll today and it was running 74% against government run health care (730,000 respondents in the sample size). And, despite what Olympia Snowe states, we are talking about government run healthcare.

I doubt the GOP has as much to do with the uproar this August as you might think. I liken the GOP to the gang that couldn't shoot straight. I think America is waking up to Obama and realizing him for what he is... a very liberal socialist. And health care "reform" is a concrete example of what Obama-style socialism is.

All the best,

Bob

Big Love's picture

That would be nice, Tron.

That would be nice, Tron. It really would. It would have been better if someone "on the hill" had thought of that six or eight months ago when the minority party was being shut out of the process. Must have been that Speaker Pelosi was worried that the "intellectual bankruptcy and decayed moral authority of the political right", would poison the process. And she made sure everyone knew that her party won and input from the right was neither needed nor welcome. And so today she's getting that input, whether she likes it or not. Thing is, it's coming from many fringe conservatives who don't truly represent the opinions of the majority of conservatives in this country. the majority of all Americans, both libs and cons, know there is a problem and want reform. Some of us just wish that we weren't being "waterboarded" with reform, and that the reform was achieved with input from more people who actually know a thing or two about medicine, and less from crooks and bullies from ACORN, the SEIU, UAW, and whackjob, intellectual, elitists from ivy walled re-education camps.

Lil's picture
verified

We should ask for more input

We should ask for more input from the birthers? And input from the "death panelists"? Or the anti-intellectualists?
______________________

"We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give."
Winston Churchill

Big Love's picture

Birthers? Not sure who you

Birthers? Not sure who you mean by that. And I'm not one who believes there would be a death panel. But if there were to be a death panel, the members would probably be chosen by a commissioner or another "czar to be named later". I would prefer that the intellectuals who help reform healthcare be those who understand the challenges of delivering affordable quality healthcare; either as administrators of the institutions where it is delivered, or practitioners who have spent the better part of their lives treating illness. And I don't mean Howard Dean. And it didn't make much sense to get people involved in the process who , in the past, espoused such things as eugenics and forced sterilization. That was a dumb mistake. Rahm must be kicking himself in the ass right now. As far as the politicians involved, people like Kent Conrad, (D-ND) and Richard Shelby, (R-AL) could get a lot more done than Pelosi and Waxman. Hey, don't look now but they're all ready to drop the public option. Guess it really wasn't about making sure everyone was covered after all. Now it's just about getting something through to save face. Pres. Obama would do well to just start over. He has plenty of time; at least till Nov. 2010.

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